Powered Usb Connectors; Example Of The Powered Usb Port - IBM 4800-741 Planning, Installation, And Operation Manual

Surepos 700 series
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Powered USB connectors

The powered USB connectors provide additional power from the host to devices
that require more power than is available from the USB standard Type A connector.
As shown in Figure 13, additional power is supplied through another set of contacts
that are contained within the powered USB connector.
The powered USB receptacle consists of two connectors that are integrated within a
common shielded housing. These two connectors are stacked vertically inside the
common housing. The upper connector contains four contacts that are used for
powering the attached device. The lower connector is a fully compliant USB Type A
connector capable of mating with either a standard USB Type A plug or a powered
USB plug. In other words, the bottom half of the connectors are standard USB Type
A ports to which USB I/O devices can be attached.
Figure 13. Example of the powered USB port. A is the power section of the connector and
Powered USB connectors provide the following features:
v Additional power for USB POS I/O devices needing more than 5 V.
v Unique keying and color coding of the 12-V and 24-V connectors, which prevents
v Positive mechanical retention latch between the plug and receptacle to prevent
Non-POS I/O devices
The SurePOS Models 721/741/781 and 722/742/782 support most of the following
non-POS I/O devices:
v Many, but not all, USB mass-storage devices such as diskette drives, CD-ROM,
v IBM VGA monitors (CRT and LCD)
v Industry-standard PC keyboards, mice, and printers
v Standard USB and RS-232 devices with appropriate drivers, software, and
20
SurePOS 700 Series: SurePOS 700-721/741/781, 722/742/782 Planning, Installation, and Operation Guide
B is the standard USB section of connector.
unintentionally attaching a connector to the wrong type of port.
inadvertent disconnections.
and memory key. Lack of standardization precludes a list of the devices that are
not supported. Boot mode is supported for most devices that support USB boot.
operating systems
Updated October 31, 2007
A
B

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