50 pin DD connectors are alive and well on the backplanes of some day job ATRs 
with new electronics in the old VME form factor.  3 x 16 STPs pass through them 
very nicely en route to front panel connectors.  Both dense, decently robust 
and legacy compliant.

More generally, if you have access to a Daniels AFM8 crimp tool and positioner, 
the Harting crimp contact Dsubs are very good for odd jobs; e.g.  
https://uk.rs-online.com/web/p/d-sub-connectors/1007759  The turned pin 
contacts are much preferable to the bent tin ones e.g. 
https://www.peigenesis.com/en/shop/part-information/M3902964369/TRI/EACH/301791.html
  Unfortunately, while the bodies are inexpensive the pins and infrastructure 
are not.  More positively, the connectors don't noticeably degrade with rework.

Martin

-----Original Message-----
From: Paul Koning via cctalk [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: 28 June 2023 13:19
To: [email protected]
Cc: Paul Koning <[email protected]>
Subject: [cctalk] Re: Need AUI cable



> On Jun 28, 2023, at 1:13 AM, Fred Cisin via cctalk <[email protected]> 
> wrote:
> 
> DA, DC, DE connectors are a different size D shell than the DB, which is the 
> one commonly used for a 25 pin cable.

There is also DD, though I've never seen one in the wild.  DA is the shell for 
AUI connectors, DC is used for RS-422 (37 pins) I think.

All of these come in regular density and high density variations.  For most of 
them, regular is 2 rows and HD is 3 -- so a VGA connector is a DE-15, high 
density DE shell connector.  But the DD regular density is 3 rows and the high 
density is 4 rows.

Meanwhile, on AUI cables: the difficulty with plugging a transceiver into the 
Pro is that the Pro uses regular nuts, for a plug that secures by screws.  
That's non-standard, since the AUI spec calls for the "turret" and sliding 
latch type.  So a standard AUI cable wouldn't be a real cure because you'd 
still have that mismatch.

A simple solution is an adapter.  I bought one from L-com: 
https://www.l-com.com/d-sub-aui-to-db15-adapter-male-female which says that it 
is "discontinued" but also shows "available: 11" so perhaps you can still get 
one.  Failing that, an option would be to get a "socket saver" -- which is just 
a thin device with a connector at each end, intended to save the device 
connectors from wear -- and remove the transceiver-side fastener so the 
transceiver can plug in.  That second option doesn't give you a secure 
attachment but it's likely good enough.

        paul

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