- ATA signal integrity over dual PCBs
- Posted by galapogos on March 27th, 2007
Hi,
I'm wondering if there will be severe signal integrity issues if I use
a 2mm pitch 2x22 socket and header combination to connect 2 PCBs
together, assuming I still adhere to the impedance of the ATA signals
on the PCB and keeping the trace lengths within ATA specs? In total
there will be 3 connectors - a pin header on the ATA host side PCB, a
pin socket on the ATA device side PCB, and another pin socket on the
ATA device side PCB that connects to the actual HDD.
- Posted by Folkert Rienstra on March 27th, 2007
"galapogos" <goister@gmail.com> wrote in message news:1174985194.270284.157990@p77g2000hsh.googlegr oups.com
What do you need specs for if you can't expect them to "work".
Ever heard of laptops and laptop harddrives?
- Posted by galapogos on March 28th, 2007
On Mar 28, 2:08 am, "Folkert Rienstra" <see_reply...@myweb.nl> wrote:
Well, I just just worried that the extra connectors would cause
undesirable reflections/ringing and other related SI issues.
- Posted by Arno Wagner on March 28th, 2007
Previously galapogos <goister@gmail.com> wrote:
I agree that that could be an issue. But typically, if
this is an 3.5" to 2.5" adapter, it works. In fact these
things work when connected to an ata cable, so there should be
some margin.
Arno
- Posted by galapogos on March 28th, 2007
On Mar 28, 1:08 pm, Arno Wagner <m...@privacy.net> wrote:
You make a good point. I hadn't thought about the adapters. My
application wouldn't have a cable, but will add a 2 connectors, so I
guess it should work. I wonder how "clean" the ATA signals are after
the adapter...