|  			 Connector Technical Data  			 |  		|||||||||
|  			 Model Number  			 |  			DB09P1LP | ||||||||
|  			 Connectors No.  			 |  			9 Pin, 15 Pin, 25 Pin | ||||||||
| Rated current | 5A | ||||||||
|  			 Rated Voltage  			 |  			 			 300V  			 |  		||||||||
|  			 Impulse Voltage  			 |  			1000V | ||||||||
| Contact | Brass | ||||||||
| Contact Plating | Au | ||||||||
| Contact Carrier | PBT | ||||||||
There are a wide range of past and present uses for D-sub connectors. These include printer cables, computer game joysticks and external floppy disk drives. They are also used in some multi-channel audio recording systems.
The most common use of the D-sub connector is as a video connector. This is in a plug and socket known as DE15, meaning it is D-shaped, size E in ITT Cannon's system, and has 15 pins. These are arranged in three rows of five.
Manufacturing Technique
FAQ
The original numbering system for the D-type or D-sub connector used D as the prefix (giving its name to the series) and this is followed by A, B, C, D, or E depending upon the shell size. This is followed by a number which indicated the number of pins. A final letter is a P or S indicating whether the connector is a plug or socket respectively.
Examples of connector numbering might be DB-25P for a 25 pin D-type plug or DE-9S for a 9 pin socket.
