Roper PXD1000 User Manual

Page 10

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background image

10

Data19(+)

29

Blue/Green

79

Green/Blue

Data19(-)

Data18(+)

30

Green/Purple

80

Purple/Green

Data18(-)

Data17(+)

31

Gray/Purple

81

Purple/Gray

Data17(-)

Data16(+)

32

Gray/Green

82

Green/Gray

Data16(-)

Data15(+)

33

Blue/White

83

White/Blue

Data15(-)

Data14(+)

34

Brown/Tan

84

Tan/Brown

Data14(-)

Data12(+)

35

Tan/Pink

85

Pink/Tan

Data13(-)

Data13(+)

36

Gray/Yellow

86

Yellow/Gray

Data12(-)

Data11(+)

37

Brown/Purple

87

Purple/Brown

Data11(-)

Data10(+)

38

Brown/Gray

88

Gray/Brown

Data10(-)

Data9(+)

39

Tan/Green

89

Green/Tan

Data9(-)

Data8(+)

40

Green/Pink

90

Pink/Green

Data8(-)

Data7(+)

41

Pink/Yellow

91

Yellow/Pink

Data7(-)

Data6(+)

42

Tan/Yellow

92

Yellow/Tan

Data6(-)

Data5(+)

43

Gray/White

93

White/Gray

Data5(-)

Data4(+)

44

Green

94

Yellow

Data4(-)

Data3(+)

45

Tan

95

White

Data3(-)

Data2(+)

46

Purple

96

Orange

Data2(-)

Data1(+)

47

Brown

97

Gray

Data1(-)

Data0(+)

48

Blue

98

Pink

Data0(-)

GROUND

49

Tan/Orange

99

Orange/Tan

+12V_FUSED

GROUND

50

Orange/Pink

100

Pink/Orange

+12V_FUSED

a. Build from cable with compatible Camera connector

If you plan to build a cable using a compatible Camera connector then you
will need a compatible mating cable plug for the PXD1000. The mating
cable plug for the PXD100 is an AMP Amplimite .050 Series Cable Plug
Connector, Series III (AMP PN: 749621-9) or equivalent

b. How long can the Digital Cable be? Imagenation recommends that the

cables for the digital camera to PXD1000 be 10 meters in length or less. If
cables are any longer than 10 meters, unpredictable results may occur.
There is not an easy answer to this question for cables longer than 10
meters. Cables up to 10 meters should work for all cameras. Beyond 10
meters, the answer begins to depend more on the camera and the speed of
the data than on the frame grabber. In general, the higher the speed, the
shorter the cable. A 40MHz camera, for example, would need a shorter
cable than a 20 MHz camera.

The problem with a long cable is that the wire sets up a distributed
capacitance. It can change the timing of the bits. If the timing of the bits
changes then the frame grabber will miss data. A high quality camera will
have a guard band on the bits to compensate for some small timing
changes.

LVDS is designed to allow cables up to several hundred feet, however,
much of that depends on the camera and the frequency.

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