It's 12 volts but with the opposite polarity of the +12 volt output-- that is, negative instead of positive.What is the -12v DC output on an atx power supply?
No.If I connect the -12v and +12v outputs together will it make 24v?
On output is at a voltage that is 12 V higher than the common reference and the other is at 12 V lower than the common reference (which should be the neutral coming into the supply). The voltage difference across them is 24 V. If you connect them together you've just shorted out a 24 V supply.What is the -12v DC output on an atx power supply? If I connect the -12v and +12v outputs together will it make 24v?
Cheers,
Mike.
Some of the components needed bipolar supplies -- in particular the RS-232 UARTs. They needed very little current and so the -12 V output is very lightweight. On most modern equipment the need for "odd" voltages is often generated on-chip, something that wasn't practical in the old days.what is the idea of having reverse polarity. what would it be used for?
Sometimes you want to attract electrons. That is what the +12VDC does.What is the -12v DC output on an atx power supply?
If you connect -12V and +12V you will let out the magic smoke.If I connect the -12v and +12v outputs together will it make 24v?
I'm confused... The 8250. 16450, 16550 UARTs are +5VDC Vdd? Op Amps and PNPs use negative biasing and the PC PS supplies -12VDC but I honestly don't know where or how it is used?Some of the components needed bipolar supplies -- in particular the RS-232 UARTs. They needed very little current and so the -12 V output is very lightweight. On most modern equipment the need for "odd" voltages is often generated on-chip, something that wasn't practical in the old days.
The actual UART chips interface to a line driver chip (such as the DS1488) which translates the logic levels to RS-232 levels. It's the driver chips that actually needed the +12 V and -12 V. I believe that, typically, this was the only thing that the -12 V was used for originally. There was also a -5 V supply that was provided to the I/O bus intended for use on stuff like sound cards.I'm confused... The 8250. 16450, 16550 UARTs are +5VDC Vdd? Op Amps and PNPs use negative biasing and the PC PS supplies -12VDC but I honestly don't know where or how it is used?
Are you sure? I never had to deal with that so I don't know. I tried tracking down some info but couldn't find anything definitive. But I didn't find anything that even hinted at -12 V being used for the floppy drives. The floppy drive cable pinouts that I found has +5 V and +12 V (plus the common for each). But I couldn't tell if these were used for the 3.5" drives or the 5.25" drives and I don't remember whether they used the same power connectors or not. My fuzzy memory recalls that the 3.5" power cables were on the same wires as the 5.25", just with a physically smaller connector.The -12V was also used for the 3.5in floppy drive it's only 1 amp rated.
We used to use the complementary pair of RS232 chips, DS1488 driver and the DS1489 receiver in early industrial applications, in conjunction with a PC for program loading..I'm confused... The 8250. 16450, 16550 UARTs are +5VDC Vdd? Op Amps and PNPs use negative biasing and the PC PS supplies -12VDC but I honestly don't know where or how it is used?
I figured there was an OPAMP in there somewhere but the DS1488 does use ±12VDC biasing.such as the DS1488
It's powered by V+ and V- (typically +/-12 V) not biased with them. There's a separate ground connection that the inputs are referred to. Internal diodes place the transition point at two diode drops above ground, largely independent of the supply voltages.I figured there was an OPAMP in there somewhere but the DS1488 does use ±12VDC biasing.
-5V was required for the DRAMs too!The actual UART chips interface to a line driver chip (such as the DS1488) which translates the logic levels to RS-232 levels. It's the driver chips that actually needed the +12 V and -12 V. I believe that, typically, this was the only thing that the -12 V was used for originally. There was also a -5 V supply that was provided to the I/O bus intended for use on stuff like sound cards.
Together makes magic smoke. If you measure from -12 to +12, you will get 24V BUT the -12 and +12 are relative to ground/common.If I connect the -12v and +12v outputs together will it make 24v?