A triple is one of the types of connectors designed to connect three cables (or two cables with an instrument connector). The most widespread are tees for connecting with coaxial radio-frequency connectors (in BNC formats, its Soviet variant CP-50 and CP-75 , as well as SMA , SMB and SSMB, SMC , TNC , LEMO , etc.). The name is associated with the typical shape of the connector in the form of a letter T. Sometimes it is used to connect two cables (as an I-connector ), while the third connector of the tee remains free or a matching is connected to it. Types of tees with various combinations of male ( male , “father”) and female ( female , “mother”) connectors are produced.
In the 10BASE-2 (thin Ethernet ) standard , the BNC tee is used to connect a coaxial network cable to a computer network card.
See also
- I-connector
- Double T-bridge (waveguides)
- Directional coupler
Literature
- Dzhurinsky K. B. Coaxial radio components of a new generation for microelectronic microwave devices. Reference materials on electronic engineering. - ONTI, 1996 .
- Dzhurinsky K. B. Miniature coaxial radio components for microwave microelectronics: connectors, coaxial-microstrip junctions, adapters, microwave inputs, low-frequency inputs, insulating racks, noise filters. - M .: Technosphere, 2006 .
- Quick Reference Designer REA. Ed. R. G. Varlamov. - M .: Owls. Radio, 1972 .
Links
T-connector (such as "triple male") and a 50-ohm SMC format terminator.
T-connector ("mother-mother-father") and TNC-format I-connector.
T-connector for BNC format, to which two cables are connected.
T-connector ("mother-mother-father") format SMA.
T-connector ("mom-mom-dad") and I-connector format Mini-UHF .