- Fri Oct 02, 2020 7:38 am
#88990
Without trying to nit-pick, real RS232C is/was commonly 12 Volts, sometimes a bit higher to span longer distances. So that's why I like to keep the nomenclature clear; separate between RS232C and serial TTL. It also has a completely different purpose; serial TTL seldomly spans more than a few feet, mostly even within a device, while RS232C is inter-device. For real RS232C generally TTL->RS232C converters are used, so don't use them when talking serial TTL
And then some nit-picking on myself: TTL is officially 0 V vs. 5 V, so the 3.3 V variant really should be called CMOS serial or something like that
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