Low-speed D- is pulled up to 3.3V
Anonymous
Not applicable
Dec 19, 2008
12:00 AM
- Subscribe to RSS Feed
- Mark as New
- Mark as Read
- Bookmark
- Subscribe
- Printer Friendly Page
- Report Inappropriate Content
Dec 19, 2008
12:00 AM
Question: The USB Spec says that low-speed D- is pulled up to 3.3V source through a 1.5K resistor. Some of your documents have a 7.5K instead. Why?
Answer:
The USB Specification requires that the D- pin of low-speed devices be pulled up to a 3.0V to 3.6V voltage source through a 1.5K-ohm resistor. An alternative implementation is to pull the D- pin to Vcc (~5V) with a 7.5K. Voltage divider (7.5K pull-up and 15K pull down on the hub side) gives around 3.3V at the D- pin which is within the level required by the Spec. Although many designs use this approach with no problem, one of the drawbacks is that the voltage on D- will be dependent upon Vcc. In order to stay above the 3.0V lower limit, Vcc must be at least 4.5V even though the IC may be guaranteed to function at lower voltages.
Rate this article:
Contributors
-
This widget could not be displayed.Anonymous