Eurocard Prototyping Boards
Eurocard Format:
Introduction:
Our range of Eurocard format prototyping cards have been designed to comply with the requirements of the international packaging specification IEC297 and the associated connector specifications DIN41494, DIN 41612 and DIN 41617. Our products therefore take into account critical dimensions for the Eurocard based formats and these are detailed here. A 2,5mm wide border is necessary - top and bottom of printed circuit boards - to allow clearance for guides and for mounting into plug-in unit guide rails. On the double height Eurocard,
Standard pitch:
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Just click on the images below to go straight to the corect product page:Single Eurocard Products Double Eurocard Products |
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Background information on the Eurocard format:The height of a Eurocard is less than the height of the sub rack or chassis by 33.35 mm to allow space for panels and card guides. The height of the card in a 3U rack is therefore 100 mm. As two stacked 3U cards are about the same height as a 6U card (see Notes) this scheme allows racks to be constructed which mix 3U and 6U cards. Front panels are also slightly smaller than the rack size, and the typical panel height for a 133.35 mm 3U rack is 130 mm. Eurocard’s come in modular depths that start at 100 mm and then increase in 60 mm increments. Popular Card Sizes:
The image on the right is of single euro depth (160mm) cassette modules in 3U and 6U heights. |
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Notes:
Standards and architecture:
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The Eurocard is a mechanical system and does not define the specific connector to be used or the signals that are assigned to connector contacts. The connector systems that are commonly used with Eurocard architectures include the original DIN 41612 connector that is also standardized as IEC 60603.2, please see below for more information. This is the connector that is used for the VMEbus standard which was IEEE 1014. The connector known as the 5-row A computer architecture that used the 6U-220 Eurocard format was Multibus-II which was IEEE 1296. Sun Microsystems used the 9U-400 format for their VMEbus based systems. Because the Eurocard system provided for so many modular card sizes and because connector manufacturers have continued to create new connectors which are compatible with this system, it is a popular mechanical standard which is also used for innumerable "one-off" applications. Conduction-cooled Eurocard’s are used in military and aerospace applications. They are defined by the IEEE 1101.2-1992(2001) standard. The use of prototyping and development boards and associated products is therefore a wide market as these products enable the fast development of circuits at low cost to provide the designer with the ability to try out his ideas before This is where the Vero product range of development products offers the broadest range of products available and in association with our range of plastic and metal enclosure products offers significant reductions in time and effort in sourcing parts and thereby dramatically reducing the cost and time of development. | |||
Explanation of rack Unit or “U”
The images to the right show examples of PCB front panels in this case 6U and 3U by 4HP wide. | ![]() | ||
Explanation of the term” Rack”A 19-inch or 23-inch rack is a standardized (EIA 310-D, IEC 60297 and DIN 41494 SC48D) system for mounting various electronic modules in a "stack", or rack, 19 inches (480 mm) or 23 inches (584 mm) wide. Equipment designed to be placed in a rack is typically described as rack-mount, a rack mounted system, a rack mount chassis, subrack, rack mountable, or occasionally, simply shelf. Most racks are manufactured from sheet steel or aluminium although some use extrusions and corner pieces to build the frame. The frame is then “clad” with outer panels either for cosmetics or to provide restricted access via locks, or other required features. These features include EMC RFI sealing as well as IP sealing for harsh environments. The most common height sold is the 42U form: that is, a single rack capable of holding 42 1U “pizza box” servers, or any combination of 1U, 2U, 3U or other height units. The racks also often include thermal monitoring and control systems as well as alarms and status monitoring systems that report via systems to a central core. Because of their origin as mounting systems for railroad signaling relays, they are still sometimes called relay racks, but the 19-inch rack format has remained a constant while the technology that is mounted within it has changed to completely different fields. In the telecommunication, computing, audio, entertainment and other industries this 19” racking method has become the norm, though the Western Electric 23-inch standard, with holes on 1-inch centres, prevails in telecommunications. 19-inch racks are often used to house professional audio and video equipment, including amplifiers, effects units, interfaces, headphone amplifiers, and even small scale audio mixers. They are also widely used for computer server equipment, allowing for dense hardware configurations without occupying excessive floor space or requiring shelving. A third common use for rack-mounted equipment is industrial power, control, and automation hardware, typically in 46U racks. Typically, a piece of equipment being installed has a front panel height approximately 1/32-inch (0.78mm) less than the allotted number of U’s. This dimension will vary from manufacturer to manufacturer but the purpose, is to ensure “clearance” between the mounted subracks to prevent interference if one item is added or removed in service. The image to the right is of a 42U high Vero Imrack 1400 600 X 600 19 inch rack. | ![]() | ||
Bus Systems Using The Eurocard Format.Multibus – II:Multibus II, though not often considered as a fault resilient bus architecture, can be used as the basis for systems that exhibit degrees of fault resilience. The bus definition, IEEE 1296, together with further software definitions of Multibus Systems Architecture provide a flexible hardware and software framework for highly reliable systems. This coupled with ongoing developments, like on-line service and repair, by the Multibus Manufacturers Group can provide cost effective solutions to the classic problems of fault resilience. The result is that although an older system this “bus” structure has found use in many areas where this fault tolerance is crucial – for example traffic control systems, railway applications as well as industrial process control and monitoring. The image to the right here is of a 6U PCB Assembly | ![]() | ||
VME:VMEbus is a computer bus standard, originally developed for the Motorola 68000 line of CPUs, but later widely used for many applications and standardized by the IEC as ANSI/IEEE 1014-1987. It is physically based on Eurocard sizes, mechanicals and connectors, but uses its own signalling system, which Eurocard does not define. It was first developed in 1981 and continues to see widespread use today. The image to the right here is of a Vero 9U high VXI rack | ![]() | ||
CompactPCI:A CompactPCI (cPCI) system is a 3U or 6U Eurocard-based industrial computer, and has been designed for hot pluggable cards from the start, and where all boards are connected via a passive PCI backplane. The pin assignments of the connectors are documented in standards, published by the organization PICMG The connectors and the electrical rules allow for 8 boards in a PCI segment. Multiple segments can be achieved but due to the speed and propagation delays in the system at its design this can only be achieved using active “bridges” to continue the bus. Unlike the original Eurocard solutions such as VME, which use connectors with a 0.1-inch pin spacing, CompactPCI cards use metric connectors with a 2-millimeter pin spacing, designed to the IEC 1076 standard. However although the connector systems are different the principles behind the system are similar in that they both use Eurocard's as the basis for the structure and define the positioning and allocation of functions in the equipment. 3U boards have a The image to the right here is of a Vero CompactPIC chassis. | ![]() | ||
Standards Organisations:ANSIThe American National Standards Institute or ANSI is a private non-profit organization that oversees the development of voluntary consensus standards for products, services, processes, systems, and personnel in the United States. The organization also coordinates U.S. standards with international standards so that American products can be used worldwide. For example, standards make sure that people who own cameras can find the film they need for that camera anywhere around the globe. ANSI accredits standards that are developed by representatives of standards developing organizations, government agencies, consumer groups, companies, and others. These standards ensure that the characteristics and performance of products are consistent, that people use the same definitions and terms, and that products are tested DINDIN stands for - Deutsches Institut für Normung e.V. (DIN; in English, the German Institute for Standardization) and is the German national organization for standardization and is that country's ISO (International Organisation for Standards) member body. “DIN” and “mini-DIN” connectors, as well as “DIN rails” are several examples of older DIN standards that are today used around the world. However, there are currently around thirty thousand DIN Standards, covering almost all fields of technology. One of the earliest, and surely the most well-known, is DIN 476, the standard that introduced the A-series paper sizes in 1922 and this is now an international standard we all use each day. DIN 41612The connector system we are looking at here is known as DIN 41612 is a DIN standard for two part electrical connectors that are widely used in rack based electrical systems. The different versions of the connectors are lettered alphabetically and cover a range of applications from power, signal , RF and optical connections. The principle being that each half of the connector pair is placed on a component that can plug into another component. Standardisation of the connectors is a pre-requisite for open systems, where users expect components from different suppliers to operate together. The mostly widely known use of DIN 41612 connectors is in the VMEbus system. The standard has subsequently been updated as international standards Mechanical details:The standard describes connectors which may have one, two or three rows of contacts, which are labeled as rows a, b and c. Two row connectors may use rows a+b or rows a+c. The connectors may have 16 or 32 columns, which means that the possible permutations allow 16, 32, 48, 64 or 96 contacts. The rows and columns are on a 2.54 mm grid pitch. Insertion and removal forces are controlled, and three durability grades are available. The types we are focusing on are primarily 48,64, and 96 way connector housings fitted with various pin configurations up to 96 ways. Electrical details:The headline performance of the connectors is a 2 amp per pin current carrying capacity, and 500 volt working voltage. Both these figures may need to be de-rated according to safety requirements or environmental conditions. IEC 1076The industry is responding with connector designs, which accommodate differential data transmission as well as single-ended systems to at transfer speeds from 100Mbits/sec. to 10Gbit/sec. speeds; fiber optic connectors up to 24 positions with 2.5Gbit/sec. to 5.0 Gbit/sec. per position; 5+2 and 8+2 row daughter card to backplane connectors with strip line shielding; Board-to-board printed circuit connectors represent 74 percent of all demand for high-speed connectors. The majority are on a hard metric 2.0mm pitch and grid and include for example connector systems known as 4-row FB, 5-row FB, 5+2 HM, 8+2 HM, Z-pack SL, HM, VHDM, Z-pack HS3, HMHS, HM with fiber, among others. There are likewise 1.25mm pitch connectors such as Speed Pac, DensiPac, HSSDC, MetaGig, among others. The leaders in high-speed board-to-board connectors are AMP Tyco with 22 percent market share, other providers are FCI, Molex, and Teradyne. Others include 3M, Hon Hai, Siemens, Harting, Erni, JAE, Hirose, and ITT Cannon. |
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Please note the images shown here are for illustration only and do not represent any support for any manufacturer in particular in any case. | |||











