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TTL-232R-3V3 USB to UART Cable with +3.3V TTL Level UART Signals (3V3)

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$18.50

$ 8 .99 $8.99

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1.Model:3v3


About this item

  • FTDI TTL-232R-3V3 USB to UART cable with +3.3V TTL level UART signals, USB to TTL Serial 3.3V Cable, USB-A to Rectang Conn, Female Sockets, 6 pos, 0.1
  • Support for All Windows, All Mac OS, Linux, Android.


Part No: TTL-232R-3V3 USB to UART cable Supports +3.3V UART signals Data Rates: 3MBaud USB Speed: Full Speed (12Mbps) USB Connector: Type A End Connector: 6 pin SIL, 0.1” pitch Cable Length: 1.8m Cable Details: 6 core, 5mm UL2464 24 AWG I/O Voltage: 3.3V Max Power Output: +5V / 75mA FTDI Internal IC: FT232R Operating Temperature: -40°C to +85°C


Chip Overclock®
Reviewed in the United States on May 5, 2020
I have ten Raspberry Pi's around the house running 24x7 doing tasks ranging from being an Apache web server to acting as an NTP server with a chip-scale cesium atomic clock. I have several others I use from time to time for special projects, like an IPv6 testbed or as a Differential GPS base and rovers. Most of those Pis run headless - that is, without a display, keyboard, or mouse. If they're on the household network, I can use tools like ssh to log into them. But the ones I take into the field - and I mean that literally, in the middle of a field in a semi-rural area - the TTL-232R-RPI cable is a must-have. I enable the serial port and serial console using the standard Pi configuration program (remember to reboot), attach the pin-end of the cable to the ground, transmit, and receive pins on the Pi (6, 8, and 10 on the GPIO header), attach the USB end to my laptop, and then use a tool like PuTTY (Windows) or screen (MacOS or Linux) to log into the Pi at 115200 baud, 8 bits, no parity. I can then interact with the Pi via the command line. This must be an invaluable tool for me: Amazon tells me I own eight of them.