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SweGaN wins commercial orders worth SEK25m from global customers

Semiconductor today - Пн, 04/27/2026 - 13:11
SweGaN AB of Linköping, Sweden — a manufacturer of custom gallium nitride on silicon carbide (GaN-on-SiC) epitaxial wafers, based on proprietary growth technology — says that it has secured multiple new commercial framework agreements from customers across Europe, Asia, and the USA. The orders received during the first four months of 2026 represent a total contract value of about SEK25m and will contribute to revenue over the next coming 6-18 months...

Чорнобиль: щоб ніколи знову

Новини - Пн, 04/27/2026 - 12:00
Чорнобиль: щоб ніколи знову
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Інформація КП пн, 04/27/2026 - 12:00
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Сорок років відділяє нас від техногенної катастрофи, що сталася на Чорнобильській АЕС. Тоді в  Україні радіоактивна хмара накрила 12 з 25 областей – 2293 населених пункти. Але Чорнобиль – це не лише велика трагедія, а й безмежна мужність наших людей, які ліквідовували наслідки аварії. Ризикуючи життям і здоров'ям, вони захистили людство  від згубного впливу й поширення радіації. Ще живі учасники і сучасники тих подій, жива пам'ять. І в серці кожного з нас одне: щоб ніколи знову.

Engineering the perfect flow with peristaltic pumps

EDN Network - Пн, 04/27/2026 - 08:58

In modern engineering, precision fluid control is vital across industries ranging from electronics manufacturing to medical device design. Peristaltic pumps, with their distinctive squeeze-and-release mechanism, deliver exceptional reliability, cleanliness, and accuracy in fluid transfer. By preventing direct contact between the pump and the fluid, they ensure contamination-free operation while reducing maintenance demands.

This post explores the fundamentals of peristaltic pumping and how electric-drive systems help engineers achieve the perfect flow in today’s most demanding applications.

Peristaltic pump vs. electric peristaltic pump

A peristaltic pump refers to the general pumping principle: fluid is moved through flexible tubing by a rotating squeeze-and-release motion. This design ensures accurate flow and prevents contamination since the fluid never touches the pump components.

An electric peristaltic pump, however, is a specific implementation powered by an electric motor. The motor provides consistent speed, programmable control, and higher precision, making it ideal for industrial automation, laboratory dosing, and electronics manufacturing processes. While the term “peristaltic pump” covers the entire category, “electric peristaltic pump” highlights the modern, motor-driven versions that engineers rely on for efficiency and repeatability.

Figure 1 A sample of today’s compact electric peristaltic pump—this battery-operable low-voltage DC motor version demonstrates modern design efficiency. Source: Author

Peristaltic pumps vs. dosing pumps

A dosing pump is a broader category of pumps designed to deliver exact volumes of fluid at controlled intervals. Peristaltic pumps can serve as dosing pumps when paired with electric drives and programmable controls, but other pump types—such as diaphragm or piston pumps—are also used for dosing applications.

In short, all electric peristaltic pumps can function as dosing pumps, but not all dosing pumps are peristaltic. Understanding this distinction helps engineers select the right solution depending on whether the priority is contamination-free transfer, chemical compatibility, or ultra-precise dosing.

As a quick aside, it’s worth noting the distinction between DC-motor-driven and stepper-motor-driven peristaltic pumps. DC motors provide continuous rotation with simple speed control, making them cost-effective and compact for general fluid transfer.

Stepper motors, on the other hand, deliver precise incremental motion, enabling highly accurate dosing and repeatability. The choice between the two depends on application requirements: DC motors excel in straightforward pumping tasks, while stepper motors are favored in laboratory and industrial settings where precision is paramount.

Figure 2 A stepper-motor peristaltic pump delivers responsive start-stop and reverse operation, offers a wide speed range, and ensures reliability, thus meeting the accurate and dependable flow control demanded by precision instruments. Source: Author

The inner workings of peristaltic pumps

At the heart of a peristaltic pump is a simple but ingenious principle: fluid is transported by compressing flexible tubing in a controlled sequence. As rollers mounted on a rotating rotor travel along the tubing, they push the fluid forward in discrete segments, creating a smooth, continuous flow. Because the fluid remains fully enclosed within the tubing, there is no risk of contamination or contact with mechanical components, making this design particularly valuable in sensitive applications such as pharmaceuticals.

The internal structure of a peristaltic pump reflects this principle with elegant simplicity. A rotor fitted with rollers or shoes provides the pressure needed to move the fluid, while the tubing’s elasticity ensures it returns to its original shape after each cycle. The pump housing supports and guides the mechanism, ensuring consistent operation.

This combination of mechanical precision and material resilience allows peristaltic pumps to deliver accurate dosing, reliable performance, and easy maintenance—qualities that make them indispensable in modern engineering systems.

Figure 3 Drawing simply depicts the mechanisms of single-roller and multi-roller peristaltic pumps. Source: Author

As a closely related note, industrial peristaltic pumps differ from those used in general and medical applications. Industrial designs often employ shoe mechanisms to achieve higher pressures and rugged performance, making them suitable for chemical transfer, mining, and other heavy-duty environments where durability is paramount.

By contrast, general-purpose and medical pumps typically rely on roller mechanisms, which minimize friction, reduce energy consumption, and extend tubing life—qualities essential for precision dosing, sterility, and reliable operation in laboratory and healthcare settings.

And when powered by an electric motor, the same mechanism gains programmable control, variable speed adjustment, and enhanced precision. Electric peristaltic pumps transform the fundamental design into a highly versatile dosing system, capable of delivering exact volumes with repeatability. This evolution from a simple mechanical concept to an automated solution makes them indispensable in neoteric engineering environments where accuracy, efficiency, and reliability are non-negotiable.

Pulsed flow: Quick pointers for makers and engineers

Now to a few compact cues and practical insights to keep your designs flowing with precision. First off take note that motor choice sets the tone for performance: DC drives are cost-effective for simple transfer tasks like irrigation or fluid circulation, while stepper motors deliver the precision required for accurate dosing.

Roller mechanisms are especially suitable for medical and laboratory applications, since they minimize friction, extend tubing life, and provide gentle, contamination-free fluid handling. They also make an excellent choice for hobbyist projects, offering simplicity, reliability, and low maintenance for makers experimenting with fluid transfer.

By contrast, shoe mechanisms are designed for rugged industrial environments where higher pressures are needed, though they accelerate tubing wear. Tubing selection is equally critical; silicone ensures biocompatibility, PVC covers general transfer needs, and specialized elastomers withstand aggressive chemicals.

Now recall that roller pumps themselves come in single-roller and multi-roller designs. Single-roller pumps are mechanically simpler, lower-cost, and easier to maintain, making them suitable for basic transfer or hobbyist projects where flow smoothness is less critical.

Multi-roller pumps, by contrast, provide smoother, more continuous flow with reduced pulsation, which is essential in medical and laboratory applications where dosing accuracy and patient safety matter. While multi-roller designs increase complexity and cost, they extend tubing life and deliver higher precision, making them the preferred choice in food and beverage industries as well.

Also, electric drives add programmable control and variable speed, enabling integration with MCUs or PLCs for automation, while compact low-voltage battery-operated designs balance efficiency with portability in point-of-care devices. Notably, to mitigate the risk of power outages, contemporary electric peristaltic pumps for medical applications are frequently equipped with hand cranks for manual fluid delivery.

In today’s market, DC drive versions are available with more than just a regular DC motor—many include extra leads for speed control inputs (often via pulse width modulation), tachometer outputs, and other control/feedback signals. These additions give designers greater flexibility in monitoring, closed-loop control, and seamless integration with modern embedded systems, making even basic DC drives far more versatile than before.

Figure 4 Datasheet snippet highlighting a brushless peristaltic pump that delivers multiple features, including speed and direction control. Source: Binaca Pumps

Maker tip: PPM-controlled “digital” peristaltic pumps simplify automation by emulating the behavior of standard RC servo motors. Because the motor driver is integrated directly into the pump, you can skip the complex external circuitry usually needed to manage speed or direction. This lets you control the pump directly from a microcontroller’s digital pin using standard libraries—saving you both space and setup time (here is a practical example).

Frankly, when it comes to real-world control challenges, few are as nuanced as those involving peristaltic pumps. The core difficulty stems from two inherent characteristics of their operation. First, these pumps often run at very low speeds, sometimes down to a complete standstill depending on the application. Second, the motor experiences highly variable loads as the rollers engage and disengage with the flexible tube.

For most of the rotation cycle, the rollers move smoothly along the tube with minimal changes in torque or fluid pressure. However, at the points of disengagement and re-engagement, the system encounters sharp pulses in both torque and pressure.

That is, the combination of low-speed operation (which challenges velocity controllers) and cyclic load fluctuations (which creates non-linear disturbances) is exactly what makes these pumps “fussy” to control. Addressing these dynamics requires specialized motion control strategies—but that is a topic for another discussion.

Closing note: Peristalsis in engineering form

I have more to share but let me close with the fundamentals at this time.

Peristaltic pumps are a class of positive displacement pumps inspired directly by biology. Just as peristalsis in the digestive tract moves food through rhythmic muscle contractions, these pumps transport fluids by progressively deforming flexible tubing with rollers or shoes. The motion sweeps fluid forward, but because the swept length is always less than the tubing circumference, each rotation introduces a brief pause, resulting in the characteristic pulsed flow.

Designs vary between fixed and variable occlusion systems: fixed occlusion maintains a constant compression force, while variable occlusion allows adjustment via springs to fine-tune performance. Accuracy is further influenced by the slip factor, a correction term that accounts for incomplete tubing recovery and backflow, which can cause measured dispense rates to differ from theoretical values.

In peristaltic pump engineering, slip refers specifically to tubing recovery and backflow losses, which differs from the slip factor used in turbomachinery but serves the same purpose of correcting theoretical versus actual flow.

In essence, peristaltic pumps mirror a biological process with engineering precision—balancing simplicity, safety, and adaptability across a broad range of applications. In healthcare, they provide sterile infusion for IV therapy, dialysis, and precise drug delivery. In laboratories, they handle chemical dosing, reagent transfer, and bioprocessing where purity is paramount. Industrially, they manage viscous fluids, corrosive chemicals, and food-grade materials without risk of cross-contamination.

In the food and beverage sector, they support hygienic transfer of juices, dairy, and brewing ingredients. For hobbyists, they simplify aquarium maintenance, hydroponics, and small-scale brewing. In agriculture, they excel at nutrient dosing in irrigation and supplement delivery in animal farming. Their gentle, pulsed flow and hygienic design make them a versatile solution wherever controlled, reliable fluid handling is required.

As you explore these designs in your own projects, consider how roller choice, hose selection, occlusion type, and modern drive features can shape performance, and share your insights to keep the conversation on precision fluid handling moving forward.

T. K. Hareendran is a self-taught electronics enthusiast with a strong passion for innovative circuit design and hands-on technology. He develops both experimental and practical electronic projects, documenting and sharing his work to support fellow tinkerers and learners. Beyond the workbench, he dedicates time to technical writing and hardware evaluations to contribute meaningfully to the maker community.

Related Content

The post Engineering the perfect flow with peristaltic pumps appeared first on EDN.

Please go all the way down, RX

Reddit:Electronics - Пн, 04/27/2026 - 08:58
Please go all the way down, RX

If you saw my last post about accidentally frying my CH32V006 dev board into a working state, this is the next chapter of that mess.

Quick recap: I'm building a custom CH32V006 dev board for OpenServoCore, my project to turn cheap MG90S-class servos into smart actuators with a Dynamixel-style single-wire UART. After the 0.84V rail saga, I had a working board. Time to bring up the Rust bootloader (tinyboot) over UART.

Except UART didn't work.

Specifically, TX worked perfectly. I could blast "Hello world" out of the chip all day. But sending anything into the MCU? Total silence. The HAL driver is essentially the same as the V003, which works fine, so I was pretty sure this was hardware, not firmware.

I scoped the RX line while shoving a stream of 0x55 (UUUUUU…) into it from the host. Quick one-liner if you've never used it:

yes U | tr -d '\n' > /dev/ttyACM0

Alternating 1s and 0s, perfect for scoping.

What I expected: a clean 0V to 3.3V square wave. What I got: a 180 mV ripple sitting on top of 3.3V. Min 3.20, max 3.38. The line was being held high so hard that my USB UART adapter could only sag it by a couple hundred millivolts when it tried to send a zero. Touching RX directly to ground snapped it cleanly to 0V, so the wiring was fine. The driver just couldn't drag it all the way down.

Back to the schematic. The RX line passes through a 74LVC2G241 tri-state buffer that handles the half-duplex direction switching. TX_EN low = listen (DATA -> RX), TX_EN high = talk (TX -> DATA). I'd been picturing this buffer as a passive switch, like a piece of wire that conditionally connects two nets.

By now you electronics gods here probably already figured out what's the issue by now, but I didn't...

Anyways, when TX_EN is low, that buffer is actively driving RX with whatever it sees on DATA. And DATA sits at 3.3V via its own 10K pullup when the bus is idle. So the buffer was reading 3.3V on DATA and pushing 3.3V back out of its high-side MOSFET onto RX with ~24 mA of drive and very low R_DS(on). I was fighting a CMOS push-pull output stage with a USB UART chip. The buffer won. Always.

The firmware workaround is to assert TX_EN while reading. That disables the DATA -> RX path and lets RX fall back to its own pullup, which the host can actually drive. Confirmed it live by poking 3.3V onto the TX_EN pad and watching the ripple snap into a clean rail-to-rail square wave. It's such a satisfying flip on the scope.

The real takeaway, however, is thatTX_EN isn't really a transmit enable. From firmware's view it looks like one, but electrically it's a mux select that picks which buffer drives the bus. Calling it "transmit enable" is what put me in this mental hole in the first place.

For Rev B, the actual fix is a hardware jumper that lets RX bypass the buffer for plain UART mode. Why hardware and not just firmware? Because tools like wchisp use the UART to read/write the CH32's Option Bytes outside of any firmware I control. If my UART depends on my firmware to function, a fresh chip or a half-flashed bootloader can lock me out of recovery. Recovery-path peripherals shouldn't depend on firmware to work.

If you want a more details with scope photos, the schematic, a video of the workaround in action, here is the full writeup.

submitted by /u/aq1018
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Teardown of a Keithley 2500 photodiode meter

Reddit:Electronics - Ндл, 04/26/2026 - 20:08
Teardown of a Keithley 2500 photodiode meter

Teardown video does go over the related PCBs at the component level, with plenty of components being discussed and pointed at. Discussion of various board sections. Thought it might be of interest to some folks here.

submitted by /u/Kqyxzoj
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Weekly discussion, complaint, and rant thread

Reddit:Electronics - Сбт, 04/25/2026 - 18:00

Open to anything, including discussions, complaints, and rants.

Sub rules do not apply, so don't bother reporting incivility, off-topic, or spam.

Reddit-wide rules do apply.

To see the newest posts, sort the comments by "new" (instead of "best" or "top").

submitted by /u/AutoModerator
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Як протидіяти дезінформації: зустріч у КПІ з Міхаєм Вакаріу та Ніколаєм Мокану

Новини - Птн, 04/24/2026 - 22:07
Як протидіяти дезінформації: зустріч у КПІ з Міхаєм Вакаріу та Ніколаєм Мокану
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kpi пт, 04/24/2026 - 22:07
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КПІ ім. Ігоря Сікорського з відкритою лекцією відвідали 🇷🇴 румунський науковець і викладач Міхай Вакаріу, відомий своїми дослідженнями в галузях теорії комунікації, філософії й кінематографа, та директор румунського телеканалу TVR Moldova Ніколай Мокану. Гостей супроводжувала українська поетеса, письменниця й громадська діячка Оксана Стоміна.

КПІ та Ericsson об’єднують зусилля для підготовки майбутніх інженерів із передовими навичками у сфері 5G

Новини - Птн, 04/24/2026 - 22:02
КПІ та Ericsson об’єднують зусилля для підготовки майбутніх інженерів із передовими навичками у сфері 5G
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kpi пт, 04/24/2026 - 22:02
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Після підписання Меморандуму про співпрацю між КПІ ім. Ігоря Сікорського та компанією Ericsson було розпочато реалізацію міжнародної навчальної програми з розвитку навичок у сфері цифрових технологій — Ericsson Educate: 5G University.

Студент першого курсу кафедри штучного інтелекту на Міжнародному конкурсі з фізики

Новини - Птн, 04/24/2026 - 21:42
Студент першого курсу кафедри штучного інтелекту на Міжнародному конкурсі з фізики
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kpi пт, 04/24/2026 - 21:42
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☑️ Олександр Мацибора, студент першого курсу кафедри штучного інтелекту Навчально-наукового інституту прикладного системного аналізу (НН ІПСА) КПІ ім. Ігоря Сікорського, досяг вагомого результату на Міжнародному конкурсі з фізики The International Physics Competition (IPhyC).

AXT announces exercise of over-allotment option in public offering

Semiconductor today - Птн, 04/24/2026 - 19:43
AXT Inc of Fremont, CA, USA — which makes gallium arsenide (GaAs), indium phosphide (InP) and germanium (Ge) substrates and raw materials at plants in China — says that, in connection with its underwritten public offering of 8,560,311 shares of common stock (completed on 22 April), the underwriters have exercised their over-allotment option to purchase an additional 1,284,046 shares at a price of $64.25, yielding additional gross proceeds of about $82.5m, before deducting underwriting discounts and commissions and other offering expenses...

The system architect’s sketchbook: The buildout frenzy

EDN Network - Птн, 04/24/2026 - 18:24

Deepak Shankar, founder of Mirabilis Design and developer of VisualSim Architect platform for chip and system designs, has created this cartoon for electronics design engineers.

The post The system architect’s sketchbook: The buildout frenzy appeared first on EDN.

Aeluma secures over $4m in contracts for quantum materials and lasers

Semiconductor today - Птн, 04/24/2026 - 17:57
Aeluma Inc of Goleta, CA, USA — which develops compound semiconductor materials on large-diameter substrates — has been awarded more than $4m in contracts from the US Government to accelerate scaling of its semiconductor heterogeneous integration platform for quantum and high-speed datacom applications...

Aeluma receives NASA award for integrated QD lasers

Semiconductor today - Птн, 04/24/2026 - 16:51
Aeluma Inc of Goleta, CA, USA — which develops compound semiconductor materials on large-diameter substrates — has received an award from US National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) to advance its integrated quantum dot laser platform for datacom and sensing applications...

Atomera extends collaboration with Synopsys to GaN workflows

Semiconductor today - Птн, 04/24/2026 - 16:38
Semiconductor materials and technology licensing company Atomera Inc of Los Gatos, CA, USA has expanded its collaboration with Synopsys Inc of Mountain View, CA, USA ― which provides electronic design automation (EDA) software, semiconductor IP and services for chip and electronic system design ― to advance gallium nitride (GaN) device modeling for radio frequency (RF) and power semiconductor applications. The work builds on their long-standing relationship around Synopsys’ Sentaurus TCAD and Atomera’s MSTcad toolset and extends the collaboration into GaN workflows to support bringing higher-quality GaN solutions to market...

💻Запрошуємо на онлайн лекцію “Авторство без конфліктів”

Новини - Птн, 04/24/2026 - 16:38
💻Запрошуємо на онлайн лекцію “Авторство без конфліктів”
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kpi пт, 04/24/2026 - 16:38
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Бібліотека КПІ запрошує дослідників КПІ ім. Ігоря Сікорського та усіх охочих долучитися до онлайн лекції “Авторство без конфліктів”, що відбудеться в межах курсу відкритих лекцій “Академічна ДоброЧесність: правила гри чи справа честі”.

📰 Газета "Київський політехнік" № 15-16 за 2026 (.pdf)

Новини - Птн, 04/24/2026 - 16:00
📰 Газета "Київський політехнік" № 15-16 за 2026 (.pdf)
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Інформація КП пт, 04/24/2026 - 16:00
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Вийшов 15-16 номер газети "Київський політехнік" за 2026 рік

New Plug-In Timing Module Delivers Precise, Reliable Synchronization for Data Centers and 5G Networks to Meet the Demands of AI and Next-Generation Connectivity

ELE Times - Птн, 04/24/2026 - 15:12

National, 24th April 2026: As data centers and 5G networks become the backbone of AI-driven innovation and digital transformation, the need for precise, resilient timing solutions has never been more critical. Timing is not just a technical requirement, but rather a strategic enabler for high-performance, scalable infrastructure. Microchip Technology (Nasdaq: MCHP) today announces its MD-990-0011-B family of plug-in timing modules, delivering turnkey, high-precision synchronization for data center servers and 5G virtualized Radio Access Networks (vRAN).

Developed in collaboration with Intel, the MD-990-0011-B timing module is designed for seamless compatibility with Intel® Xeon® 6 SoC-powered server platforms, supporting both OEMs and ODMs in building future-ready systems. By leveraging Intel’s foundational vRAN architecture, the module enables robust, low-latency time synchronization, which is essential for distributed AI workloads and real-time applications.

Engineered for the reliability and scalability required by cloud infrastructure, virtualization, and high-availability deployments, the MD-990-0011-B supports automatic source selection and locking across Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS), Synchronous Ethernet (SyncE), and Precision Time Protocol (PTP). This flexibility supports continuous, accurate timing even as network demands evolve.

“Timing is the invisible force that guides the world’s most transformative technologies. With the MD-990-0011-B timing modules, Microchip enables designers to address timing requirements proactively, whether at the outset or during upgrades,” said Randy Brudzinski, corporate vice president of Microchip’s frequency and time systems business unit. “Our plug-in solution eliminates the complexity of custom timing circuits, providing integration and reliability, accelerating innovation and reducing time-to-market for data centers and 5G networks.”

“Microchip’s MD-990-0011-B Timing Module aligns with Intel’s commitment to enable next-generation infrastructure by providing scalable, high-performance platforms that are ready for the demands of 5G, AI and cloud computing,” said Mike Merluzzi, GM of radio access networks at Intel Corporation. “By simplifying timing integration and enhancing reliability on Intel Xeon 6 SoC-powered platforms, we’re helping customers accelerate innovation and deployment.”

Delivering exceptional precision in time and frequency accuracy, along with robust holdover capabilities, the MD-990-0011-B timing modules are available in two variants. The MD-990-0011-BC01 offers 8 hours of holdover performance, while the MD-990-0011-BA01 offers 4 hours of holdover performance. These timing modules consolidate several of Microchip’s advanced technologies into a single, highly integrated solution. Key components include:

  • Synchronous Ethernet (SyncE) Synthesizer (ZL80132B): Features two independent Digital Phase-Locked Loop (DPLL) channels for flexible and resilient synchronization
  • Oven Controlled Crystal Oscillators (OCXOs, OX-22x): Engineered to provide up to 8 hours of holdover, ensuring stable timing during GNSS outages or network disruptions
  • MCP9808 Temperature Sensor supporting enhanced environmental monitoring, 24LC024 EEPROM implementing board configuration, and VC-820 for low jitter performance
By unifying these critical timing components into a single plug-in module, the MD-990-0011-B streamlines server architecture, reduces design complexity, and simplifies the supply chain. Its modular design enables rapid installation and simplified maintenance, minimizing downtime and facilitating effortless upgrades, key advantages for dynamic data center and 5G network environments.
With over 75 years of timing experience, Microchip offers a comprehensive clock and timing portfolio. The company’s frequency and timing products range from small plug-in timing server cards to multi-rack national time scale systems. As a primary contributor to the world’s time, Microchip’s timing solutions are trusted, reliable, and resilient. For more information, visit Microchip’s Clock and Timing Systems web page.
 
Pricing and Availability
The MD-990-0011-BA01 and the MD-990-0011-BC01 are now available in production quantities. You can purchase directly from Microchip or contact a Microchip sales representative or authorized worldwide distributor.
Resources
High-res images available through Flickr or editorial contact (feel free to publish):
 
About Microchip Technology:
Microchip Technology Inc. is a broadline supplier of semiconductors committed to making innovative design easier through total system solutions that address critical challenges at the intersection of emerging technologies and durable end markets. Its easy-to-use development tools and comprehensive product portfolio support customers throughout the design process, from concept to completion. Headquartered in Chandler, Arizona, Microchip offers outstanding technical support and delivers solutions across the industrial, automotive, consumer, aerospace and defense, communications and computing markets. For more information, visit the Microchip website at www.microchip.com.

The post New Plug-In Timing Module Delivers Precise, Reliable Synchronization for Data Centers and 5G Networks to Meet the Demands of AI and Next-Generation Connectivity appeared first on ELE Times.

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