Zenode.ai Logo
Beta
AM26LS31M

AM26LS31M Series

Quadruple Differential Line Driver

Manufacturer: Texas Instruments

Catalog

Quadruple Differential Line Driver

Key Features

Meets or exceeds the requirements of ANSI TIA/EIA-422-B and ITUOperates from a single 5V supplyTTL-CompatibleComplementary outputsHigh output impedance in power-off conditionsComplementary output-enable inputsAvailable MIL-PRF-38535-qualified options (M): All parameters are tested unless otherwise noted. On all other products, production processing does not necessarily include testing of all parameters.Meets or exceeds the requirements of ANSI TIA/EIA-422-B and ITUOperates from a single 5V supplyTTL-CompatibleComplementary outputsHigh output impedance in power-off conditionsComplementary output-enable inputsAvailable MIL-PRF-38535-qualified options (M): All parameters are tested unless otherwise noted. On all other products, production processing does not necessarily include testing of all parameters.

Description

AI
The AM26LS31CN-E family of devices is a quadruple complementary-output line driver designed to meet the requirements of ANSI TIA/EIA-422-B and ITU (formerly CCITT) Recommendation V.11. The 3-state outputs have high-current capability for driving balanced lines such as twisted-pair or parallel-wire transmission lines, and are in the high-impedance state in the power-off condition. The enable function is common to all four drivers and offers the choice of an active-high or active-low enable (G, G) input. Low-power Schottky circuitry reduces power consumption without sacrificing speed. The AM26LS31CN-E family of devices is a quadruple complementary-output line driver designed to meet the requirements of ANSI TIA/EIA-422-B and ITU (formerly CCITT) Recommendation V.11. The 3-state outputs have high-current capability for driving balanced lines such as twisted-pair or parallel-wire transmission lines, and are in the high-impedance state in the power-off condition. The enable function is common to all four drivers and offers the choice of an active-high or active-low enable (G, G) input. Low-power Schottky circuitry reduces power consumption without sacrificing speed.