Continue to Site

Welcome to EDAboard.com

Welcome to our site! EDAboard.com is an international Electronics Discussion Forum focused on EDA software, circuits, schematics, books, theory, papers, asic, pld, 8051, DSP, Network, RF, Analog Design, PCB, Service Manuals... and a whole lot more! To participate you need to register. Registration is free. Click here to register now.

what's the difference between USART and UART?

Status
Not open for further replies.

otakung

Junior Member level 3
Junior Member level 3
Joined
Jan 14, 2003
Messages
31
Helped
1
Reputation
2
Reaction score
0
Trophy points
1,286
Activity points
278
uart usart

I know UART only. What is the difference between UART and USART?
Where can I find some information about USART? Thank you very much. :)
 

difference between uart and usart

Hi

UART ( Universal Asyncronous Receiver Transmitter )
USART (Universal Syncronous Asyncronous Receiver Transmitter )

The USARTcan also work in a Syncrounous mode , you send a clock along with the data ) They can usually work quite a bit faster than the 115Kbd of normal Uarts , You normally see USARTS built into Micro Processors more than stand allone , but there is a couple of stand allone devices around

Regards
G
 
usart uart

Example of USART: Intel 82C51
Example of UART: NS16C450, NS16C550
 

uart vs usart

Thank you very much, GhostA.
But in MCS51 family that has only UART, it can set for synchronous mode.
So UART and USART can use both synchronous and asynchronous mode.
Does it mean UART and USART has no differeces except USART can use faster than 115k a little? Thank you. :wink:
 

usart vs uart

otakung said:
Thank you very much, GhostA.
But in MCS51 family that has only UART, it can set for synchronous mode.
So UART and USART can use both synchronous and asynchronous mode.
Does it mean UART and USART has no differeces except USART can use faster than 115k a little? Thank you. Wink

It is wrong that UART and USART has no differeces except USART can use faster than 115k.

In synchronous mode the device require both data and clock. The clock is recovered from the data or an external one which is in synchrounous with data.
In asynchronous mode the device requires only data. The data clock is internally generated and synchronised with start and stop bits embedded in the data received.
 

uart and usart

OK, I think I understand.
If the clock is internally generated then it can't be called Synchronous, is it right?
Thank you very much.
 

uart usart difference

otakung said:
OK, I think I understand.
If the clock is internally generated then it can't be called Synchronous, is it right?
Thank you very much.

It is right and note one more point.

In synchronous case the data is continuous at fixed rate.
In asynhronous case the data need not be continuous or may be burst data but transmitted at fixed rate.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Libin

    Libin

    Points: 2
    Helpful Answer Positive Rating
difference between uart usart

Usart is the 8-16 bit intel microprocessors peripheral serial communication ic..!

but the other one is more used in pc
 

synchronous uart

UART - Universal Asyncronous Receiver Transmitter
USART - Universal Syncronous Asyncronous Receiver Transmitter

In uart data is send byte by byte. one start bit and 1 or 2 stop bits are attached with a byte. The max speed for the data can be upto 100kps.

In USART data is send in the form of blocks.
 

difference between usart and uart

Can any one suggest any good book for UART..
 

what is usart

otakung said:
I know UART only. What is the difference between UART and USART?
Where can I find some information about USART? Thank you very much. :)

A UART or Universal Asynchronous Receiver-Transmitter is a piece of computer hardware that translates between parallel bits of data and serial bits. A UART is usually an integrated circuit used for serial communications over a computer or peripheral device serial port. UARTs are now built into some microcontrollers (for example, PIC16F628). USART refers to UART with synchronous implementation.

The word "asynchronous" indicates that UARTs recover character timing information from the data stream, using designated "start" and "stop" bits to indicate the framing of each character. In synchronous transmission, the clock data is recovered separately from the data stream and no start/stop bits are used. This improves the efficiency of transmission on suitable channels; more of the bits sent are data. An asynchronous transmission sends nothing over the interconnection when the transmitting device has nothing to send; but a synchronous interface must send "pad" characters to maintain synchronism between the receiver and transmitter. The usual filler is the ASCII "SYN" character. This may be done automatically by the transmitting device.

Some chips have both synchronous and asynchronous modes. These are called USARTs (for "universal synchronous asynchronous receiver-transmitters")

For information on USART see the attachment.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Part and Inventory Search

Welcome to EDABoard.com

Sponsor

Back
Top