cartridge with edge connector on bottom Edge connectors are commonly used in
personal computers for connecting
expansion cards and
computer memory to the
system bus. Example expansion peripheral technologies which use edge connectors include
PCI,
PCI Express, and
AGP.
Slot 1 and
Slot A also used edge connectors; the
processor being mounted on a card with an edge connector, instead of directly to the motherboard as before and since.
IBM PCs used edge connector sockets attached to ribbon cables to connect 5.25"
floppy disk drives. 3.5" drives use a pin connector instead.
Video game cartridges typically take the form of a PCB with an edge connector: the socket is located within the console itself. The
Nintendo Entertainment System was unusual in that it was designed to use a
zero insertion force edge connector: instead of the user forcing the cartridge into the socket directly, the cartridge was first placed in a bay and then mechanically lowered into position. Starting with the
Amiga 1000 in 1985, various Amiga models used the 86-pin Zorro I edge connector, which was later reshaped into the internal 100-pin
Zorro II slot on the
Amiga 2000 and later upmarket models. == See also ==