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Keep in mind I'm not a computer repair guy or at least not officially. The four pin molex connector from a power supply unit that you use to plug into hard drives, and other drives has a 5 volt wire and a 12 volt wire. The two black ones are ground or negative. The red wire is 5 volts DC, the yellow is 12 volts DC.

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Q: How much voltages does a 4 pin molex from a psu in a computer connector have?
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Can you use utp cable for 220 v?

No. Network cables have their own voltages, set by the network card. If you network card doesn't go up in smoke, you should not worry whether the computer is plugged into 110 or 220 V. Your computer's power supply takes care of providing the electronic components with appropriate voltages. These voltages are much lower than the 110 or 220V at your home; also, they are DC instead of AC.No. Network cables have their own voltages, set by the network card. If you network card doesn't go up in smoke, you should not worry whether the computer is plugged into 110 or 220 V. Your computer's power supply takes care of providing the electronic components with appropriate voltages. These voltages are much lower than the 110 or 220V at your home; also, they are DC instead of AC.No. Network cables have their own voltages, set by the network card. If you network card doesn't go up in smoke, you should not worry whether the computer is plugged into 110 or 220 V. Your computer's power supply takes care of providing the electronic components with appropriate voltages. These voltages are much lower than the 110 or 220V at your home; also, they are DC instead of AC.No. Network cables have their own voltages, set by the network card. If you network card doesn't go up in smoke, you should not worry whether the computer is plugged into 110 or 220 V. Your computer's power supply takes care of providing the electronic components with appropriate voltages. These voltages are much lower than the 110 or 220V at your home; also, they are DC instead of AC.


How much a desktop computer in 2007?

It depended to your computer configuration.


Who invented magnetic core memories for the computer?

no idea, but its called a hard drive. Core memory has nothing whatsoever to do with hard drives. Core memory is more analogous to RAM, but was made of small metal or ceramic rings through which wires were threaded. Applying voltages to the wires changed the magnetic polarity of the rings, allowing them to represent "on" and "off" states. See the Related Link for much more information.


How much RAM does your Lenovo computer have?

ho much memory does a modern PC have


How Much Juice Is a Computer Using at Night?

120 wattis

Related questions

How do you connect a CD-ROM directly to an electric socket?

To do this, you need a power adapter (a computer power supply will work great for this). The Drive will have a molex connector on the back for +12 VDC, ground, ground, +5 VDC. Connect a molex connector to that drive with the proper voltages, and the drive should power on. However, it won't be much good without connecting it to a computer motherboard, or drive controller.


What is a molex cable?

A Molex power connector is a 4-pin power connector found in most computer power supplies. It is used to provide power to large internal drives like hard drives and CD/DVD drives. They are slowly being replaced by SATA power connectors, which are easier to install can cannot be inserted incorrectly. They should not be confused with a Berg connector which is much smaller and is used to power floppy drives. The molex connector is used for IDE drives


Does computer supply takes main power and transforms it to the voltages?

Your power supply unit, PSU. Takes AC power and distributes so much power to each connector. Each PSU, depending on the wattage of the unit gives each connector so much voltage. Each connector is designed for a certain piece of hardware that requires different voltage.


How much voltage does the PCI bus use?

The PCI bus is an unterminated bus using either 3.3V or 5V signaling voltages. Cards using PCI are keyed by slots in their edge connector to prevent plugging the card into a connector on a bus that expects signaling voltages that they are not compatible with.


Can you use utp cable for 220 v?

No. Network cables have their own voltages, set by the network card. If you network card doesn't go up in smoke, you should not worry whether the computer is plugged into 110 or 220 V. Your computer's power supply takes care of providing the electronic components with appropriate voltages. These voltages are much lower than the 110 or 220V at your home; also, they are DC instead of AC.No. Network cables have their own voltages, set by the network card. If you network card doesn't go up in smoke, you should not worry whether the computer is plugged into 110 or 220 V. Your computer's power supply takes care of providing the electronic components with appropriate voltages. These voltages are much lower than the 110 or 220V at your home; also, they are DC instead of AC.No. Network cables have their own voltages, set by the network card. If you network card doesn't go up in smoke, you should not worry whether the computer is plugged into 110 or 220 V. Your computer's power supply takes care of providing the electronic components with appropriate voltages. These voltages are much lower than the 110 or 220V at your home; also, they are DC instead of AC.No. Network cables have their own voltages, set by the network card. If you network card doesn't go up in smoke, you should not worry whether the computer is plugged into 110 or 220 V. Your computer's power supply takes care of providing the electronic components with appropriate voltages. These voltages are much lower than the 110 or 220V at your home; also, they are DC instead of AC.


How much voltage carry a Computer?

a computer psu takes in 230 or 110v or less depending on country, output voltage differs on each volt rail on the psu i.e 4 pin molex for power to cold cathodes or hdds has a 12v volt rail whereas a sata power lead has 5v.


What is PATA?

PATA stands for Parallel AT Attachement. It typically uses an 80-pin connector (ATA-5 cable) with 40 pins as the signals and the other 40 pins as grounds. Its also uses a 4-pin molex power connector. This drive is identical to the ATA IDE we used to rememeber, nothing changed other than the name. However, with the advent of the SATA drives, we needed change to avoid confusion. The things to rememebr is that PATA uses a wide flat parallel interface cable, 80-pins, 4-pin power cable, whereas, the SATA (Serial AT Attachement) uses a 7-pin interface connector, and a 15-pin power conector. The SATA drives are much faster, lower temperatures and lower voltages. The IDE in the drives are identical as well. It means Integrated Drive Electronics. This is the actual electronics within the drive to make it spin/control the read and write access times.


What new type of power connector was introduced with PCIe version2.0 how much power does this connector provide?

8-pin power supply connector with 150 watts


What new type of power connector was introduced with pcie version 2.0 how much power does this connector provide?

8-pin power connector and 300 watts


1 What new type of power connector was introduced with PCIe Version 2.0 and How much power does this connector provide?

8-pin power supply connector, 150watts


How much voltz is current electricity?

Voltages used vary from 1.5 v to 750,000 volts.


How much power does the 6 pin connector have?

75 Watts