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Old 17th June 2004, 06:53 PM   #1
Default Signalling rate & data transfer rate?

What is the difference between signalling rate and data transfer rate? For example, the speed of USB 2.0 is 480Mbps but the data transfer rate is 53MBytes/s. How to differentiate them? and what they are for?
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Old 17th June 2004, 07:28 PM   #2
Default signaling vs. data transfer rate

Here's my 2 cents, someone correct me if I'm wrong . The signaling rate refers to the maximum physical speed of the interface, that is, 480 million transitions (bits) can be reliably detected per second over the interface. Data transfer rate is the amount of usable data (probably peak) that can be transferred in a second. 53 MB x 8 = 424 mb, less than the signaling rate because the signaling rate includes packet overhead information. Think of the start, stop and parity bits in RS-232 data. They are overhead bits that help with the communication channel, but aren't part the overall (useful) data rate.
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Old 17th June 2004, 07:36 PM   #3
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Celestie84 may not know that mbps=megabits per second, and a byte=8 bits. Claude implied that, but it was not stated explicitly.
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