What is this device?

The Sly Syl

Senior member
Jun 3, 2005
277
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I remember that my gameboy advance link cables had one of those on it, after a little work, i managed to snap it apart and take it off. It was a little heavy to be purely plastic, but i never could figure out what it was..

So I just snapped it back on and stopped wondering.

I'm thinking it may be magnets of some sort, to keep the power shielded near the ends?
 

PottedMeat

Lifer
Apr 17, 2002
12,363
475
126

It is a ferrite core - used for suppressing electromagnetic interference. Basically it keeps noise from interfering with the signal. At signal frequencies ( which you want to pass ) the core is low impedance and allows the signal to pass. At high frequencies which may interfere with signal reception the ferrite presents a high impedance and attenuates the noise.

http://www.fair-rite.com/newfair/pdf/CUP%20Paper.pdf
 

BespinReactorShaft

Diamond Member
Jun 9, 2004
3,190
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What dictates whether a manufacturer includes a ferrite core with a particular cable? Is it dependent on the peripheral type/specs, regulatory requirements that affect certain countries/manufacturers but not others, or simply how it affects profit margins?
 

Peter

Elite Member
Oct 15, 1999
9,640
1
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Peripheral cables are one major path for EMI emissions out of a computer. Those ferrit beads catch them. Note this is not about protecting the signal that is supposed to be on the cable, it is about keeping those that shouldn't from radiating out into the open.