October– Harwin will be exhibiting its latest compact and reliable board-to-board connectors for high-performance embedded and industrial designs at the inaugural Embedded World North America exhibition and conference.
Embedded World North America will run from 8 to 10 October 2024 at the Austin Convention Center in Austin, Texas. Visitors to the Harwin booth (2122) will have the opportunity to see advanced board-to-board connectors that address demanding size, weight and reliability criteria while supporting high data rates and offering compatibility with high-speed, automated manufacturing.
Among the Harwin technologies on show during the event will be the durable, high-performance Kontrol series of 1.27mm pitch PCB connectors, designed for industrial applications, along with the newly introduced Flecto range of fine-pitch, high-pin-count floating connectors.
The Kontrol family features flexible, rugged and space-saving board-to-board and board-to-cable connectors designed to withstand the rigorous demands of industrial applications ranging from factory automation systems to hand-held equipment. Flecto has been specifically designed to address the data and power transfer demands of high-performance applications while providing the positional tolerance needed to support high-speed automated assembly of PCBs with multiple connector pairs.
“Microcontrollers, microprocessors, memory and software are typically top of mind when developing embedded systems, but the connectors used to transfer system data and power also play a critical role in the end application’s functionality, performance, size, weight and reliability,” says Jessica Knight, Harwin’s Vice President of Sales, Americas. “Embedded World North America is the perfect event to highlight how our comprehensive portfolio of products help engineers address these criteria in advanced embedded designs.”
Alongside Kontrol and Flecto products, Harwin will also be demonstrating a wide range of other robust and reliable connector technologies for applications that range from submarines to satellites, industrial automation to uncrewed vehicles, and medical equipment to automotive electronics.