In modern industrial automation systems, human-machine interaction interfaces (such as touch screens and control panels) often need to be deployed at on-site operating stations tens of meters away from the host. However, the physical layer specifications of standard USB cables strictly limit their reliable transmission distance to within 5 meters - a shortcoming that has long plagued engineers who need to deploy USB peripherals such as touchscreens, keyboards, and code readers over long distances. The Beckhoff CU8800-0010 USB extender Tx (transmitter) is designed to address this pain point by extending USB 1.1 signals up to 50 meters through a standard CAT5 network cable, while supporting both full speed (12 Mbit/s) and low speed (1.5 Mbit/s) rate modes. This article will provide an in-depth analysis of the working principle, mechanical installation specifications, LED status diagnosis system, typical topology configuration, and troubleshooting path of the extender based on the technical manual CU8800-0010, providing on-site engineers with a full stack technical reference from deployment to maintenance.
Chapter 1: Product Positioning and Core Technology Principles
1.1 Resolve USB physical layer distance limitation
The USB 1.1 standard specifies a maximum transmission distance of 5 meters for a single cable segment, which is limited by the attenuation and delay of signals in copper media. Although theoretically, the total length can be extended to about 30 meters (5 segments x 5 meters+internal delay of 5 hubs) by connecting up to 5 USB hubs in series, in industrial settings, this "daisy chain" scheme not only increases the number of faulty nodes, but also makes it difficult to meet the requirements for real-time HMI applications in terms of signal delay and reliability.
The CU8800-0010 USB extender Tx (transmitter) adopts a point-to-point extension architecture: it converts the D+/D differential signal of USB into a physical layer format suitable for long-distance transmission, sends the signal to the matching receiver (CU8850 or CU8860) through a standard CAT5 network cable (up to 50 meters), and restores it to a standard USB signal at the remote end. This solution increases the transmission distance by an order of magnitude while ensuring the integrity of the USB 1.1 protocol.
1.2 Overview of Core Features
No need for external power supply: The transmitting end is directly powered by a USB port (5 V DC, maximum consumption 25 mA), greatly simplifying on-site wiring.
CAT5 Ethernet cable medium: using common and low-cost shielded or unshielded CAT5 cables, with a maximum extension distance of 50 meters.
Industrial compact design: With a width of only about 34mm, it can be directly mounted on a 35mm DIN rail (compliant with EN 50022), which is consistent with the size of the Beckhoff bus terminal module.
Compatible with USB 1.1 full speed and low speed: Supports two speed modes of 12 Mbit/s (full speed) and 1.5 Mbit/s (low speed), covering the vast majority of HMI peripherals such as touch screens, keyboards, and mice.
Built in LED status diagnosis: 5 LED indicator lights provide real-time feedback on power, speed, hanging, and remote power supply status, making it easy to quickly locate faults on site.
Chapter 2: Detailed Explanation of Hardware Interfaces and Pin Definitions
2.1 USB upstream port (X10, Type B socket)
CU8800-0010 is connected to an industrial PC or USB host through a standard USB Type B interface. This interface undertakes two core tasks:
Data transmission: carrying D+/D - differential signal pairs.
Device power supply: Get 5 V DC power from the USB host (maximum 500 mA input, this device consumes only 25 mA).
Pin signal description
1 VCC+5 V DC (from USB host)
2 Data - Negative end of differential data
3 Data+positive end of differential data
4 GND power supply ground
Shield Shield (connected to the chassis ground)
Key operational constraint: The USB connection between CU8800-0010 and PC must be completed before the industrial PC is turned on, otherwise the PC may issue an "overcurrent" warning message due to the detection of unrecognized USB devices during self check startup.
2.2 USB Extended Output Port (X20, RJ45 socket)
The transmitting end is connected to a CAT5 Ethernet cable through a standard RJ45 interface (X20) to convert USB signals into an electrical format suitable for long-distance transmission. Its pin definition is different from standard Ethernet, and it is strictly prohibited to connect this port to any Ethernet switch, hub, or network device - it is only used for point-to-point direct connection with the matching receiver (CU8850/CU8860).
Pin signal description
1 15V USB-E+15V power supply (supply to receiving end)
2 GND power supply ground
3 Tx USB Rx+transmitting end receiving data positive end
4 Rx USB Tx+transmitter sends positive data
5 Rx USB Tx - transmitting end sends data negative end
6 Tx USB Rx - transmitting end receiving data negative end
7 15V USB-E+15V power supply (supply and receive end)
8 GND power supply ground