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Is there a particular reason RS-232 uses 12V signals (well, sort of) rather than some (any?) other value?

It was formally defined in 1960, so that places it before the era of any standardized ICs like RTL that would have suggested lower voltages. PMOS did use 12V, but that was a decade later and I suspect it's more likely they selected 12V because RS-232 existed rather than the other way around.

There may be minor reasons for this, for instance, there were lots of 12V power supplies available due to it being a common battery voltage, and one might use a car battery as a line conditioner for instance. But that seems unlikely.

The idea that later versions sometimes drove the signals at 5V instead of 12 suggests there is a strong reason to match the internal voltages to the interface. So this leads to the possibility that the earlier tube-based computers, or at least the transistorized machines, used 12V. But looking over examples of 2nd generation machines I don't see an obvious signal to that effect.

So why 12V and not, say 5, or 6, or 24?

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    Total wild guess: It came out of the telecom industry which used dry/wet-cell style battery backup for continuous operation ... 12v was easy to come by? I'll be interested to know the actual reason.
    – davidbak
    Commented May 6, 2021 at 13:46
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    The 'strong' reason to use 5V is simply to save cost. Why adding the need for a 12V PSU when short distance, like to a printer, works quite fine at 5V as well?
    – Raffzahn
    Commented May 6, 2021 at 13:51
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    Nitpicking: RS-232 doesn't say +/-12V. It in fact says max.: +/-15Volts, min: +-3V. +/-12V is just a convenient in-between that can be assumed to be available in a computer environment and also provides ample elbow room for STN (early memories used 12V as well)
    – tofro
    Commented May 6, 2021 at 13:52
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    If "min +/- 3 volts" was reliably applicable in practice, no 1980s and later small computer maker would have bothered with all the added complexity to provide +/-9V and higher levels .... but most of them did :) Commented May 7, 2021 at 0:20
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    @rackandboneman Only receiver must interpret down to +/- 3V properly, the transmitter must still be able to transmit at least +/- 5V into a receiver of 3kohm load. Later equipment did not use separate supplies but used single tranceiver chip with built-in charge pump to generate the necessary +/- voltages from single 5V or 3.3V supply.
    – Justme
    Commented May 7, 2021 at 7:57

2 Answers 2

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There are maybe a few points left out here.

  • RS-232 was first recommended in 1960.

That's long before there were low-voltage devices. In fact, it was originally designed to work with electro-mechanical, not electronic devices, like TTY.

  • RS-232 uses directed voltages.

So it's not simply 0V and 12V but +12V and -12V. Quite useful to work with coils.

  • It does not specify ±12V.

RS-232 does not specify ±12V, but defines ±3..15V as operating range and forbids any voltages below 3V and above 25V

  • It's a voltage based interface, so more is better.

Unlike a current loop, where the burden of handling loss through resistance is handled by the sender (within reason). A current supplied in a current based interface will always reach the receiver at the same level. Voltage supplied in a voltage based interface gets diminished by distance. ​This is simply as line length is directly proportional with voltage drop. The higher the supplied voltage is (within reason), the higher the chance the voltage at the receivers end is still above the minimum threshold.

  • The receiver end may be a solenoid.

Yes, it needs to be repeated, as it's the reason why voltage drop can not be ignored. This interface was supposed to work with electro-mechanical devices, one where coils are used. In an amplifier-based detector circuit, the resistance of the detector can be made rather high, shifting voltage loss toward the detector. with a coil this is not possible the same way, so the mentioned line losses are a major concern.

  • 12V is a convenient value within the 3..15V range

12V goes on the high side of what's allowed, leaving much room to drop over the line, while at the same time leaving some room for tolerances toward higher voltages. After all, making a good and stable supply in 1960 was a much higher effort than today.

Bottom line: It's a nice ballpark value serving multiple requirements.


The 'strong' reason to use 5V in later (and local) setup simply to save cost. Why add the need for a 12V PSU when short distance, like to a printer, works quite fine at 5V as well? Even more so as modern circuitry can deliver a good high impedance, so cable losses are no longer an issue.

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    "defines +/- 3..15V" — "forbids … below 3V and above 25V" — is this a typo or was the lower range always 3V but the upper range different criteria for 15V max vs. 25V max?
    – natevw
    Commented May 6, 2021 at 20:45
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    @natevw No typo. Two different kinds of illegal. The area below 3V (-3..+3V) is simply not a valid signal, so should not be detected as a signal. The +/-25V regulation is a security margin. While standard conform devices should not apply more than +/- 15V, they must be able to cope with up to +/- 25V without malfunctioning.
    – Raffzahn
    Commented May 6, 2021 at 22:00
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    "should not be detected as a signal"; rather, need not be reliably detected as a signal. It may be - the standard does not require the receiver to give any guarantee in this case.
    – poncho
    Commented May 6, 2021 at 22:06
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    The RS232 standard specifically says that the load must not be inductive, so coils should not be directly driven with the interface signals. Besides rated reveiver impedances are from 3k to 7k ohms so drivers are not expected to encounter loads outside that range. Driver only has to generate rated range from +/- 5V to +/- 15V when the rated load is connected, so unloaded receiver is allowed to go up to 25V. The receiver side must properly receive +/- 3V to. +/- 15V range which allows losses in wiring. The receiver must handle +/- 25V without damage, it does not need to work at those levels.
    – Justme
    Commented May 7, 2021 at 6:51
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    Re, "RS-232...defines +/- 3..15V" The current standard is RS-232-F. Before that, there was RS-232, RS-232-A, RS-232-B, C, D, and E. I think I read somewhere that the original standard required +/- 25V signals. Later revisions narrowed the minimum voltage swing down to +/- 12V, then +/- 5V, and most recently, +/- 3V. Commented May 8, 2021 at 0:29
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The question is posed with the assumption that RS-232 was always ±12V.

Unfortunately, the short answer is, it was not always ±12V.

The specification requires that an RS-232 driver outputs a minimum of ±5V and maximum of ±15V when connected with the specified load of one RS-232 receiver. The output is allowed to have up to ±25V when no receiver is connected. The specified receiver load is also within the range of 3k to 7k ohms, so very little current is needed. The receiver must operate properly with ±3V signals to allow for noise margin, voltage drop in wires, and ground voltage difference, and the receiver must not be damaged from ±25V signals being applied.

This allows the RS-232 driver to operate with a wide range of voltages and implemented in any way that simply is within all the electrical parameters listed in the specification. Back in the 1960s when the standard was first written, the interface could have been implemented in various different ways using discrete components, instead of integrated circuits.

I suspect the misconception that it was only ±12V may come from the fact that many common devices that most people are familiar with like the IBM PC in the 80s and compatible successors did have ±12V supply voltages available, which were directly used for RS-232 transceivers when they required separate supplies.

Many devices simply used whatever supplies they happened to have available, like the TI/99 PHP1700 RS-232 Sidecar Interface used ±8V, so it definitely was not ±12V.

Later on when technology advanced and laptops and desktop motherboards started to get RS-232 ports integrated to motherboard, at some point they started to use charge-pump based RS-232 transceivers, which worked with single 5V or 3.3V supply as they generated the driver voltages internally. The charge pump based devices also did not use ±12V, perhaps something between ±7V and ±9V. The details are in the respective datasheets such as MAX202, MAX232, MAX3232 etc, or compatible clones from other manufacturers.

The RS-232 standard also specifically mentions that the RS-232 interface inputs must not be inductive, so the interface signals may not be directly used for driving electromechanical coils like relays or solenoids, and as per the specification, not much power can be drawn from a driver for driving loads anyway.

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