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{{Short description|Electronic used in particle generators}}
{{refimprove|date=September 2013}}
[[File:Short Nuclear Instrumentation Crate - side view.jpg|thumb|A NIM Crate with various modules]]
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=== RENATRAN ===
The very first standard for crate electronics was Renatran, which itself was derived from the Esone Standard published in 1964.<ref>{{cite
The Renatran system
Each plug-in units had the dials, indicators and connectors on the front, and a single screw-mated 24 pin connector (Souriau 8196-17, no longer produced) on the rear to connect to the back-plane. Certain units had additional connectors on the rear, either doubled from the front panel for a more permanent installation, or extra ports for specific purposes, such as daisy chaining counting modules or linking level comparators together. A plug-in unit generally accomplished a single task, such as giving out a clock signal, inverting signal polarity, attenuating or amplifying signals, and more.
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=== FASTBUS ===
[[FASTBUS]]<ref name="FNAL intro to Fastbus">{{cite web|title=AN INTRODUCTION TO FASTBUS|url=http://www-esd.fnal.gov/esd/catalog/intro/introfb.htm|publisher=FNAL|accessdate=21 September 2013|url-status=dead|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20130923010620/http://www-esd.fnal.gov/esd/catalog/intro/introfb.htm|archivedate=23 September 2013}}</ref> is a crate/module standard developed later than the other two for high-speed parallel data acquisition.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Barsotti |first1=Edward J. |title="FASTBUS" - A DESCRIPTION, A STATUS REPORT, AND A SUMMARY OF ONGOING PROJECTS |url=https://inis.iaea.org/collection/NCLCollectionStore/_Public/13/651/13651016.pdf |publisher=FNAL |accessdate=22 August 2018 |date=1981}}</ref>
FASTBUS modules are much taller than the other types of crate modules, so the crates are correspondingly taller.
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This allows to perform an array of maintenance task remotely.
The standard is governed by the [[PICMG]] consortium.
<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.picmg.org/openstandards/advancedtca/|title=PICMG | AdvancedTCA}}</ref>
The requirements for cards to be used in AdvancedTCA crates, are called [[Advanced Mezzanine Card]]s (AMCs) and are specified independently in their own standard.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.picmg.org/openstandards/advanced-mezzanine-card/|title=PICMG | Advanced MC®}}</ref>
===MicroTCA===
[[MicroTCA]] is an open, modular standard, based upon [[Advanced Telecommunications Computing Architecture|AdvancedTCA]], but with a smaller form factor.
Initially developed for applications in telecommunications, it has since outgrown its initial purpose by developing modules for military, aerospace and scientific use.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.picmg.org/openstandards/microtca/|title=PICMG | MicroTCA}}</ref>
As AdvancedTCA, it uses [[Advanced Mezzanine Card|AMCs]], which makes cards interchangeable between those two.
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