Ransburg, Allen-bradley remote i/o (rio), Rio protocol – Ransburg DynaFlow Programmers Manual User Manual

Page 11: Rio discrete i/o

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ALLEN-BRADLEY

REMOTE I/O (RIO)

RIO Operation

The RIO interface contains a proprietary Al-

len-Bradley application specific IC (ASIC) that

is licensed to Ransburg. This ASIC formats the

information to and from the RIO link.

RIO PROTOCOL

The DynaFlow Interface Module communicates

with Allen-Bradley PLC's using remote I/O protocol.

Two types of data are supported:

1. Discrete I/O

2. Block Transfers

RIO DISCRETE I/O

There are five (5) words of discrete inputs and five

(5) words of discrete outputs possible for each

DynaFlow Interface Module. Each DynaFlow

Interface Module supports up to four (4) Channel

Cards and each Channel Card has two (2) Chan-

nels for a total of eight (8) Channels. The PLC

discrete I/O RIO output bits are logical OR'd with

the discrete I/O hard-wired signals so that either

hard-wired signals or PLC control signals

may control the system. Likewise, the DynaFlow

hard-wired outputs are sent to the PLC via the

discrete I/O RIO inputs.

The DynaFlow System uses two-slot addressing

and appears to a PLC as a collection of 8-bit

modules of I/O. In other words, each module has

8 inputs and 8 outputs. The Interface Module

appears as a single 8-bit I/O module in slot 1,

or the odd slot of a pair of slots. Therefore, the

Interface Module, which reports the System I/O

signals, uses the high byte of word 0.

Each DynaFlow Channel Card appears as two

8-bit I/O modules. The first channel appears in

the low byte and the second channel appears in

the high byte of each successive word in the RIO

discrete I/O space.

The following table describes the RIO signals

with their respective bit locations in the discrete

I/O RIO words.

7

DynaFlow

Programer's Manual - Introduction

Ransburg

LN-9406-00.3

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