9 - connecting the i/o link, Chapter objectives, Connecting the remote i/o link – Rockwell Automation 5000,D50006.2.10 PI INSTALLATION MANUAL User Manual

Page 114: Connecting the i/o link

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Chapter

9

9-1

Connecting the I/O Link

This chapter describes how to connect an I/O chassis to the RS.

The Medium

In an I/O link, the RS and the I/O adapters communicate with one another
through 1770-CD twinaxial cable which provides a physical bus medium.
You can use the twinaxial cable to form the bus connection between them
in either a daisy-chain or a trunkline/dropline configuration. This chapter
describes how to connect a daisy-chain configuration. See publication
1770-6.2.1 for information on how to construct a
trunkline/dropline configuration.

For each I/O link of the scanner module, you can individually select to
have a data-transmission rate of 57.6k bit/s, 115.2k bit/s, or 230k bit/s. At
each I/O adapter, you must select the same rate as you select for the link at
the RS.

A higher transmission rate provides a faster I/O update. However, the
higher the rate of transmission, the shorter the maximum cable length.

If the data transmission rate is:

Then the maximum cable length is:

57.6k bit/s

10,000 ft.

115.2k bit/s

5,000 ft.

230.4k bit/s

2,500 ft.

Cabling Configuration

A general cabling configuration is shown in

Figure 9.1

. The cable has a

signal conductor with blue insulation, a signal conductor with clear
insulation, and a bare shield drain wire. Observe the color code
convention used in the following figures to provide the proper signal
polarity. At each end device, connect a termination resistor.

For a transmission rate of:

Connect an:

57.6k bit/s

150ĆOhm termination resistor

115.2k bit/s

150ĆOhm termination resistor

230.4k bit/s

82ĆOhm termination resistor

Chapter Objectives

Connecting the Remote

I/O Link

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