Delta RMC151 User Manual

Page 556

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RMC70/150 and RMCTools User Manual

Fig. 1: Point-to-Point RS-232

Network

Fig. 2: Point-to-Point RS-485 Network


Figure 2 shows biasing and termination. Termination and biasing can be left out of

networks at the expense of maximum cable distance and noise immunity. See RS-485

Termination and Biasing for details.

Multi-Drop

Only RS-485 supports multi-drop. Multi-drop is the connecting of multiple slaves with a

single master. Slaves should be chained together. Neither a star topology nor a chain with

long stubs (wires from the main chain to the device) should be used. These topologies will

cause excessive ringing on the network and unreliable data transmission.
The number of devices that can be connected to the network is dictated by the number of

unit loads that each represents. According to the TIA/EIA-485-A specification, there can

be a maximum of 32 unit loads connected to a single network. Each RMC represents unit

load for a total of 124 RMCs on the network, assuming the host is a unit load.
Figure 3 shows a typical multi-drop chain:

Fig. 3: Daisy-Chained RS-485 Network

Note:

Termination should only be located at the extreme ends of the network:


Figure 4 shows one host with two RMC controllers in a daisy-chained two-wire RS-485

configuration:

536

Delta Computer Systems, Inc.

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