Echelon Mini EVK User Manual

Page 73

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Feedback loops allow for tied control; the lamp can for example sense the

light level and provide the feedback signal based on real measurement
(rather than assumption).

Simple feedback loops contain a single source and a single destination. Creating

the feedback connection is straight-forward, as shown in Figure 4.5.

Figure 4.5 Simple Feedback Loops

With multiple sources or destinations, however, two distinct shapes of feedback

connections are possible: a daisy-chained feedback connection, and a star-shaped
feedback connection. These are shown in Figures 4.6 and 4.7

Figure 4.6 Daisy-chained Feedback Connection

Figure 4.7 Star-shaped Feedback Connection

The daisy-chained feedback loop is often considered inferior, mostly because the

loop breaks as a result of a single failure in the entire chain (subject to the

application, this might actually be desirable behaviour), and also due to the fact
that changes take time to propagate through the chain. For example, a large

number of lights will not change the state simultaneously, but one after the

other.
However, an outstanding advantage of the daisy-chain feedback loop is the

simple and elegant transport control provided. The initiator device (switch B, for
example) only needs to await exactly one feedback network variable update to

know the loop has been completed.

Mini EVK User’s Guide

67

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