DescriptionThe RS-422 interface is an excellent choice for communicating in noisy environments and over a distance. However, when the distance exceeds the RS-422 capability for reliable data transfer, you must add a repeater. The repeater circuit in Figure 1, which must operate from batteries when...
A5016: DescriptionThe RS-422 interface is an excellent choice for communicating in noisy environments and over a distance. However, when the distance exceeds the RS-422 capability for reliable data transfe...
SeekIC Buyer Protection PLUS - newly updated for 2013!
268 Transactions
All payment methods are secure and covered by SeekIC Buyer Protection PLUS.
The RS-422 interface is an excellent choice for communicating in noisy environments and over a distance. However, when the distance exceeds the RS-422 capability for reliable data transfer, you must add a repeater. The repeater circuit in Figure 1, which must operate from batteries when no power supply is available, draws less than 3µA of current from a 3V supply.
Low standby power and true fail-safe operation are the key features of RS-422 in this application. U1 and U2 drive their receiver outputs (RO) high when the RS-422 inputs are open circuited or terminated and undriven. An incoming data byte on the differential inputs A1 and B1 forces a transition on RO of U1, and a state machine (right half of the Figure 1 schematic) is latched ON by the falling edge of RO.
The state machine asserts a high level at U2's driver-enable pin, causing the incoming data byte to be retransmitted from U2 at full RS-422 levels.
The state machine watches for transitions on RO. When a data-byte transfer is complete (as indicated by no falling edges within a time delay internal to the state machine), the state machine resets itself in anticipation of the next data byte from either side of the interface. An incoming data burst (Figure 2, top) is retransmitted as outputs A2 (bottom trace) and B2 (middle trace). U2 de-asserts those outputs 700µs after the final transition. Other delays can be implemented by adjusting R1/C1 and R2/C2 as shown in Figure 1.