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RS-422/449
RS-422 is a Recommended Standard (RS) describing the electrical
characteristics of balanced voltage digital interface circuits that
support higher bandwidths than traditional serial protocols like RS-232.
RS-422 is also known as EIA-422.
The RS-449 standard (also known as EIA-449) is compatible with
RS-422 signal levels. The EIA created RS-449 to detail the DB-37 connector
pinout and define a set of modem control signals for regulating flow
control and line status.
The RS-422/499 line protocol runs in balanced mode, allowing
serial communications to extend over distances of up to 4,000 feet
(1.2 km) and at very fast speeds of up to 10 Mbps.
In an RS-422/499-based system, a single master device can communicate
with up to 10 slave devices in the system. To accommodate this
configuration, RS-422/499 supports the following kinds of transmission:
- Half-duplex transmission—In half-duplex transmission
mode, transmissions occur in only one direction at a time. Each transmission
requires a proper handshake before it is sent. This operation is typical
of a balanced system in which two devices are connected by a single
connection.
- Full-duplex transmission—In full duplex transmission
mode, multiple transmissions can occur simultaneously so that devices
can transmit and receive at the same time. This operation is essential
when a single master in a point-to-multipoint system must communicate
with multiple receivers.
- Multipoint transmission—RS-422/449 allows only a
single master in a multipoint system. The master can communicate to
all points in a multipoint system, and the other points must communicate
with each other through the master.
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