Experiment No. 14 B
Experiment No. 14 B
Experiment No. 14 B
SUBMITTED BY:
CANILAO, ARA CHARLYN E.
REGOJOS, MATT I.
SEBASTIAN, JOHN EMIL C.
SUBMITTED TO:
DECEMBER 7, 2016
I. DISCUSSION OF RELATED THEORY
CUSTOMIZED TRANSMISSION PROTOCOL
Point-to-point link via communication processors
Point-to-point link via communication processors (CPs) is an extremely powerful and low-cost
alternative to bus systems.The advantage of point-to-point links over bus systems is especially
significant when only a few (RS 485) devices are to be connected to the SIMATIC S7. The CPs
can also easily link third-party systems to the SIMATIC S7. Thanks to the great flexibility of the
CPs, different physical transmission media, transmission rates or even customized
transmission protocols can be implemented.
The interface modules for the S7-300 are available in three versions, each with one interface for
the different physical transmission media.
All point-to-point communications modules use up to 4 protocol drivers which are integrated in
the operating system. The CPs, like all other S7 modules, are parameterized from a
programming device or PC via the central processing unit (CPU).
Digital Transmission
Digital transmission is quite different from analog transmission. For one thing, the signal is
much simpler. Rather than being a continuously variable wave form, it is a series of discrete
pulses, representing one bits and zero bits. Each computer uses a coding scheme that defines
what combinations of ones and zeros constitute all the characters in a character set (that is,
lowercase letters, uppercase letters, punctuation marks, digits, keyboard control functions).
Digital transmission
How the ones and zeros are physically carried through the network depends on whether the
network is electrical or optical. In electrical networks, one bits are represented as high voltage,
and zero bits are represented as null, or low voltage. In optical networks, one bits are
represented by the presence of light, and zero bits are represented by the absence of light. The
ones and zerosthe on/off conditionsare carried through the network, and the receiving
device repackages the ones and zeros to determine what character is being represented.
Because a digital signal is easier to reproduce than an analog signal, we can treat it with a little
less care in the network. Rather than use dumb amplifiers, digital networks use regenerative
repeaters, also referred to as signal regenerators. As a strong, clean, digital pulse travels over a
distance, it loses power, similar to an analog signal. The digital pulse, like an analog signal, is
eroded by impairments in the network. But the weakened and impaired signal enters the
regenerative repeater, where the repeater examines the signal to determine what was supposed
to be a one and what was supposed to be a zero. The repeater regenerates a new signal to pass
on to the next point in the network, in essence eliminating noise and thus vastly improving the
error rate.
transmission efficiencies
II. REFERENCES