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A current loop describes two different electrical signalling schemes. Digital
For digital serial communications a current loop is a communication interface that uses current instead of voltage for signaling. Current loops can be used over moderately long distances (tens of kilometres), and can be interfaced with optically isolated links. A digital system is one that uses discrete values (often electrical voltages), especially those representable as binary numbers, or non-numeric symbols such as letters or icons, for input, processing, transmission, storage, or display, rather than a continuous spectrum of values (ie, as in an analog system). ...
In telecommunications and computer science, serial communications is the process of sending data one bit at one time, sequentially, over a communications channel or computer bus. ...
In electricity, current is the rate of flow of charges, usually through a metal wire or some other electrical conductor. ...
International safety symbol Caution, risk of electric shock (ISO 3864), colloquially known as high voltage symbol. ...
In electronics, an optical isolator is a device that uses a short optical transmission path to transfer a signal between elements of a circuit while keeping them electrically isolated -- since the signal goes from an electrical signal to an optical signal back to an electrical signal, electrical contact along the...
Long before the RS-232 standard, current loops were used to send digital data in serial form for teleprinters. More than two teletypes could be connected on a single circuit allowing a simple form of networking. Older teletypes used a 60 mA current loop. Later machines, such as the ASR33 teleprinter, operated on a lower 20 mA current level and most early minicomputers featured a 20 mA current loop interface instead of an RS-232 port. The original IBM PC Serial port card had provisions for a 20 mA current loop. A digital current loop uses the absence of current for high (space or break), and the presence of current in the loop for low (mark). RS-232 (also referred to as EIA RS-232C or V.24) is a standard for serial binary data interchange between a DTE (Data terminal equipment) and a DCE (Data communication equipment). ...
The asynchronous start-stop is the more common of two basic modes of teletypewriter operation, allowing a common means of encoding characters over a serial link such as RS-232. ...
Teletype machines in World War II A teleprinter (teletypewriter, teletype or TTY for TeleTYpe/TeleTYpewriter) is a now largely obsolete electro-mechanical typewriter which can be used to communicate typed messages from point to point through a simple electrical communications channel, often just a pair of wires. ...
Current can be measured by a galvanometer, via the deflection of a magnetic needle in the magnetic field created by the current. ...
Introduced about 1963, Teletype Corporations ASR33 was a very popular model of teleprinter. ...
Teletype machines in World War II A teleprinter (teletypewriter, teletype or TTY for TeleTYpe/TeleTYpewriter) is a now largely obsolete electro-mechanical typewriter which can be used to communicate typed messages from point to point through a simple electrical communications channel, often just a pair of wires. ...
Minicomputer (colloquially, mini) is a largely obsolete term for a class of multi-user computers which make up the middle range of the computing spectrum, in between the largest multi-user systems (traditionally, mainframe computers) and the smallest single-user systems (microcomputers or personal computers). ...
IBM PC (IBM 5150) with keyboard and green screen monochrome monitor (IBM 5151), running MS-DOS 5. ...
A male DE-9 connector used for a serial port on a PC style computer. ...
The maximum resistance for a current loop is limited by the available voltage. Current loop interfaces usually use voltages much higher than those found on an RS 232 interface, and cannot be interconnected with voltage-type inputs without some form of level translator circuit. Electrical resistance is a measure of the degree to which an electrical component opposes the passage of current. ...
MIDI (Musical Instrument Digital Interface) is a digital current loop interface. MIDI (Musical Instrument Digital Interface) is an industry-standard electronic communications protocol that enables electronic musical instruments, computers and other equipment to communicate, control and synchronize with each other in real time. ...
Analog Analog current loops are used for any purpose where a device needs to be either monitored or controlled remotely over a pair of conductors. Only one current level can be present at any time. 4-20 mA ("four to twenty milliamp current loop") is an analog electrical transmission standard for industrial instrumentation and communication. The signal is a current loop where 4 mA represents zero percent signal and 20 mA represents the one hundred percent signal. A "mA" is a milliampere, or 1/1000 of an ampere. An analog or analogue signal is an allergy continuous in both time and amplitude. ...
The article on electrical energy is located elsewhere. ...
For other uses, see Instrumentation (disambiguation). ...
In physics, the ampere (symbol: A, often informally abbreviated to amp) is the SI base unit used to measure electrical currents. ...
Current can be measured by a galvanometer, via the deflection of a magnetic needle in the magnetic field created by the current. ...
The "live zero" at 4 mA allows the receiving instrumentation to distinguish between a zero signal and a broken wire or a dead instrument. This standard was developed in the 1950s and is still widely used in industry today. Benefits of the 4-20 mA convention are that it is widely used by many manufacturers, relatively low-cost to implement, and it can reject many forms of electrical noise. The live zero also allows low-power instruments to be directly powered from the loop, saving the cost of extra wires. Current loop is also much easier to understand and debug than more complicated digital fieldbuses. Using fieldbuses and solving related problems usually requires much more education and understanding than required by simple current loop solutions. This does not cite any references or sources. ...
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A Fieldbus is an industrial network system for real-time distributed control. ...
Additional digital communication to the device can be added to current loop using HART Protocol. Digital process buses such as FOUNDATION Fieldbus and Profibus may replace analog current loops. The HART Communications Protocol (Highway Addressable Remote Transducer Protocol) is an early Fieldbus or Industrial Automation protocol. ...
FOUNDATION fieldbus is an all-digital, serial, two-way communications system that serves as the base-level network in a plant or factory automation environment. ...
PROFIBUS (Process Field Bus) is the most popular type of fieldbus with worldwide more than 10 million nodes (2004) in use. ...
Process-control use For industrial process control instruments, analog 4-20 mA and 10-50 mA current loops are commonly used for analog signaling, with 4 mA representing the lowest end of the range and 20 mA the highest. The key advantages of the current loop are that the accuracy of the signal is not affected by voltage drop in the interconnecting wiring, and that the loop can supply operating power to the device. Even if there is significant electrical resistance in the line, the current loop transmitter will maintain the proper current, up to its maximum voltage capability. The live-zero represented by 4 mA allows the receiving instrument to detect some failures of the loop, and also allows transmitter devices to be powered by the same current loop (called two-wire transmitters). Such instruments are used to measure pressure, temperature, flow, pH or other process variables. A current loop can also be used to control a valve positioner or other output actuator. An analog current loop can be converted to a voltage input with a precision resistor. Since input terminals of instruments may have one side of the current loop input tied to the chassis ground (earth), analog isolators may be required when connecting several devices in series. An analog or analogue signal is an allergy continuous in both time and amplitude. ...
Electrical resistance is a measure of the degree to which an electrical component opposes the passage of current. ...
The use of water pressure - the Captain Cook Memorial Jet in Lake Burley Griffin in Canberra, Australia. ...
This article includes a list of works cited or a list of external links, but its sources remain unclear because it lacks in-text citations. ...
flOw is a Flash game created by Jenova Chen and Nicholas Clark. ...
The correct title of this article is . ...
A three-dimensional actuator modelled using elastica theory. ...
Taking the point of view of the source of current for the loop, devices may be classified as active (supplying power) or passive (relying on loop power). For example, a chart recorder may provide loop power to a transmitter instrument such as a pressure transmitter. The pressure transmitter modulates the current on the loop to send the signal to the strip chart recorder, but does not in itself supply power to the loop and so is passive. Another loop may contain two passive chart recorders, a passive pressure transmitter, and a 24 V battery. (The battery is the active device). Panel mount displays and chart recorders are commonly termed 'indicator devices' or 'process monitors'. Several passive indicator devices may be connected in series, but a loop must have only one transmitter device and only one power source (active device). A chart recorder is an electromechanical device that records an electrical or mechanical input trend onto a piece of paper (the chart). ...
The relationship between current value and process variable measurement is set by calibration, which assigns different ranges of engineering units to the span between 4 and 20 mA. Occasionally the mapping between engineering units and current was inverted, so that 4 mA represented the maximum and 20 mA the minimum.
Long circuits Analog current loops were occasionally carried between buildings in telephone cables leased from the local telephone company. 4-20 mA loops were more common in the days of analog telephony. These circuits require end-to-end direct current (DC) continuity. DC continuity is not available over a microwave radio, optical fiber, or a multiplexed telephone circuit connection. Basic DC theory reminds us that current is the same at all points in a circuit. It was common to see 4-20 mA circuits that had loop lengths in miles or circuits working over telephone cable pairs that were longer than ten thousand feet end-to-end. There are still legacy systems in place using this technology. In Bell System circuits, voltages up to 125V DC were employed. The Bell System was a trademark and service mark used by the United States telecommunications company American Telephone & Telegraph Company (AT&T) and its affiliated companies to co-brand their extensive circuit-switched telephone network and their affiliations with each other. ...
Discrete control Discrete control functions can be represented by discrete levels of current sent over a loop. This would allow multiple control functions to be operated over a single pair of wires. Currents required for a specific function vary from one application or manufacturer to another. There is no specific current that is tied to a single meaning. It is almost universal that 0 mA indicates the circuit has failed. In the case of a fire alarm, 6 mA could be normal, 15 mA could mean a fire has been detected, and 0 mA would produce a trouble indication, telling the monitoring site the alarm circuit had failed. Some devices, such as two-way radio remote control consoles, can reverse the polarity of currents and can multiplex audio onto a DC current. A two-way radio is simply a radio that can both transmit and receive (a transceiver). ...
These devices can be employed for any remote control need a designer might imagine. For example, a current loop could actuate an evacuation siren or command synchronized traffic signals. It has been suggested that Fire siren be merged into this article or section. ...
Traffic lights will sometimes differ where there are several lanes of traffic. ...
Two-way radio use Current loop circuits are one possible way used to control radio base stations at distant sites. The two-way radio industry calls this type of remote control DC remote. This name comes from the need for DC circuit continuity between the control point and the radio base station. The purpose current loop remote control is to save the cost of extra pairs of wires between the operating point and the radio transceiver. Some equipment, such as the Motorola MSF-5000 base station, uses currents below 4 mA for some functions. An alternative type, the Tone remote, is more complex but requires only an audio path between control point and base station. [1] Image File history File links Size of this preview: 800 Ã 533 pixelsFull resolution (1881 Ã 1254 pixel, file size: 987 KB, MIME type: image/png) Photo by David Jordan: please credit when reusing this image. ...
Image File history File links Size of this preview: 800 Ã 533 pixelsFull resolution (1881 Ã 1254 pixel, file size: 987 KB, MIME type: image/png) Photo by David Jordan: please credit when reusing this image. ...
Motorola Inc. ...
A television remote control A DVD player remote control A remote control is an electronic device used for the remote operation of a machine. ...
This article or section includes a list of works cited or a list of external links, but its sources remain unclear because it lacks in-text citations. ...
Look up Speaker in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. ...
The term base station can be used in the context of land surveying, wireless computer networking, and wireless communications. ...
The term base station can be used in the context of land surveying, wireless computer networking, and wireless communications. ...
The term base station can be used in the context of land surveying, wireless computer networking, and wireless communications. ...
A Motorola T-1300 series remote control is built in a telephone housing. ...
For example, a taxi dispatch base station might be physically located on the rooftop of an eight-story building. The taxi company office might be in the basement of a different building nearby. The office would have a remote control unit that would operate the taxi company base station over a current loop circuit. The circuit would normally be over a telephone line or similar wiring. Control function currents come from the remote control console at the dispatch office end of a circuit. In two-way radio use, an idle circuit would normally have no current flow present. Taxicab, short forms taxi or cab, is a type of public transport for a single passenger, or small group of passengers, typically for a non-shared ride. ...
A dispatcher can mean different things (with related meanings). ...
In two-way radio use, radio manufacturers use different currents for specific functions. Polarities are changed to get more possible functions over a single circuit. For example, imagine one possible scheme where the presence of these currents cause the base station to change state: A two-way radio is simply a radio that can both transmit and receive (a transceiver). ...
- no current means receive on channel 1, (the default).
- +6 mA might mean transmit on channel 1
- -6 mA might mean stay in receive mode but switch to channel 2. So long as the -6 mA current were present, the remote base station would continue to receive on channel 2.
- -12 mA might command the base station to transmit on channel 2.
Note that this circuit is polarity-sensitive. If a telephone company cable splicer accidentally reversed the conductors, selecting channel 2 would lock the transmitter on. Each current level could close a set of contacts, or operate solid-state logic, at the other end of the circuit. That contact closure caused a change of state on the controlled device. Some remote control equipment could have options set to allow compatibility between manufacturers. That is, a base station that was configured to transmit with a +18 mA current could have options changed to (instead) make it transmit when +6 mA was present. In two-way radio use, AC signals were also present on the circuit pair. If the base station were idle, receive audio would be sent over the line from the base station to the dispatch office. In the presence of a transmit command current, the remote control console would send audio to be transmitted. The voice of the user in the dispatch office would be superimposed over the DC current that caused the transmitter to operate.
See also Process control is an engineering discipline that deals with architectures, mechanisms, and algorithms for controlling the output of a specific process. ...
Further reading - Lipták, Béla G. Instrumentation engineers' handbook. Process Measurement and Analysis. CRC Press. 2003. HB. ISBN 0-8493-1083-0
Notes - ^ To confirm the use of the phrase "DC remote" as accurate in describing this type of device, please see US Patent and Trademark Office patent ID 6950653, "Scanning tone remote adapter for land-mobile radio dispatch for use with dispersed dispatch stations." The patent does not describe this tone remote but confirms the use of the phrase to describe this system of signaling.
See also - Current source (a current loop transmitter)
- Passive current-to-voltage converter (a passive current loop receiver)
It has been suggested that this article or section be merged with Voltage source. ...
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