FREE subscription to Engineer magazines
Up to date news and opinion for engineers operating in all aspects of Power Engineering

Direct Industry

 
  • LSB Sky Access

Click here for the best career opportunities from some of the world's most successful engineering companies.

 

Suppliers Database

Click here for details about key suppliers of products and services in your industry.

 
 

FREE NewsBrief



Read the latest NewsBrief



ITCM designs and develops special-purpose machinery and production processes with core strengths in web processing, powder dosing, novel packaging and high-speed assembly automation.



 
 
Previous Digital Editions

Power Engineer - Maintenance


Enhanced data communication
 

Enhanced data communication

Advancements to Modbus loop capability for valve automation made by AUMA actuators benefit data transfer speed and safety in the power industry. AUMA reports that the Modbus initiative triples the maximum possible data transfer rate, and significantly reduces the feedback time of actuators in the loop, which improves the overall response time of the system.
 
AUMA has supplied the industry with fieldbus enabled actuators for over 15 years and Modbus looped systems for over five years. The company’s latest Modbus systems comprise a SIMA master station with up to 247 actuators, suitable for installations where long cable distances are involved. The looped solution is capable of supporting conventional copper cable lengths of just under 300km and uses the Modbus RTU protocol based on RS-485. Additionally, if the redundant loop is interrupted, data communication to all installed actuators is maintained without any restrictions.
 
An automatic commissioning feature for the new system from AUMA reduces start-up times and configuration errors. When the SIMA master station is switched on after completion of the wiring, it can determine the number of actuators connected, automatically assign the slave addresses of actuators and set the desired baud rate. As a result, manual setting of the communication parameters at each actuator is no longer required, which leads to considerable time savings during commissioning. Communication problems, such as slave addresses assigned twice or transmission rates set incorrectly, are also avoided.
 
This latest announcement from AUMA is part of an ongoing development programme for bus communication technologies from the company’s German based R&D division.
 
Enter √ at www.engineerlive.com/ipe

AUMA Riester GmbH & Co KG, Muellheim, Germany. www.auma.com

Tags:

auma , power
 
 

Site By OWB