Hi,
I have several questions regarding RS485 and hope you can shed some light. Your article regarding RS485 from 1999 was great, I learned a great deal from it.
First question:
I have read the RS485 is good for small packets being sent. "Small" is a relative term and I was wondering what is small? In my application I will be sending 8 bytes from the Master to the Slaves. The Slaves will respond with a 2 byte packet.
Is my 8 byte/2 byte protocol considered "Small"?
Second question:
I have read that termination may not be required depending on network length. In my application my shorted network will be 12 inches long with a single slave, while some will be upwards of 1000 feet long and could have 20 slaves. From your article it appears that I do not need terminators for runs that are this short. I would like to simplify my PCB design for the above and everything in between.
Is it bad to have terminators for a network that is this short and are both terminators required?
Third question:
I will be using PIC18F and dsPIC33 processors. I will be trying to come up with a baud rate both can do with as little RS232 %error as possible. I want to try to be in the 140Kbps range which is a non standard baud rate.
Does the driver care what the actual baud rate is, even if it is non-standard (I am using MAX3085EEPA+ and MAX3075EEPA+)?
Forth question:
Continuation of #3 above. My Master and Slaves will have an RS232 % error of less than .7% each (say +.69% for one and -.28% for the other). I know straight RS232 a low % error works fine between 2 PICs from the same family works fine.
Will the Master and Slaves be able to communicate with each other with RS232 % errors via RS485 drivers?
Fifth question:
I have seen many circuits on the web in which the RE/DE pins are tied together and have a Pull Up resistor OR Pull Down resistor tied to them.
Is one way better than the other, why would they do this and is it necessary?
Sixth question:
I will be using RJ45 connectors on my PCB to allow quick connect/disconnect. The cable had 4 twisted pairs in it. I will use one twisted pair for communication. I will use a second pair tied together at each end for the common ground and use the 100 ohm resistor you mentioned in your article. I cannot afford the MAX1480 IC and it will not fit in the area available on my current PCB layout.
Do I have to concern myself with, and if so, how do I prevent ground loops?
Seventh question:
On some designs I have seen 56 ohm resistors placed in series with the RS485 output side. One resistor in series with B and one in series with A.
Why would this be necessary?
Based on what I learned from your article I have chosen to use the MAX3085EEPA+ for 5V microprocessors (PIC18F) and MAX3075EEPA+ for 3.3V micro processors (dsPIC33).
I have more questions but do not have them in front of me. I think this is a very good start though.
Thank you for your time and effort.....
Ron