Industrial Ethernet Switches are designed to operate in plant floor environments. The specifications of Industrial Ethernet switches (temperature, shock, vibration, etc.) meet or exceed the equipment being connected (PLC’s, Ethernet I/O, HMI’s, etc.). Most commercial Ethernet switches have commercial temperature ratings (0-40C), and do not publish shock and vibration specs. Most Industrial Ethernet Switches are rated for a minimum of 0-70C operation, and have excellent shock & vibration specs.
<p><b>Why Use Industrial Ethernet Switches?</b></p>
<p><b>1. Benefits of Industrial over Commercial
Switches</b></p>
<p>Industrial Ethernet switches are housed in rugged
industrial style steel enclosures using Din-Rail or panel mounting. Most
commercial switches and media converters cannot mount conveniently inside
equipment enclosures.</p>
<p>Another added benefit derived from using Industrial
Ethernet switches is redundant power inputs. Commercial switches rely on a
single power supply to power the switch, while Industrial switches typically
run off DC power, and have redundant power inputs. This allows the weakest link
(the power supply) to have a hot standby back up, insuring maximum up time.</p>
<p>Industrial
<a href="http://www.control-logic.com.au">Ethernet
switches</a> carry a Class I Div
2, group ABCD rating while the commercial counterparts do not. This allows the
Industrial Ethernet switches to operate where explosive gases are being used
(very typical for industrial applications).</p>
<p><b>2. Alternatives</b></p>
<p>Because Ethernet has been available in the office
environment long before industrial Ethernet equipment existed, the equipment is
well known for its performance and reliability and low cost. Quite often, when
companies evaluate the technology, they do not examine the alternatives of
purchasing Industrial Ethernet Switches versus commercial switches and routers.
However, In this instance, the evaluation is simple. Fortunately, Industrial
Ethernet switches provide advantages over the 4 primary alternatives being
used. All of these alternatives utilize commercial Ethernet switches and hubs,
and are listed below:</p>
<p><b>• Wire all connections to a
climate-controlled environment.</b></p>
<p>In this scenario, the customer will place
commercial network equipment in a climate controlled environment and run cable
to every industrial Ethernet node. This is very costly and decreases
reliability. Industrial Ethernet switches offers the opportunity to eliminate
significant, expensive wiring efforts when compared to this approach.</p>
<p><b>• Build climate-controlled environments in
harsh areas.</b></p>
<p>In this scenario, the customer, to reduce wiring
costs, will build a climate-controlled environmental enclosure to house
commercial equipment in a harsh environment (i.e. Nema 4 enclosures with
Peltier coolers and bulkhead-mounted connectors). This is very costly and
increases the number of components that can fail. Industrial Ethernet Switches
can be installed directly in harsh locations, thus eliminating the need for
expensive climate-controlled enclosures.</p>
<p><b>• Simply use commercial equipment without
regard to environmental mismatches.</b></p>
<p>This is an alternative, but not a very good one. In
this scenario, the customer utilizes commercial equipment in the harsh
environment. This equipment is not rated for these environments and will
probably fail and/or decrease the reliability of the system. In our discussions
with customers utilizing this alternative, it was only implemented because they
were not aware that industrial grade equipment was available. They are very
open to utilizing Industrial Ethernet Switches.</p>
<p>In addition, many commercial switches use
cut-through techniques, and can propagate bad packets on the network. However,
Industrial switches use store and forward technology that perform CRC (cyclic
redundancy checks), and insure the data Integrity of any packets being
forwarded.</p>
<p><b>• Utilize Hubs instead of Switches</b></p>
<p>While hubs are cheaper than switches they do not
eliminate collisions, and hence create determinism issues associated with
Ethernet Networks. The following discussion illustrates the basic difference
between switches and hubs.</p>
<p><b>Difference between Ethernet Switches and
Hubs</b></p>
<p>A hub, also known as a repeater, is a simple device
that connects Ethernet nodes. Hubs forward data packets they receive from a
single workstation to ALL ports. All users connected to a single hub or
interconnected hubs share the same bandwidth. As nodes are added to the
network, they compete for a finite amount of bandwidth (typically 10 or 100
Mbs). Therefore, data collisions are guaranteed when a hub is used and network
determinism (the ability to guarantee a packet is sent/received in a finite
amount of time) is impossible. This is the primary reason Ethernet has
historically not been accepted in control applications. Most control systems
have a definite time requirement for packet transmission (< 100ms). This
cannot be guaranteed with a hub and is especially if the network is busy. You
can imagine the problems this can cause in a mission critical control
application.</p>
<p>This is analogous to a single lane road. You cannot
get onto the road until traffic is clear. With a hub, you cannot send a packet
until network traffic is clear.</p>
<p>Another analogy is a party line phone. If you
shared a party line phone with 8 users, anytime any of the users received a
call; your phone would ring. All users would have to answer to determine if the
call was for them. In addition, no other user can use the phone while someone
else is using it.</p>
<p>An Industrial Ethernet Switch is a more complex
device with built in intelligence to connect Ethernet nodes. The switch
eliminates the problem of network determinism by providing full bandwidth with
storage to a node or group of nodes. The switch eliminates all collisions that
typically make Ethernet nondeterministic. A switch sends data only to the
appropriate network port or segment, not the entire network as a hub does. The
switch forwards data based on the MAC address (unique for each hardware device
on the network) contained in the data packet. The switch must store the MAC
addresses of every device it communicates with, requiring high-speed dual ported
SRAM (hubs have no memory requirements). The switch determines the location of
each node and establishes a temporary connection between itself and the node
and terminates once the packet is transferred.</p>
<p>Using our highway analogy, we have turned the
single lane road into an 8-lane highway. A lane can be dedicated to mission
critical nodes insuring traffic can always get through in a pre-determined time.</p>
<p>Using the phone analogy, your phone rings only when
the call is for you and you can use the phone when other people are using it.</p>
<p><b>Summary</b></p>
<p>In
summary, an Industrial Ethernet Switch increases network bandwidth and provides
network determinism for Industrial control applications, and provides the most
cost effective solution for industrial environments. You can look up <a
href="http://www.control-logic.com.au">www.control-logic.com.au</a>
for detailed information on various options in Australia and
their respective comprehensive product range.</p>
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| About the author |
Leon Cowper has been selling electrical components and supplies through his store since 1996. Today he is an expert on all types of products and companies in the field.
www.control-logic.com.au |
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