Industrial Data Communications 4th Edition

Chapter 7 - Wide Area Networks

This chapter discusses communications over media and/or infrastructure that is not owned by
the entity doing the communicating. That is, if you rent, lease, or otherwise do not own the
media carrying your data it is part of the "wide area network" (WAN). This network may include
the public switched network or leased portions of the network for private lines. Transmission
over a wide area network is almost always performed in bit serial fashion (one bit after another).

Why should someone primarily interested in instrument loops care about wide area use or
technologies? Because media characteristics haven't changed. Although the modems and
digital lines described here may not be part of your immediate network, when a local area
network wants to communicate with the outside world (and in the enterprise scheme of
things chances are it will), it will do so by using one of the wide area technologies
described in this chapter. Or, at a minimum, it will employ a method that can trace its
parentage back to one of these technologies.

In discussing wide area networks, this chapter proceeds in an almost chronological fashion,
beginning with wireline and wireline modems (including a brief explanation of modulation-
and we do mean brief) and working up to the digital line offerings. A careful read
will give you a good idea of where many of the serial standards (EIA 232 specifically) had
their start and why.

New students of data communications may wonder why wireline modems were first used
and why they were so slow (particularly if they remember their own experience with the
Internet and 56 Kbps modems). First, we need to look back to the early 1960s. What
network could then be found in almost all businesses? The public switched telephone
network, of course. As you may notice as you read this chapter, a telephone line is not necessarily
an ideal data path. Still, a telephone line existed in most businesses, was relatively
inexpensive (compared to the then alternatives), and could be used for data transmission.

The author remembers quite well listening to a Bell Systems engineer in the mid-1960s who
stated that data could not and would never be transmitted down a voice-grade line (your
standard telephone line) any faster than 2,400 bits per second. As this is written, 56 Kbps
(duplex) is a standard (V.92), and then there are the DSL lines (using that same copper pair)
that exceed 1 Mbps. How was this increase accomplished? And what data transmission
method should you choose now? Those questions are what this chapter is all about.

Keep in mind that control systems use LANs and are not normally run over a WAN.
However, many supervisory control and data acquisition systems (SCADA) do use remote
inputs; many are obtained over a WAN and even a wireline. And as the enterprise communications
effort broadens, the need to interface to users who are geographically remote will
become essential for any complete control system. One last thought before you start this
chapter-many of the LAN developments used routinely in industrial data communications
(such as TCP/IP) had their start in the wide area network, where limited bandwidth, noisy
media, and the constant need for improved data speeds are the norm.

UNLIMITED FREE
ACCESS
TO THE WORLD'S BEST IDEAS

SUBMIT
Already a GlobalSpec user? Log in.

This is embarrasing...

An error occurred while processing the form. Please try again in a few minutes.

Customize Your GlobalSpec Experience

Category: Network Modems
Finish!
Privacy Policy

This is embarrasing...

An error occurred while processing the form. Please try again in a few minutes.