Industrial Data Communications 4th Edition

Appendix B - Historical Aspects

Introduction

Modern industrial data communications is a very pragmatic discipline: whatever works,
regardless of the source, keep it. Due to the changes in technology over the past several
centuries, data communications has its origins in many sources. Much of the jargon associated
with industrial data communications owes its uniqueness to this mixed parentage. This
appendix will examine the major sources of technology that have developed into the
modern practice called data communications.

To paraphrase the philosopher George Santayana, (not to be confused with the contemporary
Carlos, a rock musician), “those who do not study history are doomed to repeat it.”
Whether this was originally applied to students in a history class or to world leaders, it is
particularly true in data communications. The concepts once tried in one technology keep
coming back in the newer versions.

Instrumentation Sources

Automatic control has a form of data communications in the feedback path that is required
for closed-loop automatic control to work. Figure B-1 illustrates a feedback control loop.

Figure B-1. Feedback Control Loop

For many years, the method of transmitting information to the controller and to the indicators
was labeled signal transmission.

In the early 1800s, the precursor to many automatic machines was developed: the Jacquard
Loom. Its control was a punched card, actually a punched roll like that used on a player
piano. The punched card directed the loom weave and as such, is an early form of machine
control. More than any other singular concept, the use of a punched card for information
storage was to form the basis for the beginnings of data communications a century and a
half later. While instrumentation brought technical sophistication to pneumatic signaling, it
was the industrial requirements that pneumatics couldn’t fill that evolved into today’s industrial
communications. Pneumatics lack speed. Traveling at the speed of sound is no match
for traveling at nearly half the speed of light, as electrical circuits are wont to do. Electric
signals are fine for signal transmission, but they lack (for the time being) a cost-effective
method of moving large objects like valves, so much of instrumentation was developed
around electrical signaling combined with pneumatic activation.

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