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ARINC 429 (Aeronautical Radio Inc[1]) is the standard for the predominant avionics data bus used on most higher-end commercial and transport aircraft[2]. It defines the physical and electrical interfaces of a two-wire data bus and a data protocol to support an aircraft's avionics local area network.
[edit] Technical Description[edit] MessagesARINC 429 is application-specific for aircraft avionics. It uses a unidirectional data bus standard (Tx and Rx are on separate ports) known as the Mark 33 Digital Information Transfer System (DITS). The connection wires are twisted pairs. Data words are 32 bits in length and most messages consist of a single data word. Messages are transmitted at either 12.5 or 100 kbit/s[3] to other system elements that are monitoring the bus messages. The transmitter is always transmitting either 32-bit data words or the NULL state. A single bus (wire pair) is limited to one transmitter and no more than 20 receivers. The protocol allows for self-clocking at the receiver end, thus eliminating the need to transmit clocking data that existed in previous (6 wire) protocols like ARINC-568. [edit] Word FormatEach ARINC word is a 32-bit value that contains five fields:
[edit] LabelsLabel guidelines are provided as part of the ARINC 429 specification, for various equipment types. Each aircraft will contain a number of different systems, such as flight management computers, inertial reference systems, air data computers, radio altimeters, radios, and GPS sensors. For each type of equipment, a set of standard parameters is defined, which is common across all manufacturers and models. For example, any air data computer will provide the barometric altitude of the aircraft as label 204. This allows some degree of interchangeability of parts, as all air data computers behave, for the most part, in the same way. There are only a limited number of labels, though, and so label 204 may have some completely different meaning if sent by a GPS sensor, for example. Many very commonly-needed aircraft parameters, however, use the same label regardless of source. Also, as with any specification, each manufacturer has slight differences from the formal specification, such as by providing extra data above and beyond the specification, leaving out some data recommended by the specification, or other various changes. [edit] Protection from InterferenceThe prohibition on the use of certain electronic devices in-flight on commercial aircraft has become a controversial issue, as, although usually justified as a safety requirement to prevent interference with aircraft avionics, it is criticized by those that argue that cell phones, WiFi, Bluetooth, and other digital radio systems are incapable of interfering with such robust protocols as ARINC. Advocates of the prohibition site incidents just as the October 2008 in-flight mishap of an Airbus A330-300 during a Qantas flight[4], which some have attributed to EMI interference. ARINC 429 employs several physical, electrical, and protocol techniques to minimize radio and electrical interference from on-board radios and from other transmission cables. It's cabling is a shielded 78Ω twisted-pair[5]. ARINC signalling defines a 15V differential between the Data A and Data B levels within the biphase transmission (i.e. 5V on Data A and -10V on Data B would constitute a valid driving signal), and the specification defines acceptable voltage rise and fall times. ARINC 429's data encoding uses a complementary differential bipolar return-to-zero (RZ) transmission waveform, further reducing EMI emissions from the cable itself. [edit] See also
[edit] External linksStandards Product Manufacturers
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[edit] ReferencesDirectorio de Enlaces Directorio dmoz Directorio espejo dmoz Pedro Bernardo |