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Read and Retain for Future Reference Cooper Bussmann
Version 1.4.0 Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual ATTENTION!
Incorrect termination of the supply wires may cause internal damage and will void the warranty. To ensure that your 450U-E enjoys a long life, before turning the power on double-check ALL connections by referring to this User Manual. CAUTION To comply with FCC RF Exposure requirements in section 1.1310 of the FCC Rules, antennas used with this device must be installed to provide a separation distance of at least 20 cm from all persons to satisfy RF exposure compliance. DO NOT Operate the transmitter when anyone is within 20 cm of the antenna. Operate the transmitter unless all RF connectors are secure and any open connectors are properly terminated. Operate the equipment near electrical blasting caps or in an explosive atmosphere. All equipment must be properly grounded for safe operations. All equipment should be serviced only by a qualified technician. FCC Notice:
15.19:
THIS DEVICE COMPLIES WITH PART 15 OF THE FCC RULES. OPERATIONIS SUBJECT TO THE FOLLOWING TWO CONDITIONS: (1) THIS DEVICE MAY NOT CAUSE HARMFUL INTERFERENCE, AND (2) THIS DEVICE MUST ACCEPT ANY INTERFERENCE RECEIVED, INCLUDING INTERFERENCE THAT MAY CAUSE UNDESIRED OPERATION. 15.21:
NOTE: THE GRANTEE IS NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ANY CHANGES OR MODIFICATIONS NOT EXPRESSLY AUTHORITY TO OPERATE THE EQUIPMENT. 15.105(b):
NOTE: This equipment has been tested and found to comply with the limits for a Class B digital device, pursuant to part 15 of the FCC Rules. These limits are designed to provide reasonable protection against harmful interference in a residential installation. This equipment generates, uses and can radiate radio frequency energy and, if not installed and used in accordance with the instructions, may cause harmful interference to radio communications. However, there is no guarantee that interference will not occur in a particular installation. If this equipment does cause harmful interference to radio or television reception, which can be determined by turning the equipment off and on, the user is encouraged to try to correct the interference by one or more of the following measures:
Reorient or relocate the receiving antenna. Increase the separation between the equipment and receiver. Connect the equipment into an outlet on a circuit different from that to which the receiver is connected. Consult the dealer or an experienced radio/TV technician for help. Part 90 This device has been type accepted for operation by the FCC in accordance with Part90 of the FCC rules (47CFR Part 90). See the label on the unit for the specific FCC ID and any other certification designations. Note: This device should only be connected to PCs that are covered by either a FCC DoC or are FCC certified. 2 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources Rev Version 1.4.0 Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual Manufacturer Model Number Coax Kit ELPRO ELPRO ELPRO ELPRO ELPRO ELPRO ELPRO ELPRO Safety Notices:
UDP400-3 UDP400-5 BU-3/400 BU-6/400 YU3/400 YU6/400 YU9/400 YU16/400 Includes 3m Cellfoil Includes 5m Cellfoil CC10/450 CC10/450 CC10/450 CC10/450 CC20/450 CC20/450 Net 1dB Gain Unity Gain 2.5dB Gain 5.5dB Gain 3.5dB Loss 6.5dB Gain 5dB Gain 10dB Gain Exposure to RF energy is an important safety consideration. The FCC has adopted a safety standard for human exposure to radio frequency electromagnetic energy emitted by FCC regulated equipment as a result of its actions in Docket 93-62 and OET Bulletin 65 Edition 97-01. UL Notice:
1. The Wireless Ethernet module is to be installed by trained personnel / licensed electricians only and installation must be carried out in accordance with the instructions listed in the Installation Guide and applicable local regulatory codes. 2. The units are intended for Restricted Access Locations. 3. The Wireless Ethernet module is intended to be installed in a final enclosure, rated IP54, before use outdoors. 4. The Equipment shall be powered using an external Listed Power Supply with LPS outputs or a Class 2 Power Supply. 5. The Wireless Ethernet module must be properly grounded for surge protection before use. 6. If installed in a hazardous environment coaxial cable shall be installed in a metallic conduit GNU Free Documentation License:
Copyright (C) 2009 ELPRO Technologies. ELPRO Technologies is using a part of Free Software code under the GNU General Public License in operating the 450U-E program whose authors commit by using it. The Free Software is copyrighted by Free Software Foundation, Inc. and the ontact ELPRO Technologies for instructions A copy of the license is included in Appendix H - GNU Free Doc License 450U-E "
Important Notice:
ELPRO products are designed to be used in industrial environments, by experienced industrial engineering personnel with adequate knowledge of safety design considerations. ELPRO radio products are used on unprotected license-free radio bands with radio noise and interference. The products are designed to operate in the presence of noise and interference, however in an extreme case, radio noise and interference could cause product operation delays or operation failure. Like all industrial electronic products, ELPRO products can fail in a variety of modes due to misuse, age, or malfunction. We recommend that users and designers design systems using design techniques intended to prevent personal injury or damage during product operation, and provide failure tolerant systems to prevent personal injury or damage in the event of product failure. Designers must warn users of the equipment or systems if adequate protection against failure has not been included in the system design. Designers must include this Important Notice in operating procedures and system manuals. These products should not be used in non-industrial applications, or life-support systems, without consulting ELPRO first. 1. A radio license is not required in some countries, provided the module is installed using the aerial and equipment configuration described in the 450U-E Installation Guide. Check with your local distributor for further information on regulations. Rev Version 1.4.0 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources 3 Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual 2. Operation is authorized by the radio frequency regulatory authority in your country on a non-protection basis. Although all care is taken in the design of these units, there is no responsibility taken for sources of external interference. Systems should be designed to be tolerant of these operational delays. 3. To avoid the risk of electrocution, the aerial, aerial cable, serial cables and all terminals of the 450U-E module should be electrically protected. To provide maximum surge and lightning protection, the module should be connected to a suitable earth and the aerial, aerial cable, serial cables and the module should be installed as recommended in the Installation Guide. 4. To avoid accidents during maintenance or adjustment of remotely controlled equipment, all equipment should be first disconnected from the 450U-E module during these adjustments. Equipment should carry clear markings to indicate remote or automatic operation. E.g. "This equipment is remotely controlled and may start without warning. Isolate at the switchboard before attempting adjustments."
5. The 450U-E module is not suitable for use in explosive environments without additional protection. 6. The 450U-E Operates using the same Radio frequencies and communication protocols as commercially available off-the shelf equipment. If your system is not adequately secured, third parties may be able to gain access to your data or gain control of your equipment via the radio link. Before deploying a system make sure you have considered the security aspects of your installation carefully. Release Notice:
This is the July 2012 release of the 450U-E Ethernet Modem User Manual version 1.4.0 which applies to Modem firmware version 1.4 Follow Instructions Read this entire manual and all other publications pertaining to the work to be performed before installing, operating, or servicing this equipment. Practice all plant and safety instructions and precautions. Failure to follow the instructions can cause personal injury and/or property damage. Proper Use Any unauthorized modifications to or use of this equipment outside its specified mechanical, electrical, or other operating limits may cause personal injury and/or property damage, including damage to the equipment. Any such unauthorized thereby excluding warranty coverage for any resulting damage; and (2) invalidate product certifications or listings. 4 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources Rev Version 1.4.0 Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual 1.0 CHAPTER 1 - INTRODUCTION ................................... 7 NETWORK TOPOLOGY ........................................... 7 Access Point vs. Client ............................................. 7 Bridge vs Router ....................................................... 9 GETTING STARTED QUICKLY ................................ 10 1.1 2.0 2.1 CHAPTER 2 - INSTALLATION .................................. 11 GENERAL .......................................................... 11 ANTENNA INSTALLATION ...................................... 11 Bench test and Demo System setup ............................... 11 Antennas ........................................................................ 12 Dipole and Collinear antennas ......................................... 12 Directional antennas. ...................................................... 13 Installation tips ................................................................ 13 POWER SUPPLY ................................................. 13 SERIAL CONNECTIONS ........................................ 14 RS232 Serial Port ................................................... 14 DB9 Connector Pin outs ................................................. 14 RS485 Serial Port ................................................... 14 Failsafe Biasing ............................................................... 15 USB Ports ............................................................... 15 INPUT/OUTPUT CONNECTIONS ............................. 16 Analog Input ............................................................ 16 Digital Output .......................................................... 16 Digital Input ............................................................. 17 2.2 2.3 2.4 3.2 3.1 3.0 CHAPTER 3 - OPERATION....................................... 18 START-UP ......................................................... 18 Access Point Start-up ............................................. 18 Client Start-up ........................................................ 18 Link Establishment .................................................. 18 How a Link connection is lost .......................................... 18 Roaming Clients .............................................................. 18 LED Indication ......................................................... 19 RADIO OPERATING PARAMETERS .......................... 20 Frequency Bands .................................................... 20 Data Rate ................................................................ 20 Receiver .................................................................. 20 INITIAL CONNECTION ........................................... 21 First Time Configuration ......................................... 21 Default Configuration Switch .................................. 21 Setting the PC to same network as 450U-E .................... 21 Locale Configuration ....................................................... 23 QUICKSTART ..................................................... 24 GENERAL CONFIGURATION .................................. 25 Connecting to Existing Networks..................................... 25 NETWORK CONFIGURATION........................... 26 Network Settings Webpage Fields................................... 26 Device Mode................................................................... 27 Bridge STP (Spanning Tree Protocol) .............................. 28 SECURITY MENU ................................................ 28 WEP (128 bit) .......................................................... 29 Encryption Keys 1 to 4 .................................................... 29 Default WEP Key ............................................................. 29 WPA2 ...................................................................... 29 RADIO CONFIGURATION ....................................... 30 3.3 3.4 3.6 3.7 3.5 3.8 3.9 3.10 3.11 3.12 3.13 Radio Menu .................................................................... 30 Data Compression .................................................. 31 SERIAL ............................................................. 32 Modbus RTU Master .............................................. 32 Expansion I/O ......................................................... 33 Modbus RTU Slave ................................................ 33 Serial Gateway ....................................................... 34 Modbus TCP/RTU Converter ................................. 34 Modbus RTU Mappings Example .................................... 35 REPEATERS (WDS) ............................................. 36 Important Notes: ............................................................. 37 WDS Connections: ................................................. 37 Example 1 Extending range using WDS ............. 37 Example 2 - Roaming with WDS Access Points .... 38 IP ROUTING ..................................................... 39 FILTERING ....................................................... 41 Filter Example .................................................................. 42 MAC Address Filter Configuration: ................................... 42 IP Address Filter Configuration: ....................................... 43 ARP Filter Configuration .................................................. 43 MODBUS TCP ................................................. 44 Modbus TCP Server ............................................... 44 Modbus TCP Client ................................................ 44 TCP Mapping Example .................................................... 45 INPUT/OUTPUT CONFIGURATION ......................... 47 I/O Configuration .................................................... 47 Analog Input Configuration .............................................. 47 Analog Input configuration parameters ............................ 48 Digital Output .................................................................. 48 Digital Input ..................................................................... 49 I/O Register locations ............................................. 49 Digital Outputs Coils ........................................................ 49 Digital Input Bits .............................................................. 50 Analog Input Registers .................................................... 50 Expansion I/O ................................................................. 50 Failsafe Blocks ....................................................... 51
...................................................... 52 CONFIGURATION EXAMPLES ............................... 52 Extending a wired network (Bridged Network) ...... 52 Connecting two different networks together (Routed Network) ................................................................. 53 Extending range of a network with a Repeater hop .......... 55 3.14 4.0 4.1 4.2 CHAPTER 4 - DIAGNOSTICS ................................... 56 DIAGNOSTICS CHART .......................................... 56 CONNECTIVITY ................................................... 57 THROUGHPUT TESTING ........................................ 58 Radio Throughput................................................... 58 Modbus TCP. ................................................................. 58 FTP Transfer ................................................................... 58 Iperf Throughput Test ............................................. 59 STATISTICS........................................................ 59 Network Traffic Analysis .................................................. 60 CHANNEL SURVEY (UTILISATION) ........................... 60 CUSTOM SURVEY ............................................... 62 4.4 4.5 4.3 Rev Version 1.4.0 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources 5 Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual 4.6 4.7 NETWORK DIAGNOSTICS ..................................... 64 Ping ................................................................................ 64 IO DIAGNOSTICS ................................................ 65 Modem Module Information Registers ............................. 65 Expansion I/O Diagnostic/Error Registers ........................ 66 MONITOR RADIO COMMS .................................... 67 MONITOR IP COMMS .......................................... 67 SYSTEM TOOLS ............................................... 68 Setting a 450U-E to Factory Default Settings ........ 68 MODULE INFORMATION CONFIGURATION .............. 68 Module Information Webpage Fields ............................... 68 DHCP Client Configuration ............................................. 69 UTILITIES ........................................................ 69
............................................................................. 69
........................................................................ 70
........................................................................... 71 4.8 4.9 4.10 4.11 4.12 CHAPTER 5 - SPECIFICATIONS ............................... 72 Appendix A - Firmware Upgrades .......................... 74 Firmware Upgrade USB (Full Firmware Upgrade) .......... 74 Web based Upgrade ............................................... 77 Appendix B - USB Ethernet connection ................. 78 Connecting to the Secondary Ethernet Port ..................... 78 Appendix C - GLOSSARY ...................................... 80 Appendix D - Expansion I/O Registers ................... 84 I/O store for a 115S-11 Expansion I/O module ................ 84 I/O store for a 115S-12 Expansion I/O module ................ 84 I/O store for a 115S-13 Expansion I/O module ................ 84 Appendix E - Modbus Error Codes ........................ 85 Appendix F - Power Conversion ............................ 86 Power Conversion ........................................................... 86 Appendix G - External Iperf Test ............................ 87 Materials ......................................................................... 87 Installation ....................................................................... 87 Iperf Applications ............................................................. 87 JPerf Application ............................................................. 88 Appendix H - GNU Free Doc License ..................... 89 6 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources Rev Version 1.4.0 Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual CHAPTER 1 -
INTRODUCTION The 450U-E Industrial 802.11 based Wireless Ethernet module provide wireless connections between Ethernet devices and/
450U-E, 5 Watt max power The 450U-E is a fixed frequency wireless transceiver that operates in the 360MHz to 512 MHz frequency communications band. There are various frequency bands available depending on the model purchased. The 450U-E unit provides two serial connections as well as the Ethernet connection. It is possible to use all three data connections concurrently, allowing the 450U-E to act as a Device Server where wireless connections can be made between serial devices and Ethernet devices. The 450U-E also devices and Ether handle other protocols. Appropriate driver applications will be required in the host devices to The modem is capable of passing VLAN tagged frames. The 450U-E has a standard RJ45 Ethernet connection which will operate at up to 100Mbit/sec. The module will transmit the Ethernet messages on the wireless band at rates between 1 and 19.2Kbit/sec depending on model, band, encryption methods, and radio paths. 1.0 Network Topology The 450U-E is an Ethernet device, and must be configured as part of an Ethernet network. Each 450U-E must be configured as an:
nt (Station) You can also connect to the 450U-E via a RS232 or RS485 serial port using serial server and allowing the 450U-E to connect the serial communications into the Ethernet network. Access Point vs. Client client units, and controls the wireless communications. Clients (Stations) are slave units and when connected to the Access Point becomes transparent Ethernet links. The Access Point accepts and authorises links initiated by the Figure 1 AP-Client The first diagram shows a connection between two Ethernet devices using 450U-E Ethernet modems. In this example one 450U-E is configured as an Access Point and the other as a Client. Rev Version 1.4.0 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources 7 Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual Figure 2 AP-Client2 The second diagram shows an existing LAN being extended using 450U-E . In this example, the Access Point is configured at the LAN end - although the wireless link will still work if the Client is at the LAN end. An Access Point can connect to multiple Clients. In this case, the Figure 3 Multi Client radio paths. connected to an Ethernet devices or on a LAN epeater module, any 450U-E can be a repeater and at the same time, can be 450U-E Clients, which do not have direct reliable Figure 4 Multi AP Multiple Access Points can be set-
repeaters. 8 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources Rev Version 1.4.0 Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual Bridge vs Router Each 450U-E when configured as a bridge uses a single IP address for Ethernet and Wireless connections. A Bridge connects devices within the same Ethernet network - for example, extending an existing Ethernet LAN. Figure 5 - Bridge A Router different. In this example, the wireless link is part of LAN A, with the Client (Station) unit acting as the Router between LAN A and LAN B. The IP addresses for the Ethernet and the Wireless sides must be Figure 6 - Client Router Alternately, the Access Point could be configured as a Router. The wireless link is then part of LAN B. Figure 7 AP Router Rev Version 1.4.0 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources 9 Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual If more than two routers are required within the same radio network, then routing rules may need to be configured (refer to section 3.10 IP Routing more details). There is no limit to the number of Bridges in the same network - although there is a limit of 128 Client units linked to any one Access Point. Figure 8 - Multi Router 1.1 Getting Started Quickly This instruction will explain what sections of the manual should be read to get the modems configured quickly and easily. The out of the box basic configuration should cover most applications and require little configuration, however if more advanced applications are required the 450U-E have many sophisticated features, which can be adjusted if need be. First, read Chapter
. This will explain the connections that are required for successful operation, i.e. Power, Antenna, Serial, Ethernet and I/O. Power the 450U-E and make an Ethernet connection from your PC (for further information on how to do this, refer to section 3.2 Initial Connection Set the 450U-E address, and other necessary configuration parameters by using the Quick Start as per section 3.3 Quickstart Save the configuration - The 450U-E is now ready to use. If the modems are connected to an existing network read section 3.11 Filtering some form of filtering
(MAC, IP and ARP) will reduce the amount of Ethernet network traffic being sent over the radio network. Before installing the 450U-E, bench test the system. It is a lot easier to locate problems with all the equipment located on the bench. 10 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources Rev Version 1.4.0 Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual CHAPTER 2 - INSTALLATION 2.0 General The 450U-E modules are housed in a rugged aluminium case, suitable for DIN-rail mounting. Terminals will accept wires up to 2.5 mm2 (12 gauge) in size. All connections to the module must be SELV (Safety Extra Low Voltage). Normal 110-250V mains supply must not be connected to any terminal of the 450U-E module. Refer to Section 2.2 Power Supply . Before installing a new system, it is preferable to bench test the complete system. Configuration problems are easier to recognize when the system units are close to one another. Following installation, the most common problem is poor communications caused by incorrectly installed antennas, radio interference on the same channel, or the radio path being inadequate. If the radio path is a problem (i.e. path too long, or obstructed), a higher performance antenna or a higher mounting point for the antenna may rectify the problem. Alternately, use an intermediate 450U-E module as a repeater. The 450U-E Installation Guide provides an installation drawing appropriate to most applications. Further information is detailed below. Each 450U-E module should be effectively earthed via the "GND" screw on the back of the module - this is to ensure that the surge protection circuits inside are effective. 2.1 Antenna Installation The 450U-E module will operate reliably over large distances however the achievable distances will vary with the application, radio configuration, location of antennas, the degree of radio interference, and obstructions (such as buildings or trees) to the radio path. A 450U-E can achieve up to 50 Km (31 miles) with a directional antenna attached. To achieve the maximum transmission distance, the antennas should be raised above intermediate obstructions so the
, although the reliable distance will be reduced. Obstructions which are close to either antenna will have more of a blocking affect than obstructions in the middle of the radio path. The 450U-E modules provide a diagnostic feature which displays the radio signal strength of transmissions (refer Chapter Diagnostics ). Line-of-sight paths are only necessary to obtain the maximum range. Obstructions will reduce the range, or degrade a reliable path. A larger amount of obstruction can be tolerated for shorter distances however an obstructed path requires testing to determine if the path will be reliable - refer to section CHAPTER 4 - of this manual for more information on determining a reliable path. Where it is not possible to achieve reliable communications between two 450U-E modules, then a third 450U-E module may be used to receive the message and re-transmit it. This module is referred to as a repeater. This module may also have a host device connected to it. Bench test and Demo System setup Care must be taken with placement of antenna in relation to the radios and the other antennas. Strong radio signals can saturate the receiver, hindering the overall radio communications. When setting up a bench test/demo or a short range system the following considerations should be taken into account for optimum radio performance and reduced signal saturation. If using Demo antennas on each end, fit 20dB 5W coax attenuator in-line with the coax cable. Antennas must be kept a suitable distance from each other. Check the receive signal strength on the of the module and ensure the level is not greater than -45dB Rev Version 1.4.0 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources 11 Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual Antennas Antennas can be either connected directly to the module connectors or connected via 50 ohm coaxial cable (e.g. RG58 Cellfoil or RG213) terminated with a male SMA coaxial connector. The higher the antenna is mounted, the greater the transmission range will be, however as the length of coaxial cable increases so do cable losses. The net gain of an antenna/cable configuration is the gain of the antenna (in dBi) less the loss in the coaxial cable (in dB). The 450U-E maximum net gain will depend on the licensing regulation for the country of operation and the operating frequency Typical antennas gains and losses are:
Antenna Dipole Collinear Directional (Yagi) Cable Type Gain (dBi) 2 dBi 5 or 8 dBi 6 15 dBi Loss (dB per 30 m / 100 ft) RG58 Cellfoil Cable kits (3m,10m, 20m)
-1dB, -2.5dB, -4.8 dB RG213 - per 10m (33ft) LDF4-50 per 10m (33ft)
-1.8 dB
-0.5 dB The net gain of the antenna/cable configuration is determined by adding the antenna gain and the cable loss. For example, an 8dBi antenna with 10 meters of Cellfoil (-2.5dB) has a net gain of 5.5dB (8dB 2.5dB). Dipole and Collinear antennas A dipole or collinear antenna transmits the same amount of radio power in all directions - as such that are easy to install and use. The dipole antenna does not require any additional coaxial cable;
however a cable must be added if using any of the other collinear or directional antennas. Collinear and dipole antennas should be mounted vertically, preferably 1 wavelength away (see Figure 9 for distances) from a wall or mast and at least 3ft (1m) from the radio module to obtain maximum range. Figure 9 Collinear/Dipole Antenna 12 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources Rev Version 1.4.0 Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual Directional antennas. Directional antennas can be Yagi antenna with a main beam and orthogonal elements. Directional radome, which is cylindrical in shape. Parabolic antenna. A directional antenna provides high gain in the forward direction, but lower gain in other directions. This may be used to compensate for coaxial cable loss for installations with marginal radio path. Yagi antennas should be installed with the main beam horizontal, pointing in the forward direction. If the Yagi is transmitting to a vertically mounted omni-directional antenna, then the Yagi elements should be vertical. If the Yagi is transmitting to another Yagi, then the elements at each end of the wireless link need to in the same plane (horizontal or vertical). Directional radomes should be installed with the central beam horizontal and must be pointed exactly in the direction of transmission to benefit from the gain of the antenna. Parabolic antennas s
, with the parabolic grid at Installation tips Figure 10 Directional Antenna Connections between the antenna and coaxial cable should be carefully taped to prevent ingress of moisture. Moisture ingress in the coaxial cable is a common cause for problems with radio systems, as it greatly increases the radio losses. We recommend that the connection be taped, firstly with a layer of PVC Tape, PVC UV Stabilized insulating tape. The first layer of tape allows the joint to be easily inspected when trouble shooting as the vulcanizing seal can be easily removed. Where antennas are mounted on elevated masts, the masts should be effectively earthed to avoid lightning surges. For high lightning risk areas, approved ELPRO
-SMA-
-N-
should be fitted between the module and the antenna. If using non ELPRO surge suppression devices then the devices must have a 'TURN ON' voltage of less than 90V. If the antenna is not already shielded from lightning strike by an adjacent earthed structure, a lightning rod may be installed above the antenna to provide shielding. 2.2 Power Supply The 450U-E module can be powered from a 9 30 VDC supply. The supply should be rated in accordance with the Supply voltage and Radio power level. The power requirements for the 450U-E unit are shown in the table below. The positive side of the supply must not be connected to earth. The supply negative is connected to the unit case internally. The DC supply may be a floating supply or negatively grounded. Figure 11 - Vulcanizing Tape Figure 12 - Power Supply Rev Version 1.4.0 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources 13 Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual Quiescent TX @500mW 13.8VDC 120mA 400mA 24VDC 70mA 220mA TX @ 5W 1.2 - 1.5Amps 550mA - 650mA A Ground Terminal is provided on the back of the module. This Terminal should be connected to the Main Ground point of the installation in order to provide efficient surge protection for the module (refer to the Installation Diagram) 2.3 Serial Connections RS232 Serial Port The RS232 serial port on the 450U-E is a 9 pin DB9 female connector which provides connection for host devices as well as providing a connection point for diagnostics, field testing and factory testing. Communication is via standard RS232 signals and the 450U-E is configured as a DCE device. Hardware handshaking using the CTS/RTS lines is provided. The CTS/RTS
. The Figure 13 - Serial Cable Example cable drawings for connecting to a DTE host (PC) or another DCE device (modem) are detailed in Figure 13 -
Serial Cable. A General rule of thumb for determining if the device is DCE or DTE is to look at the DB9 Connector and if through cable and works the device is a DCE. DB9 Connector Pin outs Pin Name Direction Function 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 DCD RXD TXD DTR GND DSR RTS CTS RI Out Out In In Out In Out RS485 Serial Port Data carrier detect Transmit Data Serial Data Output (from DCE to DTE) Receive Data Serial Data Input (from DTE to DCE) Data Terminal Ready Signal Ground Data Set Ready - always high when unit is powered on. Request to Send Clear to send Ring indicator The RS485 port provides a communication link from the 450U-E unit to a host device using a multi-drop cable. Up to 32 devices may be connected in each multi-drop network. As the RS485 communication medium is shared, only one of the units on the RS485 cable may send data at any one time. Thus, communication protocols based on the RS-485 standard require some type of arbitration. Figure 14 - RS485 14 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources Rev Version 1.4.0 Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual RS485 is a multi-drop communication link or bus that can span relatively large distances (up to 1.2Km (4000ft)) using a balanced differential paired cable. It is recommended that the cable be shielded or twisted pair to reduce potential RF Interference. An RS485 network should be wired as indicated in the diagram below and terminated at each end of the network with a 120-ohm resistor. An on-board terminating resistor is provided in the modem which can be engaged by operating the single DIP switch on connect the resistor. If the RS485 device that the modem is being connected to does not have a termination switch a 120ohm resistor must be fitted manually across the RS485 terminals. Only devices at each end of the multi-drop RS485 cable will need to have a termination resistor enabled or fitted. Figure 15 -Multidrop Serial Failsafe Biasing The 450U-E does not support Failsafe Biasing on the RS485 unless a 115S serial expansion module is also connected and has its termination switch enabled. Failsafe Biasing is a simple voltage divider that is connected to the RS485 bus and pulls the terminal voltages (high or low) when the communication state is idle rather than be left at a floating state which could cause data corruption. If connecting a serial device that does not support Failsafe Biasing and a 115S expansion I/O module is also not fitted then Biasing resistors must be wired to each RS485 terminal to ensure correct operation. Resistor values will depend on the Supply voltage; see diagram for resistor value calculation and wiring. USB Ports Module has a two USB ports housed under the plastic bung on the top plate. USB A Host port is used for upgrading the module firmware and can only be used for full upgrades. Patches files are not loaded via the USB but through the web interface. The procedures for performing a full firmware upgrade and the patch file upgrade can be found in Section Appendix A - Firmware Upgrades USB B Device connector which is used as a secondary Ethernet connection point. Essentially this is a USB to Ethernet converter that will allow you to connect to the modules web interface without the need for disconnecting the existing Ethernet connection or the need to install a hub or switch to allow more ports. See Appendix B - USB Ethernet connection Figure 16 - USB connections Rev Version 1.4.0 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources 15 Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual 2.4 Input/Output Connections The 450U-E has a single physical on-board I/O channel that can be configured as either a Digital or an Analog via the web interface. The Digital channel can act as an input or an output. It can be monitored, set remotely, or alternatively used an output for a communications alarm status. If more I/O is required, you can add 115S serial expansion I/O modules via the RS232 or RS485 ports. See section 3.13 for more details on this. Analog Input The I/O channel can be configured to accept a 0-20mA current sinking analog input. The current source must be externally powered and the ADIO must be configured for Analog Input rather than Digital Input/Output. This can be configured by going to the section 3.13 for details.
screens see Figure 17 - Analog Input Digital Output The I/O channel can also be used as a discrete output. The digital output uses a FET transistor rated at 30VDC 500 mA, and can be used to switch a load, i.e. relay coil or contactor. Figure 18 - DIO Output The output can be activated by manually writing a value of re by utilising the onboard Modbus TCP Server or Serial Modbus Master to turn on the output. It could also be accessed from an external Modbus Server, i.e. a PLC, DCS, Scada, etc. via the Ethernet network or Serial interface. When activating the output the I/O indication on the front panel of the module will be lit RED when the output is on. Note: The Digital Output will override the Digital Input operation, i.e. if the output is activated while the DIO is being read the indication will show the input as being on (1). 16 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources Rev Version 1.4.0 Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual Digital Input When used NPN transistor device such as an electronic proximity switches. supports voltage free contact connection such as a mechanical switch or a Contact wetting current of the input is approximately 5mA and is provided to maintain reliable operation for driving relays. The digital input is activated by connecting between the "IO" and M" terminals. When activating the input the I/O indication on the front panel of the module will be lit GREEN when the input is switched on (closed/shorted). Provided the resistance of the switching device is less than 200 ohms, the device will be able to activate the digital input. PNP transistor devices are not suitable. Figure 20- DIO Input (Switch) Figure 19 - Digital Input (Transistor) Rev Version 1.4.0 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources 17 Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual CHAPTER 3 - OPERATION 3.0 Start-up Access Point Start-up Normal module startup time is approximately 1 minute and 20 Seconds from when first powered on to where you can connect to the IP address. When the Access Point (AP) has completed its startup process it will immediately begin broadcasting periodic messages, called beacons on the configured channel using the default beacon interval time of 15 seconds. Beacons include information that a Client may examine in order to identify if the Access Point is suitable for link establishment. Clients will only attempt to establish a link with an Access Point whose beacon indicates a matching SSID. Access Points do not initiate link establishment. Client Start-up Normal module startup time is approximately 1 minute and 20 Seconds from when first powered on to where you can connect to the IP address. When a Client completes its startup process it will begin scanning its configured frequency for a suitable Access Point. The Client will attempt to establish a link with an Access Point only if it has matching SSID, Encryption method and the correct password. If more than one suitable Access Point is discovered, the client will attempt to establish a link with the Access Point that has the strongest radio signal. Link Establishment Once a Client identifies a suitable Access Point for link establishment it attempts to link using a two-step process them to establish a link. Once the Client has been authenticated, it will then request an Association to establish a link. Status of the wireless link is indicated via the TX/LINK LED. For an Access Point, the TX/LINK LED will be OFF while no links have been established. Once one or more links have been established, the TX/LINK LED is on GREEN. For a Client, if their configurations permit of the web interface. After the link is established, data may be transferred in both directions. The Access Point will act as a master-unit and will control the flow of data to the Clients linked to it. Clients can only transmit data to the AP to which they are connected. When a Client transfers data to another Client, it first transmits the data to the AP, which then forwards the data to the destined Client. If the encryption keys are incorrect between units in the same system, or a dissimilar encryption scheme is configured, the LINK led will light, however data cannot be passed over the wireless network. over radio. A maximum of 127 Clients may be linked to an Access Point. How a Link connection is lost A Client monitors beacon messages from an Access Point to determine whether the link is still present. If the Client can no longer hear the Access Point beacons it will wait 7 beacon times (7 x 15 seconds) and then send a link check message and if it still does not receive an acknowledgment it will drop the link and clear its connectivity list. If an Access Point is connected to a single Client and the Client fails or is turned off, the Access Point will wait 5 minutes before dropping the link and clearing the connectivity list. Roaming Clients Clients can roam within a system however there are some limitations due to the link timeouts. If when connected to an Access Point the link fails because of a hardware problem or the signal level falls below the minimum threshold (-99dB, 25KHz channel @19200 baud or -100dBm @ 9600 baud) the Client will scan for beacon signals and connect to the Access Point with the strongest RSSI level (If more than one Access Points can be heard and provided the SSID and any Encryption methods/keys are the same). This functionality allows clients to roam to a stronger Access Point when the signal level gets too low or the link completely fails, etc. The timeframe for the changeover will be approximately 105 seconds due to link retires and timeouts. 18 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources Rev Version 1.4.0 Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual LED Indication The following table details the status of the indicating LEDs on the front panel for all operating conditions. LED Indicator Condition Meaning OK OK OK GREEN Normal Operation Flashing RED / GREEN Module Boot Sequence RED Default Quick start Mode (Unconfigured) Radio RX GREEN flash Radio receiving data (Good Signal Strength) Radio RX RED flash Radio receiving data (Low Signal strength) TX/LINK TX/LINK RS-232 RS-232 LAN LAN GREEN RED GREEN flash RED flash ON Radio Connection Established Radio Transmitting Data sent from RS-232 Serial Port Data received to RS-232 Serial Port Link Established on Ethernet port ORANGE flash Activity on Ethernet port. RS-485 GREEN flash Data sent from RS-485 Serial Port. If expansion I/O is being used this will flash constantly RS-485 RED flash Data received to RS-485 Serial Port IO IO IO IO GREEN RED OFF Digital Input is On. Digital Output is active Digital Output OFF and Input is open circuit. GREEN different intensity Analog input current loop. dim = 4mA, bright= 20mA The Ethernet RJ45 connector on the end of the module incorporates two indication LEDs. The LINK LED which comes on to indicate a connection on the Ethernet port, and it will blink OFF briefly when activity is detected, similar to the LAN Led on the front panel. The 100MB LED indicates that the LAN connection is at 100 MBit/Sec. The 100MB LED will be off for 10MB/Sec connection. Other conditions indicating a fault are described in CHAPTER 4 - DIAGNOSTICS. Rev Version 1.4.0 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources 19 Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual 3.1 Radio Operating Parameters Frequency Bands The radios will operate within the range 360-512MHz; however the radio must be factory set to one of the 20MHz frequency bands shown below. Care must be taken when ordering to select the correct band for your locale as the frequency cannot be configured outside of its band. The following Frequency bands are available. 370 410 440 480 360 380 MHz 400 420 MHz 430 450 MHz 470 490 MHz 390 430 460 500 380 400 MHz 420 440 MHz 450 470 MHz 490 512 MHz Note: Modems must be ordered to operate in the chosen band; modems cannot be tuned to a frequency that is outside of this band. Data Rate The 450U-E can be configured with different radio transmission rates. Selections available are 9600 and 19200 bps for wide band radios or 4800 & 9600 bps for narrow band. The Data Rate only applies to transmit messages as the radio is able to receive on all available data rates. Reducing the data rate can increase the reliable communication range of the module, i.e. if the received signal level is a little low, the data rate could be reduced to improve the communications. It is important that the Data Rates on the Client radios be configured appropriately for the radio link. The default Data Rate will be set to the high level depending on the bandwidth, i.e. 19.2kbps if the radio is wide band (25 KHz) and 9.6kbps if the radio is narrow band (12.5 KHz). If the signal strength (RSSI) for the radio is les than -100dBm for narrow band and -
110dBm for wide band radios it is recommended that the Radio Data Rate is reduced to the lower rate. The Receiver Signal Strength Indication (RSSI) can be viewed on the Connectivity page (see Section 4.1 Connectivity for details) When an Access Point first communicates with a Client it remembers what data rate it is using and from then on will communicate at that rate. All UDP broadcast traffic and beacon messages for the will use the lowest date rate from all the modules in the system. Receiver The Radio Receive Sensitivity will vary depending on the radio channel width, whether it is a wide band radio using 25 KHz channels or if it a narrow band radio using 12.5 KHz channel. The transmit data rate will also vary the receiver sensitivity. Refer to the table below for Receiver Sensitivity Receiver Sensitivity Bandwidth 25KHz Channel 12.5 KHz Channels 4.8kbits N/A
-111 dBm Baud Rate 9.6kbits
-110 dBm
-100 dBm 19.2kbits
-99 dBm N/A 20 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources Rev Version 1.4.0 Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual 3.2 Initial Connection The 450U-E has a built-in web server, for configuration and diagnostics. The preferred web browser is Microsoft internet explorer version 7 or greater. This program is shipped with Microsoft windows or may be obtained freely via the Microsoft website or Google chrome which is also downloadable from the web . Other browsers may not be fully compatible on all beta web pages. Note: Microsoft Internet Explorer Version 6 will not load web pages due to a compatibility issue between IE6 and SSL-security web sites. First Time Configuration If the modem is new and never been configured before or the module has been factory defaulted it will need to have the Locale set. The Locale is a set of parameters that define the basic radio configuration setup, they include Frequency Range and channel step size. When connecting to the Default IP address which is shown on the label on the underside of the module the first page to load will be the Locale Configuration page as shown at the end of this section Locale Configuration . Modem with no Locale configured will be indicated by a Red OK Led and the Transmitter will be unable to transmit. If the module has been previously configured and the IP address is unknown the module can be put into a mode that will temporary load the default address and allow configuration. See Default Configuration Switch below and follow the procedure to gain access to the module. Default Configuration Switch The 450U-E will temporarily load factory-default settings if powered on with the RUN/SETUP switch (on the end-plate of the module) in SETUP position. The previous configuration remains stored in non-volatile memory and will only change if a configuration parameter is modified and the change saved. When in SETUP mode, wireless operation will be disabled. Do not forget to set the switch back to the RUN position and cycle power at the conclusion of configuration for resumption of normal operation. The default factory configuration of the 450U-E is Client / Bridge IP address192.168.0.1XX, where XX is the last two digits of the serial number (the default IP address is shown on the printed label on the back of the module) Netmask 255.255.255.0 Because the Default IP address of the modem will be within the IP range 192.168.0.XXX it may not be compatible with the network or PC that you are using to configure it with. You will temporarily need to change the computers IP address to allow connection to the module. See below for instruction on how this can be done. Setting the PC to same network as 450U-E This procedure will run you through the process for changing your computer settings so that the configuring PC is on the same network as the 450U-E connection between the PC Ethernet port and the 450U-E. Connect the Ethernet cable between the module and the PC configuring the module. for
Rev Version 1.4.0 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources 21 Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual Set the RUN/SETUP Switch to the SETUP position. This will start the 450U-E with a default Ethernet IP address, subnet mask, gateway IP address and the radio will be disabled. The default Ethernet address will be within the IP range 192.168.0.1XX where XX is the last two digits of the serial number and should be shown on the label on the back of the module. Do not forget to set the dip switch back to the RUN position and restart the module at the conclusion of configuration. Power up the 450U-E module. following description is for Windows XP - other Windows operating systems have similar settings. Select Internet Protocol (TCP/IP) and click on Properties. On the General tab enter IP address 192.168.0.1, Subnet mask 255.255.25 Open Internet Explorer and ensure that settings will allow you to connect to the IP address selected. If the PC uses a proxy server, ensure that Figure 21 - Local Area Connection Internet Explorer will bypass the Proxy Server for local addresses. This option may be modified by opening Tools -> Internet Options ->
Connections Tab -> LAN Settings->Proxy Server -> bypass proxy for local addresses. Enter the default IP address for the 450U-E 192.168.0.1XX where XX is the last two digits of the serial number. Enter the default Figure 22 - TCP/IP Properties You should now be connected to the Locale Configuration page on the modem as per Figure 23 Locale Configuration below. You will now need to configure the modem with radio specification that conforms to the country of operation. Locale Configuration below will explain this configuration process. Figure 23 Locale Configuration 22 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources Rev Version 1.4.0 Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual Locale Configuration When connecting to the module for the first time (new or factory defaulted module) you will need to configure the model Locale and a number of other radio configuration parameters before the modems can be used, these include Transmit and Receive Frequency the channel step size and the Transmit Power level as per the country regulation. The main Locale screen requires you select the appropriate Locale from the drop down list, the table will shows the available Locales and frequency ranges based on the radio hardware. When the correct Locale is selected, press the Save and Activate Changes button at the bottom of the screen. The next page will display the Default Quick Start page. This opening screen will guide you through the initial radio configuration parameters. See below for complete parameter descriptions. You cannot navigate away from this page until the operating parameters have been set. When all configuration parameters have been entered ensure the RUN/SETUP switch is set tton to apply the configuration. When the modem has reset you will be directed to the Main home screen as per Figure 24 - Main Screen below. From here you can configure the modem as you wish. From the Main Screen the easiest way to this which is explained in the next section 3.3 Quickstart
. Figure 24 - Main Screen Rev Version 1.4.0 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources 23 Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual 3.3 Quickstart Figure 25 - Quick Start The Quick Start Configuration option is designed to guide you through the configuration process with minimal effort. You can access it any time by selecting it from the right hand menu. This is a simple first stage configuration tool that will help configure the basic parameters that are needed to get a connection between two modules. For most applications, no further configuration should be needed however if more advanced options are required the normal configuration pages can be edited after the Quick Start configuration has been saved. 1. configure the following parameters if necessary:
Transmit Power Level - This allows adjustment of the radio power. Depending on the Locale the maximum radio power level may be limited to the maximum allowable for the locale. You can reduce the power for short range applications, or to allow the use of high gain transmitter antennas while still complying with the emission requirements of your license. For dBm to mW conversion table see Appendix C. Transmit Data Rate - The 450U-E can be configured with different radio transmission rates. Note:
reducing the configured data rate may increases the reliable range of the module (transmission distance).The radio baud rate in kilobits per second (kbps) for point to point radio transmissions. Select a fixed rate for the radio to use from the drop down list. Selections available are 9600 and 19200 kbps for wide band radios or 4800 & 9600 kbps for narrow band. The Transmit Data Rate only applies to the Transmit messages as the radio can receive on all data rates. Frequency Step Size - The Frequency Step size is the spacing between frequencies that you can select when configuring the TX and RX frequencies. The steps sizes available are 5Khz or 6.25KHz. Transmit Frequency - The Frequency that you wish to configure for the radio Transmitter. Frequency selection will be automatically adjusted to the frequency step size configured in the previous parameter. E.g. 450.00500, 450.01000, 450.01500, 450.02000, etc. for 5Khz or 450.00625, 450.01250, 450.01875, 450.02500, etc. for 6.25KHz frequency step size. Receive Frequency - The Frequency that you wish to configure for the radio Receiver. Frequency selection will be automatically adjusted to the frequency step size configured in the previous parameter. E.g. 450.00500, 450.01000, 450.01500, 450.02000, etc. for 5Khz or 450.00625, 450.01250, 450.01875, 450.02500, etc. for 6.25KHz frequency step size. Operating Mode - Used to select Access Point or Client. The default is set to Client. System Address (ESSID) - A 450U-E wireless network comprises modules with the same "system addre address is a text string 1 to 31 characters in length. Select a text string which identifies your system. WPA Passphrase - It is assumed that WPA2-PSK (AES) Encryption will be used. Enter in the Encryption key passphrase that you wish to use. saved if a different Encryption Method is required. (See section below for details) IP Address - The IP address of the 450U-E module. Subnet Mask - The IP address of the 450U-E module. 24 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources Rev Version 1.4.0 Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual Default Gateway - This is the address that the device will use to forward messages to remote hosts that are not connected to any of the local bridged network (Ethernet or Wireless). This is only required if the wired LAN has a Gateway unit which connects to devices beyond the LAN - for example, Internet access. If there is no Gateway on the LAN, set to the same address as the Access Point - that is, the efer to section 3.10 IP Routing 2. Save Changes and Reset
. 0U-E web page as shown in the figure below with the correctly configured Model, Locale and Frequency. Figure 26 - Main Screen with Description 3.4 General Configuration Connecting to Existing Networks. From the Main menu as shown in Figure 27 - Right hand Menu. Module Configuration can be viewed or modified by selecting each of the right hand heading. Selecting each heading will open a new configuration page displaying configuration parameters associated with that link. The following sections explain each of the configuration pages. When prompt password (This is the factory default See section 4.11 Module Information Configuration user user General Configuration Comments A system of 450U-E must have at least one Access Point configured as a master with one or more Clients. All 450U-E For further information and examples on wireless network topologies refer section 1.0 Network Topology The 450U-E supports two radio encryption methods, WEP128 and WPA2-PSK which can be configured on the Security Page. The default encryption method is WPA2 and is setup during the Quickstart process by simply entering a Password. If utilising any form of encryption, all modules in the system will need the same encryption method and keys. It is advisable to enter a new password and not use the The available encryption methods are described in detail in Section 3.6 Security Menu below. Figure 27 - Right hand Menu Rev Version 1.4.0 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources 25 Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual Changes and R Note: If making changes to a remote module via the radio link make sure all changes are compliant and accurate before top the radio link from working and will require a hard wire connection to change back. Care should be tken when connecting the modem to existing Networks - When configured as a Bridge (default), all broadcast messages appearing at its wired Ethernet port will be transmitted over the radio. As the modem has a low data throughput any unnecessary traffic being sent over the radio could compromise the reliability of the wireless link. In many cases, the intended recipient of the broadcast traffic that is heard on the Ethernet port does not lie at the opposite end of a radio link. Therefore it is recommended that the radios be configured with some basic filtering or be configured as a routing network to limit unnecessary broadcast traffic being sent over the rad io. Refer to Section 3.11 Filtering 3.5 Network Configuration Figure 28 Network allows configuration of parameters related to the wired and wireless Ethernet interfaces. In general, IP address selection will be dependent upon the connected wired Ethernet device(s) before connecting to an existing LAN consult the network administrator. Default configuration of the module will be Client and Bridge. When in Bridged Mode the modules wired and wireless IP address will be the same, meaning only one IP Address is required. If the Device Mode is changed to Router the page will display two IP addresses, one for Ethernet and one for Wireless. For more information on Bridging Networks see section 3.10 IP Routing
. The Network Configuration page Network Settings Webpage Fields Operating Mode Used to select Access Point, Client. Default is set to Client. System Address (ESSID) A 450U-E wireless network comprises modules with the same "system Desired BSSID with each other. The system address is a text string 1 to 31 characters in length. Select a text string which identifies your system. To force a client/station to always connect to the same Access Point enter the MAC address of that Access Point in the Desired BSSID field
(Note that the ESSID of the Access Point must also match the configured ESSID of the client). Radio Encryption Select the desired radio Encryption level. Encryption key, passphrase, etc. 26 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources Rev Version 1.4.0 Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual Device Mode Bridge STP Obtain IP Address Automatically IP Address IP Subnet Mask Default Gateway section 3.6 below for details) Used to select Bridge or Router mode. IP addresses and Netmasks are required for the Ethernet and Wireless interfaces. By default this is set to Bridge. Checking this box enables Spanning Tree protocol in bridged networks. See to section 0.0 Bridge STP (Spanning Tree Checking this item enables DHCP client on the 450U-E. A DHCP client requests its IP address from a DHCP server which assigns the IP Address automatically. For more information, refer to section 4.11 DHCP Client Configuration default is unchecked. Bridge Mode - The IP address of the 450U-E module. Both wired (Ethernet Interface) port and wireless (Wireless Interface) ports will take on this address. Router Mode addresses must be different. Separate IP addresses are required for each interface. IP The IP network mask of the 450U-E module. This should be set to appropriate subnet mask for your system (Typically 255.255.255.0). In Router mode each interface will have its own Netmask. This is the address that the device will use to forward messages to remote hosts that are not connected to any of the local bridged network (Ethernet or Wireless). This is only required if the wired LAN has a Gateway unit which connects to devices beyond the LAN - for example, Internet access. If there is no Gateway on the LAN, set to the same address as the Access Point -
3.10 IP Routing for more information. Save Changes Save changes to non-volatile memory. The module will need to be restarted before the changes take effect. Save Changes and Reset. Save settings to non-volatile memory, and reboot 450U-E. Once the module has completed the reboot sequence, all changes are in effect. Device Mode The Device Mode allows selection between a Bridge and a Router, each mode is explained in more detail below. When Router is selected you will notice the screen will display a separate IP address for each interface (Ethernet and Wireless). The default mode is Bridge which only requires one interface IP address. Bridge Operation (Transparent Network) A bridge connects several Ethernet networks together, and makes them appear as a single Ethernet network to higher protocol layers. By default, the 450U-E is configured as a transparent bridge. When a transparent bridge is started, it learns the location of other devices by monitoring the MAC address of all incoming traffic. Initially it forwards all traffic between the wired Ethernet port and the wireless port, however by keeping a list of devices heard on each port, the transparent bridge can decide which traffic must be forwarded between ports - it will only transfer a message from the wired port to the wireless port if it is required. A bridge will forward all Broadcast traffic between the wired and wireless ports. If the wired network is busy with broadcast traffic, the radio network on the 450U-E can be unnecessarily overburdened. Use filtering to reduce broadcast traffic sent over the radio. Refer Section 3.11 Filtering By default, a transparent bridge does not handle loops within the network. There must be a single path to each device on the network. Loops in the network will cause the same data to be continually passed around that loop. Redundant wireless links may be set up by enabling the bridge Spanning Tree Protocol (see section 0.0 Bridge STP (Spanning Tree Protocol) Rev Version 1.4.0 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources 27 Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual Router Operation (Routed Network) A router joins separate IP sub-networks together. The router has different IP addresses on its wired and wireless ports, reflecting the different IP addresses of the separate Ethernet sub networks. All of the devices in these separate networks identify the router by IP address as their gateway to the other network. When devices on one network wish to communicate with devices on the other network, they direct their packets to the router for forwarding. As the router has an IP address on each of the networks it joins, it inherently knows the packet identity. If the traffic directed at the router cannot be identified for any of the networks to which it is connected, the router must consult its routing rules as to where to direct the traffic to. For details on configuring routing rules, see section 3.10 IP Routing Bridge STP (Spanning Tree Protocol) network loops and provide redundant paths in networks. To enable tick the STP box on the configuration page. For example, consider this network with a redundant wireless link. If the bridge Spanning Tree Protocol is enabled, one of the two wireless links will be disabled - that is, all wireless data will be transferred by one link only. If the active link fails, the other link will automatically start transferring the wireless data. Figure 29 - Spanning Tree Protocol The Spanning Tree Protocol implemented is IEEE 802.1d compatible. The algorithm forms a loop-free network by blocking traffic between redundant links in the network. These blocked links are placed in a standby condition, and may be automatically enabled to repair the network if another link is lost. The Spanning Tree Algorithm maintains a single path between all nodes in a network, by forming a tree-like structure. The Bridge Priority determines where the node sits in the tree. A Bridge configured with the lowest priority (0) will become the root node in the network, and will direct traffic between each of its branches. unit that handles the majority of traffic in the network. The 450U-E is configured with a Bridge Priority of 32768 by default. The intention is to reduce traffic that the 450U-E must handle, by placing it at the branch level in the network tree. As a branch, the 450U-E The root node is typically the There is some overhead in maintaining a network utilizing the Spanning Tree Algorithm. Users wishing to increase their throughput, at the expense of redundancy should disable Spanning Tree. The Spanning Tree Protocol can be configured on the Repeaters configuration page. 3.6 Security Menu Select the Radio Encryption level from the drop down menu on the Network page and button. Available encryption levels are listed below and explained in greater detail later in the section:
None WEP128 (Wired Equivalent Privacy) WPA2-PSK (AES) (Wi-Fi Protected Access 2) When selection has been made, it is important to save the configurat When all selections have been made the configuration needs to be saved and the module restarted by Changes and 28 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources Rev Version 1.4.0 Figure 30 - Security Menu Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual WEP (128 bit) WEP128 (Wired Equivalent Privacy) encryption is the weakest encryption method, defined by the original IEEE802.11 standard and uses a 104bit key with a 24bit initialization vector to give a 128bit WEP encryption level. WEP is not considered an effective security scheme, and should only be used if it is necessary to interoperate with other equipment which does not support more modern encryption methods. Encryption Keys 1 to 4 These are the keys used to encrypt radio data to protect data from unwanted eavesdroppers when WEP Encryption is selected. These keys should be the same for all 450U-E units in the same system. WEP keys must be entered as pairs of hexadecimal digits separated by colons. Hexadecimal digits are in the range 0...9 and A...F. 128bit WEP requires 26 Hexadecimal digits. For example, 12:AB:EF:00:56:15:6B:E4:30:C8:05:F0:8D for 128bit encryption Encryption keys must not be all zeros, i.e. 00:00:00:00:00 Default WEP Key Figure 31 - WEP One of the four keys may be selected as the default key, and is used to encrypt transmitted messages from the configured unit. A 450U-E can receive and decrypt a message from a module that has a different default key index as long as each module has the same key configured at the same index. WPA2 WPA2-PSK (AES) (Wi-Fi Protected Access 2) replaced WPA and provides significant security improvements over this method. In particular, it introduces CCMP, a new AES-based encryption mode with strong security. WPA2 AES
(Advanced Encryption Standard) is the most secure encryption method, is also based on 128 bit encryption key. When WPA Encryption is selected, 128bit Encryption keys are internally generated based on the Passphrase and System Address (ESSID). The Passphrase must be between 8 and 63 characters in length, and the Passphrase must be the same for all 450U-E units in the same system. Figure 32 WPA2 For optimal security consider using a passphrase consisting of a combination of letters and numbers (i.e. not just a simple word or phrase) as well as upper and lower c Rev Version 1.4.0 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources 29 Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual 3.7 Radio Configuration Figure 33 - Radio Config The Radio Configuration page is where configuration parameters associated with the radio can be adjusted or configured. The first time out of the box configuration will run a configuration wizard that will step you through some radio questions that will allow you to select radio configuration for your country of operation and license. The factory-default parameters of the radio will be set to values that will allow the radio to be powered up safely, without it interfering with radio equipment that may be available in the country of operation. I.e. transmit and receive frequencies will be set to zero. After the initial out of the box configuration you will be able to configure available radio parameters by selecting the page. When all changes are made, you will
& Activate the changes. Radio Menu Radio Bandwidth Transmit Power Level Transmit Data Rate Frequency Step Size Transmit Frequency This is the Bandwidth of the radio and it is factory set. It will be either 12.5KHz
(narrow band) or 25Khz (wide band) This allows adjustment of the radio power. Do not set the radio power above the allowed setting for your country or radio license. You can reduce the power for short range applications, or to allow the use of high gain transmitter antennas while still complying with the emission requirements of your license. See Appendix F -
The 450U-E can be configured for different radio transmission rates. Note:
reducing in the configured data rate may increases the reliable range of the module (transmission distance). The radio baud rate in kilobits per second (kbps) for point to point radio transmissions. Select a fixed rate for the radio to use from the drop down list. Selections available are 9600 and 19200 kbps for 25KHz wide band or 4800 &
9600 kbps for 12.5KHz narrow band. The Transmit Data Rate only applies to the Transmit messages as the radio can receive on either data rate. The Frequency Step size is the spacing between frequencies that you can select when configuring the TX and RX frequencies. The steps sizes available are 5Khz or 6.25KHz. The Frequency that you wish to configure for the radio Transmitter. Frequency selection will be in multiples of the frequency step configured in the previous parameter. E.g. 450.00500, 450.01000, 450.01500, 450.02000, etc. for 5Khz or 450.00625, 450.01250, 450.01875, 450.02500, etc. for 6.25KHz frequency step size. 30 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources Rev Version 1.4.0 Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual Receive Frequency The Frequency that you wish to configure for the radio Receiver. Frequency selection will be in multiples of the frequency step configured in the previous parameter. E.g. 450.00500, 450.01000, 450.01500, 450.02000, etc. for 5Khz or 450.00625, 450.01250, 450.01875, 450.02500, etc. for 6.25KHz frequency step size. The following are advanced settings and care should be taken when making changes to the parameters on this page. Beacon Interval (AP only) Fragmentation Threshold Disable SSID broadcast.
(AP only) Figure 34 - Advanced Radio This interval is the period between beacon transmissions sent by an Access Point. The default value is 15 seconds, and it may be adjusted from 1 to 60 seconds. Reducing the Beacon Interval will increase the amount of radio messages in the system which could compromise normal communications. Do not change unless advised by an Elpro Systems Engineer.
(Client Stations only). The maximum transmission unit (MTU) of data over the radio. If more than this number of bytes is input into the module, it will be transmitted in more than one message (or fragmented). This should be used to reduce bandwidth eavesdroppers from detecting the radio network System Address (SSID) by passively listening to beacon transmissions from the Access Point. When disabled, Access Points will not transmit the System Address openly in Beacon messages. This is particularly useful in unencrypted radio networks and where all stations know the SSID of the Access Point. Data Compression Enable/Disable Data compression. See below for details Save Changes Save changes to non-volatile memory Save Changes and Reset Data Compression Save changes to non-volatile memory and activate the process The radios incorporate a data compression algorithm based on RFC1951 specifications. This algorithm is similar to the one used in file compression utilities such as PKZip, etc. which simply matches duplicate strings within the data frame with pointers to previous data patterns. It keeps a running image of previous received data frames which it uses to compare with the current data frame. When it finds a data string that is the same as a previous data string a pointer to this location is sent instead of the data. Depending on the data this could considerably reduce the amount of data that needs to be sent. Performance is dependent on the type of data frames that are being sent. Typical improvements in throughputs that can be expected when compression is enabled are:
15-40% improvement if using Modbus, depending on the radio baud rate 70% improvement for web page download 40% improvement if using FTP download Rev Version 1.4.0 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources 31 Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual 3.8 Serial The Serial page allows configuration of the onboard serial ports. The 450U-E has two ports, one RS-232, and one RS-
485 port which are used for serial communications with other devices. These ports are completely independent of the other and can be configured for different functions even utilised at the same time. The 450U-E offers five different and each port is configured separately by selecting from the drop down list the appropriate parameters associated with this function. The Available Port Types are:
Modbus RTU Master This type should be selected when the port is operating as a Modbus Master, i.e. Modbus RTU slave devices are connected directly to the serial port. Modbus mappings will need to be configured in the table provided, see below for details on how this is done. Expansion I/O This type should be selected when Elpro Serial Expansion modules (115S-XX) are connected to the modem. Modbus RTU Slave This type should be used if the port is being used as a Modbus RTU slave, i.e. being connected to from a Modbus Master (DCS, Scada, etc.) via the serial port. Serial Gateway This type should be selected if you wish to allow point to point or point to multipoint transparent serial data transfers. Modbus TCP/RTU Converter This Port Type allows Modbus TCP to Modbus RTU conversion. Modbus RTU Master Port Type Data Rate Data Format Flow Control Modbus Scan Rate Select Modbus RTU Master from the drop down list. Serial Data Rate will need to be configured to match that of the serial device that is connected and communicating via the port. Baud rates available from 110 to 230400 baud. Serial Data Format defines the number of data bits, parity and start/stop bits that is used to communicate with the serial device. Flow Control is used by some serial devices to regulate the flow of data by turning on/off flags that are used to tell the connected serial devices to start or stop transmitting data. The RS232 supports CTC/RTS hardware flow control. Configures the frequency with which the Slave Device will be polled. Default is 100msec. Modbus Response Timeout This is the time the RTU Master / TCP Client waits for a response from the slave from the previous poll. Mapping Master Mapping Table Local Register Enter the starting onboard I/O register number that the specified Modbus Master transaction will transfer I/O to/from depending on whether it is a read or a write mapping. I/O count Specify the number of consecutive I/O register that will be transferred in the mapping. Function Code Modbus Function Code used for the transaction. Standard Function codes are:
o 01: Read Coil - Read from a Coil (Output) register. o 02: Read Discretes - Read from a Discrete Input register. o 03: Read Registers - Read from an Analog Output register. o 04: Read Inputs - Read from an Analog Input register. o 15: Write Coils- Write to a Coil (output) register. o 16: Write Registers - Write to an Analog Output register. 32 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources Rev Version 1.4.0 Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual Destination Register Enter the starting I/O register number in the destination device that the Modbus mapping will transfer I/O to/from. Device ID Enter the Modbus Device ID of the destination device Comms Fail Register Enter the onboard local I/O Register number to store the communication status for the specified mapping. The register will be set to 0 if communications is successful, 0xFFFF if there is no connection to the specified server, or 0xFFxx where xx is the Modbus Exception Code (see Appendix E - for more information on Exception codes) Save changes to non-volatile memory and activate the process Select Expansion I/O from the drop down list. Serial Data Rate will need to be configured to match that of the serial device that is connected and communicating via the port. Baud rates available from 110 to 230400 baud. Serial Data Format defines the number of data bits, parity and start/stop bits that is used to communicate with the serial device. Flow Control is used by some serial devices to regulate the flow of data by turning on/off flags that are used to tell the connected serial devices to start or stop transmitting data. The RS232 supports CTC/RTS hardware flow control. Save Changes and Activate Expansion I/O Port Type Data Rate Data Format Flow Control Maximum Device ID to Poll The maximum number of Modbus address that will be polled on the serial interface. The default for RS232 is one and three addresses will be polled on the RS485. Save Changes and Activate Save changes to non-volatile memory and activate the process Modbus RTU Slave Port Type Data Rate Data Format Flow Control Select Modbus RTU Slave from the drop down list. Serial Data Rate will need to be configured to match that of the serial device that is connected and communicating via the port. Baud rates available from 110 to 230400 baud. Serial Data Format defines the number of data bits, parity and start/stop bits that is used to communicate with the serial device. Flow Control is used by some serial devices to regulate the flow of data by turning on/off flags that are used to tell the connected serial devices to start or stop transmitting data. The RS232 supports CTC/RTS hardware flow control. Modbus Slave Device ID Address of the onboard Modbus RTU Slave/TCP Server. This is the Address that will be polled by an external Modbus Master / TCP Client. Default address is 255 and can be set here or on the Modbus TCP page. Save Changes and Activate Save changes to non-volatile memory and activate the process Rev Version 1.4.0 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources 33 Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual Serial Gateway Port Type Data Rate Data Format Flow Control Serial Gateway Mode Select Serial Gateway from the drop down list. Serial Data Rate will need to be configured to match that of the serial device that is connected and communicating via the port. Baud rates available from 110 to 230400 baud. Serial Data Format defines the number of data bits, parity and start/stop bits that is used to communicate with the serial device. Flow Control is used by some serial devices to regulate the flow of data by turning on/off flags that are used to tell the connected serial devices to start or stop transmitting data. The RS232 supports CTC/RTS hardware flow control. Server When configured as a Server the modem will wait for a TCP connection to be initiated by a remote Client. Client When configured as a Client the modem will automatically attempt to connect to a specific remote server that matches the configured Device IP Address and Port Character Timeout Enter the maximum delay (in msec) between receiving the last serial character on the serial port and the radio transmitting the whole packet. Data will be sent when this time is exceeded. Packet Size Listen Port The Maximum number of received bytes that will be buffered before the packet is sent. Data will be sent when packet size is exceeded. Only available when Server is selected in the Serial Gateway Mode. Enter a TCP Port number on which the Server must listen for incoming connections. Default will be 24 Remote Device Port Only available when Client is selected in the Serial Gateway Mode. Enter the TCP Port number configured on the Listen Port of the remote Server. Default will be 24 Remote Device IP Address Only available when Client is selected in the Serial Gateway Mode. Enter the IP Address of the remote Server you wish to communicate with. Save Changes and Activate Save changes to non-volatile memory and activate the process Modbus TCP/RTU Converter The Modbus TCP/RTU Converter allows an Ethernet Modbus TCP Client (Master) to communicate with a serial Modbus RTU Slave. The 450U-E makes this possible by internally performing the necessary protocol conversion. The conversion is always performed by the 450U-E which is directly connected to the Modbus serial device (i.e. only this module needs to have the Modbus TCP/RTU Conversion enabled). Figure 35 - Modbus TCP/RTU demonstrates how a Modbus/TCP Client (Master) can connect to one or more Modbus RTU Slave devices. In this example the 450U-E Access Point is configured with the RS232 serial port set TCP/RTU Converter When using this Port Type the module converts the Modbus/TCP query from the Client into a Modbus RTU frame and forwards it out the appropriate serial port to the Slave device. When the serial device responds the query is received on the serial port, it is then converted into a Modbus/TCP response and forwarded via the network to the Modbus/TCP Client. Figure 35 - Modbus TCP/RTU Converter The Modbus TCP/RTU Converter may be configured to operate on either the RS-232 or RS-485 port. Port Type Data Rate Select Modbus TCP/RTU Converter from the drop down list. Serial Data Rate will need to be configured to match that of the serial device that is connected and communicating via the port. Baud rates available from 110 to 230400 baud. Data Format Serial Data Format defines the number of data bits, parity and start/stop bits that is used to 34 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources Rev Version 1.4.0 Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual communicate with the serial device. Flow Control Flow Control is used by some serial devices to regulate the flow of data by turning on/off flags that are used to tell the connected serial devices to start or stop transmitting data. The RS232 supports CTC/RTS hardware flow control. Response Timeout TCP Port Device ID Save Changes and Activate This is the time the TCP/RTU Converter waits for a response from the slave before sending the next poll. Fixed to 502. Address of the onboard Modbus RTU Slave/TCP Server. This is the Address that will be polled by the Modbus Master / TCP Client. Default address is 255 and is fixed on this screen; however it can be modified on the Modbus TCP page. Save changes to non-volatile memory and activate the process Modbus RTU Mappings Example The system in Figure 36 below shows that Unit B is a Modbus RTU Master that is configured to poll the RTU Slave Device at Unit A via the serial interface and read the status of eight onboard I/O registers which will then be reflected to eight local I/O registers at Unit B. Figure 36 Modbus Example Firstly the Modbus RTU Master needs to be enabled on the dropdown list of whatever serial port is going to be used to communicate with the Slave device. Then the serial Data rate, Data format and Flow control need to match that of the device and then the Scan rate and Response time need to be appropriate for the application. The Scan Rate in this example is set for 1 second and it will also wait 1 second for a response from the slave before flagging a Comms Failure. Figure 37 - Modbus RTU Serial Settings As the module is also communicating with a Modbus RTU slave device (Device #5) it will need to have an RTU Master Mapping configured. Figure 38 Unit B Modbus RTU Mapping The RTU Mapping example shown in Figure 38 Unit B Modbus RTU Mapping is configured to read 8 x Discrete values starting at register 501 from a Modbus Slave Device ID #5 connected to the RS232 port and store the values at its own local internal register 501. Rev Version 1.4.0 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources 35 Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual Local Register (501) specifies a general purpose Bit Storage area in the local module (Unit B). I/O Count (8) specifies that it is passing 8 I/O points. Function Code 02: Read Discretes specifies the standard Modbus function code to read a digital input. Destination Register (501) specifies the register location on the remote Modbus RTU Slave (Unit A). Device ID (5) is the Device ID of the Modbus RTU Slave at Unit A. Comms Fail Register (509) is the local Register location that will indicate a communication failure for this mapping. Care should be taken to ensure that the Device ID (i.e. Modbus Address) of the remote serial device is different to the Device ID of the onboard Modbus TCP Server (if its enabled, the TCP Server only needs to be enabled if the I/O registers are to be read from another external TCP Client). 3.9 Repeaters (WDS) Figure 39 - WDS Repeaters Wireless networks can be extended by allowing Access Points to behave as repeaters and forward traffic to other Access Points. Access Point to Access Point communications is also known as WDS (Wireless Distribution System). The 450U-E offers very powerful WDS configuration, allowing mesh network technology with self-healing functionality. Alternatively, fixed AP to AP links can be configured for optimized throughput. Each 450U-E Access Point supports up to 3 Virtual Access Point or 5 virtual Station/Client connections to other devices. The WDS virtual interfaces will always be bridged with the main wireless interface A WDS bridge interface allows traffic to be bridged to another Access Point on the same IP network. WDS bridge interfaces do not require additional IP Address configuration, as they are bridged with the standard wireless interface that is used for connections to associated clients. All of the WDS interfaces on the one Access Point may be bridged if required. WDS bridge interfaces have the advantage that redundant paths are permitted when using the bridge Spanning Tree Protocol (see section 0.0 Bridge STP (Spanning Tree Protocol) ), thus behaving as a self-healing mesh network. Bridged networks are also not as configuration intensive as routed networks. Since WDS bridge interfaces generally do not require IP address configuration (they inherit the IP address of the standard wireless interface). 36 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources Rev Version 1.4.0 Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual Important Notes:
All Access Points must be configured on the same radio frequency. Specify SSID for AP/STA modes. SSID and Encryption is not inherited from the main network page. Each WDS interface can be configured with a different encryption algorithm; however each side of a single WDS link must specify the same encryption algorithm and keys. A maximum of 3 virtual AP or 5 virtual Client/STA applies per unit. WDS Connections:
Add Entry Button Add an entry to the WDS Connections table. This adds a virtual station to the device. Delete Entry Button Delete the currently selected entry in the WDS Connections table. To select a row, click anywhere in the row with the mouse, to highlight the entire row. Connection Mode Specify the connection mode for this link. AP (Downlink) configures the connection as a virtual Access Point. Sta (Uplink) configures the connection as a virtual Station/Cient. SSID AP Mode: Specify the SSID that this virtual access point will use. Stations connecting to this virtual access point use this SSID. Sta Mode: Specify the SSID that this virtual station will use when connecting to other access points. Encryption Select the required Encryption (if any) for this WDS link. Encryption Key Enter the Encryption key (for WEP encryption) or the passphrase (for WPA encryption). For WEP encryption, the encryption key is set as WEP Key 1. For Sta Mode, this must match WEP Key 1 on the Access point this virtual client will connect to. For AP mode, clients must configure their WEP Key 1 to the same value as this key and select the Default WEP Key to be WEP Key 1. There are many different ways to setup wireless networks; often it depends on the devices you wish to connect and the existing network topology. The following pages show some examples of how to connect devices into different types of systems. Example 1 Extending range using WDS Figure 40 - Extending Range Rev Version 1.4.0 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources 37 Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual One of the most common uses for WDS is to extend the range of the wireless network using repeaters. The diagram in Figure 40 above illustrates a simple example where the four Access Points are all at fixed locations (each of the Access Points could, of course, have one or more client/stations connected). Since the locations are fixed, there is no chance of network loops so we can avoid the overhead of using the Bridge Spanning Tree protocol by configuring fixed WDS links to ensure that each Access Point will only connect to the next Access Point in the chain. Any number of additional intermediate repeaters could be added to the chain in a similar way. The WDS configuration is accessed by selecting the Repeaters link on the configuration web page. Configuration for Site A is shown above in Figure 41. Site A is configured with a virtual Client that will connect to the Access Point at Site B
, likewise Site B also has a Virtual Client configured that connects with the Access Point at Site C who also has a Virtual Client that connects to the Access Point at Site D. Figure 41 - Site A WDS Configuration In this example each Virtual connection is using the same Encryption method (WPA2-PSK (AES) with a key of passp however it is recommended the encryption method be equal to or greater than the main system so as to maintain system security. Also since it is a bridged network the Spanning Tree Protocol is disabled on the network configuration page as there is no possibility of network loops. or even disabled (no encryption) Example 2 - Roaming with WDS Access Points Figure 42 - WDS Roaming Another common use for WDS is extending the range across a large wireless network but allowing roaming connections between access points or being able to switch to the next Access Point when out of range of the previous Access Point. The diagram in Figure 42 above shows a bridging network with a number of Access Points all with the same SSID, network structure, etc. (so as the Roaming Client/Stations can freely roam between Access Points) Each Access Point then needs a separate connection to the next Access Point, which is done using the WDS Virtual Access Points and Client/Stations 38 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources Rev Version 1.4.0 Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual The configuration for Site B is shown below in Figure 43. The WDS is configured with a Virtual Access Point for the virtual clients configured at Sites A & C. The Encryption Method and key are configured the same as the main network for simplicity. Figure 43 - Site B WDS Configuration 2 The WDS configuration for Site A & Site C will be exactly the same as Site B except the Connection Mode will need to be
. The main network configuration settings for all sites will all be the same for each site (as shown). This setup can be replicated many times which will allow Roaming Stations full connectivity across the network. 3.10 IP Routing Figure 44 - System Network Settings When a 450U-E receives an IP frame that is destined for an IP address on a different network, it checks if the network address matches the network address of one of its own interfaces (i.e. hard-wired Ethernet, or wireless Ethernet, or WDS) and forwards the frame appropriately. However, if the IP network address does not match the network address of any of its interfaces, the 450U-E will forward the frame to its default gateway. In this case it is assumed that the default gateway has a valid route to the destination. In some cases, it is not practical to have just one default gateway (i.e. routed wireless networks with more than two 450U-
E routers; and in some cases when WDS router interfaces are used). If more than one 450U-E allows for up to 100 routing rules to be configured. A routing rule specifies a destination network (or host) IP address and the corresponding next-hop router that messages for the specified destination will be forwarded to. It is assumed that the next-hop router (or gateway) will then deliver the data to the required destination (or forward it on to another router that will).
Figure 45 - Routing Rev Version 1.4.0 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources 39 Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual The above network diagram illustrates a situation where routing rules may need to be configured. In this example, the 450U-E clients need only specify the Access Point as their default gateway (i.e. they require no routing rules to be configured). However, for the Access Point to be able to deliver traffic to LAN B and LAN C it needs to have routing rules configured that specify the respective 450U-E client/routers as next-hop routers (i.e. gateways) to networks B and C. Note that devices on LAN A should specify the 450U-E Access Point as their default gateway. An alternative to adding routing rules to the 450U-E in this example would be for each device on LAN A that needs to communicate with LANs B and C to have independent routing rules specifying the 450U-E clients at B and C as gateways to those networks. The routing rules for the Access Point in the above example are shown below in Figure 46. The first entry shows the route to LAN B. The gateway for the route to LAN B is configured as the wireless IP address of the 450U-E client connected to LAN B. The destination for the route is configured as the network address of LAN B. Because the host id of the destination IP address is 0, it specifies a network address. Consequently, any traffic received at the Access Point with destination IP address 169.254.109.x (where x is any host id) will be forwarded to the 450U-E at LAN B. Name Destination Figure 46 - Routing Rules @ AP A name that describes the routing rule (Max 32 characters). The destination network (or host) IP address (to specify a network address set the host address to 0. i.e. for an IP address 192.168.0.0 with Netmask 255.255.255.0 would specify a destination network, while 192.168.0.16 specifies a destination host). Subnet Mask The subnet mask for the destination network. Gateway The IP address of the next-hop router for the specified destination. Enabled Check this box to enable the rule. You can uncheck the box to disable a routing rule without needing to re-enter the information at a later time. Devices on LAN B & LAN C that needs to send messages back to LAN A will need to have their Gateway addresses directed to the 450U-E on their respected networks. I.e. a LAN B device needs to send data back to LAN A. The Gateway address will need to be configured as 169.254.109.40 as this is the IP address of the wired side of the LAN B 450U-E. Any message coming in with a 192.168.0.X IP address will be directed across the wireless interface to LAN A. The Routing Rules configuration page can be accessed pages. Up to 30 routing rules may be added to each 450U-E. The table below summarizes the configurable parameters of a routing rule. any of the configuration web Note: Entering dedicated Ethernet Routes can also be added to the wired Ethernet LAN in place of generating / adding routing rules into the modems. 40 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources Rev Version 1.4.0 Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual 3.11 Filtering Figure 47 - Filtering The 450U-E has a filtering feature to help reduce unnecessary wireless transmissions and enhance security. The 450U-E may be configured to reject or accept messages to and from certain Addresses. To accept wireless Ethernet port of the configured 450U-E. The Filter comprises of three lists: MAC Addresses, IP Address/Protocol/Port and ARP Filters. Each list may be set as either a Blacklist (to block traffic for listed devices and protocols), or as a Whitelist (to allow traffic for listed devices and protocols). The Filter operates on four rules listed below. Filtering applies only to messages appearing at the wired The MAC Address filter is always checked before the IP Address filter. If a message matches a MAC filter entry, it will not be subsequently processed by the IP filter. If the MAC filter list is a Whitelist, the message will be accepted. If the MAC filter list is a Blacklist, the message will be dropped. The MAC address list checks the Source address of the message only. The IP Address filter checks both the source address and the destination address of the message. If either address match, then the rule is activated. ARP filtering applies only to ARP request packets (typically these are broadcast packets) which are sourced from the Ethernet interface and destined for the wireless interface. (ARP requests from devices on the wireless network will always be passed to the Ethernet interface. ARP response packets will always be passed). When configuring a Whitelist it is important to add the Addresses of all devices connected to the 450U-E wired Ethernet port, that communicate over the wireless link. It is particularly important to add the Address of the configuration PC to the Whitelist. Failure to add this address will prevent the configuration PC from making any further changes to configuration. Design of the filter may be simplified by monitoring network traffic and forming a profile of traffic on the wired network. Network Analysis software, such as the freely available Wireshark program, will list broadcast traffic sent on the network. Rev Version 1.4.0 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources 41 Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual Filter Example Figure 48 - Filtering Example Device B needs to communicate with Device E via modems C & D. The Filtering requires that Modem C has Device B in its Whitelist LAN via Modem C because the destination matches the IP for device B. This works because Device B is a Modbus Master and it initiates all communications. If the communications was being initiated from each end, i.e. a non-polling system you would need to put a filter list in each modem to allow the communications to be passed from each end.
, any traffic from Device E will be passed back into the With this filter configuration Device A will not be able to access Device E, as Device A is not present in the Whitelist in Modem C. ARP filters is also recommended as it would filter out broadcast ARP requests from other devices on the LAN which would normally be sent over the radio. ARP (Address Resolution Protocol) is a communication protocol used by Ethernet devices for associating MAC addresses and IP addresses and is a crucial part of normal network communications. When a device on a LAN wishes to communicate with another device it needs to know the MAC Address. If the MAC address is not already known or is in its lookup table it will broadcast an ARP request which subsequently would be passed over the radio if the modems were setup in bridging mode. If this is a small network it may not matter however in larger systems there can be a considerable amount of broadcast ARP traffic which if sent over the radio would compromise the reliability of the wireless link. It should be noted that adding ARP filters will only filter out ARP traffic and IP filters will only filter out IP traffic. Also if using an IP filter any Ethernet traffic that is not IP would be passed, this could include Netbios, IPX, PPP, etc. These protocols could be more effectively filtered by using MAC filtering or configuring the modems in a Router configuration instead of a Bridge. If after configuring the modem with filteriing, you no longer have access to the modem, this probably means the Computer IP or MAC address was not added to the filter list. SETUP mode must be enabled to restore operation. MAC Address Filter Configuration:
MAC addresses are uniquely assigned to each device and so can be used to permit or deny network access to specific devices through the use of Blacklists and Whitelists. In theory, MAC filtering allows a administrators to permit or deny network access to hosts associated with the MAC address, though in practice there are methods to circumvent this form of access control through address modification. The MAC filter entry will match only the source MAC address in the packet. Note: It is important to add the MAC Address of the configuration PC when creating a Whitelist. If the configuration PC is not on the Whitelist, it will be unable to communicate with the module for further configuration. 42 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources Rev Version 1.4.0 Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual Blacklist will prevent all listed devices from accessing the module and using the radio link. Whitelist will allow devices with the MAC addresses listed to communicate with the module and utilize the radio link. All other devices are blocked. Add Entry Delete Entry Enable Mac Address Save Changes Add a row to the table of Mac Address filter rules Delete the currently selected MAC address filter rule. Check to enable the rule. Enter the desired source MAC Address Save changes to non-volatile memory (Reset is required to activate) Save Changes and Reset Save to non-volatile memory And restart to activate changes IP Address Filter Configuration:
The IP filter allows can be used to permit or deny network access to specific devices through the use of Blacklists
(blocking of traffic that matches a rule) and Whitelists (allow traffic that matches a rule). The IP filter entry will match either source or destination address in the packet. That is, if either the source or destination IP address falls within the address range specified in the rule, the packet is matched and will be discarded (Blacklist) or allowed (Whitelist). If the protocol is specified, the protocol of the packet must also match. If the protocol is TCP or UDP the source or destination TCP/UDP can also be inspected. If the IP address and protocol matches and the source or destination port number falls within the range specified, the packet is matched. Note: Configuration pages use TCP protocol on ports 80 and 443. Create Whitelist rules specifying the configuration PC's IP address, with TCP protocol, ports 80 and 443. Blacklist will prevent all listed devices from accessing the module and using the radio link. Whitelist will allow devices with the IP addresses listed to communicate with the module and utilize the radio link. All other devices are blocked. Add Entry Delete Entry Enable IP Address Min, IP Address Max Port Min, Port Max Protocol Add a row to the table of IP Address filter rules Delete the currently selected IP address filter rule. Check this box to enable the rule These set the range of IP addresses. All addresses within the specified range are affected by the rule. When the protocol is set to TCP or to UDP, this is the range of port addresses to which the rule applies. When protocol is set to All or to ICMP, these settings have no effect. This chooses the protocol to which the rule applies. The rule can apply to Any protocol (All), or to only one of TCP, UDP, or ICMP (Ping). Save Changes Save changes to non-volatile memory (Reset is required to activate) Save Changes and Reset Save to non-volatile memory and restart to activate changes ARP Filter Configuration ARP (Address Resolution Protocol) is a broadcast message and is primarily used for identifying MAC addresses when only the IP or some other Network Layer address is known. On large networks, you generally tend to get a high proportion of broadcast messages. ARP filters are useful for reducing broadcast traffic that is generated on the wired side of the network on to the wireless network. This is done by only allowing ARP requests for the devices that are on the wireless network, or blocking ARP requests for high use addresses. This means that all other ARP requests for devices on the wired network will not be passed over the radio. As the 450U-E Rev Version 1.4.0 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources 43 Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual has a reduced throughput compared with other Ethernet modems it is very important that any unnecessary traffic is not broadcast over the radio, therefore it is highly recommended that the ARP filters are enabled and configured. modems and any device that is connected to these remote radios in the ARP filter table. what is required is to add the IP address for all remote modem has rebooted it will only pass ARP traffic for the IP addresses configured. Se A Blacklist will block ARP requests that match the entry. A Whitelist will allow only ARP Requests that match the entry. All other devices are blocked. Add Entry Add a row to the table of ARP Address filter rules Delete Entry Delete the currently selected ARP address filter rule. Enable IP Address IP Netmask Check this box to enable the rule This sets the IP address that you wish to filter. Sets the IP Netmask Save Changes Save changes to non-volatile memory (Reset is required to activate) Save Changes and Reset Save to non-volatile memory and restart to activate changes 3.12 Modbus TCP The 450U-E also has an on-board Modbus TCP Server and Modbus TCP Client that provide connectivity for a range of Modbus applications. The Modbus TCP Client and the Modbus TCP Server can be enabled simultaneously, and when combined with the built in Modbus TCP/RTU Converter (enabled on the Serial page) the 450U-E can transfer I/O to/from almost any combination of Modbus TCP or RTU devices. Modbus TCP Server Modbus TCP Server enables the 450U-E to accept connections from Modbus TCP Clients. All Modbus transactions routed to the onboard Modbus TCP Server are directed to/from the onboard general purpose I/O registers. The Modbus TCP Server can also be shared with the Modbus TCP/RTU Converter (if enabled) must be a unique address which is why the default is set to 255. Care should be taken to ensure any serially connected Modbus devices use a different Modbus Device ID (i.e. Modbus Slave Address) to that of the onboard Modbus TCP Server. Up to 32 separate connections to the Modbus TCP Server are supported. Modbus TCP Client Figure 49 -Modbus TCP Server The Modbus TCP Client enables the 450U-E to connect to one or more Modbus TCP Servers. All Modbus Mappings are directed to/from the onboard I/O registers depending on configuration which is described below. Communications with the Remote TCP Servers is achieved with the use of Mappings. All Mappings are directed to/from the onboard I/O registers and are setup button and a new default mapping will be added to the table. You will then need to edit this entry and configure the parameters to match the application. Each column is described in the table below. 44 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources Rev Version 1.4.0 Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual Modbus TCP Client Mappings:
Figure 50 - Modbus TCP Client Mapping Local Register I/O Count Enter the starting onboard I/O register number that the specified Modbus Master transaction will transfer I/O to/from. Specify the number of consecutive I/O registers to be transferred for the specified transaction. Function Code Specify the Modbus Function Code for the transaction. Destination Register Enter the starting I/O register number in the destination device that the specified Modbus Master transaction will transfer I/O to/from. Device ID Enter the Modbus Device ID of the destination Modbus device Server IP Address Specify the IP Address of the destination Modbus TCP Server for the specified transaction. Sever Port Server Port number used for Modbus TCP. Default/standard port number is 502 Response Timeout Comm Fail Register Enter the timeout (in milliseconds) to wait for a response to the specified transaction. Response time should be configured in conjunction with the Response time for the serial ports if utilising TCP to RTU communications. Enter the onboard I/O Register number to store the communication status of the specified transaction. The Specified register will be set to 0 if communications is successful, 0xFFFF if there is no connection to the specified server, or 0xFFxx where xx is the Modbus Exception Code Note: When entering the Local or Destination registers you do not need to enter in the full Modbus Address, i.e. 30001 or 10001 only the I/O address is needed as the Function Code determines what type of command is being used. E.g. if you wish to read from Destination register 30001 you need to select Function Code 04: Read Inputs and then enter the Destination Register of 1. Or if you wish to read register 10501 you need to select Function Code 02: Read Discretes and then enter the Destination Register of 501. TCP Mapping Example The system in Figure 47 below shows that Unit B is a Modbus TCP Client that will poll the TCP server at Unit C via the Wireless Ethernet interface to gather the status of the on board DIO (Digital Input) which will then be reflected on its own DIO (Digital Output). Figure 51 Modbus Example Rev Version 1.4.0 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources 45 Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual Enabling the Modbus TCP Server within Unit B provides a register location for the polled values from Unit C to be stored. It will also allow an external Modbus TCP Client (DCS or Scada) to monitor the stored I/O values from units A & C. Firstly the Modbus TCP Client must be enabled and a suitable scan rate be selected, the default time will be 1000msec meaning that there will be a 1 second delay between the Client mappings directed at any Modbus server. Next the mappings need to configured, see below for the explanation. Figure 52 - TCP Client The Example TCP mapping in Figure 53 - Unit B Modbus TCP Mappings is configured to transfers the status of the onboard digital input at Unit C (Device ID#3) to the onboard digital output at Unit B. Figure 53 - Unit B Modbus TCP Mappings Local Register (1) specifies the register for the onboard digital output at B. This register is configured with 1 which is the register used to turn on the Digital Output. I/O Count (1) specifies that only one I/O point is being transferred (i.e. the single digital I/O). Function Code (02: Read Discretes) specifies the standard Modbus function code to read discrete (i.e. digital) inputs. Destination Register (1) specifies the register for the onboard digital input (1) As the Function Code is a Read Discrete, this indicates that the Destination register will be in the range 10XXX range and so we only need to put in the register location and not the function designator (10XXX). Device ID (3) is the ID of the onboard Modbus TCP Server at C. Server IP Address (192.168.0.200) is the IP address of unit C which is the Modbus TCP Server we are reading from. Server Port is the TCP port used. Response Timeout (1000ms) specifies that unit C must respond to this message within 1000ms. Comm Fail Register (0) specifies the local register where the communications status for this mapping will be stored. Modbus TCP Client functionality allows a maximum of 100 mappings to be configured and a maximum of 24 different Modbus TCP Servers. 46 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources Rev Version 1.4.0 Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual 3.13 Input/Output Configuration The 450U-E has a single physical on-board I/O channel that can be configured as either a Digital or an Analog via the web interface. The Digital channel can also act as an input or an output. The 450U-E also has a number of internal register locations that are used for monitoring internal I/O, general purpose I/O registers and module information as well as an area of memory that will hold the values from any expansion I/O modules that maybe connected to the serial ports. I/O Configuration Configuration of the physical I/O (Analog Input or the Digital Input/output) is done by select accessed from the main right hand web links. Selecting the change the name of the channel to something more descriptive, i.e. Tank Level, etc and it also allows you to change the input mode from Digital Input /Output to Analog. When the I/O mode and name have been changed you must press effect. The default I/O Mode is Digital Input/Output Analog Input Configuration and Activate Changes Figure 55 - Input Mode Figure 54 - I/O Configuration Figure 55- Input Mode Figure 56 - Analog Input The I/O channel can be configured to accept a 0-20mA current sinking analog input. The default settings should suffice for most applications however the following parameters can be adjusted to suit the application if needed. Rev Version 1.4.0 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources 47 Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual Analog Input configuration parameters Name Configure a descriptive name for the Analog input. Zero This parameter is used to configure the scale of the analog input. This is the starting variable (in counts) when the analog input is at the bottom or zero scale. Default is 8192 which equates to the number of raw counts in the register when the input is at the zero or minimum value, i.e. 0mA on the analog input. Span This parameters is used to configure the scale of the analog input. This is the number of counts per measured value, i.e. 1 mA, 1 V, 1 HZ, etc.). Default is 2048 which equates to 20mA on the analog input. E.g. the register range has a total range of 32768 counts with a total mA range of 16mA; therefore the Span is calculated by dividing the total range in counts by the total range in mA, V, Hz, etc. (32768 / 16 = 2048) Filter (sec) The Filter time Constant is the time the analog takes to settle on a step changed of an analog value. By default, inputs have a time constant of 5 seconds. Lower Setpoint This parameter is the lower control point value that is used in conjunction with the Upper Setpoint to turn on and off the Analog Setpoint register. AI1 setpoint location is at register 10002 and VSupply setpoint is located at register 10003. Upper Setpoint This parameter is the upper control point value that is used in conjunction with the Lower Setpoint to turn on and off the Analog Setpoint register. Invert This option toggles the Setpoint control logic between the default normal and inverted state. The function does not change, only the operation is inverted, e.g. if setpoint is on in its normal state, inverting the signal will mean the setpoint will be off in the normal state. Default state is not inverted (not ticked) Window This parameter toggles the Set point operation between the Default and the Windowed modes. Default (un-ticked) - If the Analog Input is greater than the Upper Set point, the set-point status will be active (on, Note: The Upper Se Windowed Digital Output Figure 55- Input Mode The default parameters for the digital output should suffice for normal operation however if you wish to configure the output to have a failsafe indication you will need to configure the parameters below. Digital Output Configuration Parameters Figure 57 Digital Output Name A descriptive name can be configured for the Digital Output, up to 30 characters including spaces. Fail-Safe Time (sec) The time before the output actives its Failsafe state if it does not receive an update or a COS message from the sending input. If the Fail Safe Timer counts down to zero the output will be set to the ON /OFF Fail Safe state depending on how it is configured. When an update or a COS message is received the Failsafe timer is then restarted. It is recommend this Fail Safe Time be configured for a little more than twice the update time of the input that is turning it on, that way the output will reset if it fails to receive two update messages. 48 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources Rev Version 1.4.0 Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual Fail-Safe State The state that the output will be set to if countdown has elapsed. If the Failsafe state is enabled (ticked), the LED and the digital output will be turned ON. If the Failsafe state is disabled (unticked), the LED and the digital output will be turned OFF. Digital Input Configuration of the I/O channel as a If you wish to adjust the digital input parameters see below for details. Digital Input Configuration Parameters Figure 55- Input Mode Figure 58 Digital Input Name A descriptive name that can be given to the input to help with configuration, up to 30 characters including spaces or use the default, Debounce Time (Sec) Debounce is the time which an input must stay stable before the module decides that a change of state has occurred. If a digital input changes (on - off) and changes again (off - on) in less than the debounce time, then the module will ignore both changes. Default debounce time is 0.5 seconds. I/O Register locations There are over 5000 x 16bit general purpose registers that are available for Modbus (including the onboard Analog/Digital Input/Output) and are shared with both Modbus Client and Server. Along with the physical DIO status the internal I/O can be accessed by reading or writing to the following register locations. The Register locations are structured into standard Modbus I/O types and can be accessed using the local onboard Modbus TCP Server, Modbus serial Master or an external Modbus Master device. The layout of the 450U-E I/O Registers are summarized in the table below. Each register is internally saved as a 16bit unsigned integer value. A Modbus transaction may access the entire 16 bit value of any register, or alternatively the most significant bit of a register may be accessed as a discrete value. The main use for the general purpose I/O registers is for intermediate storage, i.e. when transferring I/O from one Modbus Slave device to another. Also provided is the status of the onboard digital I/O, as well as the status of the wireless link and any serial or TCP connections. The different I/O Types and Registers are shown below. Digital Outputs Coils Registers Purpose 0001 Local Digital Output Register 0021 - 0500 0501 - 3000 I/O Space for locally attached 115S expansion I/O modules. 20 registers per module address. Max 24. General Purpose Bit Storage Area assigned in memory for Modbus Mapping storage. Rev Version 1.4.0 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources 49 Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual Digital Input Bits Registers Purpose 10001 10002 10003 Local Digital Input Register Setpoint status Register for Analog Input 1 Setpoint status Register for VSupply 10021 - 10500 10501 - 12500 I/O Space for locally attached 115S expansion I/O modules. 20 registers per module address. Max 24. General Purpose Bit Storage Area assigned in memory for Modbus Mapping storage. Analog Input Registers Registers Purpose 30001 30002 30021 30493 Local Analog Input Register) Local Supply Voltage (8-40VDC) I/O Space for locally attached 115S expansion I/O modules. 20 registers per module address. Max 24. 30494 - 30500 Internal information registers Serial Number, Firmware Version and Patch Level. 30501 - 32500 General Purpose Bit Storage Area assigned in memory for Modbus Mapping storage. 38001 38003 Local DIO register (as a Floating Point value) Local Supply Voltage (8-40VDC) as a Floating Point) Expansion I/O 115S Serial Expansion I/O modules can be added to provide additional I/O. When adding expansion I/O modules to the 450U-E the appropriate serial port must be configured
. The default serial parameters of the port should be 9600, N, 8, 1 which match the defaults of the 115S serial expansion modules. These parameters can be changed, to increase poll speeds in larger systems however the 115S serial port and the 450U-E serial port will need to match. If more than 3 serial expansion mod adjusted. Connect the serial expansion module and take note of the address (Rotary switches on the bottom) as this address will be used as an offset to locate the I/O within the 450U-E. Make sure the devices at either end of the RS485 cable have the termination switch enabled (on), this includes the 450U-
E. Failure to terminate the RS485 correctly could result in the modules not operating correctly. 115S Expansion I/O Memory Map I/O data on the 115S module is read into memory locations according to their Modbus address. The maximum number of Modbus addresses is 24. Each 115S module Modbus address (selected on the rotary switch on the end of the 115S expansion I/O module) multiplied by 20. E.g. If connecting a 115S-11 (16 x DIO) with address #15 Digital input 1 will be at register location 10301. ((15*20) +10001) Digital Output 1 will be at register location 301 ((15*20) +1) If using a 115S-12 (8 x DIO & 8 AIN) with address 16 Digital input 1 will be at register location 10321 ((16*20) +10001) 50 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources Rev Version 1.4.0 Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual Analog input 1 will be at register location 30321 ((16*20) +30001) See Appendix D - Expansion I/O Registers When adding expansion I/O modules to the 450U-E, there are two inbuilt registers used to indicating the communication status of the module. ocated at register location 10020 + offset value. This register will Failsafe Blocks Fail Safe Block configuration allows the internal registers to be set to a pre-configured value on start-up as well as configuring the DIO to reset to a predefined value after a timeout period has elapsed. Also if a remote device is sending I/O to the local DIO and it is in communications fail the output can set to the configured time. after a pre-configured Figure 59 - Failsafe Block Analog In the screenshot above, register 40501 holds an analog value that is being updated from another module every 60 seconds. The module is configured so that on start-up a value 16384 will be written into register 40501 and then start counting the sending module. If after 130 seconds, the module still has not received an update from the other module, register 130 seconds which is a little over two times the 1 minute update period from ted value (~). below. sending has been updated with a real value. will be inhibited from Also if the register is being read by a Modbus Master or Client an exception response will be returned as the register is invalid. If a Modbus Master or Client is writing from a register with an invalid state to another device the message will not be sent. The maximum number of Fail Safe blocks you can have is 50. Registers Purpose First Register First local register were the Failsafe block will start from. Count Timeout Number of registers to incorporate in the Failsafe block Time allocated to the failsafe block before triggering a failsafe state. Initialise at Startup Initialise the value on startup (if un ticked the register will be uninitialized (~)) Startup Value Value to Initialise the register to on startup of the module. Invalidate on Fail Register will be invalidated on failure Fail Value Value to set the Register when a fail occurs Rev Version 1.4.0 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources 51 Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual Figure 60 - Invalid Register State All registers within the module can have various states depending on what type of register it is and what sort of value it holds, a typical analog range is between 0 and 65535 and a digital can be 0 or 1. Registers can also have so does not hold a value but more a non-value or null. Any mapping with an invalid register will be inhibited from sending. This is to ensure the data that gets to the destination is valid and not just default values that the module starts up with. as a shown above. 3.14 Configuration Examples Extending a wired network (Bridged Network) Figure 61 - Example Config 1 Access Point Configuration Connect straight through Ethernet cable between PC and 450U-E. Ensure configuration PC and 450U-E are setup to communicate on the same network Set dipswitch to SETUP mode. Power up unit, and wait for the OK LED to cease flashing. Adjust PC network settings Set Configuration PC network card with network setting of IP address 192.168.0.1, Netmask 255.255.255.0 Open configuration webpage with Internet Explorer at address 192.168.0.1XX/ where XX is the last two digits of the serial number When prompted for password, screen. On this screen select the Transmit Power level, Transmit Data Rate, Frequency Step size and Transmit & Receive 52 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources Rev Version 1.4.0 Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual Select Operating Mode as Access Point. Enter a System Address (ESSID) string. And record as this will need to be exactly the same for all radios in the example. The Radio Encryption is configured for WPA2 AES and will require an encryption key which will also need to be the same on all radios in the example. Change the IP addresses to 192.168.0.100 Leave the Subnet masks at the default 255.255.255.0 Leave the Gateway IP Address at the default 192.168.0.1 as it is not used in this example. Set dipswitch to RUN Save the changes and unit will restart with new settings. Client 1 Configuration Perform the same configuration steps as the Access Point configuration with the following differences:
Ensure that the Radio, System Address (ESSID) and Encryption key are the same as the Access Point. Set the Operating Mode to Client. Change the IP addresses to 192.168.0.101 When complete, set the dipswitch back to RUN ave Client 2 Configuration As for Client1 above, however set the IP address as 192.168.0.102 Connecting two different networks together (Routed Network) Figure 62 - Example Config 2 LAN A Configuration In this example, network A is connected to the internet via a router at IP address 192.168.0.1. Devices on LAN A that require a connection to devices on LAN B, should set their Gateway IP addresses to the Ethernet Address of the 450U-E Access Point/Router, i.e.192.168.0.200. Devices on LAN A, that interact with devices on the internet and LAN B should set their Gateway IP Address to the Internet Router (192.168.0.1) and then apply a routing rule for devices on Network B. On PCs, this may be achieved with the MS-DOS command ROUTE. For example2 this would be: ROUTE ADD 169.254.102.0 MASK 255.255.255.0 192.168.0.200 4.12 Utilities Rev Version 1.4.0 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources 53 Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual LAN B Configuration All devices on LAN B should be configured so their Gateway IP addresses are configured with the IP address 169.254.102.54 which is the 450U-E Access Point/Router. Access Point Configuration Connect straight through Ethernet cable between the PC and the 450U-E. Ensure configuration PC and 450U-E are setup to communicate on the same network Set dipswitch to SETUP Power up unit, and wait for OK led to cease flashing. Adjust PC network settings Set Configuration PC network card with network setting of IP address 192.168.0.2, Netmask 255.255.255.0 Open configuration webpage with Internet Explorer at address 192.168.0.1XX where XX is the last two digits of the mber screen. On this screen select the Transmit Power level, Transmit Data Rate, Frequency Step size and Transmit & Receive Select Operating Mode as Access Point. Enter a System Address (ESSID) string. And record as this will need to be exactly the same for all radios in the example. The Radio Encryption is configured for WPA2 AES and will require an encryption key which will also need to be the same on all radios in the example. Change the IP addresses to 192.168.0.200 Leave the Subnet masks at the default 255.255.255.0 Leave the Gateway IP Address at the default 192.168.0.1 as it is not used in this example. the configuration before resetting the module. make some other changes to This will then display separate IP address fields for Ethernet and Wireless. As the Access Point is now configured as a Router it will route the IP traffic from one network to another. Change the Wireless IP address to the 169.254.102.54 which is the IP address on the Wireless network. Set dipswitch back to RUN Client Configuration Perform the same configuration steps as the Access Point configuration with the following differences:
Ensure that the Radio, System Address (ESSID) and Encryption key are the same as the Access Point. Set the Operating Mode to Client. Because the radio network is on a different IP range change the IP addresses to 168.254.102.53 54 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources Rev Version 1.4.0 Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual Extending range of a network with a Repeater hop Configure units as described in intermediate repeater location. Additional repeaters can be added using Wireless Distribution System (WDS) refer Section 3.9 Repeaters (WDS) for further details. example above. Place the Access Point at the remote Figure 63 - Example Repeaters Rev Version 1.4.0 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources 55 Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual CHAPTER 4 - DIAGNOSTICS 4.0 Diagnostics Chart LED Indicator Condition Meaning OK OK OK OK OK GREEN RED Solid Normal Operation Factory Default Mode, Supply voltage low or Internal Module Fault RED At Power On Boot Loader delay at start-up Fast Flash RED / GREEN Module Boot Sequence Slow Flash RED / GREEN Module Boot Sequence Radio RX Radio RX GREEN flash RED flash Radio is receiving a valid Elpro 450U-E data frame. Radio is receiving a data frame with a low signal level. Threshold is
-100dBm for 2 level FSK and -90dBm for 4 level FSK TX/LINK TX/LINK RS-232 RS-232 LAN LAN RS-485 RS-485 I/O I/O I/O I/O GREEN RED Flash GREEN flash RED flash ON Flash Connection Established to remote device Radio Transmitting Data sent from RS-232 Serial Port Data received to RS-232 Serial Port Link Established on Ethernet port Activity on Ethernet port. GREEN flash Data sent from RS-485 Serial Port RED flash GREEN RED Off Data received to RS-485 Serial Port Digital Input is turned on (shorted to GND). Digital Output is active Digital Output OFF and Input is open circuit. GREEN varying intensity Analog input current in circuit (Dim =4mA, bright=20mA) The green OK LED on the front panel indicates correct operation of the unit. This LED turns red for a number of reasons, i.e. module has been reset to Factory default and will remain on until the module has been configured and reset. Also if the module has a processor fault or the supply voltage is low. When the OK LED turns red shutdown state is indicated. On processor failure, or on failure during start-up diagnostics, the unit shuts down, and remains in shutdown until the fault is rectified. During Module, boot-up the OK LED flashes RED-
GREEN until the boot sequence is complete. Boot Status LED Indication during Start-up The OK LED indicates the status of the module during the boot up process. At power on, the OK LED comes on RED. During kernel boot the OK LED flashes Red-Green at a 1Hz rate ( second red, second green). During module initialisation, the OK LED flashes Red-Green at 0.5Hz rate (1-second red, 1-second green). When initialisation is complete, the OK LED switches to green continuously. If the OK LED remains red at power on, this could indicate either low supply voltage (The module will not attempt to boot until supply voltage is within range); Module fault; or module is in Factory Default mode. 56 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources Rev Version 1.4.0 Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual 4.1 Connectivity The Connectivity webpage displays information on the current connection with either the Client or the Access Point depending on how it is configured. information will display the MAC address, IP address, which interface is being used, the radio data rate, received signal strength (RSSI), authentication status and the inactive time. The readings displayed are based upon the last received data message from the Client. Wireless Figure 64 - Connected Wireless Devices Note: When updating the Connectivity webpage, it is necessary to hold down the <ctrl> key while pressing the refresh button to ensure the most up to date information is displayed. Connectivity Parameters Mac Address Mac address of the connected device. IP Address IP Address of the connected device. Interface RATE RSSI Auth Interface being used for the connection. Will indicate Radio0 Radio5 depending on the interface. Radio0 is the main Network interface and Radio 1-5 indicates the virtual WDS interfaces. Radio Data Rate:
The last radio receive signal strength from that site. Shows if the modem is authenticated, i.e. modem has the correct SSID s the modem has the correct SSID but the wrong Encryption method/key, etc. Inactive Shows the last time data was received from the connected device. If the default Run/Setup switch is enabled the radio is disabled and you will not see anythink in the connectivity list. multiple entries will be displayed as per Figure 65. The table will display certain configuration parameters for each Access Point, i.e. Mac Address, RSSI, SSID, etc. To scan for a list of available Access Point, configure the Client with an SSID that is not available for connection, i.e. there are no Access Points it can connect to. Save the Config and when the module has been restarted the Site Survey will display a list of Access Points and their RSSI values. This information is useful for determining the best connection if multiple Access Points are available. s Point can be heard This list is only refreshed when the module starts up and only if the Client is not connected to an existing Access Point. When the Client does connect to an Access Point it will refresh the scan list and so only indicate the Access Point it is connected to. Figure 65 Site Survey Site Survey Parameters Mac Address Mac address of the Access Point. RSSI The last radio receive signal strength from that AP. Only Scanned on Rev Version 1.4.0 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources 57 Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual startup. Beacon Interval Shows the Beacon Interval configure on the AP SSID Shows the Access Points SSID 4.2 Throughput Testing Radio Throughput There are a number of throughput estimations that may help to determine the amount of data that can be successfully transmitted through the modems. These throughput estimations are based on perfect radio conditions, i.e. little to no outside radio interference present while data is being passed and they are calculated using real life conditions and communication constraints. The performance of a wireless link is best measured in terms of the maximum throughput that can be achieved. The recommended methods for measuring modem throughput are to use an external Modbus Client to poll the internal Modbus Server on the remote modem or to use a FTP Server/Client arrangement and transfer a file, measuring the time it takes to send. It is recommended that the throughput tests be performed on point to point link with minimal radio interference, i.e. no communications from other wireless network traffic. Modbus TCP. Below is a table showing the maximum number of polls per minute (ppm) based on the radio receiver signal level. Results show two different test polls using two different data speeds and with and without Data Compression. For more details on what data compression is and how to implement it, read section 3.7 Data Compression The test is designed to simulate a Modbus TCP Client polling a Modbus TCP server through the radio modems utilising the two different data rates (2 Level FSK and 4 Level FSK) and scanning a different number of I/O points. Setup for the Modbus Client was made to simulate the fastest polling rate possible and then determine the number of messages that were successfully polled in a one minute period. TCP Client scan rate was 5msec, poll delay was 5msec and the Slave response time was 10seconds. Typical results for this setup are shown below. Data Throughput Modbus (Polls per Minute) 4800 baud (2 level FSK) 9600 baud (4 Level FSK) 20 Words @ maximum Scan rate No Compression 20 Words @ maximum Scan rate With Compression 120 Words @ maximum Scan rate No Compression 120 Words @ maximum Scan rate With Compression 72 Ppm 89 Ppm 50 Ppm 89 Ppm 91 Ppm 113 Ppm 58 Ppm 113 Ppm FTP Transfer Another means for gauging the data throughput performance of the modem is to transfer a known data file using FTP (File Transfer Protocol) and time how long it takes for the file to download. application, i.e. Fillzilla, Cerberus Server, etc and the other as an FTP client. Because the 450U-E has a reduced throughput compared with other Ethernet modems you will need to adjust the connection timeout under the settings within the application. Below are some estimated throughputs for ftp transfer using different radio baud rates. l need to run an FTP server Note: the results will vary depending on the type of file that is being sent and if Compression is enabled or not. Data Throughput FTP (file transfer) 4800 baud (2 level FSK) 9600 baud (4 Level FSK) 100k text file No Compression 100k text file With Compression 134k jpg file No Compression 134k jpg file With Compression 294sec @ 0.34kB/s 185sec @ 0.72kB/s 65sec @ 1.54kB/s 46sec @ 2.17kB/s 404sec @ 0.33kB/s 185sec @ 0.72kB/s 215sec @ 0.62kB/s 183sec @ 0.73kB/s 58 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources Rev Version 1.4.0 Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual Iperf Throughput Test A more thorough test is to perform a throughput test which will check the amount of data that can be reliably achieved via the Wireless link. There are a number of software tools that we can use to check the data throughput, i.e. FTP - file transfer protocol, Iperf, Qcheck, etc. bandwidth measurement application that is run on a Laptop or PC at each end of the radio link. The Iperf/Jperf application can be downloaded from http://sourceforge.net/projects/iperf/
a over the link, calculate the results and then display the throughput accordingly. See Appendix G - External Iperf Test throughput. All of the above procedures measure the raw data throughput and from these throughput measurements we can determine if interference is a contributing factor in the overall performance of the modems. 4.3 Statistics Figure 66 - Statistics The Statistics webpage is used for advanced debugging of 450U-E. This webpage details the state of the 450U-E and performance information. This page is typically useful to ELPRO technical support personnel in diagnosing problems with the module. Note: When updating the Statistics webpage, it is necessary to hold down the <Ctrl> key while pressing the refresh button to ensure the most up to date information is displayed. The Statistics Page is used for gathering information about how the module is connected and communicating. It is comprised of a number of dynamic list boxes with each showing particular statistics about its function. Interface Statistics: will show the number of bytes transmitted and received as well as the number of CRC errors, dropped packets, fifo alarms and the different types of frames (fragmented, compressed or multicast). tion as this will indicate how the Radios are communicating. Time: shows the amount of time the module has been running since its last reset. System Log: shows a running log of information about how the modules operating system is running. This log will also log any errors and resets. Rev Version 1.4.0 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources 59 Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual Routes: will display the current IP routes configured in the module. IP statistics: show a number of statistics for each interface TCP/UDP Statistics: shows the number of TCP and UDP connections currently established Memory Statistics: shows the amount of memory available for each function. Serial Statistics: shows the current status of each of the serial ports. Network Traffic Analysis There are many devices and PC programs that will analyse performance of an Ethernet network. A freely available a simple cost effective means for more advanced analysis. By monitoring traffic on the wired Ethernet, a better idea of regular traffic can be discovered. Network Analysis programs make configuration of a filter for the 450U-E a simple task. 4.4 Channel Survey (Utilisation) Channel Utilisation gives a visual display of how busy the current radio channel is over a given period of time. Channel Utilisation is logged by the radio over three separate time intervals: 1 Second which will cover the last 60 seconds; 1 Minute which covers the last 60 minutes; and 1 Hour which covers the last 60 hours. At any given time, an Access Point and its associated clients occupy a radio channel. This radio channel, or frequency, may contain interference from other radio transmitters. When installing or diagnosing the 450U-E modem, the potential capacity of a given radio channel will be reduced by the existence of these other interfering RF signals. Channel Utilisation allows us to see how much RF activity is on a given channel as a percentage of the total utilisation. When looking at the utilisation graph you need to look at the average percentage level rather than the peak bursts, also look at the average percentage over a longer time period. If the graph shows bursts of 60-80% utilisation then this is normal as the 450U-E uses the majority of the channel when transmitting due to the lowers bandwidth. If most of the graph is filled to 60-80% then this would indicate there is excessive traffic. A channel that is very busy will have high channel utilisation. Conversely a channel that is quiet will have low channel utilisation. Channel Survey and Custom Survey can therefore be valuable tools to use when performing site surveys as it allows you to determine how much of the frequency is being used. It is also a valuable diagnostics tool for identifying possible sources of interference. Channel Utilisation on a Live System:
Channel Utilisation can be used on a live system and is the simplest method for determining how busy the channel is and to get an indication of how much spare capacity the channel has for additional data transfers. Performing a standard Channel Survey Scan on a live system will show all Transmit & Receive packet from the system. It may also show Transmit & Receive packet for other systems if they happen to be on the same frequency. To identify possible interference on the current channel you can use the page. If possible, temporarily disable all data transfer on the system, and if the Channel Utilisation remains high this will confirm the presence of outside interference. selection on the Custom Survey Diagnosing Low Throughput:
If normal communications between modems is poor, i.e. data throughput measurements from the previous section are lower than estimated it could be attributed to interference. The Channel Utilisation graphs can be used to confirm how much other radio traffic or interference is present. If the Channel Utilisation is high, then this could be the contributing factor for the poor throughput performance. If the Channel Utilisation was low (indicating little interference), then this could be attributed to a low RSSI, which can be checked on the Connectivity of the menu. 60 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources Rev Version 1.4.0 Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual Channel Utilisation Graphs:
The Channel Survey screen displays a graph showing the percentage of time that a channel is being utilised by any of the following causes:
1. The connected modem is transmitting. 2. The connected modem is receiving valid data from other Elpro 450U-E modems in the system. 3. The connected modem is receiving valid data from other 450U-E modems not in the system but on the same frequency or from modems in the same system that are not communicating directly but through repeaters. There are three different time periods displayed on the page, 1 second, and 1 minute and 1 hour. Each one shows the channel utilisation and background noise level over that time period. Figure 67 - Channel Utilization Seconds The first screen shows the radio traffic on the channel over the last 60 seconds as well as a calculated average percentage of utilisation for the 1 minute period. The next screen shot shows the radio background noise level for the last 60 seconds. Figure 68 Background Noise (Sec) Rev Version 1.4.0 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources Figure 69 - Channel Utilisation Minutes 61 Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual The third screen shot shows the Channel utilisation for each minute over a one hour period. Each minute is calculated from the running average of the 60 second scan. Figure 70 - Background Noise Minutes The last screen shot shows the running radio background average noise level for each minute over the last 0ne hour period. The Channel Survey page also shows two other screen shots (not shown here) which indicate the Percent Channel Utilisation (average readings from each minute) and the Noise Floor in one hour intervals (The screens will only show the last 60 hour period. 4.5 Custom Survey Custom Survey is made up of two separate charts that can be configured to display different radio channel characteristics over three different time scales (Seconds, Minutes or Hours). The custom survey is essentially the same as the channel survey (explained in the previous section) except it allows different channel related data to be displayed which is useful for diagnosing channel utilisation s problems. The default selection on the custom page will display the total percentage of transmitted frames over a 60 second period in chart one and the total percentage of received frames over a 60 second period in chart two. From this default view we can determine if there are too many transmissions being sent from this radio or if there is too many radio messages being received from other sites in the radio network. To display different data select the appropriate parameter from the drop down list and select the to refresh the chart. As there are two separate charts different data values can be displayed and compared at the same time. The data components available for graphing are displayed in the following table:
Custom selections Description All TX & RX Frames All TX Frames All ELPRO transmissions sent and received by the radio being monitored. This option is the same as the normal channel survey which is explained in the previous section. All data frames transmitted by the radio being monitored. This is the default for chart one and will help to segregate the overall channel utilisation into transmissions from the radio in question or transmissions from other radios. This option encompasses TX first attempt, TX retries and TX Ack messages from below. All RX Frames All data frames received by the radio being monitored. This is the default for chart two and will display only received ELPRO data frames. TX First Attempt Messages The amount of time spent transmitting first attempt messages from the modem, i.e. All messages will be retried if the first do not succeed. This option allows us to log the number of times messages fail to get through on the first attempt, which can indicated some level of interference as the message may have clashed with other radio messages. This option and the following two are useful for breaking down the amount of time that is spent transmitting messages into normal transmissions, retries and acknowledgements. TX Retries The percentage of time spent transmitting retry messages from the modem. This is 62 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources Rev Version 1.4.0 Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual useful for determining if the communications get through after the first retry or it continues to fail TX Acknowledge messages The percentage of time spent transmitting acknowledgment messages from the modem and Broadcast messages. Radio Hold off RX to this radio RX to other radios The percentage of time that the radio has spent holding off from transmitting data, possibly because the channel is busy. The percentage of time receiving messages specifically for the radio being monitored, i.e. valid Elpro radio communication frames from other modems in the system that are specifically addressed to this modem. The percentage of time receiving valid ELPRO messages addressed to other radios within the system i.e. radios that maybe talking through a repeater and the host can hear the message directly. Useful for determining how much radio traffic the modem can hear that it may not need to. RX acknowledgements The percentage of time receiving acknowledge messages RX Errors The percentage of time dealing with radio receive error messages, i.e. corrupted data, Data Collisions, etc. By configuring the different chart options from above we can get a clear idea of the percentage of time spent handling transmit and receive messages and/or the amount of other receive data that can be heard at the radio. Configure what is to be logged from the drop down list, select a time interval, then redraw the graphs and display below the settings. Each graph will display a percent channel utilisation using the selected criteria and time interval (Seconds, Minutes or Hours). hanges and the charts will Example One. A good test would be to configure chart one to show radio link and chart two to show data frames). We can see from the results in Figure 71 - Custom Survey 1 being transmitted at the end of the chart and the receive data in chart two also shows a slight increase in traffic. From this we can deduce that the radio itself or a device on the Ethernet network of the radio is transmitting a large amount of data. valid data frames received from any source (ELPRO 450U-E that there is a large amount of data data frames transmitted over the Rx ll If the charts showed an increased number of RX Frames instead of TX frames then this would indicate one or all of the remote radios are transmitting excessive data and it would be advisable to perform the same TX/RX Custom survey on these remote site/sites to determine the cause for the excessive data. Figure 71 - Custom Survey 1 Rev Version 1.4.0 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources 63 Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual Example Two. In the second example we can see chart one shows the radio is transmitting a large amount of data in the last half of the sixty second scan. We can configure the second chart to read specific information about the radio link which can help us determine what shows that the radio is holding off from transmitting around 36% of the time which is a clear indication that the radio frequency is busy. The other two charts show that it is not transmitting many acknowledgements but is send a number of first attempts indicating that it is initiating the increase in communications. Figure 72 - Custom Survey 2 4.6 Network Diagnostics Figure 73 Network Diagnostics Network Diagnostics allows you to check the communications path to other modules within the system. Ping Ping is a standard Network instruction that sends out a small data probe to the IP address configured letting you know if you have a communication path or not. You will receive a response for each Ping, which will show a packet size, IP Address, Sequence number and a time in milliseconds. Followed by a summary showing the number of packets transmitted, the number of packets received, any lost packets and the Minimum, Average and Maximum Ping times in milliseconds. A Ping can be done on either the Radio Network or Ethernet Network. The ping command will automatically select the correct network interface according to the address selected. 64 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources Rev Version 1.4.0 Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual Remote IP Address This is the IP address that you want to Ping Count / Max Hops back. This is the number of Ping probes that are send out. You should see this many responses come Interval repeaters. Wait time between ping requests. Default is 5 seconds and generally will not need to be changed unless using When pinging on the radio network, the response time for the first ping will be longer if the device needs to establish a network route to the destination. 4.7 IO Diagnostics Figure 74 - I/O Diagnostics Selecting this option from the main screen will allow some basic reading and writing of the I/O store registers within the module. To read a register location, enter an address location, e.g. 10001-12500 (for digital Inputs), enter a count (number of conse Below the buttons, you will see the returned address location and the returned values an Output register location, E.g. 1-2500, enter the address location, count, and value and then press the E.g. Write to Register 1 with a count of 1 and a value of 1 will turn the Local Digital Output on. To Read an Analog register location, enter an address location, e.g. 30001-32500 enter a count (number of consecutive registers) and then pr invalid state and has no value (not even zero). see 3.13 Invalid register states. is in an for more details on Using the I/O Diagnostics enables you to check the register locations for invalid states states and even write values to internal register or the DIO if required. If when reading the Status of the DIO on the module
, read Digital or Analog input Modem Module Information Registers There are registers available in the module that show a number of the modules characteristics, i.e. Serial Number, Firmware version, etc. This information is available on the main Web page of the module however having the information available in registers allows a Host system to read the values via Modbus (provided the Modbus has been activated) Register 30494, 30495 & 30496 = Module Serial number Register 30497, 30498 & 30499 = Module Firmware version Register 30500 = Firmware patch level. Rev Version 1.4.0 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources 65 Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual Expansion I/O Diagnostic/Error Registers The 450U-E has a number of diagnostics registers that are allocated for Expansion I/O diagnostic information. Every connected module will have its own diagnostic information which will indicate the module type, error counts, error codes, etc. The Register locations are dynamic with regard to the module address and require an offset to read the correct location. modules Modbus address, which can be read on the rotary switches on the end on the expansion module and multiply this by the 20 E.g. If connecting a module that has an address of 2 the offset will be (2 x 20) = 40, or if the address of 18 the offset will be (18 x 20) = 360. Each Expansion I/O module has the following diagnostic registers. Add the offset to the fixed register number to get the actual register location Fixed Register Description - Example 30017 30018 30019 30020 Modbus Error Counter, Number of Modbus errors the modules has had since powered on) E.g. If the module address is #2 then the register location will be 30017+ (2*20) = 30057 Last 115S Status Code / Modbus Error Code that the module has had. E.g. If the module address is #2 then the register location will be 30018 + (2*20) = 30058 Modbus Lost Link Counter, (Number of communication errors) E.g. If the module address is #2 then the register location will be 30019 + (2*20) = 30059 Expansion I/O Module Type. E.g. If the module address is #2 then the register location will be 30020 + (2*20) = 30060 dec 257 (101hex) indicates a 115S-11 module dec 513 (201hex) indicates a 115S-12 module dec 769 (301hex) indicates a 115S-13 module 115S Expansion I/O Error Codes These Error codes are initiated by the 450U-E when trying to communicate with 115S expansion I/O modules and will only be available if Expansion I/O has been selected in the serial configuration. Dec Code Hex Code Name Meaning 1 2 3 4 0x0001 No Response No response from a poll 0x0002 Corrupt/invalid Corrupt or invalid data 0x0003 CRC Fail CRC error check does not match the message, Different message or possible data corruption. 0x0004 Response did not match request. The response heard was not the correct ID, possibly heard other RS485 traffic. 5 0x0005 81 0x0129 Message type did not match request. Problem accessing local memory The response heard did not match the requested poll, i.e. different command response, possibly heard other RS485 traffic. Could not access register location, possibly because the register is not initialised There are other Modbus Error Response Codes explained in Appendix D which are responses from the Slave device showing any errors it has with the communications. 66 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources Rev Version 1.4.0 Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual 4.8 Monitor Radio Comms The Monitor Radio Comms page shows radio communication frames that are received or transmitted by the radio. Note: Comms log will display Elpro 450U-E data frames only. Figure 75 - Monitor Radio Comms Figure 75 - Monitor Radio Comms Comms Comms above shows typical data frames from the communication log screen. Below is a table explaining each of the fields within the data frame. e frame. Time Message Time Stamp Time from when module was last started Message Type Displays if message is a Transmit (Tx) or a Receive (Rx) Ethernet frame Frame designator RX blank required. Received packet is a broadcast packet, no acknowledgement is
- Indicates Received packet requires a message acknowledgement the Transmitted packet is the acknowledgement of a previous received frame. transmitted, i.e. reties
TX 1,2,3,4
blank required. Frequency Shows the Frequency of the RX/TX frame Signal /Seq Number Shows the Receive Signal Level on any received message or an internal sequence number for the transmitted message. Data Length Total length of the transmitted or received message Data Data packet 4.9 Monitor IP Comms This option shows the standard IP communication data frames and allows you to see the Source and Destination MAC addresses along with some other IP Comms data. More information on standard IP Comms can be found on the internet. Rev Version 1.4.0 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources 67 Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual 4.10 System Tools Figure 76 Monitor IP Comms The System Tools Page has a number of tools that help maintain the module firmware and configuration. System Log File Shows an event log of the modules operation, used for diagnosing problems. Read Configuration File This option will show the module configuration in XML format. This file can be saved for future reference or backup. Write Configuration File be loaded back into the module Firmware Upgrade This option is used for Patch firmware upgrades only. See Appendix A - for full upgrade procedure. one locally or remotely via the radio. Resets the module Loads the Factory default configuration and resets. CAUTION Doing this will overwrite any current configuration Reset Factory Default Configuration Setting a 450U-E to Factory Default Settings Access the configuration webpages on the 450U-E 3.2 Initial Connection . Click on the menu item from the main menu. Click on Factory Default Configuration Reset
, and wait for unit to reset. While the module executes the reset sequence the OK LED will flash. The OK LED will turn green when the reset sequence is complete. When complete you should be able connect to the modules default IP address which will be displayed on the label on the bottom of the module. 4.11 Module Information Configuration Module Information Webpage Fields This configuration page is primarily for information purposes. With the exception of the password, the information entered here is displayed on the home configuration webpage of the 450U-E. Username Password Configuration of Username. This is the username used to access the configuration on the 450U-E. Take care to remember this username if you change it as it will be needed to access the 450U-E in future. Configuration of Password. This is the password used to access the configuration on the 450U-E. Take care to remember this password if you change it as it will be needed to access the module in future. Device Name A text field if you wish to label the particular 450U-E. This is also the DNS 68 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources Rev Version 1.4.0 Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual Owner Contact Description Location name (hostname) of the device if you are using DNS. A text field for owner name. A text field for owner phone number, email address etc. A text field used for a description of the purpose of the unit. A text field used to describe the location of the 450U-E. Configuration Version A text field used to enter in a version for the configuration DHCP Client Configuration DHCP (Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol) allows DHCP Clients to automatically obtain their IP Address at start-up. This simplifies network administration, as there is no need to manually configure each device with a separate IP Address. The 450U-E is able to act as a DHCP client. To set the 450U-E to acquire its IP address from a DHCP Server, check the the IP address will be unknown) and so should be given a unique name. 4.12 Utilities P Ping is a basic Internet program that lets you verify that a particular IP address exists and can accept requests. Ping is used diagnostically to ensure that a host computer you are trying to reach is actually operating. If, for example, a user can t ping a host, then the user will be unable to send files to that host. Ping operates by sending a packet to a designated address and waiting for a response. The basic operation of Ping can be performed by following these steps in any Windows operating system. There will be a certain directory specified (unique to your own PC) with a flashing cursor at the end. At the cursor type the w 450U-E at first start-up. to send the ping command. The PC will reply with an acknowledgement of your command and if your 450U-E is correctly configured the reply will look something like this. Figure 77 - Ping Rev Version 1.4.0 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources 69 Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual This Figure 78 - Ping-t A good test for the network once it is first set up is to use IP address. This gives a good indication of the network s reliability and how responsive it is from point to point. When you enter Ctrl-
-received-lost percentage. Ip ipconfig can be used to show your current TCP/IP information, including your address, DNS server addresses, adapter type and so on. Figure 79 - Ipconfig In the above example ipconfig was entered in the command prompt. mask and the gateway it is connected to. Other ipconfig commands will return back more information. The hardware or MAC address of the computer may be discovered using the command ipconfig /all. Ipconfig /? Lists all of the commands and their usages available for use. A Displays and modifies the IP-to-Physical address translation tables used by Address Resolution Protocol (ARP). Once a remote computer has been pinged, this can be used to see the IP address & MAC address of the remote computer. It will also show any other devices on the network that it may be connected to. Figure 80 - Arp The command used in the screen shot above is command, in this case the IP address is still 192.168.0.17. It also shows the IP address and its associated MAC address of any another device that has a connection to it. like the previous ipconfig a . Arp ? Lists the commands available for this function. 70 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources Rev Version 1.4.0 Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual R Route is used when joining two or more different networks together via the 450U-E. Refer to Section 1.1 for more details. When routing from one subnet to another devices on one subnet need to know where to pass the message to get it to the other subnet. This is done one of two ways;
Setting up a route within the device which is a lookup table showing a list of subnets and which IP address to use as the Gateway. Setting up a default Gateway address on the modem. This is a link to an IP address that knows how to get to the required sent it to the default Gateway. where if it does not know where to send the message it will If there are multiple networks each with a different IP range, routing rules must be used as the Default Gateway only allows one address to be configured. In the example below a routing rule needs to be entered into Network B. which will allow access from Network A to Figure 81 - Route To enter a Routing rule:
Open a DOS command window and enter the following command at the prompt. Route ADD 192.168.2.0 MASK 255.255.255.0 192.168.0.191 This routing rule states that if you wish to access any IP address on network B (192.168.2.0) with the Netmask of 255.255.255.0 the message needs to be sent to 192.168.0.191. Devices on Network B should also have their Default Gateway Address set to the Routers Wireless address
(192.168.2.191). This will ensure that any traffic destined for the 192.168.0.0 network can be returned successfully. There are a number of Route commands that can be used to edit, manipulate, and delete routing rules. They are briefly explained below. Route PRINT: will show all active routes on PC, Route ADD: will add a routing table to network, format: Route<IP Address> Mask<Subnet Mask> <Route IP Address>
Route DELETE: will delete the unwanted routing table, format: Delete <Destination IP >
Route CHANGE modifies an existing route, format: Change<IP Address> Mask<Subnet Mask> <Route IP Address>
Rev Version 1.4.0 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources 71 Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual CHAPTER 5 - SPECIFICATIONS Frequency 360-512MHz (8 x 20MHz bands) Transmitter/Receiver Transmit Power Data Encoding Receiver Sensitivity Channel Bandwidths Data Rate Licensed - 5 Watt (+37dBm), Unlicensed 0.5Watt (+27dBm) 2-FSK, 4-FSK 25 KHz channel : -99dBm @19,200 baud, -110dBm @ 9600 baud 12.5 KHz channel : -100dBm @9600 baud, -111dBm @ 4800 baud 25 KHz channel 12.5 KHz channel 25 KHz channel : 4800 baud, 9600 baud 12.5 KHz channel : 9600 baud, 19,200 baud Range, Line of Site (LoS) 50Km (31mi.) @ 5Watts 10Km (6mi.) @ 0.5Watts Antenna Connector Female SMA Standard Polarity Input/Output Discrete I/O (1) Ethernet Port Link Activity RS232 RS485 (2) Data Rate (Bps) Discrete Input - Voltage-Free Contact Max 30VDC, 5mA Wetting Current Discrete Output - FET 30Vdc 500mA Analog Input - Current sinking, 4-24mA +/- 0.2% Accuracy, 150 Ohm Impedance Ethernet Port 10/100baseT; RJ45 Connector IEEE 802.3, Auto MDIX Link, 100baseT via LED Serial Port DB9 Female DCE; RTS/CTS/DTR/DCD 2-Pin Terminal Block Non-Isolated 1200, 2400, 4800, 9600, 14400, 19200, 38400, 57600, 76800, 115200, 230400 Bps Serial Settings 7/8 Data Bits; Stop/Start/Parity (Configurable) System Address ESSID; 1 31 Character Text String Protocols/Configuration Protocols Supported TCP/IP, UDP, ARP, SNMP, RADIUS/802.1x, DHCP, DNS, PPP, ICMP, HTTP, FTP, TFTP, TELNET, MODBUS and MODBUS-TCP User Configuration User Configurable Parameters via HTTPS Embedded Web Server Configurable Parameters Access Point/Client/Bridge/Router Point-to-Point, Point-to-Multi-Point Wireless Distribution System (AP - AP repeater) Modbus TCP/RTU Gateway Serial Client/Server/Multicast Simultaneous RS232/485 connection 72 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources Rev Version 1.4.0 Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual Security Bandwidth Protection Embedded Modbus Master/Slave for I/O transfer Data Encryption 802.11i With CCMP 128bit AES Support for 802.1x Radius Server Secure HTTP Protocol MAC Address Whitelist/Blacklist IP Filtering Whitelist/Blacklist ARP/GARP Filtering Whitelist/Blacklist LED Indication/Diagnostics LED Indication Reported Diagnostics Power/OK; RX; TX/Link; RS232; LAN; RS485; Analog/Digital I/O status Please refer to product manual for further information RSSI Measurements (dBm); Connectivity Information/Statistics; System Log file Network Management Compatible with Cooper Network Management System EMC RF (Radio) Compliance USA - FCC CFR47 P 90,15; CAN - IC RSS 119; EU - EN301 489-3; AS/NZS
- CISPR22 USA- FCC CFR47 P 90,15, CAN - IC RSS 119, EU - EN300113-2/
EN300220-2, AS/NZS - AS/NZS4295 Hazardous Area CSA Class I, Div 2; ATEX IEC Ex zone2 Safety Size Housing Mounting UL Listed, IEC 60950 (RoHS Compliant) General 186 x 115x 36mm (7.3 4 4 IP20 Powder-Coated Aluminum DIN Rail Terminal Blocks Removable; Max conductor 12AWG (2. 5mm2) Temperature Rating
-40 to +70C ; -40 to +120F Humidity Rating 0 99% RH Non-condensing Weight 0.55kg (1.2lb). Pollution Degree 2 - Not sealed, not subject to dust, dirt, condensation Installation Category 2- Transient voltages are not higher than 2.5 kV at 250 V ac supply Altitude 0 - 2000m (6500ft) Power Supply Nominal Supply 9 to 30Vdc; Under/Over Voltage Protection Average Current Draw 120mA @ 13.8V (Idle);70mA @ 24V (Idle) Transmit Current Draw 1.2-1.5A @ 13.8V (5Watts); 550-650mA @ 24V (5Watts) Note: Specifications subject to change. 1) Can be used to transfer I/O status or Communications Failure Output 2) Maximum Distance 1200 Meters Rev Version 1.4.0 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources 73 Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual Appendix A - Firmware Upgrades You can check the firmware version that is present in the module by viewing the Home webpage of the module. Firmware upgrades should be done locally with a PC connected directly to the module, remote firmware upgrades are not recommended over the radio link due to bandwidth limitations. Firmware Upgrade USB (Full Firmware Upgrade) Firmware can be upgraded using a USB flash drive with the firmware files installed. Typically a full USB upgrade is required if the existing firmware is a much older version and requires multiple patch files to upgrade to the latest version or a patch file may not be available for the particular version to version. The following procedure will guide you through performing a full USB firmware upgrade on a 450U-E Requirements USB memory stick Firmware files contact ELPRO Technical Support for these files. Ethernet Cable PC for transferring files Preparing the USB memory stick for firmware upgrade. Not all USB flash drives are configured correctly and can be used for firmware upgrade on the 450U-E. The following procedure describes how to check and if necessary re-configure the USB drive for use as a Firmware upgrade drive. 1. Plug in the USB drive, and wait until windows has recognised the drive and completed software installation. 2. Diskpart utility. C:\>diskpart Microsoft DiskPart version 6.1.7601 Copyright (C) 1999-2008 Microsoft Corporation. On computer: TEST_COMPUTER 3. below the USB drive is a 1911 MB (2GB) drive, which corresponds to Disk 1). DISKPART> list disk Disk ### Status Size Free Dyn Gpt
Disk 0 Online 232 GB 0 B Disk 1 Online 1911 MB 0 B 4. When Warning: The commands that follow this step can destroy the contents of the selected disk, make sure that you have selected the correct drive before continuing. DISKPART> select Disk 1 Disk 1 is now the selected disk. 5. correctly configured for use as a firmware upgrade drive on the 450U-E. The drive should contain only one partition, and the Offset value should be non-zero as shown below. 74 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources Rev Version 1.4.0 Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual DISKPART> list partition Partition ### Type Size Offset
Partition 1 Primary 1910 MB 64 KB You can now format the drive using the diskpart utility. If the 7 below to re-configure the drive. or if there is more than one Partition, as indicated in the examples below, follow steps 6 and Partition ### Type Size Offset
Partition 1 Primary 1911 MB 0 B Partition ### Type Size Offset
Partition 1 Primary 100 MB 64 KB Partition 2 Primary 1810 MB 101 MB 6. fre DISKPART> list disk Disk ### Status Size Free Dyn Gpt
Disk 0 Online 232 GB 0 B
* Disk 1 Online 1911 MB 0 B DISKPART> clean DiskPart succeeded in cleaning the disk. DISKPART> list disk Disk ### Status Size Free Dyn Gpt
Disk 0 Online 232 GB 0 B
* Disk 1 Online 1911 MB 1910 MB 7. command, and note that there is only one partition, and that the offset is non-zero. DISKPART> create partition primary DiskPart succeeded in creating the specified partiti Type Size Offset
* Partition 1 Primary 1910 MB 64 KB 8. Finally, the drive can be formatted using the diskpart command line. The file system format should be selected DISKPART> format fs=fat32 label=FW_UPGRADE 100 percent completed DiskPart successfully formatted the volume. Alternatively the drive can be formatted from within the Windows GUI environment by performing the procedure below. Rev Version 1.4.0 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources 75 Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual Formatting USB Memory Stick Plug the USB stick in to the PC, select and right click the stick from within Windows Figure 82 - Format USB Start button.
-selected before pressing the Figure 83 - Quick Format Upgrade Procedure 1. Prior to performing the upgrade you will need to copy the supplied firmware files to the USB Stick root directory. They should look something like the screenshot shown in Figure 84. Figure 84 - Firmware Files 2. When the files have been copied, remove the USB stick from the PC. Note the current firmware version of the 450U-E by connecting to the modules home webpage. This will allow you to compare this version with the final version to confirm the upgrade procedure has been performed successfully. Figure 85- firmware version 3. Remove the black plastic cover on the front of the Module which will reveal a USB port and a reset push button switch. 4. Plug USB stick into the USB A port and press the Reset button. 5. LED will flash as per diagram below. 6. When complete, remove USB stick from 450U-E and refit the hatch cover. 7. Upgrade is now complete; Navigate to the Home page and check Figure 86 - Side access panel 76 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources Rev Version 1.4.0 Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual firmware version has been updated and that all other configuration settings are ok, configuration should not have been changed or erased during this process. DO NOT remove the Flash drive or interrupt the power to the module while this is happening. If the upgrade process is interrupted module could become unserviceable and will need to be returned to ELPRO for repair. Figure 87 - Firmware Update LEDs Web based Upgrade
. File will typically be named as version it will be upgraded to. 450U-E_X.X-
are version and the If the device firmware version has fallen multiple versions behind the desired version, it may be necessary to upload the patch files have been detailed instructions if it is necessary to upgrade the module firmware. eset When the module to perform the firmware upgrade. You will receive more Figure 88 Webpage Firmware Upgrades Rev Version 1.4.0 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources 77 Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual Appendix B - USB Ethernet connection Connecting to the Secondary Ethernet Port To use the secondary Ethernet port you first need to install the USB Driver file, which can be downloaded from our Technical Resource Library at www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources. Save the file in a known location as you will need to find further on in the procedure. You will also require a USB A to USB B cable which is a standard USB Printer cable and can be purchased from any electrical store. The steps for installing the driver on a Windows 7 System as explained below. Installation on other Windows version may not be exactly the same but will have a similar install process. 1. Connect a suitable power source to the modem and wait for it to power up. 2. Open the plastic cover on the front of the module and connect the USB cable to the USB B socket and then connect the other end of the cable to a free USB socket on the PC. Figure 89 - USB ports 3. When the Cable is connected you will notice Windows will show a new device has been connected and you will get a popup indicating no Driver was found. Figure 90 - Driver not found 4. 5. Menu/Search box which will open the Device Manager window where you will see a Figure 91 - Open Device Manager Figure 92 - Unknown Device 78 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources Rev Version 1.4.0 Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual 6. You will probably get a Windows Security alert as the Driver publisher will Figure 93 - Windows Security 7. When successfully installed close the window Figure 94 - Success Now you will then need to open the Network connections window by Connections window open you will see a new Network adaptor called Figure 95 - New Network Adaptor 8. IP address 1.1.1.1 and Subnet Mask 255.255.255.0. When entered press Ok and then Ok again to get back to the Network Connections page. 9. You should now be able to open a web browser and browse the modules IP address of 1.1.1.1. Figure 96 Network Properties Rev Version 1.4.0 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources 79 Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual Appendix C - GLOSSARY ACK Acknowledgment. Access Point An access point connects wireless network Stations (or Clients) to other Stations within the wireless network and also can serve as the point of interconnection between the wireless network and a wired network. Each Access Point can serve multiple users within a defined network area. Also known as a base station. Antenna Gain Antennae don t increase the transmission power, but focus the signal more. So instead of transmitting in every direction (including the sky and ground) antenna focus the signal usually either more horizontally or in one particular direction. This gain is measured in decibels Bandwidth The maximum data transfer speed available to a user through a network . Bridge A bridge is used to connect two local area networks together. Bridges are typically used to connect wireless networks to wired networks. Typically, bridges will transfer messages between networks only when the message destination is on the other network. Messages that are destined for the same network as they originated on are not passed to the other network, therefore reducing traffic on the entire network. Collision avoidance A network node procedure for proactively detecting that it can transmit a signal without risking a collision with transmissions from other network nodes. Client / Sta /
Station A device on a network that gains access to data, information, and other devices through a Server (Access Point). Crossover cable CSMA/CA CSMA/CD DHCP Dial-up DNS A special cable used for networking two computers without the use of a hub. Crossover cables may also be required for connecting a cable or DSL modem to a wireless gateway or access point. The cable is wired so that the signals crossover , connecting transmit signal on one side to receiver signals on the other. Carrier Sense Multiple Access/Collision Avoidance is a listen before talk method of minimizing (but not eliminating) collisions caused by simultaneous transmission by multiple radios. IEEE 802.11 states collision avoidance method rather than collision detection must be used, because the standard employs half duplex radios radios capable of transmission or reception but not both simultaneously. Unlike conventional wired Ethernet nodes, a WLAN station cannot detect a collision while transmitting. If a collision occurs, the transmitting station will not receive an ACKnowledge packet from the intended receive station. For this reason, ACK packets have a higher priority than all other network traffic. After completion of a data transmission, the receive station will begin transmission of the ACK packet before any other node can begin transmitting a new data packet. All other stations must wait a longer pseudo randomized period of time before transmitting. If an ACK packet is not received, the transmitting station will wait for a subsequent opportunity to retry transmission. Carrier Sense Multiple Access/Collision Detection is the access method used on an Ethernet network. A network device transmits data after detecting that a channel is available. However, if two devices transmit data simultaneously, the sending devices detect a collision and retransmit after a random time delay. Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol A utility that enables a server to dynamically assign IP addresses from a predefined list and limit their time of use so that they can be reassigned. Without DHCP, an IT Manager would have to manually enter in all the IP addresses of all the computers on the network. When DHCP is used, whenever a computer logs onto the network, it automatically gets an IP address assigned to it. A communication connection via the standard telephone network, or Plain Old Telephone Service (POTS). Domain Name Service A program that translates URLs to IP addresses by accessing a database maintained on a collection of Internet servers. The program works behind the scenes to facilitate surfing the Web with alpha versus numeric addresses. A DNS server converts a name like mywebsite.com to a series of numbers like 107.22.55.26. Every 80 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources Rev Version 1.4.0 DSL Encryption key Firewall Hub Hz IEEE Infrastructure mode I/O Internet appliance Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual website has its own specific IP address on the Internet. Digital Subscriber Line Various technology protocols for high-speed data, voice and video transmission over ordinary twisted-pair copper POTS (Plain Old Telephone Service) telephone wires. An alphanumeric (letters and/or numbers) series that enables data to be encrypted and then decrypted so it can be safely shared among members of a network. WEP uses an encryption key that automatically encrypts outgoing wireless data. On the receiving side, the same encryption key enables the computer to automatically decrypt the information so it can be read. Encryption keys should be kept secret A device or computer program that keeps unauthorized users out of a private network. Everything entering or leaving a system's internal network passes through the firewall and must meet the system's security standards in order to be transmitted. Often used to keep unauthorized people from using systems connected to the Internet. A multiport device used to connect PCs to a network via Ethernet cabling or via 802.11. Wired hubs can have numerous ports and can transmit data at speeds ranging from 10 Mbps to multi-Gigabyte speeds per second. A hub transmits packets it receives to all the connected ports. A small wired hub may only connect 4 computers; a large hub can connect 48 or more. Hertz. The international unit for measuring frequency, equivalent to the older unit of cycles per second. One megahertz (MHz) is one million hertz. One gigahertz (GHz) is one billion hertz. The standard US electrical power frequency is 60 Hz, the AM broadcast radio frequency band is 535 1605 kHz, the FM broadcast radio frequency band is 88 108 MHz, and wireless 802.11b/g LANs operate at 2.4 GHz. Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, New York, www.ieee.org. A membership organization that includes engineers, scientists and students in electronics and allied fields. It has more than 300,000 members and is involved with setting standards for computers and communications. An 802.11 setting providing connectivity to an AP. As compared to Ad-Hoc mode, whereby 802.11 devices communicate directly with each other, clients set in Infrastructure Mode all pass data through a central AP. The AP not only mediates wireless network traffic in the immediate neighbourhood, but also provides communication with the wired network. See Ad-Hoc and AP. Input / Output. The term used to describe any operation, program or device that transfers data to or from a computer. A computer that is intended primarily for Internet access is simple to set up and usually does not support installation of third-party software. These computers generally offer customized web browsing, touch-screen navigation, e-mail services, entertainment and personal information management applications. IP Internet Protocol. A set of rules used to send and receive messages across local networks and the Internet. IP telephony Technology that supports voice, data and video transmission via IP-based LANs, WANs, and the Internet. This includes VoIP (Voice over IP). IP address IPX-SPX A 32-bit number that identifies each sender or receiver of information that is sent across the Internet. An IP address has two parts: an identifier of a particular network on the Internet and an identifier of the particular device (which can be a server or a workstation) within that network. Internetwork Packet Exchange, a networking protocol used by the Novell NetWare operating systems. Like UDP/IP, IPX is a datagram protocol used for connectionless communications. Higher-level protocols, such as SPX and NCP, are used for additional error recovery services. Sequenced Packet Exchange, SPX, a transport layer protocol (layer 4 of the OSI Model) used in Novell Netware networks. The SPX layer sits on top of the IPX layer (layer 3) and provides Rev Version 1.4.0 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources 81 ISDN ISO Network Model Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual connection-oriented services between two nodes on the network. SPX is used primarily by client/server applications. A type of broadband Internet connection that provides digital service from the customer's premises to the dial-up telephone network. ISDN uses standard POTS copper wiring to deliver voice, data or video. A network model developed by the International Standards Organization (ISO) that consists of seven different levels, or layers. By standardizing these layers, and the interfaces in between, different portions of a given protocol can be modified or changed as technologies advance or systems requirements are altered. The seven layers are: Physical , Data Link, Network, Transport, Session, Presentation, Application. LAN Local Area Network. A system of connecting PCs and other devices within the same physical proximity for sharing resources such as an Internet connections, printers, files and drives. Receive Sensitivity The minimum signal strength required to pick up a signal. Higher bandwidth connections usually have less receive sensitivity than lower bandwidth connections. Router A device that forwards data from one WLAN or wired local area network to another. Signal to Noise Ratio. The number of decibels difference between the signal strength and background noise. The power usually expressed in mW or dBm that the wireless device transmits at. SNR Transmit Power MAC Address Media Access Control address. A unique code assigned to most forms of networking hardware. The address is permanently assigned to the hardware, so limiting a wireless network's access to hardware -- such as wireless cards -- is a security feature employed by closed wireless networks. But an experienced hacker -- armed with the proper tools -- can still figure out an authorized MAC address, masquerade as a legitimate address and access a closed network. NAT NIC Every wireless 802.11 device has its own specific MAC address hard-coded into it. This unique identifier can be used to provide security for wireless networks. When a network uses a MAC table, only the 802.11 radios that have had their MAC addresses added to that network's MAC table will be able to get onto the network. Network Address Translation: A network capability that enables a number of computers to dynamically share a single incoming IP address from a dial-up, cable or xDSL connection. NAT takes the single incoming IP address and creates new IP address for each client computer on the network. Network Interface Card. A type of PC adapter card that either works without wires (Wi-Fi) or attaches to a network cable to provide two-way communication between the computer and network devices such as a hub or switch. Most office wired NICs operate at 10 Mbps
(Ethernet), 100 Mbps (Fast Ethernet) or 10/100 Mbps dual speed. High-speed Gigabit and 10 Gigabit NIC cards are also available. See PC Card. Proxy Server Used in larger companies and organizations to improve network operations and security, a proxy server is able to prevent direct communication between two or more networks. The proxy server forwards allowable data requests to remote servers and/or responds to data requests directly from stored remote server data. RJ-45 Server Standard connectors used in Ethernet networks. RJ-45 connectors are similar to standard RJ-11 telephone connectors, but RJ-45 connectors can have up to eight wires, whereas telephone connectors have four. A computer that provides its resources to other computers and devices on a network. These include print servers, Internet servers and data servers. A server can also be combined with a hub or router. Site survey The process whereby a wireless network installer inspects a location prior to installing a wireless network. Site surveys are used to identify the radio- and client-use properties of a 82 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources Rev Version 1.4.0 Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual facility so that access points can be optimally placed. Secure Sockets Layer. A commonly used encryption scheme used by many online retail and banking sites to protect the financial integrity of transactions. When an SSL session begins, the server sends its public key to the browser. The browser then sends a randomly generated secret key back to the server in order to have a secret key exchange for that session Found in larger networks, these smaller networks are used to simplify addressing between numerous computers. Subnets connect together through a router. A type of hub that efficiently controls the way multiple devices use the same network so that each can operate at optimal performance. A switch acts as a networks traffic cop: rather than transmitting all the packets it receives to all ports as a hub does, a switch transmits packets to only the receiving port. Transmission Control Protocol. A protocol used along with the Internet Protocol (IP) to send data in the form of individual units (called packets) between computers over the Internet. While IP takes care of handling the actual delivery of the data, TCP takes care of keeping track of the packets that a message is divided into for efficient routing through the Internet. For example, when a web page is downloaded from a web server, the TCP program layer in that server divides the file into packets, numbers the packets, and then forwards them individually to the IP program layer. Although each packet has the same destination IP address, it may get routed differently through the network. At the other end, TCP reassembles the individual packets and waits until they have all arrived to forward them as single message. The underlying technology behind the Internet and communications between computers in a network. The first part, TCP, is the transport part, which matches the size of the messages on either end and guarantees that the correct message has been received. The IP part is the user's computer address on a network. Every computer in a TCP/IP network has its own IP address that is either dynamically assigned at startup or permanently assigned. All TCP/IP messages contain the address of the destination network as well as the address of the destination station. This enables TCP/IP messages to be transmitted to multiple networks
(subnets) within an organization or worldwide. Voice Over Internet Protocol. Voice transmission using Internet Protocol to create digital packets distributed over the Internet. VoIP can be less expensive than voice transmission using standard analog packets over POTS (Plain Old Telephone Service). Virtual Private Network. A type of technology designed to increase the security of information transferred over the Internet. VPN can work with either wired or wireless networks, as well as with dial-up connections over POTS. VPN creates a private encrypted tunnel from the end user's computer, through the local wireless network, through the Internet, all the way to the corporate servers and database. Wide Area Network. A communication system of connecting PCs and other computing devices across a large local, regional, national or international geographic area. Also used to distinguish between phone-based data networks and Wi-Fi. Phone networks are considered WANs and Wi-Fi networks are considered Wireless Local Area Networks (WLANs). Wired Equivalent Privacy. Basic wireless security provided by Wi-Fi. In some instances, WEP may be all a home or small-business user needs to protect wireless data. WEP is available in 40-bit (also called 64-bit), or in 108-bit (also called 128-bit) encryption modes. As 108-bit encryption provides a longer algorithm that takes longer to decode, it can provide better security than basic 40-bit (64-bit) encryption. Wireless Fidelity: An interoperability certification for wireless local area network (LAN) products based on the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) 802.11 standard. SSL Sub network or Subnet Switch TCP TCP/IP VoIP VPN WAN WEP Wi-Fi Rev Version 1.4.0 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources 83 Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual Appendix D - Expansion I/O Registers Adding 115S Expansion I/O modules to the 450U-E the I/O will automatically be added to the 450U-E modules I/O store. To calculate the register location, add the address of the I/O point from the tables below to the offset. The offset ids calculated by finding the address of the Modbus Slave X 20. E.g1. Digital input #1 on an 115S-11 with address 5 would be: (5x20) +10001 = 10101 E.g2. Digital output #2 on an 115S-11 with address 6 would be: (6x20) +2 = 122 E.g3. Analog input #3 on an 115S-12 with address 3 would be: (3x20) +30003 = 30063. E.g4. Analog Output #8 on an 115S-13 with address # 7 would be: (7x20) + 40007 = 40147 I/O store for a 115S-11 Expansion I/O module 0001 - 0016 + Offset DIO Outputs 1 - 16 10001 -10016 + Offset DIO Inputs 1 - 16 10019 + Offset Modbus Comms Fail indication for this 115S module 10020 + Offset Modbus Comms Fail indication (Inverse) for this 115S module 30001 -30004 + Offset 115S-11 pulsed input rate 1 4 30005 - 30012 + Offset 115S-11 Pulsed input count 30017 + Offset Modbus Error Counter for this 115S module 30018 + Offset Modbus Last Error Code for this 115S module. (Appendix E - Modbus Error Codes) 30019 + Offset Modbus Lost Link Counter for this 115S module 30020 + Offset Module type (0x0101) = 257. / Error Status 40009 - 40016 + Offset Pulsed Output target 1 8 (1 register per pulsed output) I/O store for a 115S-12 Expansion I/O module 0001 - 0008 + Offset DIO Outputs 1 - 8 10001 - 10008 + Offset DIO Inputs 1 - 8 10019 + Offset Modbus Error indication for 115S module 10020 + Offset Detected indication for this 115S module 30001 - 30008 + Offset Inputs AIN 1 AIN8 30017 + Offset Modbus Error Counter for this 115S module 30018 + Offset Modbus Last Error Code for this 115S module. (Appendix E - Modbus Error Codes) 30019 + Offset Modbus Lost Link Counter for this 115S module 30020 + Offset Module type (0x0201) = 513. / Error Status 40009 - 40016 + Offset Pulsed Output target 1 8 (1 register per output) I/O store for a 115S-13 Expansion I/O module 0001 - 0008 + Offset DIO Outputs 1 - 8 10001 - 10008 + Offset DIO Inputs 1 - 8 10019 + Offset Modbus Error indication for 115S module 10020 + Offset Detected indication for this 115S module 30017 + Offset Modbus Error Counter for this 115S module 84 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources Rev Version 1.4.0 Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual 30018 + Offset Modbus Last Error Code for this 115S module. (Appendix E - Modbus Error Codes) 30019 + Offset Modbus Lost Link Counter for this 115S module 30020 + Offset Module type (0x0301) = 769. / Error Status 40001 - 40008 + Offset Analog Output 1 8 40009 - 40016 + Offset Pulsed Output target 1 8 (1 register per pulsed output) Appendix E - Modbus Error Codes The following are Modbus Error Response codes that are sent from the Slave device in response to a poll where there is some sort of problem executing the command. They can be used by utilising the Modus mapping fail register and selecting a General Purpose Analog Register (30501, 40501, etc.) instead of a General Purpose Digital register (10501, 501, etc.) This way instead of just indicating the error with a digital output an analog output can be used which will display the error code. Dec Code Hex Code Name Meaning 65281 FF01 Illegal Function 65282 FF02 Illegal Data Address 65283 FF03 Illegal Data Value The function code received in the query is not an allowable action for the server (or slave). This may be because the function code is only applicable to newer devices, and was not implemented in the unit selected. It could also indicate that the server (or slave) is in the wrong state to process a request of this type. The data address received in the query is not an allowable address for the server (or slave). More specifically, the combination of reference number and transfer length is invalid. For a controller with 100 registers, the PDU addresses the first register as 0, and the last one as 99. If a request is submitted with a starting register address of 96 with a quantity of 4 registers, then this request will successfully operate on registers 96, 97, 98, 99. If a request is submitted with a starting register address of 96 and a quantity of registers of 5, then this request will fail with Exception Code 0x02 A value contained in the query data field is not an allowable value for server
(or slave). This indicates a fault in the structure of the remainder of a complex request, such as that the implied length is incorrect. It specifically does NOT mean that a data item submitted for storage in a register has a value outside the expectation of the application program, since the MODBUS protocol is unaware of the significance of any particular value of any particular register. 65384 FF04 Slave Device Failure An unrecoverable error occurred while the server (or slave) was attempting to perform the requested action. 65285 FF05 Acknowledge Specialized, use in conjunction with programming commands. The server (or slave) has accepted the request and is processing it, but a long duration of time will be required to do so. This response is returned to prevent a timeout error from occurring in the client (or master). 65286 FF06 Slave Device Busy Specialized, use in conjunction with programming commands. The server (or slave) is engaged in processing a long duration program command. The client (or master) should retransmit the message later when the server (or slave) is free. Rev Version 1.4.0 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources 85 Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual 65288 FF08 Memory Parity Error Specialized, use in conjunction with function codes 20 and 21 and reference type 6, to indicate that the extended file area failed to pass a consistency check. 65290 FF0A Gateway Path Unavailable Specialized, use in conjunction with gateways. Indicates that the gateway was unable to allocate an internal communication path from the input port to the output port for processing the request. Usually means that the gateway is misconfigured or overloaded. 65291 FF0B Gateway Device Failed to Respond Specialized, use in conjunction with gateways. Indicates that no response was obtained from the target device. Usually means that the device is not present on the network 65024 FE00 Invalid Response from Slave Command type or Slave address did not match request (probably another unit) 64512 FC00 Server Offline 63488 F800 Invalid Local Memory Address Local address invalid in command - Memory location does not exist or is not initialised. 65535 FFFF No Response to the Poll No response to poll message Appendix F - Power Conversion Power Conversion dBm to mW Conversion dBm 10 dB 11 dB 12 dB 13 dB 14 dB 15 dB 16 dB 17 dB 18 dB 19 dB 20 dB 21 dB 22 dB Watts 200 mW 316 mW 398 mW 500 mW 630 mW 800 mW 1.0 W 1.3 W 1.6 W 2.0 W 2.5 W 3.2 W 4.0 W dBm 23 dB 25 dB 26 dB 27 dB 28 dB 29 dB 30 dB 31 dB 32 dB 33 dB 34 dB 35 dB 36 dB Watts 10 mW 13 mW 16 mW 20 mW 25 mW 32 mW 40 mW 50 mW 63 mW 79 mW 100 mW 126 mW 158 mW 86 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources Rev Version 1.4.0 Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual Appendix G - External Iperf Test This Appendix shows how to set up and use the Iperf application to test the throughput of Ethernet Modems. Iperf is a tool used to measure the throughput and quality of a network link. Jperf can be used in conjunction with Iperf to graphically display the Iperf data results. This instruction covers both Iperf and Jperf; it does not cover the setup and configuration of the modems. Details of this can be found in previous sections. Materials 2 x Ethernet Modems configured as a bridge 2 x PC Computers with Ethernet Ports and cables Suitable Power Supplies for the Ethernet Modems Iperf / Jperf Application Installation The Application can be downloaded from the following link, http://sourceforge.net/projects/iperf/ ,which you will need to save to a location on your PC. Extract the zip file to the ROOT directory on your PC, i.e. C:\. This folder contains the main Iperf application as well as the Jperf graphical interface. Copy this folder to the 2nd PC or download to the second PC and extract as per above instructions. Iperf Applications The Iperf /Jperf application needs to be run on the PC or laptop at each end of the wireless link that is to be tested. When command prompt appears we need to set the directory to where the Iperf application resides, i.e. where it was saved above, and from here run the Iperf server comm Figure 97. Figure 97 - Iperf Server Note: If you get a security pop up on PC select Unblock for the application to run. This will run the Iperf application in Server mode which is configured to respond to any communication frames sent to it from the Client. On the Client PC open up a CMD window and change to the directory that Iperf is located, in this case it is c:/utils/iperf. Enter the Iperf command to start the Client communication to the S See Figure 98. c <IP address of Server PC> -w 65535. Figure 98 - Iperf Client Rev Version 1.4.0 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources 87 Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual This will run a test over the radio link to the Server PC and report back results as seen in Figure 99. These results show the Bandwidth (Throughput) of the test as 19.2 Kbits/sec. Figure 99 - Iperf Results It is recommended that the test be run a number of times to get an average. JPerf Application Jperf is a graphical interface that runs over the top of Iperf. It will display a graph result from the Iperf test.
-2.0.2: directory Figure 101Figure 100. The CMD screen will disappear and the Jperf Screen will appear as seen in Figure 101. Figure 100 - Command line Figure 101 Jperf Screen When Jperf screen appears select Client Mode, enter in the IP address of the Server PC; leave Port as default and press Run Iperf button. The test will run and then display the measured Bandwidth (Throughput) versus time. You can run this test as often as you like to try and gather a more accurate average. Note: Jperf is written in Java which might mean that further installation or updates may be required, depending on how the PC is setup. 88 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources Rev Version 1.4.0 Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual Appendix H - GNU Free Doc License Version 2, June 1991 Copyright (C) 1989, 1991 Free Software Foundation, Inc. 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301, USA Everyone is permitted to copy and distribute verbatim copies of this license document, but changing it is not allowed. Preamble The licenses for most software are designed to take away your freedom to share and change it. By contrast, the GNU General Public License is intended to guarantee your freedom to share and change free software--to make sure the software is free for all its users. This General Public License applies to most of the Free Software Foundation's software and to any other program whose authors commit to using it. (Some other Free Software Foundation software is covered by the GNU Lesser General Public License instead.) You can apply it to your programs, too. When we speak of free software, we are referring to freedom, not price. Our General Public Licenses are designed to make sure that you have the freedom to distribute copies of free software (and charge for this service if you wish), that you receive source code or can get it if you want it, that you can change the software or use pieces of it in new free programs; and that you know you can do these things. To protect your rights, we need to make restrictions that forbid anyone to deny you these rights or to ask you to surrender the rights. These restrictions translate to certain responsibilities for you if you distribute copies of the software, or if you modify it. For example, if you distribute copies of such a program, whether gratis or for a fee, you must give the recipients all the rights that you have. You must make sure that they, too, receive or can get the source code. And you must show them these terms so they know their rights. We protect your rights with two steps: (1) copyright the software, and (2) offer you this license which gives you legal permission to copy, distribute and/or modify the software. Also, for each author's protection and ours, we want to make certain that everyone understands that there is no warranty for this free software. If the software is modified by someone else and passed on, we want its recipients to know that what they have is not the original, so that any problems introduced by others will not reflect on the original authors' reputations. Finally, any free program is threatened constantly by software patents. We wish to avoid the danger that redistributors of a free program will individually obtain Rev Version 1.4.0 patent licenses, in effect making the program proprietary. To prevent this, we have made it clear that any patent must be licensed for everyone's free use or not licensed at all. The precise terms and conditions for copying, distribution and modification follow. Terms and Conditions This License applies to any program or other work which contains a notice placed by the copyright holder saying it may be distributed under the terms of this General Public License. The "Program", below, refers to any such program or work, and a "work based on the Program" means either the Program or any derivative work under copyright law: that is to say, a work containing the Program or a portion of it, either verbatim or with modifications and/or translated into another language. (Hereinafter, translation is included without limitation in the term "modification".) Each licensee is addressed as "you". Activities other than copying, distribution and modification are not covered by this License; they are outside its scope. The act of running the Program is not restricted, and the output from the Program is covered only if its contents constitute a work based on the Program (independent of having been made by running the Program). Whether that is true depends on what the Program does. 1. You may copy and distribute verbatim copies of the Program's source code as you receive it, in any medium, provided that you conspicuously and appropriately publish on each copy an appropriate copyright notice and disclaimer of warranty; keep intact all the notices that refer to this License and to the absence of any warranty; and give any other recipients of the Program a copy of this License along with the Program. You may charge a fee for the physical act of transferring a copy, and you may at your option offer warranty protection in exchange for a fee. 2. You may modify your copy or copies of the Program or any portion of it, thus forming a work based on the Program, and copy and distribute such modifications or work under the terms of Section 1 above, provided that you also meet all of these conditions:
a) You must cause the modified files to carry prominent notices stating that you changed the files and the date of any change. b) You must cause any work that you distribute or publish, that in whole or in part contains or is derived from the Program or any part thereof, to be licensed as www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources 89 Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual a whole at no charge to all third parties under the terms of this License. c) If the modified program normally reads commands interactively when run, you must cause it, when started running for such interactive use in the most ordinary way, to print or display an announcement including an appropriate copyright notice and a notice that there is no warranty (or else, saying that you provide a warranty) and that users may redistribute the program under these conditions, and telling the user how to view a copy of this License. (Exception: if the Program itself is interactive but does not normally print such an announcement, your work based on the Program is not required to print an announcement.) These requirements apply to the modified work as a whole. If identifiable sections of that work are not derived from the Program, and can be reasonably considered independent and separate works in themselves, then this License, and its terms, do not apply to those sections when you distribute them as separate works. But when you distribute the same sections as part of a whole which is a work based on the Program, the distribution of the whole must be on the terms of this License, whose permissions for other licensees extend to the entire whole, and thus to each and every part regardless of who wrote it. Thus, it is not the intent of this section to claim rights or contest your rights to work written entirely by you;
rather, the intent is to exercise the right to control the distribution of derivative or collective works based on the Program. In addition, mere aggregation of another work not based on the Program with the Program (or with a work based on the Program) on a volume of a storage or distribution medium does not bring the other work under the scope of this License. 3. You may copy and distribute the Program (or a work based on it, under Section 2) in object code or executable form under the terms of Sections 1 and 2 above provided that you also do one of the following:
a) Accompany it with the complete corresponding machine-readable source code, which must be distributed under the terms of Sections 1 and 2 above on a medium customarily used for software interchange;
or, b) Accompany it with a written offer, valid for at least three years, to give any third party, for a charge no more than your cost of physically performing source distribution, a complete machine-readable copy of the corresponding source code, to be distributed under the terms of Sections 1 and 2 above on a medium customarily used for software interchange; or, c) Accompany it with the information you received as to the offer to distribute corresponding source code. (This alternative is allowed only for non-commercial distribution and only if you received the program in object code or executable form with such an offer, in accord with Subsection b above.) The source code for a work means the preferred form of the work for making modifications to it. For an executable work, complete source code means all the source code for all modules it contains, plus any associated interface definition files, plus the scripts used to control compilation and installation of the executable. However, as a special exception, the source code distributed need not include anything that is normally distributed (in either source or binary form) with the major components (compiler, kernel, and so on) of the operating system on which the executable runs, unless that component itself accompanies the executable. If distribution of executable or object code is made by offering access to copy from a designated place, then offering equivalent access to copy the source code from the same place counts as distribution of the source code, even though third parties are not compelled to copy the source along with the object code. 4. You may not copy, modify, sublicense, or distribute the Program except as expressly provided under this License. Any attempt otherwise to copy, modify, sublicense or distribute the Program is void, and will automatically terminate your rights under this License. However, parties who have received copies, or rights, from you under this License will not have their licenses terminated so long as such parties remain in full compliance. 5. You are not required to accept this License, since you have not signed it. However, nothing else grants you permission to modify or distribute the Program or its derivative works. These actions are prohibited by law if you do not accept this License. Therefore, by modifying or distributing the Program (or any work based on the Program), you indicate your acceptance of this License to do so, and all its terms and conditions for copying, distributing or modifying the Program or works based on it. 6. Each time you redistribute the Program (or any work based on the Program), the recipient automatically receives a license from the original licensor to copy, distribute or modify the Program subject to these terms and conditions. You may not impose any further restrictions on the recipients' exercise of the rights granted herein. You are not responsible for enforcing compliance by third parties to this License. 90 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources Rev Version 1.4.0 Elpro Technologies 450U-E Wireless Ethernet Modem & Device Server User Manual 7. If, as a consequence of a court judgment or allegation of patent infringement or for any other reason (not limited to patent issues), conditions are imposed on you
(whether by court order, agreement or otherwise) that contradict the conditions of this License, they do not excuse you from the conditions of this License. If you cannot distribute so as to satisfy simultaneously your obligations under this License and any other pertinent obligations, then as a consequence you may not distribute the Program at all. For example, if a patent license would not permit royalty-free redistribution of the Program by all those who receive copies directly or indirectly through you, then the only way you could satisfy both it and this License would be to refrain entirely from distribution of the Program. If any portion of this section is held invalid or unenforceable under any particular circumstance, the balance of the section is intended to apply and the section as a whole is intended to apply in other circumstances. It is not the purpose of this section to induce you to infringe any patents or other property right claims or to contest validity of any such claims; this section has the sole purpose of protecting the integrity of the free software distribution system, which is implemented by public license practices. Many people have made generous contributions to the wide range of software distributed through that system in reliance on consistent application of that system; it is up to the author/donor to decide if he or she is willing to distribute software through any other system and a licensee cannot impose that choice. This section is intended to make thoroughly clear what is believed to be a consequence of the rest of this License. 8. If the distribution and/or use of the Program is restricted in certain countries either by patents or by copyrighted interfaces, the original copyright holder who places the Program under this License may add an explicit geographical distribution limitation excluding those countries, so that distribution is permitted only in or among countries not thus excluded. In such case, this License incorporates the limitation as if written in the body of this License. 9. The Free Software Foundation may publish revised and/or new versions of the General Public License from time to time. Such new versions will be similar in spirit to the present version, but may differ in detail to address new problems or concerns. Each version is given a distinguishing version number. If the Program specifies a version number of this License which applies to it and "any later version", you have the option of following the terms and conditions either of that version or of any later version published by the Free Software Foundation. If the Program does not specify a version number of this License, you may choose any version ever published by the Free Software Foundation. 10. If you wish to incorporate parts of the Program into other free programs whose distribution conditions are different, write to the author to ask for permission. For software which is copyrighted by the Free Software Foundation, write to the Free Software Foundation; we sometimes make exceptions for this. Our decision will be guided by the two goals of preserving the free status of all derivatives of our free software and of promoting the sharing and reuse of software generally. NO WARRANTY 11. BECAUSE THE PROGRAM IS LICENSED FREE OF CHARGE, THERE IS NO WARRANTY FOR THE PROGRAM, TO THE EXTENT PERMITTED BY APPLICABLE LAW. EXCEPT WHEN OTHERWISE STATED IN WRITING THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND/OR OTHER PARTIES PROVIDE THE PROGRAM
"AS IS" WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EITHER EXPRESSED OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. THE ENTIRE RISK AS TO THE QUALITY AND PERFORMANCE OF THE PROGRAM IS WITH YOU. SHOULD THE PROGRAM PROVE DEFECTIVE, YOU ASSUME THE COST OF ALL NECESSARY SERVICING, REPAIR OR CORRECTION. 12. IN NO EVENT UNLESS REQUIRED BY APPLICABLE LAW OR AGREED TO IN WRITING WILL ANY COPYRIGHT HOLDER, OR ANY OTHER PARTY WHO MAY MODIFY AND/OR REDISTRIBUTE THE PROGRAM AS PERMITTED ABOVE, BE LIABLE TO YOU FOR DAMAGES, INCLUDING ANY GENERAL, SPECIAL, INCIDENTAL OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES ARISING OUT OF THE USE OR INABILITY TO USE THE PROGRAM (INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO LOSS OF DATA OR DATA BEING RENDERED INACCURATE OR LOSSES SUSTAINED BY YOU OR THIRD PARTIES OR A FAILURE OF THE PROGRAM TO OPERATE WITH ANY OTHER PROGRAMS), EVEN IF SUCH HOLDER OR OTHER PARTY HAS BEEN ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES. Rev Version 1.4.0 www.cooperbussmann.com/wirelessresources 91
frequency | equipment class | purpose | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 2013-11-18 | JBP - Part 15 Class B Computing Device Peripheral | Original Equipment |
app s | Applicant Information | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Effective |
2013-11-18
|
||||
1 | Applicant's complete, legal business name |
ELPRO Technologies Pty Ltd
|
||||
1 | FCC Registration Number (FRN) |
0013674825
|
||||
1 | Physical Address |
9/12 Billabong Street
|
||||
1 |
1544
|
|||||
1 |
Queensland, N/A 4053
|
|||||
1 |
Australia
|
|||||
app s | TCB Information | |||||
1 | TCB Application Email Address |
T******@TIMCOENGR.COM
|
||||
1 | TCB Scope |
A1: Low Power Transmitters below 1 GHz (except Spread Spectrum), Unintentional Radiators, EAS (Part 11) & Consumer ISM devices
|
||||
app s | FCC ID | |||||
1 | Grantee Code |
O9P
|
||||
1 | Equipment Product Code |
450UE
|
||||
app s | Person at the applicant's address to receive grant or for contact | |||||
1 | Name |
H**** C****
|
||||
1 | Title |
Engineering Manager
|
||||
1 | Telephone Number |
0061-********
|
||||
1 | Fax Number |
0061-********
|
||||
1 |
j******@elpro.com.au
|
|||||
app s | Technical Contact | |||||
n/a | ||||||
app s | Non Technical Contact | |||||
n/a | ||||||
app s | Confidentiality (long or short term) | |||||
1 | Does this application include a request for confidentiality for any portion(s) of the data contained in this application pursuant to 47 CFR § 0.459 of the Commission Rules?: | Yes | ||||
1 | Long-Term Confidentiality Does this application include a request for confidentiality for any portion(s) of the data contained in this application pursuant to 47 CFR § 0.459 of the Commission Rules?: | No | ||||
if no date is supplied, the release date will be set to 45 calendar days past the date of grant. | ||||||
app s | Cognitive Radio & Software Defined Radio, Class, etc | |||||
1 | Is this application for software defined/cognitive radio authorization? | No | ||||
1 | Equipment Class | JBP - Part 15 Class B Computing Device Peripheral | ||||
1 | Description of product as it is marketed: (NOTE: This text will appear below the equipment class on the grant) | UHF NARROW BAND LICENSED RADIO BAND TRANSCEIVER MODULE WITH ETHERNET PORT | ||||
1 | Related OET KnowledgeDataBase Inquiry: Is there a KDB inquiry associated with this application? | No | ||||
1 | Modular Equipment Type | Does not apply | ||||
1 | Purpose / Application is for | Original Equipment | ||||
1 | Composite Equipment: Is the equipment in this application a composite device subject to an additional equipment authorization? | No | ||||
1 | Related Equipment: Is the equipment in this application part of a system that operates with, or is marketed with, another device that requires an equipment authorization? | Yes | ||||
1 | Is there an equipment authorization waiver associated with this application? | No | ||||
1 | If there is an equipment authorization waiver associated with this application, has the associated waiver been approved and all information uploaded? | No | ||||
app s | Test Firm Name and Contact Information | |||||
1 | Firm Name |
EMC Technologies NZ Ltd.
|
||||
1 | Name |
A**** C******
|
||||
1 | Telephone Number |
64-9-********
|
||||
1 | Fax Number |
64-9-********
|
||||
1 |
a******@ihug.co.nz
|
|||||
Equipment Specifications | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Line | Rule Parts | Grant Notes | Lower Frequency | Upper Frequency | Power Output | Tolerance | Emission Designator | Microprocessor Number | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1 | 1 | 15B |
some individual PII (Personally Identifiable Information) available on the public forms may be redacted, original source may include additional details
This product uses the FCC Data API but is not endorsed or certified by the FCC