Rs-232 control protocol, Overview, Command string structure – Contemporary Research ICC1-232 RS-232 User Manual
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Contemporary Research
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ICC1-232 Manual
Overview
RS-232 control for up to 4000 TV Controllers is provided through an iC-series Head-End Network Controller. The
ICE-HE Ethernet Head End manages iC-Net communication over RF Coax to ICC1 (1-way) and ICC2 (2-Way) TV
Controllers.
Each TV Controller is assigned a unique device number from 1 to 4000 to which control commands are
addressed. The devices are organized into 16 zones of 255 devices. All the devices in each zone will respond to
a single “virtual device number” — one device number that represents all devices in each zone. There is also a
global device number, 4095, that will command all devices in the system. This feature dramatically speeds up
system operation and programming, because one command can affect an entire group of devices—or all. To
take advantages of this feature, review the section iC-Net SmartZones in this manual.
In ABC-Net, we reserve the first group of devices, 1-255, for components operating on a connected control
system. Zones 1-16 are used for CR TV Controllers, Video Display Controllers and Tuners. As it’s unlikely any
system will use all 4000 devices, this may be a good device standard for your system as well.
The Remote RS-232 port on the Head-End Network Controller can communicate from 1200 to 38.4K baud. The
factory default setting is 19.2K baud, 8 data bits, No parity, and 1 stop bit.
Command String Structure
Characters in command strings are expressed in a combination of hex and ASCII characters. For clarity, the
following protocol examples use the following conventions:
Single-byte hex numbers are preceded by the ‘$’ symbol
ASCII characters or strings are enclosed in single quotes
Numbers not marked as hex or ASCII are a single decimal byte
Parameters shown in < > brackets are single byte
A series of multiple commands or parameters are set apart by [ ] brackets
Commas separate the bytes, but are not part of the protocol
Double quotes enclose the command string, but are not part of the protocol
Command format:
“$A5,,
$A5
Starts the command
The zone or high order byte of the device*
The unit or low order byte of the device (0 for global zone)
The number of command bytes to follow
The first command byte
[
Multiple commands can be concatenated, with byte count added to