

Industrial Network BasicsThis practical guide focuses on many of the types of network technology and protocols commonly used in modern automation, CNC machinery and process control systems.If you work as a technician, “Industrial Network Basics” is valuable resource for understanding the industrial networks seen in today’s manufacturing and industrial settings.Special emphasis is given to unique characteristics of popular fieldbus protocols and the integration of complementary high speed applications such as FF-HSE, EtherNet/IP and PROFINET. The foremost industrial Ethernet and fieldbus applications are covered, along with details on “smart” I/O blocks, programmable automation controllers, SCADA systems and a wide array of other “intelligent” field devices used in modern DCS environments.Included in the many topics covered:•Physical wiring media such as UTP, STP, Coax and Fiber-optic cable/ connectors•Typical network topologies•Understanding Bandwidth, Broadband & Baseband•Decimal, Binary and Hexadecimal conversion•Understanding the OSI layers•TCP/IP and other protocols used in both traditional networks and “industrial networks”•Fieldbus Technologies such as FF-H1, Profibus, DeviceNet and RS-485 networks•High speed “backbone” applications such as ProfiNet, FF-HSE, EtherNet/IP and Sercos III•Allen Bradley networks, connectivity, drivers and cable interfaces Review: Complete, succinct, no fluff expertise in a hundred pages. - A complete summary of networking technologies in the industrial setting, at the same time providing depth at key areas. The author knows those crucial crux points that get you the 'a-ha!' effect. Well done. Intense yet easy to read and follow. Not for someone just starting in industrial networks. Review: Good read - Some good detail, useful resource.
| Best Sellers Rank | #2,819,249 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #375 in Industrial Technology (Books) #1,369 in Robotics & Automation (Books) #186,976 in Textbooks (Special Features Stores) |
| Customer Reviews | 4.0 out of 5 stars 91 Reviews |
A**C
Complete, succinct, no fluff expertise in a hundred pages.
A complete summary of networking technologies in the industrial setting, at the same time providing depth at key areas. The author knows those crucial crux points that get you the 'a-ha!' effect. Well done. Intense yet easy to read and follow. Not for someone just starting in industrial networks.
T**P
Good read
Some good detail, useful resource.
J**E
Good review of the current state of Industrial Networking
Good review of the current state of Industrial Networking. Covers the past & present of networking for the beginning student without getting bored with all the theory, formulas, etc. Consider this as the "get it done" and come back to other books / courses if the student wants to learn more. Good starting point of a very complex subject. Start here and continue learning as networking / computing is a continuous moving subject.
O**E
Content is adequate; writing is amateurish.
I was disappointed in this book. It looks self-published and seems to be printed on demand. Firstly, there is no index. Secondly, the body text is double-spaced and rendered in a san-serif font. Thirdly, there are ambiguous technical descriptions, like the author's description of bandwidth, which he describes as influencing not the transmission speed of a network circuit, but the volume of data sent. Say what? An example of a volumetric unit of measurement is a liter or a gallon. Packets have lengths in bytes but not volume. The author did not mention frequency in the example. The use of acronyms is inconsistent. The convention is to spell the term on first use followed by the commonly-used acronym in parentheses; for example, gigahertz (GHz). Another odd quirk was the use of quotations to set off keywords. Quotations, quotations everywhere, ignoring the convention in American English to place trailing commas or periods within the closing quotation mark. It's not necessary to capitalize Hexadecimal (sic). And beware of the exclamation mark in the subtitle. Yahoo! does it but nobody else should. It won't sell more copies. On a positive note, I found chapter four, Industrial Plant Networks, the most useful. But the author needs a competent technical editor and the book will undoubtedly be improved.
B**S
An essential guide for those in the field.
If you are not in the field, this educational guide is still quite valuable, though it may require one or two readings to become perfectly clear. Well written with concise explanations and forward thinking, this is a manual that I expect to see crop up in training rooms for businesses large and small.
K**N
Four Stars
Good publication for my needs.
J**S
Five Stars
finally a book for beginners, well written.
M**E
Informative
Helpful reading
G**N
Its a reasonable read however there is a major ommission ...
Its a reasonable read however there is a major ommission and cc-link is not present. Which seems a major oversight as its the largest network in Asia.
R**S
A good purchase
+: the author’s approach goes straigth to the point and provides a quick and useful overview about industrial networks, their protocols and technical implementative details. I‘ve learnt some new concepts and refreshed some knowhow. -: nothing negative so far. Very fair price for the book as well.
M**I
great book
great book
A**L
Pira Ton
Un poco piratón pero te da una idea.
N**I
Four Stars
Good service.thanks
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