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//Digital Addressable Lighting Interface// (**DALI**) is a trademark for network-based products that control lighting. The underlying technology was established by a consortium of lighting equipment manufacturers as a successor for 1-10 V/0–10 V lighting control systems, and as an open standard alternative to several proprietary protocols. The DALI, DALI-2 and D4i trademarks are owned by the lighting industry alliance, (**DiiA**) //Digital Illumination Interface Alliance//. | //Digital Addressable Lighting Interface// (**DALI**) is a trademark for network-based products that control lighting. The underlying technology was established by a consortium of lighting equipment manufacturers as a successor for 1-10 V/0–10 V lighting control systems, and as an open standard alternative to several proprietary protocols. The DALI, DALI-2 and D4i trademarks are owned by the lighting industry alliance, (**DiiA**) //Digital Illumination Interface Alliance//. | ||
- | DALI is specified by a series of technical standards in IEC 62386. Standards conformance ensures that equipment from different manufacturers will interoperate. The DALI trademark is allowed on devices that comply with the DiiA testing and certification requirements, | + | DALI is specified by a series of technical standards in **IEC 62386**. Standards conformance ensures that equipment from different manufacturers will interoperate. The DALI trademark is allowed on devices that comply with the DiiA testing and certification requirements, |
Members of the AG DALI were allowed to use the DALI trademark until the DALI working party was dissolved on 30 March 2017, when trademark use was transferred to DiiA members. Since 9 June 2017, Digital Illumination Interface Alliance (DiiA) certifies DALI products. DiiA is a Partner Program of IEEE-ISTO. | Members of the AG DALI were allowed to use the DALI trademark until the DALI working party was dissolved on 30 March 2017, when trademark use was transferred to DiiA members. Since 9 June 2017, Digital Illumination Interface Alliance (DiiA) certifies DALI products. DiiA is a Partner Program of IEEE-ISTO. | ||
===== Technical overview ===== | ===== Technical overview ===== | ||
- | A DALI network consists of at least one application controller and bus power supply (which may be built into any of the products) as well as input devices (e.g. sensors and push-buttons), | + | A DALI network consists of at least one application controller and bus power supply |
- | Each device is assigned a unique short address between 0 and 63, making up to 64 devices possible in a basic system. Address assignment is performed over the bus using a " | + | Each device is assigned a unique short address between 0 and 63, making up to 64 devices possible in a basic system. Address assignment is performed over the bus using a //" |
Data is transferred between devices by means of an asynchronous, | Data is transferred between devices by means of an asynchronous, | ||
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A single pair of wires comprises the bus used for communication on a DALI network. The network can be arranged in bus or star topology, or a combination of these. Each device on a DALI network can be addressed individually, | A single pair of wires comprises the bus used for communication on a DALI network. The network can be arranged in bus or star topology, or a combination of these. Each device on a DALI network can be addressed individually, | ||
- | The bus is used for both signal and bus power. A power supply provides a current limited source of up to 250 mA at typically 16 V DC; each device may draw up to 2 mA unless bus-powered. While many devices are mains-powered (line-powered), | + | The bus is used for both signal and bus power. A power supply provides a current limited source of up to 250 mA at typically 16 V DC; each device may draw up to 2 mA unless bus-powered. While many devices are mains-powered |
- | Although the DALI control cable operates at ELV potential, it is not classified as SELV (Safety Extra Low Voltage) and must be treated as if it has only basic insulation from mains. This has the disadvantage that the network cable is required to be mains-rated, | + | Although the DALI control cable operates at ELV potential, it is not classified as **SELV** (//Safety Extra Low Voltage//) and must be treated as if it has only basic insulation from mains. This has the disadvantage that the network cable is required to be mains-rated, |
The network cable is required to provide a maximum drop of 2 volts along the cable. At 250 mA of supply current, that requires a resistance of ≤ 4 Ω per wire. The wire size needed to achieve this depends on the length of the bus, up to a recommended maximum of 2.5 mm² at 300 m when using the maximum rating of bus power supply. | The network cable is required to provide a maximum drop of 2 volts along the cable. At 250 mA of supply current, that requires a resistance of ≤ 4 Ω per wire. The wire size needed to achieve this depends on the length of the bus, up to a recommended maximum of 2.5 mm² at 300 m when using the maximum rating of bus power supply. | ||
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Each bit is sent using Manchester encoding //(a " | Each bit is sent using Manchester encoding //(a " | ||
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+ | ===== Sources ===== | ||
+ | Wikipedia ([[https:// | ||
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+ | ===== DALI topics on lamaPLC ===== | ||
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