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Introduction In
the satellite launch vehicle, the Avionics system is proposed to be based on MIL-STD
1553B BUS. A number of interface modules for application such as sensor data acquisition,
vehicle sequencing, control generation, command posting etc. are being designed
with this interface. These interface modules are then connected to the onboard
computers via the 1553B BUS. These modules have to be tested separately and evaluated
and also confirm their compliance with the 1553B BUS standard before being integrated
as the Avionics System. The PC/AT based MIL-STD 1553B interface board can be used
as a standard test system for the module level test. The newly developed interface
board can be integrated in the PC bus which guaranteed for 0 microsecond interword
gap. Tri-state
buffers are used to isolate the CPUs data and address lines. Since the data transfer
with the board is 16 bits, only even addresses of the CPU are required. The address
bus from SA1 to SA9 is considered and utilized. The interface hardware is designed
as a 16 bit AT interface card to an IBM PC/AT compatible computer. The VHDL
advantage Traditional
design techniques such as Karnaugh maps are typically used to generate design
equations that are implemented in a PLD. Using a simple language with syntax for
entering combinational and registered equations, the designer enters the design
equations in a data file. The equations are then synthesized by software, which
produces a data file to use in programming the PLD. For
larger systems that use CPLDs, FPGAs, or ASICs the traditional design methodology
described above is not feasible. Generating equations with traditional techniques
is time consuming and prone to mistakes. Tracking errors in equations can also
be difficult. Schematic capture offers several advantages. For example, it provides
a graphical view of the design, and with software tools that support schematic
hierarchy, it provides for design modularity. But as means for capturing large
designs, even pure schematic capture has its drawbacks: 1).Control
logic must still be generated using traditional design techniques; 2).Schematics
can be difficult to maintain because the intent of the design is often clouded
by its implementation. 3).A
schematic must often be accompanied by documentation to describe design's
functionality. MIL-STD-1553B
defines the term Time Division Multiplexing (TDM) as "the transmission of
information from several signal sources through one communications system with
different signal samples staggered in time to form a composite pulse train."
For our example in Figure 1b, this means that data can be transferred between
multiple avionics units over a single transmission media, with the communications
between the different avionics boxes taking place at different moments in time,
hence time division. MIL-STD-1553
Applications Since
its inception, MIL-STD-1553 has found numerous applications. Notice 2 to the standard
has even removed all references to "aircraft" or "airborne"
so as not to limit its use. While all the programs to which the standard has been
applied are too numerous to be covered here, the following is a summary of its
uses. While the standard has been applied to satellites as well as payloads within
the space shuttle (it is even being used on the International Space Station),
its military applications are the most numerous and far ranging. It has been employed
on large transports, aerial refuelers , and bombers, tactical fighters, and helicopters.
It is even contained within missiles and serves, in some instances, as the primary
interface between the aircraft and a missile. The Navy has applied the data bus
to both surface and subsurface ships. The Army, in addition to its helicopters,
has put 1553 into tanks and howitzers. Commercial
applications have applied the standard to systems including subways, for example
the Bay Area Rapid Transit (BART), and manufacturing production lines. MIL-STD-1553B
has also been accepted and implemented by NATO and many foreign governments. The
UK has issued Def Stan 00-18 (Part 2) and NATO has published STANAG 3838 AVS,
both of which are versions of MIL-STD-1553B. The broad acceptance and application
of MIL-STD-1553B has also fostered the development of other standardization efforts.
MIL-STD-1773 is a fiber optic version of 1553B. And MIL-STD-1760A, the Aircraft/Store
Interconnect, has 1553B embedded within it.
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