Survey of Encoding Techniques for Vehicle Multiplexing

910715

2/1/1991

Authors
Abstract
Content
This paper proposes the adaptation of a modulation technique called Modified Frequency Modulation (MFM) to vehicle multiplexing. MFM was developed during the latter 1960's for use in magnetic disk drives. Disk drives use MFM encoding to achieve a maximum density of recorded data on a disk. The advantage in vehicle multiplexing is that the technique is synchronous with an average of 0.75 transitions per bit. Another advantage is that it can tolerate a large amount of rise and fall time wave shaping, which can significantly reduce radiated EMI. The paper will compare the EMI characteristics generated by NRZ, PWM, VPWM, Manchester, and MFM encoding. Included are typical encoding requirements such as symbol generation, arbitration capabilities, latency, invalid bit testing as well as encoding techniques effect on the host microcomputer.
Meta Tags
Topics
Affiliated or Co-Author
Details
DOI
https://doi.org/10.4271/910715
Pages
12
Citation
Miesterfeld, F., and Halter, R., "Survey of Encoding Techniques for Vehicle Multiplexing," SAE Technical Paper 910715, 1991, https://doi.org/10.4271/910715.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
2/1/1991
Product Code
910715
Content Type
Technical Paper
Language
English