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Your Trusted Partner in Automation

Moxa is a leading manufacturer of industrial networking, computing, and automation solutions. With over 25
years of industry experience, Moxa has connected more than 30 million devices worldwide and has a
distribution and service network that reaches customers in more than 70 countries. Moxa delivers lasting
business value by empowering industry with reliable networks and sincere service for automation systems.

Moxa Sales and Marketing


Headquarters

The Americas
Moxa Americas

Europe
Moxa Germany

Asia-Pacific
Moxa Taiwan

China
Moxa Shanghai

Moxa Corporate Plaza

Toll Free: 1-888-MOXA-USA


Tel: +1-714-528-6777
Fax: +1-714-528-6778
usa@moxa.com

Tel: +49-89-3700-399-0
Fax: +49-89-3700-399-99
europe@moxa.com

Tel: +886-2-8919-1230
Fax: +886-2-8919-1231
asia@moxa.com

Tel: +86-21-5258-9955
Fax: +86-21-5258-5505
china@moxa.com

Moxa Brazil

Moxa France

Moxa India

Moxa Beijing

Tel: +55-11-2495-3555
Fax: +55-11-2495-6555
brazil@moxa.com

Tel: +33-1-30-85-41-80
Fax: +33-1-30-47-35-91
france@moxa.com

Tel: +91-80-4172-9088
Fax: +91-80-4132-1045
india@moxa.com

Tel: +86-10-6872-3959/61

Moxa UK

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Moxa Shenzhen

Tel: +44-1844-355-601
Fax: +44-1844-353-553
uk@moxa.com

Tel: +7(495)287-09-29
Fax: +7(495)269-09-29
russia@moxa.com

Tel: +86-755-8368-4084/94

601 Valencia Ave., Suite 200


Brea, CA 92823, U.S.A.
Toll Free: 1-888-669-2872
Tel: +1-714-528-6777
Fax: +1-714-528-6778
usa@moxa.com

Moxa Design and Engineering


Headquarters
Fl. 4, No. 135, Lane 235, Baoqiao Rd.
Xindian Dist., New Taipei City,
Taiwan, R.O.C.

Fax: +86-10-6872-3958
china@moxa.com

Fax: +86-755-8368-4148
china@moxa.com

Tel: +886-2-8919-1230
Fax: +886-2-8919-1231
info@moxa.com

IEC 61850 Substation Solutions

2014 Moxa Inc., All Rights Reserved.


The MOXA logo is a registered trademark of Moxa Inc. All other logos appearing in this catalog are the intellectual property of the respective company, product, or organization associated with the logo.

P/N: 1900001401200

Moxa and the Smart Grid

Moxa and the Smart Grid


Connect To The Smart Grid Today

Create rock-solid and future-proof power networks by partnering with Moxa. You can rely on our over 25
years of expertise in proven solutions that include power-hardened products. Moxas products are
toughened for harsh environments, ensuring consistent operations even in the most demanding conditions.
Tap into Moxas expertise in device control, computing, and communications to easily build an efficient and
effective smart grid.
Moxa is a Collective Member of CIGRE and has delivered communication and computing solutions to over
500 successful power transmission and distribution applications around the world. Moxa is now the leading
solar energy monitoring supplier in North America and has many diverse projects in advanced metering
infrastructures worldwide. You can rely on our expertise of more than 25 years in proven solutions in the
following industrial applications.

Application Focus
Solar power
Wind power
Power transmission and distribution
Advanced metering infrastructure

Leading Technologies
Industrys first IEC 61850 switch with MMS data modeling: SNMP/MMS management with
integrated network monitoring solutions for power substation SCADA applications
Noise Guard: The worlds only wire speed zero packet loss technology that exceeds IEEE
1613 class 2
Industrys first integrated PRP/HSR redundancy box with zero recovery time
Turbo Chain: Self-Healing redundancy technology ensures non-stop wind power operation
Patented computing platform for heat dissipation with wide temperature tolerance
MXcloud: Cloud management for solar energy monitoring

www.moxa.com/substation

www.moxa.com

IEC 61850 Makes Substations Smarter

IEC 61850 Makes Substations Smarter


The goal of IEC 61850 is to transform the electricity distribution

Communication Solutions:

Computing Solutions:

Secondary Device Networking


IEEE 1588 Transparent Clock
Meter Networking
Protocol Converter

Back-end Host
Tele-control Computer
Protocol Converter
Protection Management Computer

industry by building more intelligence and more complete automation


into power substations. With intelligent electronic devices (IED), its
possible to extend new controls and automation deep into the
SCADA/HMI

substations process layer, thus allowing for real-time monitoring and

Substation Backend
Host Computer

Substation Backend
Host Computer

Remote Control Center

management from a centralized remote control hub.


SNMP/MMS

According to IEC 61850, an intelligent substation is characterized by


these three basic features:

SNMP/MMS

All primary substation machinery (switchgear, transformers) are


engineered with a relatively high level of device intelligence.

Station-level
Ethernet Switch

All secondary devices are networked.


All routine operations and management are fully automated.

Protection Management Computer

Station Level
GOOSE/MMS

Protocol Conversion
Computer

To meet these objectives, the IEC 61850 standard stipulates that


power substations will use Ethernet switches and embedded

Protocol Conversion
Serial Device Server

computers for data communications and computing all throughout the


station, bay, and process levels. Because commercial devices are far
too frail for the demanding conditions of a power substation
environment, devices specifically engineered to heavy industrial
measures and optimized for use in power substations are required.

Data Acquisition
Gateway
Protection Relay

IED

RTU

Bay Level
GOOSE/SMV/PTP

IEEE 1588 Transparent Clock


Ethernet Switch

Intelligent
Control
Unit

Intelligent
Control
Unit
Merging Unit

Meter
ECT/EVT

ECT/EVT

Grandmaster Clock

Process Level

www.moxa.com/substation

www.moxa.com

Maximize System Availability

How To Maximize System Availability

Moxa Solutions Make Smart Substations


Even Smarter

Maximizing a power substations availability and safety is the ultimate goal for both transmission grid operators and SAS

This brochure examines some key application

(Substation Automation System) integrators. A properly optimized SAS ensures safe and continuous operation of

scenarios that involve availability and safety, and

substations.

considers the practical concerns electricity suppliers


must account for when planning substation upgrades.

A substations daily operation is classified in three states:

As the conceptualization above indicates, in each

State 1 is when the system is healthy and working

An optimized SAS can maximize substation availability

case the focus is on how Moxas communication and

properly.

through three approaches

computing solutions best minimize error probability,

Minimize Error Probability: Cut the possibility for errors


in any way possible.

State 2 is when the system encounters errors that reduce


availability and/or make it unsafe.

detect errors faster, and speed up fault corrections


within the context of IEC 61850.

Detect Errors Faster: Increase the speed at which errors


are detected, thereby minimizing interruptions to the
smallest possible window.

State 3 is when a State 2 error has been detected and


measures are being taken to make the system available, to

Optimize Error Repairability: Increase the efficiency and


effectiveness of fixing substation failures.

return it to State 1.

Normal
operation state

S1

Minimize Error Probability


Normal operation state:

The system is healthy and working normally.

Pr
ob
ab
ilit
y

y
ilit
ab
air
ep
rR
ro
Er
ize
tim
Op

Mi
nim
ize
Er
ro
r

Communication

Computing

PRP/HSR Seamless Redundancy


Wire Speed Zero Packet Loss Technology
IEC 61850 QoS
Substation Configuration Wizard

Patented Fanless Thermal Design


IEC 61850-3 Certified (Temperature Class C3
and EMC level 4)

Detect Errors Faster

Maximize System Availability

Communication

Computing

IEC 61850 Switch Modeling


for Power SCADA
ST/SC/SFP Fiber Diagnosis

PRP/HSR Monitor and Control Intelligence


SNMP-based Self-Health Management
IEC 61850 Computer Modeling
for Power SCADA

Error detected, reacting state:


Error before
detected state

S2

Error before detected state:

The system might potentially be


unavailable and/or unsafe for
requests.

www.moxa.com/substation

Detect Errors Faster

Error detected,
reacting state

S3

The failure of the system has


been detected and measures
are being taken to make the
system safe again.

Optimize Error Repairability


Communication

Computing

Turbo Ring/Turbo Chain 20 ms


Fast Redundancy

OS Smart Recovery API to Cure System


Crash Automatically

www.moxa.com

Moxa Solutions Make Smart Substations Even Smarter

Minimize Error Probability


Compliant with the IEC 62439-3:2012 standard, Moxa has developed the industry's first integrated PRP/HSR redundancy

Patented Fanless and High-efficient


Heat Dissipation Design

box (RedBox) for mission-critical applications in SAS communication.

A major worry for any system that depends on high

See pages 9 and 10 for more benefits.

performance computers are burnouts caused by failed

PRP/HSR Standardized Protocols for Zero Recovery Time

Noise Guard: Wire-Speed Zero Packet Loss Technology


To meet IEEE 1613 Class 2 requirements,
network devices must have a level 4 EMC
rating to guarantee they will reliably tolerate
high EMI conditions.

Mechanical Design: Integrated housing for better conduction


Customized Components: Newly redesigned fiber transceiver
Enhanced Power Supply Unit: Optimized circuit design and
upgraded components

fans or clogged grills. Ideally, a substation computer


should be fully sealed from the outer environment and
not require a fan in any capacity. This extends its life
significantly, but is complicated by the extreme heat
that is often generated in substation environments.
Engineers must therefore work to situate the PCBs
highest thermal concentration in the very center of the
device, so that heat has the largest immediate area
available to dissipate into. With fanless systems,
generally the entire outer shell is utilized as one large
heat sink, with careful analysis and adjustment of fin
heights, gaps, thicknesses, and points of contact to
further optimize dissipation. All of these factors must be

Noise Guard

IEC 61850 QoS

Patented Fanless Thermal Design

carefully evaluated and adjusted to achieve maximum


dissipation efficiency.

IEC 61850 QoS: Substation Automation Packet Priority


Substation automation devices must communicate

To fully satisfy IEEE 1613 Class 2 requirements,

critical, low-level IEC 61850 multicasts (GOOSE/SMV)

substation switches must support strong QoS traffic

IEC 61850-3 Compliant

with the highest priority, without fail. Prioritizing the

shaping.

The IEC 61850-3 and IEEE 1613 standards precisely

transmission of GOOSE/SMV packets guarantees that

define EMC and communication requirements for

these messages are clearly received without distortion

network equipment used in power substations.

throughout the entire network, regardless of what other

Critical packets can be prioritized in different levels

Substation computers and Ethernet switches must be

communications may be currently congesting the lines.

Packet types: GOOSE, SMV, PTP

IEC 61850-3/IEEE 1613 compliant to guarantee

Ping-based solutions are not sufficient to achieve this.

Packet priorities: High, medium, normal, low

adequate protection against a variety of environmental


conditions.

Substation Configuration Wizard


Because substations have such specialized environments, IT setups only require a few key
functions. For this reason, simplifying and streamlining the configuration process makes a lot

These minimum requirements include:

of sense: by reducing the configuration interface to only the relevant network features, setup

Level 4 EMC, for stronger protection against


electrical interference

and maintenance become much more efficient. Moxas Ethernet switches support a

-40 to 75C ambient temperature tolerance

browser-based configuration wizard, making it possible to deploy one of our network devices

High tolerances for constant vibrations and shocks

in as little as 7 steps.

www.moxa.com/substation

www.moxa.com

Moxa Solutions Make Smart Substations Even Smarter

PRP/HSR Standardized Protocols for Zero Recovery Time


and for Monitoring and Control Intelligence
Network redundancy is crucial for maintaining high

activate non-HSR or non-PRP end devices connected

network availability, and many redundancy technologies

to HSR or PRP networks with zero switch-over time.

can provide millisecond-level recovery. However, some

Mission-critical applications in SAS communication can

mission-critical and time-sensitive applications in SAS

benefit from these redundancy technologies to ensure

communication cannot tolerate even a millisecond of

network resilience.

network interruption without severely impacting

Moxa has developed the industrys first integrated

operations or jeopardizing the safety of onsite

PRP/HSR redundancy box (RedBox) and the rackmount

personnel. The Parallel Redundancy Protocol (PRP) and

substation computers are all compliant with the IEC

High-availability Seamless Redundancy (HSR)


described in IEC 62439-3 are two technologies that
provide seamless failover from a single point of failure.

in SAS communication.

Hardware-based IEEE 1588 v2 PTP


Easy diagnosis through fiber check (SFP
DDM) minimizes error probability
Isolated dual power inputs for both WV (24/48
VDC) and HV (110-220 VDC/VAC) models

in parallel, whereas HSR is designed primarily for ring


topologies. Based on these two seamless redundancy

USB interface for configuration and log


backup and firmware upgrade

protocols, a redundancy box (Redbox) can quickly

LAN

RedB

Rack
m
Com ount
puter
witch

Computing Advantages

Inter
Link

PRP and HSR modes are implemented on a


standard PCIe interface expansion card

Link

RedB

Link

Coup
ling

Box

www.moxa.com/substation

net S

Join substation computer to PRP/HSR


redundant network

witch

The network status of Moxas PRP/HSR nodes


can be monitored with a substation computer

on Le

RedB

vel

ox

HSR
Ring
2

Proc

Ether

Stati

HSR
Ring
1

Quad

ox

LAN

ox

3 full Gigabit connections (or links) for


redundancy, and interlink combo ports and
1 Ethernet console port for local
configuration/monitoring
Built-in MMS server that follows IEC
61850-90-4 modeling

duplication over two independent networks that operate

net S

One device supports PRP, HSR, Coupling,


and Quadbox for different redundancy
network architectures

62439-3:2012 standard for mission-critical applications

PRP realizes active network redundancy by packet

Ether

Benefits of Moxas Integrated


PRP/HSR Technology:
Communication Advantages

ess L

evel

www.moxa.com

10

Moxa Solutions Make Smart Substations Even Smarter

Detect Errors Faster


SNMP/MMS Management:
Integrated Network Monitoring Solutions for Power Substation SCADA
Administrators may now use MMS to:

With MMS-capable IT hardware, substation SIs and


automation engineers will be able to render a full

Monitor and control IEDs, switches, embedded


computers, device servers, and process data from a
single power SCADA interface

accounting of the entire network of automation devices


right alongside process layer information, all under a

Eliminate redundant SNMP systems for IT hardware


while decreasing network congestion

single SCADA view. Because substation systems will no


longer need to resort to installing and configuring

Configure devices for event triggers, polling reports,


or both

separate NMS software for IT devices, station operators


will achieve the combined benefits of more thorough

Precisely locate devices relative to other devices


within the network hierarchy in a single software view

automation integration, improved management


efficiency, and savings on deployment costs.
Integrating IT devices via MMS makes substation
networks more controllable, more flexible, and more

Fiber Check: A Fiber Digital Diagnostic Monitoring (DDM) Tool


Using Fiber Check, a fiber Digital Diagnostic

relay, or in the system log. This arrangement further

Monitoring (DDM) tool, Moxas IEC 61850 substation

allows system operators real time monitoring of

switches can monitor ST/SC (as well as SFP) connectors,

transmission and reception power, temperature,

and notify power SCADA systems via SNMP trap or MMS

voltage/current along optical fiber connections, and

when abnormalities are detected, allowing operators to

similar items.

initiate maintenance procedures. Fiber Check reports


and alarms can be communicated via web, CLI, or serial
console, via MMS reporting or SNMP traps, by a digital

SYNMAP: SNMP-based Self-Health Management and Alert


Synmap is Moxas revolutionary software virtualization for industrial computers, an evolutionary advance in network
device control that adapts solid, reliable SNMP into a fully portable remote procedure interface. Synmap not only

Batch configuration by CID (Configured IED


Description) files

parameters, and local interfaces. Synmap is SNMP-based health management

provides SNMP functionality, but also allows remote monitoring and control of device internals like temperature, BIOS
and alert software, and Synmap devices are a flexible and cost-effective

Po

upgrade that returns obvious benefits to any IA network.

we
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CPU Usage Alert

Temperature Alert

When CPU usage exceeds a


threshold over a period of time
(usage threshold and time period
defined by the user).

When the system temperature


exceeds a user-defined threshold
over a configured time period.

Memory Usage Alert

Storage Drive Alerts

When memory usage exceeds a


specified threshold over a
configured time period.

Thresholds may be configured for


S.M.A.R.T. values, including
dwindling storage capacity.

PRP/HSR Monitor and Control Intelligence


Moxas rackmount substation computers are compliant with the IEC 62439-3:2012 standard for mission-critical applications

on

IED

in SAS communication. PRP and HSR modes are implemented in a standard PCIe interface expansion card, so that the
network status of Moxas PRP/HSR nodes can be monitored by substation computers. See pages 9 and 10 for more
benefits.

os

PIO

www.moxa.com/substation

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erv
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Et Indu
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11

Auto-warning: SNMP trap, relay, email, MMS, event log

Directly configure and control IT hardware from the


SCADA system

responsive.

Pr

Fiber status monitoring: fiber temperature, working


voltage, Tx /Rx power

www.moxa.com

12

Moxa Solutions Make Smart Substations Even Smarter

Optimize Error Repairability


20 ms Fast Redundancy with Turbo Ring and Turbo Chain

OS Smart Recovery:
Remotely or Automatically Trigger a
Computer to Restore its
Entire Software Environment

Moxas Turbo Ring and Turbo Chain are

Ring, as needed. This type of deployment is an ideal

Moxa Smart Recovery allows engineers to automate

field-proven redundancy technologies that enable fast

solution for substation buses that require network

the remote monitoring of a computers health and to

fault recovery under 20 milliseconds at a full load of

redundancy and have budget considerations and

trigger OS re-writes should a problem arise. These

250 switches. Turbo Chain is extremely versatile and

cabling difficulties associated with coupling.

re-writes are made from a tagged copy of the entire


system that is created when the embedded computer

can accommodate any type of complex network


topology, allowing you to quickly expand your network

Fast fault recovery < 20 ms

was first successfully deployed and then stored locally

in a very cost-effective way to create as many

Unlimited redundant network expansions

on the computer itself.

redundant connections, such as STP, RSTP, and Turbo

Live node expansion without network interruptions


Tremendous savings on cabling costs

Without a smart OS recovery system, corruption of


system softwarewhether in the OS or in local
substation applicationscan mean catastrophic failure
for remote industrial installations and sites with mass
computer deployments. With some estimates of
computer failure attributable to software corruption as
high as 30%, automated BIOS-level software recovery
systems are an extremely valuable design addition to

Gig

abi

power substation installations.

IED

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abi
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k

IED

IED

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g

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ab

13

IED

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IED

pli

nk

www.moxa.com/substation

IED

tB

ack

Power Shutdown: Auto boot up

bon

System slowdowns: Configure period recoveries to


speed things up
Bootable but damaged systems: Configure a rewrite
procedure that will let you know if the damage is in
hardware or software
System crash and boot failure: Use auto-recovery to
verify if its hardware or software, and resurrect the
machine if its a software problem

IED

www.moxa.com

14

Success Deployment Worldwide

Sweden
Finland

Russia
Ukraine

Canada
Germany
Switzerland
Poland

United States

Czech Republic
Spain

Italy

Japan
Turkey

Korea
China

Algeria

Mexico

Taiwan

Saudi Arabia
India

Over 500

Thailand

Indonesia
Brazil

Successful Substation Deployments

Ultra High Voltage (330 kV and up)

15

www.moxa.com/substation

End User

High Voltage (330 kV to 220/110 kV)


End User

Medium/Low Voltage (220/110 kV to 35 kV)

Territory

Type

Territory

Type

Territory

Type

Poland

Utility

Lublin, Poland, 400 kV Substations

Poland

Utility

Lubocza, Poland, 220 kV Substations

USA

Utility

Longmont, Colorado, USA United Power, 34.5 kV, 115 kV, and 230 kV

India

Utility

Nabinagar, India, 415 kV Substations

Poland

Utility

Wrocaw, Poland, 220 kV/110 kV Substations

USA

Utility

Longmont, Colorado, USA United Power, 34.5 kV Substations

Algeria

Utility

Sonelgaz, 400 kV IEC 61850 Substations

Poland

Utility

Boguchwaa, Poland, 220 kV Substations

USA

Utility

Longmont, Colorado, USA United Power, 115 kV Substations

Ukraine

Enterprise Ukraine, 750 kV Kiev Substations

India

Utility

Andhra Pradesh State, India, 220 kV Substations

USA

Utility

Longmont, Colorado, USA United Power, 230 kV Substations

China

Utility

Anxi, Gansu, China, 750 kV IEC 61850 Substations

India

Utility

Delhi, India, 220 kV Substations

Germany

Utility

Germany, 110 kV Substations

China

Utility

Suzhou, Jiangsu China IEEE 1588v2 500 kV Substations

Russia

Utility

Russia, TVER Nuclear Plant 220 kV Substations

Taiwan

Enterprise

Taiwan, 161 kV Substations

China

Utility

Nanyang City, Henan Province, China, 500kV/220kV/35kV step-down Substations

Russia

Utility

Russia, Smolenskaya NPP

Taiwan

Enterprise

Taiwan, 22 kV/11 kV Substations

China

Utility

Jiuquan, Gansu, China, 750 kV Substations

Russia

Utility

Russia, Volga Hydro Power Station

Taiwan

Enterprise

Taiwan, 10 kV/35 kV Substations

China

Utility

Dezhou, Shandong, China, 500 kV Substations

Korea

Utility

YoungWol, Korea, 141 kV Substations

India

Utility

India, 66/131/220 kV Substations

China

Utility

Baicheng, Jilin, China, 500 kV Substations

Korea

Utility

Korea (YoungWol), Korea Southern Power Co., Ltd. (KOSPO), 154 kV Substations

China

Enterprise

Jinan Stainless Steel Works, 35 kV/10 kV

China

Utility

Anxi, Gansu, China, 750 kV IEC 61850 Substations

China

Utility

Xijing City Power, Worlds 1st IEEE 1588v2 200 kV Substations

China

Enterprise

Shanghai Pudong Airport, 35 kV Substations

China

Utility

Chengde, Hebei, China, 500 kV Substations

China

Utility

Taizhou, Zhejiang, China, 220 kV Substations

China

Utility

China

Utility

Tangshan, Hebei, China, 500 kV Substations

China

Utility

Chengdu, Sichuan, China, 220 kV Substations

Russia

Enterprise

Berezovskie Elektricheskiye Seti, LLC. 110 kV Substations

China

Utility

ShiPing, Chongqing, China, 500 kV Substations

China

Utility

Ningbo, Zhejiang, China, 220 kV Substations

Taiwan

Enterprise

Hsinchu, Taiwan Semiconductor, 10 kV/35 kV Substations

China

Utility

Zhangjiaba, Chongqing China, 500 kV Substations

China

Utility

Changchun, Jilin, China, 220 kV Substations

Indonesia

Utility

End User

Shanghai, China, 110 kV Substations

Bali, Jakarta, and Bandung, Indonesia, 10 kV/35 kV Substations

www.moxa.com

16

Product Selection Guide

IEC 61850-3 Ethernet Switches


PT-7728-PTP

PT-7828

PT-7728

PT-7528

PT-7710

Computers for Power Transmission and Distribution


PT-G7509

PT-508/510

PT-G503-PHR-PTP

Max. Number of Ports


Max. Number of Hardware
PTP Ports
Gigabit Ethernet,
10/100/1000 Mbps
Fast Ethernet, 10/100 Mbps

DA-683 Series

DA-660 Series

1.66 GHz
WinXPE Emb, W7E or
Linux

667 MHz

1 GB (2 GB max.)

2 (USB 2.0)
4 DIs, 4 DOs

2 GHz

1 GHz

1.4/1.1/1.5 GHz

WinXP Emb. or Linux

W7E or Linux

533 MHz

1 GB (2 GB max.)

4 slots
4 (USB 2.0)
4 DIs, 4 DOs

400 MHz

512 MB (1 GB max.)

2 (USB 2.0)

1/2 GB (4 GB max.)

2 slots
4 (USB 2.0)

1.66 GHz
WinXP Emb., W7E or
Linux

667 MHz

1 GB (2 GB max.)

2 slots
4 (USB 2.0)
4 DIs, 4 DOs

533 MHz

WinXP Emb. or Linux

2 GB (DOM)

2 GB

2 GB

2/8 GB (DOM)

2 GB (DOM)

28

28

10

8/10

CPU Speed

2.5/2.1 GHz

OS (pre-installed)

Linux or W7E

DRAM
FSB
Flash
System Memory
PCMCIA
Expansion Bus
USB Ports
Digital I/O
Analog I/O

Up to 4

Up to 4

Up to 4

Up to 4

Up to 2

Up to 28

Up to 28

Up to 28

Up to 28

Up to 10

8/10

2 or 4 GB (16 GB max.)

PCI 104
6 (USB 2.0)

Linux
128 MB
32 MB

2 (USB 2.0, DA-662)

Storage

w/ optional kit

w/ optional kit

Built-in
CompactFlash Socket
HDD Support

16 GB (CFast)

Other Peripherals
KB/MS

Display

Redundancy and Backup Options

Graphics Controller

Later release

LAN Interface

Network Management and Control

10/100 Mbps Ethernet


Ports
10/100/1000 Mbps
Ethernet Ports
Magnetic Isolation
Protection

2 (DA-660)/4 (DA-662)

1.5 kV

1.5 kV

1.5 kV

1.5 kV

1.5 kV

1.5 kV

1.5 kV

2 (DB9-M)

2
6

2 (DB9-M)

4 kV

4 (DB9-M)
8 (TB)

15 kV
2 kV

16

1.5 kV

RTS/CTS, XON/OFF,
ADDC
50 bps to 921.6 Kbps

Serial Interface
RS-232 Ports
RS-485 Ports
RS-232/422/485 Ports
RS-422/485
ESD Protection
Digital Isolation
Console Port
Serial Communication
Parameters

Data Bits: 5, 6, 7, 8; Stop Bits: 1, 1.5, 2; Parity: None, Even, Odd, Space, Mark

Flow Control

Baudrate

Later release
Later release
Later release
by Ethernet console
port

Later release

Later release

Port Mirror
SNMP/RMON
VLAN
QoS
Relay Warning

Later release
Later release

RTS/CTS, XON/XOFF

RTS/CTS, XON/XOFF

RTS/CTS, XON/XOFF

RTS/CTS, XON/XOFF

50 bps to 115.2 Kbps

50 bps to 115.2 Kbps

50 bps to 115.2 Kbps

50 bps to 115.2 Kbps

Power, Storage, Power


Failure
10M, 100M

Power, Storage, Power


Failure
10M, 100M

OS

100M, 1000M

TX, RX

TX, RX

TX, RX

Tx, Rx

2.6 kg
440 x 45 x 198
Standard 19-inch
rackmount

LEDs
System

Power, Storage

LAN

100M, 1000M

Power, Storage, Power


Failure
100M, 1000M

Serial

TX, RX

TX, RX

Power, Storage, Power


Failure
100M, 1000M
TX, RX (for 4 modules),
Programmable

Housing
Weight
Dimensions

SECC sheet metal (1 mm)


6 kg
315 x 440 x 90 mm

4 kg
315 x 440 x 90 mm

14 kg
400 x 480 x 180 mm

4.5 kg
440 x 315 x 45 mm

7 kg
440 x 315 x 90 mm

4.5 kg
440 x 315 x 90 mm

Mounting

Standard 19-in rackmount

Standard 19-in rackmount

Standard 19-in rackmount

Standard 19-in rackmount

Standard 19-in rackmount

Standard 19-in rackmount

-40 to 75C
-20 to 80C
5 to 95% RH

-10 to 60C
-20 to 80C
5 to 95% RH

-10 to 50C
-20 to 80C
5 to 95% RH

0 to 60C
-20 to 75C
5 to 95% RH

-10 to 60C
-20 to 80C
5 to 95% RH

-40 to 75C
-40 to 85C
5 to 95% RH

-10 to 60C
-20 to 80C
5 to 95% RH

EN 55022, EN 61000-3-2,
EN 61000-3-3, EN 55024,
FCC Part 15 Subpart B
Class A, IEC 61850-3
(DPP-T models only)

EN 61000-6-4, EN
61000-3-2, EN
61000-3-3, EN 55024,
FCC Part 15 Subpart B
Class A

CE (EN 55022, EN
61000-3-2, EN
61000-3-3, EN 55024),
FCC (Part 15 Subpart B,
CISPR 22 Class ), CCC
(GB9254, GB 17625.1),
IEC 61850-3 (DPP-T
models only)

EN 55022 Class A, EN
61000-3-2 Class A, EN
61000-3-3, EN 55024,
FCC Part 15 Subpart B
Class A

UL 60950-1, CSA C22.2


No. 60950-1-03, EN
60950-1, CCC
(GB4943, GB9254,
GB17625.1)
RoHS, CRoHS, WEEE

UL 60950-1, CSA C22.2


No. 60950-1-03, EN
60950-1, CCC (GB4943,
GB9254, GB17625.1)

UL/cUL (UL 60950-1, CSA


UL 60950-1, CSA C22.2
C22.2 No. 60950-1-03),
No. 60950-1-03, EN
LVD (EN 60950-1), CCC
60950-1
(GB4943)

RoHS, CRoHS, WEEE

RoHS, CRoHS, WEEE

10M/100M

Physical Characteristics

Environmental Limits

Standards and Certifications


CE/FCC
UL/cUL 60950-1
UL 508
IEC 61850-3
(Power Substation)
IEEE 1613
(Power Substation)
50121-4
(Way-side Applications)
EN 50155
(Railway Applications)
NEMA TS2
(Traffic Control System)

DA-682A Series

28

-40 to 85C

Layer 3 Switching
IPv6
DHCP Option 66/67/82
NTP/SNTP
Software-based IEEE
1588v2 PTP
Hardware-based IEEE
1588v2 PTP
LLDP
Modbus TCP
EtherNet/IP
IGMP/GMRP
Port Trunking
IEEE 802.1X
Port Lock
TACACS+/RADIUS

DA-681 Series

Operating Temperature

PRP/HSR
(Recovery Time approx. 0 ms)
Turbo Ring/Turbo Chain
(Recovery Time < 20 ms)
Turbo Ring/Turbo Chain
(Recovery Time < 50 ms)
STP/RSTP
Automatic Backup
Configurator (ABC-01)
Automatic Backup
Configurator (ABC-02)
Ethernet console port

DA-710 Series

28

Installation Options
Rack Mounting
Panel Mounting
DIN-Rail Mounting

DA-685 Series

14

Power Supply
24 VDC, isolated
48 VDC, isolated
12/24/48 VDC
24/48 VDC, isolated
88-300 VDC or 85-264 VAC,
isolated

DA-820 Series
Computer

Number of Ports

Operating Temperature
Storage Temperature
Ambient Relative Humidity
Regulatory Approvals

Pending
Pending

Pending

EMC

FCC, CE (Class A)

FCC, CE (Class A)

EN 55022 Class A, EN
61000-3-2, EN
61000-3-3, EN 55024,
FCC
Part 15 Subpart B Class A

Safety

LVD, UL, cUL, CCC

LVD, UL, cUL, CCC

UL 60950-1, CSA C22.2


No. 60950-1-07, CCC
(GB4943, GB9254,
GB17625.1)

Green Product

RoHS, CRoHS, WEEE

RoHS, CRoHS, WEEE

RoHS, CRoHS, WEEE

RoHS, CRoHS, WEEE

Reliability
Buzzer, RTC, WDT
Warranty

17

www.moxa.com/substation

3 years (see www.moxa.com/warranty)

www.moxa.com

18

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