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P bus and I bus

P bus and I bus


A bus is understood to be the leads over which information is sent digitally and serially. Digital means that the voltage difference between the leads has only two values, roughly 0 V and 5 V. The information is coded so that different combinations of 0 V and 5 V pulses have different meanings.

Serial means that the information is sent in "packets” which are transmitted one after the other in rapid succession.

The buses consist of a P bus (Powertrain Bus) and an I bus (Instrument Bus). Both buses are connected to the MIU (Main Instrument Unit). The buses are electrically isolated from each other.

The diagnostic tool is not connected direct to the bus but communicates via the DICE, one of the control modules connected to the I bus, and so has access to all control modules connected to the bus.

The data transfer rate of the P bus is ten times faster than that of the I bus. The reason for this is that the powertrain systems need information with the least possible delay.

All information sent out on a bus by a control module is available to all other control modules connected to a bus. The MIU ensures that information which is available on one bus is also available on the other.

The control modules send out information on the bus at regular intervals. The time between two transmissions depends on the information being sent and varies between 10 milliseconds (0.010 seconds) and 1 second. Information is also sent out by the control modules whenever the information changes.

Information interchange between control modules takes place on two leads, bus+ (green lead) and bus- (white lead). The two P bus leads are twisted to increase their resistance to electrical interference.