DALI intro



Introduction to IEC62386 ( DALI ), DALI vs DMX



DALI and DMX are popular bus systems for lighting


Comparison

Feature
DALI
DMX
Ideal Application
Lighting with fewer than 100 changes per day
Lighting with up to 40 changes per second
Dimming and fade
smooth, 1000 steps per second
jumpy - 40 steps per second
Bus ruggedness
Very high - slow bus with high noise tolerance
Very low - wiring must have exactly two ends, and each end is terminated
Multiple Masters
Yes - Multiple masters, multiple clients
One master, multiple Clients
requires a merger device for multple masters
On/Off, Scene, broadcast and group support
Built in - no master required for day to day operation
Requires a DMX Console
Power and DATA on the same bus
Yes
No
Topology
Tree with multiple branches
straight line only
Conversion
Simple DALI to DMX converters exist
Simple DMX to DALI converters Exist
Alexa, Schedules, Automation
User Friendly ZWD package available from ATX LED



The DALI bus is a simple, 2 wire, unshielded AWG 24 or 18 daisy chained bus for lighting control

It was developed during 2006 and is widely used in commercial applications world wide, because it has many suppliers and is tolerant of noise and installation methods.  The only real design constraint is the radius length of the DALI bus from the power supply to the furthest driver Distance planning

The DALI bus allows 64 switches controlling hundreds of lights, 16 groups and 16 scenes are also stored.  A large project can have multiple DALI bus instances. 

ATX LED Wall Switch Drivers combine a wall switch, a dimmer slider and a LED driver into one. Please see https://atxled.com/pdf/-AN-How2wire.pdf


DALI to DMX


At ATX LED - our AL-WS-010v switches have the DALI bus in them - and they can control DMX universe devices without any master or console needed.  If you want to add automation - our Hue Emulator ( ATX LED Hub ) provides that feature.

-Example-DMX



 Why DALI dimming is better than DMX dimming



We have heard about concerns of overloading in DMX drivers.   With DALI - the problem is not common - here is why.

Too many linear ft will cause a CV power supply to overload, shut down or burn up ( unless the CV supply has CC as well).   RGBW strips will overheat if the control system sets all channels to 100%.   Perhaps you utilize the Overcurrent feature of Meanwell CV supplies to manage full brightness and heat in RGBW, this works but it is not intended by Meanwell to operate continuously in Overcurrent mode.   Overcurrent breaks the dimming curve completely - resulting in a DMX control slider having no effect in the top 50% of it's range.

 

Lets say someone has a RGB strip with 24 watts per color and a 24 watt power supply and wants white.   The maximum DMX value for each RGB color is 33%.   This means you have only 80 steps ( 6 bits ) of dimming resolution.   A TW DMX solution like REVI requires that the DMX master limits the max value to 50% ( 7 bits ) to avoid overheating the strip.  The  DMX control system needs to know this and adjust automatically the TW values to assure constant brightness, but with 7 bits of dimming precision, the steps are visible and dimming is imperfect.

 

In DALI TW - the color and brightness is set - and the driver assures that the total wattage remains constant regardless of color.  DALI uses a log table - so dimming is far smoother at low levels - closer to 12 bits of dimming resolution.  Fade is built into the driver - not the control system - so 12 bits means very smooth dimming.  

 

In our ZWD - we treat RGBW with a complex reverse calculation of the log table ( the Gamma) and assure that attached Sunricher RGBW drivers will not go into overcurrent mode, allowing the expected dimming performance.

 





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