Electronic – Can we consider that ethernet or RS-232 (RS-485) networks have no ground connection between the two ends of each cable

groundgroundloopsnetwork-interface

This is for a huge home theater.

I have a power transformer that converts 380VAC between two legs of a 3-phase power system down to 230VAC, with a center-tap of the secondary being our "neutral" for this secondary. (FYI, there are three such transformers, connected between phases A and B; B and C; and C and A. All this is needed.)

A hundred feet away we have a Lutron lighting panel that operates at 230 VAC from one leg of the same 3-phase power, on the same breaker panel, to neutral.

The lighting system is controlled via a Crestron system powered at the above-mentioned transformer, with control from the Crestron to the Lutron via RS-485.

If the RS-485 cabling makes a connection from the chassis ground of the Crestron system to the chassis ground of the Lutron, it looks like we have a HUGE ground loop. Hence the question, which I'd like to generalize:

Do ethernet, RS-232, and/or RS-485 essentially isolate grounds at the two ends of their cables? Do they carry a ground through? Does it depend on the equipment?

Best Answer

Ethernet uses galvanic isolation with transformer coupling at both ends of the link. RS-232 and RS-485 do not. You have to use line coding in order to use AC coupling through either transformers or capacitors. This is part of the Ethernet spec. However, no low speed protocol supports this. However, it should be possible to get a box that can provide isolation for RS-232 or RS-485.