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Is there a way to transmit a CAN bus signal over a high current DC line?

Motor Vehicle Maintenance & Repair Asked by Karsten Breivik on May 24, 2021

I would like to use a high current cable with batt + and chassis ground from the vehicle to the trailer, and also use the same cable to transmit a CAN bus signal to the trailer. Is there a way to get this to work? The problem being that this would constitute a short of the bus network…

Would it be possible perhaps to modulate the CAN bus signal somehow? Maybe some sort of “amperage modulation” if that makes sense… Or maybe a modulated signal over some sort of voltage highpass/lowpass filtration…

2 Answers

You can build a simple filter network to block DC.

Here's some design examples:

Electronics Stack Exchange - DC Filters

That URL came from the Electronics Stack Exchange, which might be a better place to ask the question.

Answered by SteveRacer on May 24, 2021

In theory it is possible. It would require 2 series capacitors to couple and decouple the CAN signal onto and from the DC line. After the first capacitor you would have a diode to add the DC voltage to the CAN signal. Between the 2 points in the circuit the CAN signal + the DC are combined. At the second point the second series capacitor would pass the CAN signal but block the DC. The diode before the second capacitor would recover the DC voltage. Then the recovered DC would have to be filtered to remove any residual noise. In Theory... The values of capacitors would probably be small like .001uF disc ceramic. I believe this process is referred to as phantom power. I hope this makes a little bit of sense or a least teases you a bit to do a bit of extra research.

Answered by Old_Fossil on May 24, 2021

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