SLOA101B August 2002 – May 2016 SN55HVD233-SEP , SN65HVDA1040A-Q1 , SN65HVDA1050A-Q1 , SN65HVDA540-5-Q1 , SN65HVDA540-Q1 , SN65HVDA541-5-Q1 , SN65HVDA541-Q1 , SN65HVDA542-5-Q1 , SN65HVDA542-Q1
Common-mode voltage is the difference in potential between grounds of sending and receiving nodes on a bus. This is often the case in the networked equipment typically found in a CAN application. Possible effects of this problem are intermittent reboots, lock-ups, bad data transfer, or physical damage to a transceiver.
Network interface cards, parallel ports, serial ports, and especially transceivers are prime targets for some form of failure if not designed to accommodate high levels of ground shift and power supply imbalance between typical CAN nodes.
With this in mind, most TI CAN transceivers are designed to operate with complete safety well beyond the bus voltage range of –2 V to 7 V required by the ISO 11898 Standard