Master station
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In telecommunication, the term master station has the following meanings:
1. In a data network, the station that is designated by the control station to ensure data transfer to one or more slave stations.
Note: A master station controls one or more data links of the data communications network at any given instant. The assignment of master status to a given station is temporary and is controlled by the control station according to the procedures set forth in the operational protocol. Master status is normally conferred upon a station so that it may transmit a message, but a station need not have a message to send to be designated the master station.
2. In navigation systems using precise time dissemination, a station that has the clock used to synchronize the clocks of subordinate stations.
3. In basic mode link control, the data station that has accepted an invitation to ensure a data transfer to one or more slave stations.
Note: At a given instant, there can be only one master station on a data link.
[edit] Trivia
In Beavis and Butt-head Do America, Butthead misreads it as "Masturbation".
This article contains material from the Federal Standard 1037C, which, as a work of the United States Government, is in the public domain.