|
We
also have an overview of Cat 6 cabling, including one reason
why there can sometimes be a fine line between pass and fail
during testing.
I hope you find this issue interesting, and please let us know
if there are any subjects that you would like us to cover in
future editions.
CONTENTS:
1.
High Fibre Diet
2. Overview of Cat 6
3. Find a Cabling Installer Near You!
1. High Fibre Diet
There has been a constant battle for supremacy between copper
and fibre over the last 20 years or so. Fibre has always won
the fight for long distance communications, particularly for
high data rate applications; in the core of the telecomms networks
and the backbones of datacomms networks the superiority of fibre
is unchallenged. But when it comes to the edges of the networks
the desktop connections in local area networks and the
subscriber connections in telecomms networks the balance
of
power has usually been with copper cabling.
However, as data rates climb and the standards-based rules of
distances become more flexible to allow longer cable runs, the
technology pendulum swings back in favour of fibre. If this
is taken in conjunction with cost savings in fibre optics cabling
and systems, then perhaps it is time to review and update our
thinking about the role of fibre-to-the-desk (FTTD).
The case for fibre
There are many reasons for using fibre optics as a communications
medium, apart from its mind-boggling ability to transport stupendous
amounts of information over tremendous distances: No electromagnetic
current issues the data that travels along a fibre is
not affected by electromagnetic interference of any sort. Similarly,
it does not cause any interference to anything else around it;
Security it is very difficult to tap into the signal
that is travelling along a fibre as any intrusion is detectable;
Compact fibres are incredibly skinny.But it is bandwidth
that is central to the case for fibre. Computers are getting
more powerful, memory is getting cheaper, applications are getting
more and more bandwidth-intensive. The ubiquitous Ethernet protocol
has responded by increasing its data rate from the original
10 Mb/s to 100 Mb/s, which we used to call 'fast' Ethernet,
through to 1 Gb/s and now the 10 Gb/s standard that was ratified
in June.
The original 10 Mb/s Ethernet was a shared bus topology with
thick, yellow, coaxial cables. A later common implementation
used thinner, cheaper, coaxial cable. When the 10BaseT Ethernet
standard was developed for untwisted pair (UTP), all that was
needed (and the best UTP available at the time) was Category
3 cable.
Any old fibre would easily support 10 Mb/s over desktop-type
distances. Some early FTTD installations in the City of London
were carried out with 200PCS fibre. Plastic optical fibre is
another possibility for use at these data rates.
At 100 Mb/s came the first protocol that had to use fibre
FDDI (Fibre Distributed Data Interface); initially there was
no UTP cable capable of supporting this data rate. This was
the first time that fibre bandwidth became an important issue
and the bandwidth requirements forced operation at the (more
expensive) 1300 nm wavelength window, where 500 MHz.km bandwidth
was specified. Even so, the maximum length was bandwidth limited
to 2 km on multimode fibre.
The massive growth in the structured cabling market was kicked
off by the development of Category 5 UTP capable of supporting
100 Mb/s to the desktop, coupled with the arrival of generic
cabling systems standards. This was a severe blow to the role
of FTTD; although 100 Mb/s on fibre over 100 m is certainly
no problem to almost every fibre, the cost of the fibre transceivers
was prohibitive.
The emergence of Gigabit Ethernet meant radical changes in cabling
technology for copper and fibre. For copper UTP it meant a change
from simply using one pair for transmit and one pair for receive
as had been the case up until then. 1000BaseT requires all four
pairs in the cable to carry traffic in both directions simultaneously.
This meant a whole new raft of tests and the definition of Enhanced
Category 5 cable.
For fibre it meant that we could no longer use cheap LEDs as
the light source for systems. LEDs cannot be switched on and
off fast enough. Therefore, Gigabit Ethernet meant that we had
to start using lasers as the light source. Fortunately a new
type of laser emerged at this time to give laser-type performance
at LED-type prices. This new laser was the VCSEL (rhymes with
pixel), the Vertical Cavity Surface Emitting Laser. This operated
at 850 nm initially though 1300 nm technology is coming
along.
However lasers launch light into multimode fibre in quite a
different way to LEDs, so this has some important implications
for the way we specify and test multimode fibres and has also
led to a whole new type of laser-optimised multimode fibre.
If we consider the pessimistic minimum bandwidth performance
specified by the fibre standards, this may limit transmission
distance to just 220 m. Of course, when talking about 10 Gigabit
Ethernet we're not really talking about current implementation
to the desktop however, if a cabling system is being
installed with an anticipated lifetime of many years it may
be sensible to plan for the future.
The low transmission losses associated with optical fibres allow
long cable runs before the power level needs to be boosted up
again. However, in all high performance fibre optic systems
today, transmission distances are more likely to be limited
by bandwidth and distortion factors than by a lack of signal
strength. Telecomms systems use optical amplifiers to boost
signals without regeneration to achieve transoceanic distances.
So why are extended distances important for a desktop cabling
scenario? The answer lies in the increased flexibility that
fibre can give you in planning your network. If you are using
copper for your desktop connections then you are constrained
to a maximum copper cable run of 90 m. This usually means that
in a large installation there is a floor distributor or wiring
cabinet on every floor of a multi-storey office block or in
every region of a large office area. This cabinet often occupies
expensive floor space and needs power and fans because it has
to house a lot of electronic equipment.
Using fibre allows you to extend the desktop connection back
to a central location where floor space is cheaper (such as
the basement) and where full control may be exerted over patching
and reconfiguration. Efficient utilisation may be made of switch
ports, leading to further cost savings. This topology is known
as a collapsed backbone or centralised office architecture.
The case against
A number of objections are often raised when FTTD is proposed:
"fibre is too fragile", "it's difficult to install",
"it's expensive" these are outdated or uninformed
perceptions.
Fibre is surprisingly strong, for a thin glass rod an eighth
of a millimetre in diameter, however the office can be a harsh
environment, especially when people try moving computers and
desks without first disconnecting them. Experience has shown
that this can be one of the most challenging aspects of a FTTD
installation. However, selection of the right products, such
as cable management in office furniture, coupled with a little
basic awareness training for end-users, can solve the problems.
I don't believe that fibre is difficult to install. The five-day
City & Guilds 3466 certificate course will produce a competent,
professional fibre optics installer. There is no need for a
six month apprenticeship before being let loose on real installations.
However, there have been many developments over the years that
have made fibre optics easier to install. Fitting connectors
using traditional methods can be tricky that's why many
installers use the quick and easy method of fusion splicing
preterminated pigtails. The cost of a pigtail is cheaper than
many of the rapid termination connectors now on the market,
although these connectors (3M's Volition, Corning Unicam MT-RJ
and others) can cut installation time dramatically compared
with traditional methods.
An old objection to fibre to the desk was that a copper cable
was still needed to provide a telephony service. Now, Voice
over Internet Protocol can make the telephone into just another
software application. An IP telephone or a headset can be plugged
into the computer.
The costs
If a straight comparison is done for the cost of replacing existing
copper horizontal distribution cable with identical fibre runs
the cost comparison will probably favour copper though
the actual installed cost of the cabling itself is not likely
to be too different. Many factors have evened out:
the cable installation and containment costs will be the same;
the cost of fibre compared with good quality (Category 6) cable
will not be too different; there is not likely to be much, if
any, premium for fibre labour; fibre connector costs have come
down, as have termination times.
The major cost differential comes not from the cost of the fibre,
but from the cost of the equipment at the ends of the fibres.
However, if the cost comparison is conducted from the perspective
of what can be achieved with a fibre-specific design then the
balance may shift in favour of fibre. For example, if a centralised
office architecture is used, the floor distributors and all
of the equipment that is inside them is eliminated completely,
together with their requirements for expensive office space
and electricity.
The development of VCSELs has reduced the cost of high performance
optical transceivers. Some equipment vendors have implemented
single fibre working where signals are carried in both directions
along a single fibre simultaneously halving the number
of fibres and connectors needed in the cabling.
Optical equipment has much lower power requirements than equivalent
copper equipment, it is less likely to generate heat and therefore
puts less demand on an air conditioning system. Active equipment
may be mounted away from the working environment anyway.
Some of the developments that are happening in fibre may further
reduce the cost of FTTD or increase the bandwidth requirements,
hence the demand for FTTD: new types of single mode fibre suitable
for operation at the cheaper wavelength of 850nm this
means cheap fibre and cheap equipment; bi-directional traffic
is becoming common in optical access networks. This may involve
different wavelengths of operation in a wavelength division
multiplexing (WDM) environment; there is a lot of development
work on producing optical integrated circuits, where transmitters
and receivers are incorporated onto a single device together
with the required WDM devices. Automated manufacturing and increased
integration are driving costs down; on the demand side there
is an increasing trend for rich internet content including video
and audio to be delivered everywhere; desktop video conferencing
using web cameras is a low cost option that is becoming commonplace.
It pays to keep an open mind on the role of FTTD and assess
installations on a case by case basis.
By Richard Ednay.
Richard Ednay is technical director of Optical Technology Training.
This article is based on a presentation made at the ECA ITEC
Conference in Birmingham (England)
Reproduced with the kind permission of:
Optical Technology Training Ltd - www.ott.co.uk/
&
Electrical & Mechanical Contractor magazine - www.emconline.co.uk/
2.
Overview of Cat 6
Last summer the standard for Cat 6 was approved for publication
by the EIA (TIA/EIA-568-B.2-1). Category 6 is capable of transmission
frequencies up to 250Mhz using improved cables and RJ45 connectors.
The problem that manufacturers have, is that to meet the Cat
6 specification requires the use of cables and connectors which
are designed to work together as a 'tuned' system. This means
that if you install a Cat 6 system the manufacturer will only
guarantee performance if all of the components including the
patch leads are from their Cat 6 product range. In fact, by
mixing Cat 6 components from different manufacturers you could
end up with a system with worse performance characteristics
than a conventional Cat 5e system. That said, it is worth noting
that Cat 6 systems are backwards compatible with Cat 5/5e cabling,
and when mixed with these lower bandwidth systems the performance
criteria of the lower specification should still be met.
Testing Cat 6 cables can be a frustrating process, apart from
taking longer because the tester has to scan frequency steps
up to 250MHz instead of 100MHz, the fine line between pass and
fail is accentuated by the slightest kink or twist. The most
significant factor when testing a Cat 6 system can be return
loss failures due to the test leads themselves. All connectors
have a life cycle limit and with the average RJ45 connector
this is around one or two thousand insertions, so test leads
should be replaced after every 1000 tests or so. OK, not a problem
but at around $200 per set this cost will have to be considered
when pricing jobs.
Fluke seem to have a solution to this problem with their DSP-LIA101S
Permanent Link Adapters. The connector at the end of the leads
are interchangeable with connectors from different manufacturers
to ensure compatibility with the system under test. Although
a good idea, the adapters are over $600 and a new pair of "Personality
Modules" (the interchangeable adapters) cost over $100.
Surely the test plugs and leads should now be considered as
'consumables' and priced accordingly.
Tell us what you think!
email news@datacottage.com
3.
Find a Cabling Installer Near You!
Looking
for a network cabling installer near you? Network Cabling
Help has easy to use lists of networking and cabling companies
throughout the USA and UK.
|