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A GLOSSARY OF TERMS AND ABBREVIATIONS FOR OPEN OFFICE CABLING
These
are the terms, definitions and abbreviations you will hear
regarding telecommunications cabling in buildings. This document
focuses on those things that directly relate or interconnect
with the more commonly used modular zone telecommunications
cabling.
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Backbone
Cabling - The cabling that distributes voice and data services
between the equipment room, telecommunications closets, and
between buildings. See 'Horizontal Cabling.'
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Categories
(i.e. Category 5, 5 enhanced, 6, etc.) - Categories in this
contest were established by the EIA/TIA (see EIA/TIA)
to identify the performance levels of copper communications
cabling. CAT 3 was designed for use with 10Base-T. CAT 5 was
designed for use with 100Base-Tx, and the most recently passed
CAT 5 Enhanced standards (CAT 5 E) were designed for use with
1000Base-T (gigabit). The Category 6 standards, as of this writing,
are only in the proposal stage and not quite yet available.
It is anticipated that the CAT 6 standards will be approved
by early 2001. Category 5e is the de facto standard today.
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Consolidation
Point - A point of connect and disconnect now allowed in
the open office between the telecommunications outlet and the
telecommunications closet. Approved as part of the EIA/TIA standard
under Technical Systems Bulletin 75 (TSB75).
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Datacomm
Contractor - The industry jargon for a data communications
contractor, a firm that specializes in installing structured
voice/data cabling systems in buildings. These firms are used
on new installation and major renovations and typically do detailed
testing, supplying the end user with test results and certifications.
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Electronic
Industries Association/Telecommunications Industries Association
(EIA/TIA) - Standards organizations that publish the specifications
and test procedures for telecommunications cabling in a building.
The current standard for voice/data cabling performance is EIA/TIA
568-A. This is almost universally accepted as the standard for
installation of voice and data cabling.
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Equipment
Room - A centralized space for telecommunications equipment
that serves the occupants of the building. Equipment housed
herein is considered distinct from a telecommunications closet
(wiring closet) because of its nature or the complexity of the
equipment.
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Feeder
Cable - This is the generic term for the cabling from the
wiring closet out to another wiring closet or to the Consolidation
Point when a zone solution is implemented. Feeder cable is terminated
in wiring closets, and on the back of the Consolidation Point
modules by the datacomm contractor during the initial installation.
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Fiber
Optics - Light transmission through optical fibers for communications
or signaling.
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Horizontal
Cabling - The cabling between the telecommunications outlet
in the work area, and the Horizontal Cross-Connect (HC) in the
telecommunications closet. Maximum allowed distance for this
'Link' is 90 meters for data cabling.
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Intermediate
Cross-Connect (IC) A cross-connect between the main cross-connect
(usually in the equipment room) and the horizontal cross-connect
(usually in the telecommunications closet).
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Horizontal
Cross-Connect - Usually found in the telecommunications
closet (wiring closet), it typically connects the backbone cabling
to the horizontal cabling.
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Local
Area Network (LAN) - Computers, cabling and networking software
forming a computer network in a specific area of a building.
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Main
Cross-Connect (MC) - The cross-connect in the main equipment
room for connecting entrance cables, backbone cables, and equipment
cables.
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Main
Telecommunications Closet (MC) - If a building has only
one Telecommunications Closet (TC), it is called the Main Telecommunications
Closet. If a building has more than one TC, then all of the
backbone cabling from the rest of the TC's will terminate in
one TC. The TC where all the backbone cabling terminates is
knows as the MC. Also known as a 'wiring closet,' the Main Telecommuncations
Closet is an enclosed space for housing telecommunications equipment,
cable terminations and cross-connects. The closet is also the
recognized cross-connect between the backbone cable and horizontal
cabling. Requirement is a minimum of one MC per any given building.
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Megabits
- The data rate, or rate of data transfer in a communications
cable. Not used to specify performance in cabling under the
standards. Do not confuse with Megahertz, which is used to specify
the carrying capacity of a structured cabling system in the
standard.
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Megahertz
(MHz) - A unit of frequency measurement that is equal to
one million hertz. Used to measure the bandwidth, or carrying
capacity of a cable.
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Micron
- A term for micrometer (one millionth of a meter). Used in
defining fiber cable diameter.
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Modular
Cable Assembly - Term for 10, 30 and 50 foot cable assemblies
with a modular plug on one end that goes into a port on the
Consolidation Point, and a jack on the other that snaps into
a furniture faceplate to provide the telecommunications outlet
for the user. These can be unshielded twisted pair (UTP), four-pair
solid wire (not stranded) copper cables, or one-pair multimode
fiber optic cables that perform the same voice or data function.
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Modular
Jack - A female connector (typically eight-position for
data) that has become the standard interface for four-pair UTP
copper cable. Also known as a RJ45 connector. This is found
on the user-side ports and on the end of Modular Cable Assemblies.
There are (unfortunately) two slightly different wiring patterns
for this connector - T568A and T568B, and customers across the
continent use one or the other. They cannot be mixed, requiring
a set of Modular Cable Assemblies for each wiring pattern.
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Modular
Plug -A telephone-style male connector plug ( typically
eight-position for data) with a latch that mates with the modular
connector. This is the standard plug interface for copper UTP
cabling. This plug is used on the end of the modular cables
to plug into the moduler jack connectors.
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Multi-Mode
Fibers - Optical glass fiber in which light travels in multiple
modes. Typical core and cladding sizes (diameter) in microns
are 50/125 and 62.5/ 125. Multi-mode fiber is the standard for
horizontal cabling and LAN backbone cabling.
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MT-RJ
Fiber Optic Cabling - You will see this term as a modular
fiber solution based on the small form-factor fiber optic connector
known as the MT-RJ. This connector reduces the size of a fiber
connector interface into something that will fit into the same
faceplate hole size as the copper RJ45 connector. MT-RJ has
reduced the complexity, cost and size of fiber optic cabling,
paving the way for its use all the way to the user outlet.
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Patch
Cable/Patch Cords - This is the industry term for the copper
cable that makes the transition from the cross connect in the
wiring closet to the active equipment. It is also used to connect
the workstation in the office to the telecommunications outlet
in the panel or the wall. This cable is usually stranded wire,
and has an eight-position modular plug on each end. They can
be purchased in a variety of lengths and colors, and can even
be customer fitted and field engineered to specific lengths.
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Pathway
- A facility for the placement of telecommunications cabling
in a building or furniture.
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PVC
- The abbreviation for polyvinyl chloride, a material used in
manufacturing jacketing material for voice/data cabling.
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RCDD
(Registered Communications Distribution Designer) - Industry
accepted designation for a person qualified by BICSI (the Building
Industry Consulting Service International) to design or consult
regarding telecommunications cabling systems. Information Technology
(IT) managers typically expect the design of their cabling to
be done or certified by an RCDD.
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Structured
Cabling - A communications cabling system in a building
that is planned and installed as a complete entity to provide
certain levels of functionality and performance.
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Technical
Systems Bulletin (TSB) 75 - When the EIA/TIA 568
standard is revised, Technical Systems Bulletins are published
as additions. TSB 75 was approved in late 1997, allowing for
one connection point between the telecommunications closet and
the outlet. This allowed for zone cabling in the open office,
as opposed to the original standard that required only uninterrupted
'home run' cables to the outlet. TSB 75 has since been integrated
into the newest revision of the standard, known as T568-B.
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Telecommunications
Cabling - Generic industry term for building cabling that
carries voice and data signals. This is now usually the exact
same cabling for both services, allowing for ease of reconfiguration.
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| Telecommunications
Closet (TC) - An enclosed space for housing telecommunications
equipment, cable terminations and cross-connects. The closet
is also the recognized cross-connect between the backbone cable
and horizontal cabling. Also known as the 'wiring closet.' Requirement
is a minimum of one per floor in any given building. |
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