System Structure of Integrated Wiring
The Integrated Wiring System has a Layered Star structure. The Integrated Wiring System consists of three subsystems: the Main Wiring subsystem of the park, the building wiring subsystem, and the horizontal wiring subsystem. See.
Integrated Wiring includes three sub-systems: Campus trunk, building trunk, and horizontal wiring. The maximum configuration of the integrated cabling system shown in structure 2 can be established when multiple cabling subsystems are connected together. The distribution frame provides a means of configuring and wiring to support different topologies, such as bus, Star, and ring.
Placement of functional elements of Integrated Wiring
For placement requirements of distribution frame, see ISO/IECTR14763-2.
Cables are laid by cable trough or pipe series. For management requirements on cable laying in cable trough or pipe series, see ISO/IEC18010.
Distribution frames are placed between devices or telecommunications rooms. The telecom outlet is located in the work zone.
Balanced cabling classification for integrated cabling
Class A: defined as high as 100 kHz.
Class B: up to 1 MHz.
Class C: up to 16 MHz.
Class D: up to 100 MHz.
Class E: up to 250 MHz.
Class F: up to 600 MHz.
Integrated Wiring Cable
Includes balanced cables and optical cables. The specific categories are shown in table 1.
Integrated Wiring channel and permanent link
A channel is a transmission path between a LAN switch, a hub, and other devices and terminal devices. A typical channel consists of the level subsystem, its work zone, and the device jumper. For a longer reachable distance, the channel consists of two or more subsystems, including the work zone and device jumper. The channel performance does not include connections to devices specific to applications.
A permanent link is the transmission path of the installation and wiring subsystem that includes the connected hardware at the end of the installed cable. In the horizontal cabling sub-system, a permanent link is composed of a telecom outlet, a horizontal cable, an optional CP, and a horizontal cable terminal contact at the floor distribution frame. Permanent links include connections at the end of the installed wiring.
Some basic concepts of Integrated Wiring have been introduced to you. I hope you have mastered it. We will introduce it in the next section: explanation: the next section of the Integrated Wiring System of "Digital National Standard"
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