Data Comm / Low Voltage
Glossary
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AC
- Alternating current. A signal that
alternates its polarity between positive and
negative with respect to an earth ground.
Dynamic signals such as audio, radio waves
and utility power are typically AC.
ACK
- Abbreviation for the Acknowledge response
in data communications.
ADC
- Analog to Digital Converter.
ADMINISTRATION
- The method of labeling, identification,
documentation and usage needed to implement
moves, additions and changes of the
telecommunications infrastructure.
ACR
- Attenuation to Crosstalk Ratio. ACR is a
comparison of signal strength to noise
interference and is used as a bandwidth
indicator.
ATTENUATION -
Attenuation is the degradation of signal
level along the cable due to losses in the
cable. It measured in dB and calculated as
follows: Attenuation = 10 log Received
Voltage/Transmitted Signal Voltage. See also
OPTICAL LOSS.
AUTOTEST
- A series of tests performed by a LAN Cable
Tester activated by the AUTOTEST key. The
content of a test series and the test limits
are predefined by the selection of a
Standard (e.g. Category 6), or a cable
manufacturer’s test suite, or may be
constructed by the test unit’s user.
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BACK REFLECTION
- Light reflected from the cleaved or
polished end of a fiber caused by the
difference of the refractive indices of air
andglass. Back Reflectance is typically 4%
of the incident light. It is expressed in dB
relative to incident power.
BACKBONE - A
facility (e.g. pathway, cable or conductors)
between telecommunications rooms, or floor
distribution terminals, the entrance
facilities, and the equipment rooms within
or between buildings.
BACKSCATTERING -
The scattering of
light in a fiber back toward the source.
This backscattered light is used to make
Optical Time Domain Reflectometer (OTDR)
measurements.
BALANCE -
Balance is the ratio of the differential
signal output at either end of any pair to a
common mode
BALUN - A
passive line matching transformer designed
to match the impedance of a transmission
medium referenced to ground such as coaxial
cable to transmission media whose signals
are differential, or referenced to each
other, such as TV antenna twin lead.
Frequently used to connect twisted pair
media to coaxial cable.
BANDWIDTH - The
range of electrical frequencies that an
electronic device or transmission system can
effectively handle. For LAN’s, it describes
the maximum data rate for a given topology.
The best bandwidth indicator of a cabling
system is Attenuation Crosstalk Ratio (ACR),
and one should strive for 7-10 dB ACR at the
highest frequency level of transmission. The
higher the ACR, the stronger the signal.
(See
Attenuation Crosstalk Ratio (ACR)).
BASEBAND - The
use of the entire bandwidth of the network
cable to transmit a single digital signal.
The frames are applied directly to the cable
in digital form without modulation or
multiplexing. Ethernet and Token Ring are
Baseband transmissions because they use only
one protocol.
BASEBAND VIDEO
- An application that defines transmission
characteristics up to 862 MHz.
BASIC LINK - A
testing configuration that appeared in older
editions of the ANSI/TIA/EIA-568-A Standard.
It has been replaced by Permanent Link test
configuration in the 568-B Standard that
replaced 568-A. See
PERMANENT LINK.
BAUD
- The most
basic unit of data transmission speed, one
baud represents one signal state change per
second. It is often confused with bits per
second (bps) because they were at one time
very similar. By using current data
compression and modulation techniques, many
times the baud rate in bits per second can
be achieved.
BENDING RADIUS
- The minimum allowed curvature of any piece
of cable (fiber or metallic). It is
absolutely critical that the bending radius
be maintained so that neither the cable’s
impedance (metallic) nor refractive index
(fiber optic) is affected.
BER
- Bit Error
Rate. The ratio of received error bits of
data to the total number of bits
transmitted.
BINARY -
Information contained in one of two states,
either 0 (zero) or 1 (one). Digital
computers are designed to respond to streams
or groups of binary information. By
combining and manipulating this information,
these machines can be instructed to perform
useful tasks. All information, whether alpha
or numeric, must be converted into a binary
equivalent to be processed by these systems.
It forms the basis of the Binary digIT or
BIT. Eight bits together form a BYTE. (Four
bits form a NIBBLE).
BINARY SYNCHRONOUS COMMUNICATIONS
- BCS or BISYNC. Developed by IBM as a form
of communications between their mainframes
and other devices. This protocol depends on
synchronization between transmitter and
receiver via timing signals.
BIT
- Binary Digit.
The smallest unit of data (and most basic)
for data communications. It can have a value
of a one (mark) or a zero (space).
BIT
RATE - The
number of bits passing a given point in a
measured period of time. Usually expressed
as bits per second (bps), thousands of bits
per second (Kbps), or millions of bits per
second (Mbps).
BLOCK - A group
of transmitted data, typically framed with
control characters and having a fixed size,
such as 256, 512, 4096, etc.
BNC
- The Bayonet-Neill-Concelman connector.
Widely used in 10BASE2 and other thin
coaxial applications.
BPS
- Bits Per
Second. (See also
BIT RATE)
BRAID - The
stranded shield found on most types of axial
metallic media and some types of twisted
pair, such as IBM Type 1.
BRIDGE - In the
LAN arena, it is a device used to connect
two physically separate networks.
BROADCAST - To
send a message to two or more receiving
devices at the same time.
BROADCAST STORM
- In a NETBIOS based
network, devices broadcast their addresses
when queried. When several or all devices
broadcast their addresses, the network slows
down with the excess traffic.
BROUTER - A
combination bridge and router, performing
the functions of both in a single device.
See also BRIDGE
and ROUTER.
BUNDLED CABLE -
An assembly or two or more cables
continuously bound together to form a single
unit.
BUS
- An electrical
connection tying two or more points
together. A bus can be serial or parallel
and can carry both dynamic signals or DC
voltage.
BUS
NETWORK - A
topology based on all communicating devices
being attached to a common medium. Various
access methods are used including CSMA/CD
and Token Passing. Typically bus networks
carry data in the millions of bits per
second data rate.
BYTE
- Eight data
bits or two nibbles.
BYTE
COUNT - The
number of bytes in a given message or block
of data.
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c
- Symbol representing the Speed of Light
(See
PROPAGATION RATE
and NVP).
CABLE
- An assembly of one or more conductors
within an enveloping sheath, constructed so
as to permit use of the conductors singly or
in groups.
CABLE RISER -
Vertically installed cable connecting floors
of a building. Cable tested to UL 1666 is
"riser" rated. Typically multi-pair copper
and fiber.
CABLE RUN
- A length of installed media who may
include other components along its path.
CABLE SHEATH -
A covering over the optical fiber or
conductor assembly that may include one or
more metallic members, strength members or
jackets.
CABLE SHIELD -
A conductive layer of material located just
under the cable’s outer sheath which is
designed to increase the cable’s immunity to
outside electrical noise interference. It
may be constructed of metal foil or braided
strands.
CABLING - A
combination of all cables, jumpers, cords
and connecting hardware.
CAMPUS
- The buildings and grounds having legal
contiguous interconnection.
CAPACITANCE -
The measured ability of an electronic
component to store an electrical charge.
Capacitance is rated in units called FARADS.
Common divisions of farads include
microfarads (mF = X 10 6 ),
nanofarads (nF = X 10 9 ) and
picofarads (pF = X 10 12 ).
CARRIER SENSE MULTIPLE ACCESS/COLLISION
DETECTION (CSMA/CD) -
The most common form
of access control found in an Ethernet
environment. It is used to avoid data
collisions in a logical bus topology, such
Ethernet.
CARRIER SIGNAL
- A continuous signal, upon which is
modulated the data or other signal that is
to be transmitted.
CATEGORY 3 (CAT 3)
- 4-pair UTP cable and associated connecting
hardware whose transmission characteristics
are specified up to 16 MHz. (SEE ISO 11801
CLASSES A, B, C)
CATEGORY 4 (Cat 4)
- 4-pair UTP cable and associated connecting
hardware whose transmission characteristics
are specified up to 20 MHz. (SEE ISO 11801
CLASSES A, B, C)
CATEGORY 5 (CAT 5)
- 4-pair UTP cable and associated connecting
hardware whose transmission characteristics
are specified up to 100 MHz.
CATEGORY 5e (CAT 5e)
- 4-pair UTP cable and associated connecting
hardware whose transmission characteristics
are specified up to 100 MHz. It has
approximately 3 dB stronger signal strength
than standard CAT 5. Category 5e includes
additional tests (Headroom, PSACR, PSELFEXT,
PSNEXT, and ACR) to ensure that Gigabit
Ethernet can run over unshielded Twisted
Pair (UTP) cabling. (SEE ISO 11801
CLASS D)
CATEGORY 6 (CAT 6)
- a proposed addition, in draft form, to the
ANSI/EIA/TIA-568-B.2 and ISO 11801 Standards
specifying testing transmission
characteristics for 4-pair STP and UTP
cabling and connectors up to 250 MHz (See
ISO 11801 CLASS
E).
Additionally, tests for Capacitance,
Resistance and Impedance are required in
addition to all tests required for Category
5e. Approval is expected in early 2002.
CATEGORY 7 (CAT
7) - an
anticipated addition to the
ANSI/EIA/TIA-568-B.2 Standard specifying
testing transmission characteristics for
4-pair STP cabling and connectors up to 600
MHz (See ISO 11801
CLASS F).
Approval of the ISO 11801 Standard is
possible in late early 2002 with an
ANSI/EIA/TIA Standard following at some
future date.
CATV
- Community Antenna TeleVision or Cable
TeleVision. CATV is Broadband transmission
effected by multiplexing multiple channels
on one medium.
CAU
- Controlled Access Unit. A type of
semi-intelligent central wiring concentrator
for the Token Ring environment. Used in
conjunction with LAM’s.
CCITT -
International Telephone and Telegraph
Consultative Committee. An international
standards setting body for the
telecommunications industry. In 1985, the
CCITT chartered the TIA/EIA with drafting
the 568 Standards we use today.
CDDI
- Copper Distributed Data Interface. A
standard describing 100 Mbps data
transmission on metallic cable.
CENTRALIZED CABLING
- A cabling configuration from the work area
to a centralized cross-connect using
pull-through cables, an interconnect or
splice in the telecommunications room.
CHANNEL LINK -
The Channel Link includes up to 90 m (295
ft) of horizontal cable, a work area
patchcord, a telecommunications
outlet/connector, an optional transition
point or consolidation connector, and two
connections in the telecommunications room.
When a maximum horizontal length of 90 m is
used, then the total length of the
patchcords shall not exceed 10 m (33 ft).
For other lengths of horizontal cabling,
refer to ANSI/EIA/EIA-568-B.2.
CONNECTING HARDWARE
- A device providing mechanical cable
terminations between two cable ends.
CPU
- Central
Processing Unit. The portion of a computer
which performs all arithmetic and logic
manipulation in addition to instruction
interpretation and processing.
CGA
- Color
Graphics Adapter.
CHANNEL SERVICE UNIT
- A device that interfaces a digital
telephone line to a multiplexer or other
digital device for high-speed
communications.
CHARACTER - A
combination of binary digits representing an
alphanumeric value.
CHARACTERISTIC
IMPEDANCE -
Characteristic Impedance is the measure of a
transmission medium’s impedance throughout
its length and over a swept frequency
spectrum. When terminating transmission
media, it is important to match its
Characteristic Impedance so as to minimize
reflections.
CHARACTER ORIENTED PROTOCOL
- A communications protocol that responds to
special control characters as opposed to
individual bit values for function control.
CHEAPERNET -
Slang for 10BASE-2, also Thinnet, Thinwire
Ethernet using a 50 ohm coax cable. (also
see THIN
ETHERNET)
CICS
- Customer
Interface Control System. An IBM user
interface designed for mainframe interaction
and job processing.
CLADDING - The
low refractive index optical coating
surrounding the core of a fiberoptic cable
that prevents light from escaping the core.
The cladding guides light along the core.
CLASS D - An
approved ISO 11801 Standard specifying
testing transmission characteristics for
4-pair STP and UTP cabling and connectors up
to 150 MHz (also see Category 6). Approval
is expected in late 2001.
CLASS E
- A proposed addition, in draft form, to the
ISO 11801 Standard specifying testing
transmission characteristics for 4-pair STP
and UTP cabling and connectors up to 250 MHz
(also see Category 6). Approval is expected
in early 2002.
CLASS F
- An anticipated addition to the ISO 11801
Standard specifying testing transmission
characteristics for 4-pair STP cabling and
connectors up to 600 MHz (Category 7).
Approval of the ISO 11801 Standard is
expected in early 2002 with an ANSI/TIA/EIA
Category 7 Standard following at some future
date.
CMIP
- Common Management
Information Protocol. One of many network
management information exchange protocols.
The current favorite is SNMP.
COAXIAL CABLE -
A cable constructed of an insulated center
conductor surrounded by a shield. 10 BASE-5
and 10 BASE-2 require different types of
50-ohm coax cables.
COLLISION - The
event that occurs when data from two devices
attached to a common bus are placed on the
bus at the same time. In Ethernet this
typically generates a re-transmission.
COMMUNICATIONS PROTOCOL
- The rules that govern the behavior and
attributes of both hardware and software as
they apply to data communications.
COMMUNICATIONS SERVER
- A device which acts as a gateway to
communication lines outside normal building
boundaries or to a different communicating
device. The server may allow access to
several lines by any number of users on a
network. Sometimes called a modem pool.
CONCENTRATOR -
A device used in LAN applications to attach
several nodes to one AUI or bus attachment
point. Often this term is used mistakenly in
place of hub.
CONNECTING BLOCK
- An interconnecting device used in
telecommunications and LAN applications
consisting of multiple points for wire
attachment. Some common connecting blocks
are the 66 block, 110 block, the BIX block
and the Krone block.
(also see
Cross-Connect)
CONSOLIDATION POINT
- A location for interconnection between
horizontal cables extending from a
telecommunications room and horizontal
cables extending to telecommunications
outlet/connectors.
CORE
- The central light carrying part of a
fiberoptic cable. It has a higher index of
refraction than that of the surrounding
cladding
COUPLER - An
optical device that splits or combines light
from more than one fiber.
CPS
- Characters Per Second.
CPU
- Central
Processing Unit
CRC
- Cyclic
Redundancy Check. A common form of error
checking for data communications and other
situations where blocks of data are moved
from one location to another. All bits in a
block are divided by a predetermined binary
number and the result is compared with what
the actual number should be.
CROSS-CONNECT
- A facility enabling the termination of
cable elements and their interconnection or
cross-connection.
CROSS-CONNECTION
- A connection scheme between cabling runs,
subsystems and equipment using patch cords
or jumpers that attach to connecting
hardware on each end.
CROSSTALK -
Crosstalk is the measure of noise induced to
one pair by another pair of conductors.
Crosstalk measured from the near end is
"NEXT" and Crosstalk measured from the far
end is "FEXT". Crosstalk is expressed in dB
and the smaller the number, the greater the
inductive noise effect. ANSI/TIA/EIA-568-B.2
requires bidirectional NEXT measurements to
verify performance in both directions.
CSMA/CD -
Carrier Sense Multiple Access/Collision
Detection (an Ethernet Media Access
Mechanism).
CSU
- See CHANNEL SERVICE UNIT -
CTS
- Clear To
Send.
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D-CHANNEL
- A sort of status line in the ISDN arena. A
16 Kbps line carrying control signals and
call data in the BRI interface. A 64 Kbps
line in the PRI interface.
D
TYPE - A
description for the 9, 15 and 25 pin
connectors widely used for data
communications and microcomputer
peripherals. It looks very loosely like a
"D" when viewed vertically.
DASD
- Directly
Accessible Storage Device. IBM’s term for
local hard disk.
DATA
GRADE CIRCUIT -
A telephone line capable of carrying
high-speed data. The line is specially
conditioned to accommodate this.
DATA
SERVICE UNIT -
DSU. A device for transmitting data on
digital transmission facilities. Sometimes
incorporated with a CSU.
DATA
SET - Another
term for modem.
dB
- the
abbreviation for decibel. A unit of
measurement to compare an output signal to
an input signal. A relative term. (See also
text on ATTENUATION for more information)
DC
- Direct
Current. A steady state voltage, either
positive or negative with respect to ground,
but not both. Batteries are a source of DC.
DC
RESISTANCE -
Provides an effective check on cable and
connector integrity. Both cabling and
connectors have inherent DC resistance. Loop
resistance is the combined resistance of
each individual wire in a two-wire pair. It
is tested for each pair by placing a known
DC voltage on one wire in the pair, shorting
the Remote Handset and reading the voltage
loss at the Display Handset. DC loop
resistance testing is essential to isolating
poor connector punch downs, cable damage and
shorts.
DEAD
ZONE - In OTDR
measurements, if a subsequent event occurs
at a distance less than the pulse width
generated by the OTDR, the subsequent event
will not be “seen” by the OTDR because it
occurs within a “dead zone.”
DELAY SKEW -
Also known as Propagation Delay/Delay Skew.
Delay Skew is a measurement of the signaling
delay difference from the fastest pair to
the slowest. Delay Skew is calculated from
Propagation Delay measurements.
DENSE WAVELENGTH DIVISION MULTIPLEXING
(DWDM) - A
method of increasing the amount of data that
can be transmitted over an optical fiber.
DIGITIZE - The
conversion of an analog or continuous signal
into a data stream of binary digits.
DISOSS -
Distributed Office Support System by IBM.
DISTRIBUTED PROCESSING
- A system or network whereby the processing
is done at each individual workstation and
not at a central device. A LAN is an example
of distributed processing.
DMA
- Direct Memory
Access.
DNA
- Digital
Equipment Corporation’s Network
Architecture.
DOMAIN - An
area including all peripherals and nodes
under control of a single computer or server
in a network.
DOWNLINE IMPEDANCE
-
LAN Cable Testers
perform this function using a Time Domain
Reflectometer (TDR) that samples and
analyzes the impedance of a link. Relative
Impedance is measured as a function of
length and each cable can be viewed in
graphical format along its length to
ascertain where the anomalies are located,
whereas Characteristic Impedance is usually
measured in a laboratory with complex test
equipment such as an expensive network
analyzer. The TDR measures relative
impedance in the field to find crimps, kinks
and/or stretched cable that would show up as
a blips, peaks or valleys on the otherwise
flat line graph of a good link. (also see
FAULT FIND)
DRAIN WIRE - In
a cable, it is an uninsulated wire included
in the sheath with the insulated wires.
Typically used for grounding.
DROP
CABLE -A cable
connecting a workstation or peripheral to
the main network cable.
DS-0
- Digital Service Level 0, a 64 Kbps
digitized voice line.
DS-1
- Digital Service Level 1, a 1.544 Mbps line
carrying 24 DS-0 lines.
DS-1C - Digital
Service Level 1C, a 3.152 Mbps line also
called T-1.
DS-2
- Digital Service Level 2, a 6.312 Mbps line
also called T-2.
DS-3
- Digital Service Level 3, a 44.736 Mbps
line also called T-3.
DS-4
- Digital Service Level 4, a 273 Mbps line
also called T-4.
DUAL
NEAR END CROSSTALK
- Near end Crosstalk (NEXT) is the amount of
transmitted signal on one pair that is
induced electromagnetically onto adjacent
pairs. High levels can cause excessive
retransmission rates. An AutoTest generates
swept signals for NEXT from 1 to 250 MHz for
Category 6/CLASS E and it measures the
induced noise on adjacent pairs at precise
intervals. The AutoTest performs Dual NEXT
tests from both ends.
DWDM
- See DENSE
WAVELENGTH DIVISION MULTIPLEXING.
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EBCDIC
- Extended Binary Coded Decimal Interchange
Code. An 8-bit code developed by IBM for
data transfer between their computers.
EIA
- Electronis
Industry Association. A trade organization
of manufacturers which sets and defines
standards for its members. This group works
with the TIA on standards pertaining to both
industries. The originator of the "RS"
series of interfaces (RS232, RS-449, etc.)
EISA
- Extended
Industry Standard Architecture. An
independent alternative to IBM’s
Micro-channel for 32 bit computers.
ELFEXT - See
EQUAL LEVEL FAR-END CROSSTALK.
EMI
-
Electromagnetic Interference.
EPROM -
Erasable Programmable Read Only Memory.
EQUAL LEVEL FAR-END CROSSTALK (ELFEXT)
- A measure of
the unwanted signal coupling from a
transmitter at the near-end into a
neighboring pair measured at the far-end
relative to the received signal level
measured on that same pair.
EQUIPMENT CABLE CORD
- A cable or cable assembly used to connect
telecommunications equipment to horizontal
or backbone cabling.
ESDI
- Enhanced
Small Device Interface.
ETHERNET - A
LAN operating under the guidelines of the
IEEE 802.3 document defining physical and
data link layer behavior.
ETHERNET 10BASE-,
100BASE-, 1000BASE-TOPOLOGIES
| 10BASE-T |
10 Mb/s Ethernet over two pairs
of 100-ohm Category 3, or better,
UTP copper cable |
| 100BASE-Tx |
100 Mb/s Ethernet of two pairs
of 100-ohm Category 5, or better,
UTP copper cable |
| 100BASE-SX |
100 Mb/s Ethernet over 62.5 m
MM, and 50 m MM fiber using Light
Emitting Diodes (LEDs) |
| 1000BASE-T |
1000 Mb/s Ethernet of four pairs
of 100-ohm Category 5e or better UTP
copper cable |
| 1000BASE-LX |
1000 Mb/s Ethernet over 62.5 m
MM, 50 m MM, and 10 m SM fiber using
long wavelength (1300 nm) lasers |
| 1000BASE-SX |
1000 Mb/s Ethernet over 62.5 m
MM, and 50 m MM fiber using long
wavelength (850 nm) lasers |
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FANOUT - A
device similar to a concentrator in that
it provides multiple access to a single
backbone tap.
FARAD - A unit
for measuring capacitance. One farad is a
one-coulomb charge with one-volt potential
difference between the plates. A 50-volt,
one farad capacitor is roughly the size of a
quart milk container. (also see
CAPACITANCE)
FAR-END CROSSTALK LOSS
(FEXT) - A
measure of the unwanted signal coupling from
a transmitter at the near-end into a
neighboring pair measured at the far-end.
FAT
- File
Allocation Table. The location of all names
and addresses of data files stored on a
disk.
FAULT FIND - A
diagnostics feature on the IDEAL LAN Testers
that allows you to determine where in a link
a fault is located. (also see DOWNLINE
IMPEDANCE)
FCC
- Federal
Communications Commission.
FC
CONNECTOR - A
connector type used primarily for Singlemode
fiberoptic cable. It offers precise
alignment of the cable with respect to the
transmitter and detector. Using a threaded
receptacle and a locator notch, once
installed the position is maintained with
absolute accuracy.
FCS
- Frame Check
Sequence. An error-checking field found in
bit oriented protocols.
FDDI
- Fiber
Distributed Data Interface. A dual
counter-rotating ring topology based on
fiber optics operating at 100 Mbps.
FDM
- Frequency
Division Multiplexing. A technique in which
several signals are transmitted on the same
cable simultaneously at different
frequencies. Used in Broadband.
FDX
- An
abbreviation for Full Duplex transmission.
Gigabit Ethernet will use full duplex
transmission on all four pairs. This is
analogous to being on an 8-lane highway and
any car can go any direction, at any time!
FEP
- Front End
Processor. A preprocessor for devices
attached to a larger, faster computer.
FERRULE -The
component of a connector that holds a
fiberoptic cable in place and maintains its
alignment. Cylindrical in shape with a hole
in the middle, the ferrule is sometimes
described as a sleeve.
FEXT
- See FAR END
CROSSTALK.
FIBER - A thin
filament of glass capable of carrying
information in the form of light.
FIBEROPTICS (FO) -
Light transmission
through flexible fibers for communications
or lighting.
FIBEROPTIC TEST PROTOCOLS
- A series of test procedures defined by the
FO 6.2 committee of TIA. The procedures
cover a wide number of situations, for
example, verification by manufacturers of
cable specifications, cable bend radius,
connector manufacturing, fire rating, and
field testing of fiber optic installations.
FIBEROPTICS LAN SECTION
- Known as FOLS, a group operating within
the trade association operation of TIA. FOLS
is dedicated to promoting the common
interests of TIA members involved in
fiberoptic telecommunications.
FILE
SERVER - A
device found on local area networks which
sends requested files and programs to
requesting nodes and stores files sent from
nodes.
FIRMWARE -
Operating instructions for a processor
permanently stored in devices such as
EPROM’s, and ROM’s which are hardware.
FLASH MEMORY -
Flash Erasable Programmable Read-only Memory
is a form of computer semiconductor storage.
It allows data in electronic format to be
held without loss (unlike RAM) for an
indefinite period (like ROM), and for the
contents to be changed. It is a popular type
of removable storage used for transporting
data between recording devices and a PC.
FO-2, FO-6 -
See TIA/IEEE
STANDARDS COMMITTEES
FOLS
- See
FIBEROPTICS LAN SECTION
FOTP
- See
FIBEROPTIC TEST PROTOCOL
FOUR-WIRE CIRCUIT
- A transmission circuit using a transmit
pair and a receive pair, or four wires
altogether.
FREQUENCY - The
rate, at which an electrical current
alternates, usually measured in Hertz, or
cycles per second, which are the same.
FTP
- File Transfer Protocol. A file sharing
protocol often used in conjunction with
TCP/IP. It operates in layers 5 through 7 of
the OSI network model.
FULL
DUPLEX - The
ability of a circuit to carry signals in two
directions simultaneously. (also see
FDX
and GIGABIT
ETHERNET)
FUSION SPLICER
- An instrument that splices fiber by fusing
or welding the fibers, typically by an
electric arc.
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GATEWAY
- For LAN’s, a connection between two
dissimilar network topologies, i.e.,
Token-Ring and Ethernet.
GIGA
- A prefix for
one billion.
GIGABIT ETHERNET
- Gigabit Ethernet is defined by three
standards generated by IEEE 802.3 working
groups.
1000Base-T supports Gigabit Ethernet over 100 meters of Category 5e balanced copper cabling.
1000BASE-SX supports the use of short wavelength Vertical Cavity Side-Emitting Lasers (VCSELs) to transmit data over fiber optic cable. The lasers specified by the Standard operate over Multimode Fiber in the wavelength range of 770 to 860 nanometers.
1000BASE-LX supports the use of long wavelength lasers to transmit data over fiber optic cable. The lasers specified by the Standard operate over either Multimode or Singlemode Fiber in the wavelength range of 1270 to 1355 nanometers. |
GROUND LOOP
- This occurs when a segment is grounded
at more than one point. It creates a
situation for a potential voltage
difference between the grounds, causing
the network cable to conduct unwanted
electricity. A bad thing.
GUI
- Pronounced
"gooey", it’s the abbreviation for Graphical
User Interface.
H
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HALF DUPLEX
- The ability of a circuit to carry signal
in one direction at a time. Ethernet and
Fast Ethernet use half duplex with one pair
transmitting and the other pair receives.
HARDWARE - A
generic term describing all computing and
peripheral machinery.
HARDWIRE - A
permanent connection between two devices,
usually not easily disconnected.
HARMONICA - A
cable adapter used to change an Amphenol
type 50 pin Telco connector into multiple
RJ-45’s or RJ-11’s.
HDLC
- High Level
Data Link Control. A bit oriented protocol
developed by the International Standards
Organization (ISO).
HEADROOM -
Headroom is the sum of the natural margin,
or ACR, of the cabling and the additional
margin between the worst case NEXT and the
limit for NEXT. Headroom is calculated using
a power sum ACR on the worst pair after the
attenuation for that pair has been
normalized to 100 meters (328 ft).
HERTZ (Hz) - An
equivalent to cycles per second for defining
frequency.
HIT
- Slang for an
induced electrical impulse. (also see
IMPULSE NOISE
section)
HOME
RUN - A cable
run going from a workstation or office
directly back to a wiring closet with no
other connections. Physical star topologies
consist exclusively of home runs.
HORIZONTAL CABLING
- The cabling between and including the
telecommunications outlet-connector and the
horizontal cross-connect.
HOST
- Term
describing a Host computer. A central
computer responsible for the control of
time-share terminals and other peripherals.
Usually associated with minicomputers and
mainframes.
HUB
- 1. A central
point of connection for several circuits. 2.
A device which electrically converts a
logical topology to a different physical
topology. An ARCNET hub enables physically
star-wired nodes to be seen as a logical,
token-passing bus. Hubs can be active
(powered), or passive (non-powered). Active
hubs sometimes are capable of allowing
longer cabling lengths than passive units.
HUB
ACTIVATION -
Hub activation tests transmit a signal to a
10 BASE-T hub to verify it is operational.
HYBRID CABLE -
An assembly of two or more cables, of the
same or different types or categories,
covered by one overall sheath.
Hz
- See Hertz.
I
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INFRASTRUCTURE
(telecommunications)
- A collection of those telecommunications
components, excluding equipment that
together provide the basic support for the
distribution of all information within a
building or campus.
I/O
- Input/Output.
I/O
CHANNEL - A
high-speed bus used to interconnect
peripherals with the CPU.
I/O
CONTROLLER - A
device that arbitrates the I/O channel and
controls data transfer between devices
attached to the channel.
IBM
TOKEN RING - A
token passing network topology that conforms
to the IEEE 802.5 definition and documents.
Operating at 4 Mbps or 16 Mbps, it is the
chief topology used to interconnect small
and mid-size equipment from IBM and other
vendors.
IDC
- Insulation Displacement Connector. A type
of connector in which the insulated wire is
pushed down between two sharp blade-like
pieces of metal so that the conductor
touches the connector and there is no
exposed bare wire. Modular telephone plugs
(RJ series) are examples of insulation
displacement connectors.
IDF
- Intermediate Distribution Frame as it was
called previous to being changed to "IC" or
intermediate cross-connect in TIA/EIA 568-A.
Also known as a wiring closet, the IDF is a
cross connection point for horizontally
attached devices to riser media. Provides
the wiring interface between the end-user
and the Main Distribution Frame. The MDF was
change to "MC", which stands for main
cross-connect.
IEEE
- Institute of Electrical and Electronic
Engineers. A standards setting and
publishing body responsible for such
guidelines as the 802 series for LAN’s.
IEEE
802.X -
Guidelines describing the physical and data
link layers of the OSI network model for
various topologies.
IMPEDANCE - The
complex opposition to current flow
dynamically in a transmission medium.
Including components of resistance,
capacitance and inductance when driven by a
voltage source. (also see
CHARACTERISTIC
IMPEDANCE for
more detailed information)
IMPEDANCE MATCHING
- An operation to assure maximum transfer of
signal power over the operating frequency
range by proper selection of all elements of
a transmission system. A properly impedance
matched system transfers maximum signal
power to the load with no signal distortion.
IMPULSE NOISE -
Intermittent, short, high frequency, high
amplitude pulses that are induced into a
transmission line. Can cause data corruption
and in some cases hardware damage.
INDUCTANCE -
The tendency for an electrical current to
build a magnetic field around a conductor
and cause a portion of that current to be
induced or generated on an adjacent
conductor. (also see
NEAR-END CROSSTALK).
INSERTION LOSS
- The signal loss resulting from the
insertion of a component, or link, or
channel, between a transmitter and receiver
(often referred to as attenuation).
INSULATION - A
non-conductive material used to separate
conductors to prevent electrical short
circuits. Cables are insulated and rated for
different applications. Plenum rated cables
can be used anywhere inside a building and
riser rated cables are only used between
floors.
INTELLIGENT TERMINAL
- A computer terminal or personal
computer/workstation having the ability to
process data independently from the host
computer.
INTERCONNECTION
- A connection scheme that employs
connecting hardware for the direct
connection of a cable to another cable
without a patch cord or jumper.
INTERFACE - The
point at which two different items come
together. They might be mechanical,
electronic or software.
INTERNET PROTOCOL (IP)
- Used at OSI Level 3 and above to connect
networks through gateways.
INTERNETWORKING
- The connection of
multiple networks for data interchange. This
is normally accomplished with interface
devices such as bridges, brouters and
gateways.
IPL
- Initial
Program Load. A fancy term for "booting" a
large computer.
IRQ
- Interrupt
ReQuest. A form of peripheral prioritization
for microcomputers.
ISO
- International
Standards Organization. Based in Paris, this
body develops open industry standards for
the world. A key standard is the Open
Systems Interconnection Network Model (OSI
model) which forms a general definition for
all LAN’s. ISO 11801 is similar to
ANSI/EIA/TIA/568-B but uses different terms
and values in some instances.
J
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JABBERING, JABBER
- The continuous transmission of meaningless
data, usually due to a failure of some sort.
The network slows tremendously when burdened
with this excess traffic.
JACK
- A receptacle
for a modular device. Mates with a plug.
JACKET - The
outer protective sheath of a cable.
JITTER - The
skewing of a transmitted pulse so as to
cause its edge to become poorly defined and
difficult to correctly detect.
JUMPER - An
assembly of twisted pairs without
connectors, used to join telecommunications
circuits/links at the cross-connect.
K
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K
- A short form for the metric "Kilo" or
1000. Often appended to measurements of
things like frequency (KHz), storage
(KBytes), and bit rate (Kbps).
KEYING - The
mechanical feature of a connector system
that guarantees correct orientation of a
connection or prevents the connection to a
jack or to an optical fiber adapter of the
same type intended for another purpose.
L
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LAN
- Local Area Network.
A distributed processing environment usually
located within the confines of a single
building.
LAUNCH CABLE -
A known good fiber optic jumper cable
attached to a source and calibrated for
output power used for loss testing. This
cable must be made of fiber and connectors
of a matching type to the cables being
tested.
LAY
- From cable
manufacturing. A term describing the length
of one conductor in a twisted pair in making
one complete turn.
LAYER - A
subdivision of a complete model comprising
software and/or hardware elements to
complete a specific and related set of
tasks.
LCD
- Liquid
Crystal Display.
LCL
- See
LONGITUDINAL CONVERSION LOSS.
LCTL
- See
LONGITUDINAL CONVERSION TRANSMISSION LOSS.
LED -See
LIGHT-EMITTING
DIODE.
LENGTH
- The distance of a
communications link measured by a tester
with a TDR. For TIA/EIA 568-B.2, the
Permanent Link is limited to 90 meters of
horizontal cabling embedded in the walls and
ceiling plenum. Length is one of the
ANSI/EIA/TIA-568-B.2 required tests for a
Category 5e UTP cable limited to a total
distance of 100 meters including the
Permanent Link of 90 meters + 10 meters
allowance of line cords, patch cords and up
to two cross-connects in a link. (also see
NOMINAL
VELOCITY OF PROPAGATION)
LIGHT-EMITTING DIODE (LED) -
A semiconducting device that emits light
when stimulated by an electrical current.
Used in transmitters for multimode fiber
links.
LINE
- A term used
loosely to describe a connection between two
communicating devices.
LINEMAP - A
term referring to the termination pinout
pairs of cable. (also see
CONTINUITY
and WIREMAP)
LINE
SPEED - The
maximum rate of data transfer for a given
line.
LINK
- A transmission path between two points,
not including terminal equipment, work area
cables, and equipment cables.
LLC
- Logical Link
Control. A protocol developed by the IEEE
for end-system addressing and error
checking. Operates in Layer 2 of the OSI
model.
LISTED -
Equipment included in a list published by an
organization, acceptable to the authority
having jurisdiction, that maintains periodic
inspection of production of listed
equipment, and whose listing states either
that the equipment or material meets
appropriate standards or has been tested and
found satiable for use in a specified
manner.
LOCAL DISTRIBUTION FRAME
- LDF. Another name for an Intermediate
Distribution Frame or "IC" as the
ANSI/EIA/TIA-568-B.2 standard specifies.
LONG WAVELENGTH -
A commonly used
term for light in the 1300 and 1550 nm
ranges.
LONGITUDINAL
CONVERSION LOSS
- A ratio expressed in dB, of measured
differential voltage relative to the common
mode voltage on a conductor pair applied at
the same end.
LONGITUDINAL
CONVERSION TRANSMISSION LOSS
- A ratio expressed in dB, of measured
differential voltage relative to the common
mode voltage on a conductor pair applied at
the opposite end.
LOSS BUDGET
- Sometimes known as dB LOSS BUDGET, it is
the amount of light available to overcome
attenuation in a fiberoptic link and
maintain performance specifications.
LRC
- Longitudinal Redundancy Check. Another
term for parity checking.
M
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M
- Short form of the
metric "Mega" or 1,000,000. Used as a prefix
for frequency (MHz), storage (MBytes) and
line speed (Mbps).
m
-
Representation of the metric "milli" or
1/1000th .
MAC
- Media Access
Control. A control protocol designed for
specific media with variations for different
media. Works in conjunction with LLC.
MACHINE LANGUAGE
- The binary digits that the computer
hardware processes without interpretation.
Also called machine code.
MAIN
DISTRIBUTION FRAME
- the MDF has been changed to "MC" (main
cross-connect) in ANSI/EIA/TIA-568-B.2. The
MC is the point at which outside service
lines interface to inside service and then
to IC’s or to TC’s.
MAINFRAME - A
large computer system.
MAN
- Metropolitan
Area Network. A Network operating within the
confines of a single city or community.
MANCHESTER ENCODING
- An encoding method which involves a
digital state change (0 to 1 or vice versa)
for every bit representation occurring in
the middle of the transmitted bit. Useful in
local area networks because it is
self-clocking. The receiver can develop the
data clock from the transmitted data stream.
Used in Token Ring and Ethernet systems.
Standard Ethernet uses Manchester encoding
which results in 10 Mbps throughput at 10
MHz frequency (one-for-one).
MAPPING - The
act of associating logical representations
with their physical counterparts.
MAU
- Media Access
Unit. Another name for an Ethernet
transceiver. MAU was also the abbreviation
for a Token Ring Multi-station Access Unit.
This has been changed recently to MSAU to
avoid confusion.
MCA
- Micro-Channel
Architecture. IBM’s 32-bit peripheral bus
for microcomputers.
MDF
- Main
Distribution Frame,
which has been
changed to "MC" (main cross-connect) by
ANSI/EIA/TIA-568-B. The connecting point in
a building where outside services interface
to internal services. All networking
components are "star-wired" back to the MC.
MECHANICAL SPLICE -
A semi-permanent connection between two
fibers, made with an alignment device and
refractive index matching fluid or adhesive.
MEDIA (Telecommunications)
- Wire, cable or conductors used for
telecommunications.
MEDIUM -
Material used for the transmission of
signals.
MIB
- Management
Information Base. An information database
used in conjunction with the Simple Network
Management Protocol.
MICRO (µ) -
Prefix for one millionth. Used as a prefix
for capacitance.
MICROFARAD (µf)
- One millionth of a
farad.
MIPS
- Millions of
Instructions per Second. A speed rating for
computers and workstations.
MJ
- Modular Jack.
A term describing plug-in IDC connectors
used in telephone and data communications.
The connectors usually are configured with
4, 6 or 8 pins.
MMJ
- Modified
Modular Jack. Developed by Digital Equipment
Corp. (DEC), it is an RJ-12 (6 pin) modular
jack with the bottom-locking tab offset to
one side.
MODAL DISPERSION -
The temporal spreading
of a pulse in an optical waveguide caused by
modal effects.
MODEM -
MOdulator DEModulator. A device which
converts digital data to a modulated form
which can be transmitted over telephone
lines and reverses the process when
receiving.
MODULAR PLUG -
A series of connectors designed for ease of
use and flexibility. They are characterized
by locking plastic tabs on the bottom and
typically appear in three configurations:
RJ-11 (4-conductor), RJ-12 (6-conductor) and
RJ-45 (8-conductor).
MSAU
- Multi-Station
Access Unit. The new abbreviation for a
Token Ring wiring center. The units can be
active or passive. They typically have eight
ports for device (or lobe) attachment and a
RI (ring-in) and RO (ring-out) port for
network attachment.
MS-NET -
Microsoft NETworks. The predecessor to LAN
Manager. First introduced in MS-DOS version
3.1.
MTBF
- Mean Time
Between Failures. The average operational
time of a device.
MULTIMODE FIBER -
A fiber with a core
diameter (commonly 50 or 62.5 microns) much
larger than the wavelength of light
transmitted that allows many modes of light
to propagate. Commonly used with LED light
sources for lower speed, short distance
links. More recently used with VCSEL laser
light sources for Gigabit Ethernet.
MULTIMODE PROPAGATION
- A method of introducing a light pulse with
multiple light rays (modes) into an optical
fiber. Multimode is typically used for
short-haul applications of less than 2 KM
using relatively inexpensive light sources
usually operating at a 850 or 1300 nanometer
wavelength. Gigabit Ethernet uses an 850
VCSEL laser while most other applications
use Light Emitting Diode (LED) light
sources.
MULTIPROCESSING
- The ability of a system to run two or more
processors simultaneously.
MULTIPLEXER - A
device which causes two or more signals to
use the same communications medium.
Multiplexing can occur in either the
frequency or the time domain.
MUTUAL CAPACITANCE
- The capacitance between two conductors
with all other conductors shorted to ground.
MUX
- A short form slang of multiplex. Also
MUXED, MUXING.
N
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NAK
- No Acknowledgment. A
data communications negative response.
NEAR-END CROSSTALK (NEXT)
- The coupling of power from the transmitted
signal pair to an adjacent pair at the same
transmitting end of the LAN cable.
NETBIOS -
Network Basic Input/Output System.
NETVIEW - A
network management offering from IBM.
NETWARE - A
popular network operating system from Novell
Inc.
NETWORK ADDRESS
- A number giving a specific identification
to a network attached device.
NETWORK INTERFACE CARD
- NIC. A circuit card providing the hardware
interface between a network device and the
transmission medium.
NETWORK OPERATING SYSTEM
- NOS. The software component of a network.
The NOS contains all instructions pertinent
to data transfer, file manipulation and
services and interfacing routines.
NETWORK TOPOLOGY
- The physical layout and interconnection of
a network.
NEXT
- See NEAR-END
CROSSTALK.
NODE
- A connection
point into a network. The node may perform
several functions (i.e., file server,
workstation, print server, bridge, etc.).
NOMINAL VELOCITY OF PROPAGATION
- "NVP" is the relative speed a signal
travels on a conductor that is proportionate
to the speed of light in a vacuum. Length
measurements are determined by sending a
signal down a line and measuring the
reflected signal that comes back and
factoring in the amount of time that it took
to make the return trip. (also see
c
and LENGTH)
O
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OCTOPUS
- A cable adapter that
transforms a 25-pair feeder into individual
modular plugs.
ODD
PARITY - An
error checking method in which binary 1’s or
zeroes are added to a character so that the
number of 1’s is always odd.
OHMS
- A measure of
resistance. One ohm allows one ampere of
current to flow across a one volt potential.
OPEN
CIRCUIT - An
incomplete circuit. A cable connected at one
end only is an example of an open circuit.
The opposite of a short circuit.
OPEN
OFFICE - A
floor space division provided by furniture,
moveable partitions or other means instead
of by building walls.
OPERATING SYSTEM
- A software program or collection of
programs that manage the computer’s hardware
and provide an interface to that hardware
for the end-user.
OPTICAL LOSS TEST SET -
A measurement
instrument for optical loss that includes
both a meter and a light source.
OPTICAL POWER -
The amount of radiant
energy per unit time expressed in linear
units of Watts or on a logarithmic scale in
dBm (where 0 dB equals 1 mWatt) or dB*
(where 0 dB = 1 microwatt).
OPTICAL RETURN LOSS (ORL) -
Light reflected from
the cleaved or polished end of a fiber
caused by the difference of refractive
indices of air and glass.
OPTICAL TIME DOMAIN REFLECTOMETER (OTDR)
- A device that uses an emitted light pulse
of known power and width and measuring the
light that is scattered back from events
along the length of the fiber. Distance to
splices, connectors, faults and the end of
the cable can then be calculated and
displayed.
OS
- Abbreviation
for Operating System.
OSI
- Open Systems
Interconnect. A seven layer model defining
the different levels of data communications
in a network environment. Developed by the
International Standards Organization. Cables
comprise the Physical Layer of the OSI
model.
OTDR
- See OPTICAL
TIME DOMAIN REFLECTOMETER.
OUTLET BOX
(Telecommunications)
- A metallic or nonmetalic box mounted
within a wall, floor or ceiling and used to
hold telecommunications outlets/connectors
or transition devices.
OUTLET CABLE
- A cable placed in a residential unit
extending directly between the
telecommunications outlet/connector and the
distribution device.
OUTLET/CONNECTOR
(Telecommunications)
- A connecting device in the work area on
which horizontal or outlet cable terminates.
OUTSIDE PLANT
- Telecommunications infrastructure designed
for installation exterior to buildings.
P
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PACKET
- A group of data in
an organized form with a distinct header,
control information and a destination
address.
PACKET SWITCHING
- The transmission of packetized data
through a network. Each packet has
information linking it to the rest of the
total message or file as well as the
destination address. This form of
communication is efficient because each
packet can take a different route if
necessary to maximize throughput.
PACKET SWITCHING NETWORK
- A network constructed to move data
packets. An X.25 network is an example of a
packet switching network.
PAIR
- Two wires,
usually twisted around each other.
PAIRED CABLE -
Cable in which all conductors are arranged
in color-coded pairs usually twisted around
each other and then surrounded by a sheath.
PARALLEL DATA -
Multiple bits of data transmitted each on
its own line simultaneously.
PARITY CHECK -
The addition of a bit to a character to aid
in error checking.
PATCH CORD - A
Length of cable with a plug on one or both
ends.
PATCH PANEL
- A cross-connect system of mateable
connectors that facilitates administration.
PDN
- Public Data
Network.
PDS
- Premise
Distribution system.
PEER-TO-PEER NETWORK
- A network in which all devices have equal
status and abilities for file transfer,
printer sharing, etc.
PERMANENT LINK
- The Channel Link includes up to 90 m (295
ft) of horizontal cable and one connection
at each end and may also include an optional
transition/consolidation point connection.
The permanent link configuration excludes
both the cable portions of the test cord and
the connection to the testing device.
PHYSICAL LAYER
- The bottom layer of the OSI model,
concerning physical interconnect hardware
and electrical interface between devices.
PICO
- 1 X 10
-12 . Used as a prefix usually for
capacitance (pF) values.
PICOFARAD (pF)
- One-trillionth (10 -12) of a
farad. A common unit used in measuring
mutual capacitance in cable.
PLENUM CABLE -
Cable that can meet the UL 910 (Steiner
Tunnel) test by using fire retardant
insulation that inhibits fire propagation
and toxic fumes. These cables can be used in
horizontal runs in open air ceiling returns
and will be clearly indicated with a "P"
suffix (such as CMP) as certified by UL, ETL
or other third party testing firms. It is
typically coated with TEFLON®.
POLL
- In LAN
applications, it is a query to a node
looking for information to be transferred on
the network.
POLYVINYL CHLORIDE
- PVC. A common insulation material
sheathing many types of paired and axial
cable. Emits very toxic gases when burned so
it may not be used in free-air plenums or
risers in premises applications. (also see
also PLENUM
CABLE)
POTS
- Plain Old Telephone Service. Slang term to
describe unknown, older, generic telephone
wire.
POWER BUDGET -
The difference (in dB) between the
transmitted optical power (in dBm) and the
receiver sensitivity (in dBm).
POWER METER (Fiberoptic)
- An instrument that measures optical power
emanating from the end of a fiber.
POWER SUM -
Pair-to-Pair measurements are used to
measure one pair against another. Power Sum
measurements select a pair and then measure
the disturbances from other pairs within the
same sheath. This can be used in a 4-Pair or
other high pair count (25, 50, 100 and up)
to determine the effects of all the cables
(of course testers only test 4-Pair at a
time). Power Sum ACR, ELFEXT, and
bidirectional NEXT measurements are made
with the LT8000 Series. In general, this
results in an approximately 3-dB loss limit
when compared to pair-to-pair test values.
POWER SUM ATTENUATION
TO CROSSTALK RATIO (PSACR)
- A ratio expressed in dB, determined by
subtracting the insertion loss from the
POWER SUM NEAR-END CROSS TALK LOSS.
POWER SUM EQUAL LEVEL
FAR-END CROSSTALK (PSELFEXT) -
A computation of the
unwanted signal coupling from multiple
transmitters at the near-end into a pair
measured at the far-end relative to the
received signal level on that same pair.
POWER SUM NEAR-END
CROSSTALK LOSS
(PSNEXT) - A
computation of the unwanted signal coupling
from multiple transmitters at the near-end
into a pair measured at the near-end.
PREMISES DISTRIBUTION SYSTEM
- A multifunction wiring system designed by
AT&T for integration of voice, data, video
and graphics. It includes cables, adapters,
electronic modules, wall jacks and
protective covers. It is scalable from a
single floor to a campus environment.
PRIMARY RATE INTERFACE (PRI)
- An ISDN service consisting of either 23
B-channels + 1 D-channel (1.544 Mbps) or 30
B-channel + 1 D-channel (2.048 Mbps). (also
see B-CHANNEL
and D-CHANNEL)
.
PROPAGATION DELAY
- Propagation Delay is the time it takes for
a signal to propagate from one end of a
conducting pair in cabling, cables or
connecting hardware to the opposite end of
that pair. (also see
DELAY SKEW).
PROPAGATION RATE
- The speed at which electricity travels in
a transmission medium. Expressed as a
percentage of the speed of light that is
represented as a lowercase "c".
PROTOCOL - A
set of rules governing all aspects of
communicated data.
PROTOCOL ANALYZER
- A device capable of capturing, monitoring,
decoding and analyzing various
communications protocols. A high level
troubleshooting and analysis tool.
PSACR - See
POWER SUM ATTENUATION TO CROSSTALK RATIO.
PUNCH-DOWN BLOCK
- A device used to terminate and
cross-connect premises wiring. (also see
also CONNECTING
BLOCK)
PULL
STRENGTH - See
PULL TENSION.
PULL TENSION
- The pulling force that can be applied to a
cable.
PVC
- See POLYVINYL
CHLORIDE.
R
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RACEWAY
- A metal or plastic
trough used to guide and carry installed
cabling.
RECEIVER - Any
device which receives communications. The
opposite of a transmitter.
RECEIVER
(Optical) - A device containing a photodiode
and signal conditioning circuitry that
converts light into an electrical signal in
fiberoptic links.
RESISTANCE -
The blockage or obstruction of current flow.
A property of all conductors, it is measured
in ohms.
RETURN LOSS -
A measure of
impedance mismatch indicated by a return
echo signal reflection. It is often referred
to as "RL" and it measures the ratio between
the transmitted signal strength and the
signal reflected back to the transmitting
end. Like attenuation, excessive return loss
indicates reduced signal strength at the
receiver end and it can indicate a
mismatched impedance at some point along the
cable link. Return Loss is reported as a dB
value for each pair, from each end. A value
of 20 dB or higher for UTP is very good and
a value below 10 dB causes a large
reflection of signal back to the source and
is not good. The IDEAL LT8000 Series
provides this measurement.
REVERSED PAIR -
See also SPLIT PAIR and TRANSPOSED PAIR. A
situation that occurs when the one end of a
twisted pair has its connections reversed.
This condition is detected by a LAN Cable
Tester’s Wiremap test.
(also see SPLIT
PAIR and
TRANSPOSED PAIR).
RISER - The
path between floors of a building carrying
cables which interconnect the floors.
ROUTER - A
device used to connect LAN’s utilizing
different communications protocols. It
directs traffic within networks and offers
security by restricting access to those that
don’t belong. Routers require intensive
programming instructions and are used mostly
for WAN (wide area network) interface to
outside services.
RS232-C - A
standard developed by the EIA defining
signal levels and pin assignments for serial
data communications. Much misused and
modified, it no longer represents a
standard, but a general guideline to follow
when interfacing DTE and DCE.
S
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SAA
- Systems Application
Architecture. Specifications designed by IBM
to insure compatibility at the application
(highest) level between all newly developed
software packages.
SAG
- The downward
curvature of a wire or cable due to its
weight. The TIA/EIA 569 Pathways and Spaces
Standard requires Category 5 cable to be
supported at 48" to 60" intervals and the
sag cannot exceed 12" between supports.
SC
CONNECTOR - The
SC (Subscriber Carrier) fiber optic
connector is one of three connectors (the
other two are ST and SFF) approved by
ANSI/TIA/EIA 568-B.3. The SC Connector’s
main advantage is polarization since the
connectors can be paired and keyed.
SCATTERING -
The change of direction of light after
striking small particles that causes loss in
optical fibers.
SCREEN - An
element of a cable formed by a shield
SCSI
- Small
Computer Systems Interface. A high-speed
semi-intelligent peripheral interface for
microcomputers.
SDLC
- Synchronous
Data Link Control. A bit oriented
synchronous communications protocol
developed by IBM for use within SNA.
SEGMENT - A
cable run. Its maximum length is determined
by the topology. A 10BASE2 segment may be up
to 605 feet long. A 10BASE-T segment may be
up to 328 feet long.
SERIAL TRANSMISSION
- The sending of multiple data bits down a
single line in a stream.
SERVER - A
network device which provides a service to
other network devices. Services include
file, printer, communications or gateway.
SESSION LAYER -
The fifth layer of the OSI model dealing
with network processing, linking and
unlinking users from their chosen service.
SFF
CONNECTOR - See
SMALL FORM
FACTOR CONNECTOR.
SHORT WAVELENGTH -A
commonly used term for light in the 665,
790, and 850 nm ranges.
SINGLEMODE FIBER -
A fiber with a small
diameter (commonly 8-10 microns) core, only
a few times the wavelength off light
transmitted that only allows one mode of
light to propagate. Commonly used with laser
sources for high-speed, long-distance links.
SMALL FORM FACTOR CONNECTOR (SFF)
- The SFF CONNECTOR is a term used to
describe a group (rather than a single) of
fiberoptic connectors approved by
ANSI/TIA/EIA 568-B.3 (along with ST and ST
Connectors). They are not presently used for
Singlemode connections. They are designed to
reduce the size of patch panels, thereby
reducing the number and cost of
telecommunication closets to make
fiber-to-the-desktop more competitive with
copper. Popular SFF connectors include
SC/DC, LC, MT-RJ, Volition and Fiber Jack.
SHARED LOGIC -
The simultaneous use of resources in a
computer by several users.
SHEATH
- See cable sheath
SHIELD
- A metallic layer placed around a conductor
or group of conductors.
SHIELDED PAIR -
A pair of wires, twisted together and
covered with a conductive material to
provide any potentially induced noise a
quick path to ground.
SINGLEMODE PROPAGATION
- A method of introducing a light pulse into
a single light ray (mode) into an optical
fiber. Singlemode is typically used for
long-haul applications of 2 to 50 kilometers
using relatively expensive laser light
sources usually operating at a 1310 or 1550
nanometer wavelength.
SHORT CIRCUIT -
A condition that exists when two conductors
are connected ahead of where they normally
should be in a circuit. This causes reduced
resistance and sometimes the undesirable
side effects.
SIGNAL GROUND -
A common point of reference for all other
signals in a communications interface.
SIGNAL TO NOISE RATIO
- (SNR) The ratio of received signal to
existing system noise. In LAN applications
it is the attenuation to NEXT ratio. Both
are expressed in decibels.
SILVER SATIN -
Flat, untwisted cable used typically as a
telephone extension cord. It should never be
used in a Local Area Network.
SIMPLEX -
Transmission in one direction only.
SKEW
– See DELAY
SKEW.
SNA
- Systems
Network Architecture. Developed by IBM as a
path to interconnect all of its computer
products. Very common and very successful.
SNMP
- Simple
Network Management Protocol. A popular
network management protocol that is
incorporated into many intelligent hubs and
concentrators. Originally designed for
TCP/IP, it now functions independently and
with most topologies and network operating
systems.
SONET -
Synchronous Optical NETwork.
SOURCE - A
laser diode or LED used to inject an optical
signal into a fiber.
SPACE - Another
name for a binary "0" in data
communications.
SPLICE - A
splice describes the connection of two
fibers in a permanent joint. A splice may be
formed by “fusion splicing,” wherein the two
fibers are welded together, usually with an
electric arc. Alternatively, a splice may be
formed by “mechanical splicing” that uses a
mechanical alignment fixture and a matching
gel or epoxy to minimize back reflection.
SPLIT PAIR - A
situation that occurs when a twisted pair is
misconnected so that it becomes ½ of two
separate pairs. The noise immunity of the
twists is lost and an impedance mismatch is
created. This wiring error will not show up
as an error on a Wiremap, but will be
indicated by very high NEXT. (also see also
REVERSED PAIR
and TRANSPOSED
PAIR).
ST
CONNECTOR - The
ST (Straight Through or alternatively
Straight Terminus) fiber optic connector is
one of three connectors (the other two are
SC and SFF) approved by ANSI/TIA/EIA
568-B.3. The ST Connector is the most widely
used connector for Multimode fiberoptic
cable.
STAR
TOPOLOGY - A
physical layout in which each device is
wired back to a central point.
START BIT - In
asynchronous communications, a start bit and
stop bit delimits each character to indicate
to the receiver the character’s location.
START/STOP TRANSMISSION
- Another term for
Asynchronous Communication.
STOP
BIT - The
trailing bit in an asynchronous character
sequence.
STP
- Shielded
Twisted Pair. Cable constructed of pairs of
insulated wire twisted around each other
surrounded by shielding material made of
foil or braid or both. The entire group of
wires may have a common shield or as found
in Category 7 cables, each pair may be
shielded individually with another shield
around the entire group just under the
sheath.
STRANDED CONDUCTOR
- A wire or cable constructed of several
small strands of conductor instead of one
larger solid piece. This configuration
provides for more flexibility in certain
applications. Patch cords are made out of
stranded conductors and the NEXT values are
degraded up to 20% to allow for them in a
link.
SURFACE EMITTER LED -
An LED that emits
light perpendicular to the semiconductor
chip. Most LEDs used in data communications
are surface emitters.
SWITCH -
Multi-port device used to connect a
quasi-exclusive 10/100/1000 Mbps connection
between any two-end systems using the source
and destination addresses of the packet via
the internal bus. Switches work at the MAC
(Media Access Control) Layer and above and
use either "store and forward" or
"cut-through" technology. Switches are
"plug-and-play " devices that can be used to
segment a network when it starts to slow
down. Each port can function at the rated
speed of the switch and some are
auto-sensing for 10/100 Mbps. Ethernet
switches are offered as standalone systems
or as modules for existing hubs.
SYNCHRONOUS TRANSMISSION
- Transmission between devices with a common
clock. Data can be sent at a much higher
speed because there is no need to frame each
character.
T
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T CONNECTION
- A connector fanning out in three
directions and looking like a "T". Commonly
used is a BNC T connector for 10BASE2
applications.
TAP
- An electrical
connection to a bus to enable access. A tap
may be invasive (requiring a cable splice),
or non-invasive (a "vampire" tap).
TCP/IP -
Transmission Control Protocol/Internet
Protocol. A suite of protocols designed by
the Department of Defense to enable
communications between dissimilar computer
systems. Now widely used by the commercial
and academic sectors.
TDR
- Time Domain
Reflectometer. A piece of test equipment
used to measure metallic cable length and
impedance.
TELECOMMUNICATIONS
- Any transmission, emission, and reception
of signs, signals, writings, images and
sounds, that is information of any nature by
cable, radio, optical or other
electromagnetic systems.
TELECOMMUNICATIONS INDUSTRY ASSOCIATION
- Known as TIA, this association is made up
of two autonomous parts. The first operates
as a traditional trade association
structured to promote the common interests
of its members. The second operates as the
Standards Development organization for the
telecommunications industry in North
America.
TERMINAL SERVER
- A device that allows connection of several
terminals and multiplexes them onto a LAN
cable.
TERMINATE - To
connect a wire or wires to a device or a
matching impedance connection.
THICKNET -
Another term for IEEE 802.3 10BASE-5
systems.
THIN
ETHERNET -
Normally describes a 10BASE-2 system. Also
called Cheapernet.
TIA
- See
TELECOMMUNICATIONS INDUSTRY ASSOCIATION.
TIA/IEEE STANDARDS COMMITTEES
- The following TIA/IEEE committees and
subcommittees draft the standards that are
pertinent to LAN Networks:
|
FO-2 |
Committee on Optical Communications Systems |
|
FO-2.1 |
Single-mode Systems Subcommittee |
|
FO-2.2 |
Digital Multimode Systems Subcommittee |
|
FO-2.3 |
Opto-Electronic Sources, Detectors and Devices Subcommittee |
|
FO-2.4 |
Optical Terms, Definitions, Document Control Subcommittee |
|
FO-2.5 |
Outside Fiber Cable Plant Installation Subcommittee |
|
FO-2.6 |
Reliability of Fiberoptic Systems and Active Optical Components Subcommittees |
|
FO-6.3 |
Interconnecting Devices Subcommittee |
|
FO-6.6 |
Fibers and Materials Subcommittee |
|
FO-6.7 |
Optical Cables Subcommittee |
|
FO-6.9 |
Polarization-Maintaining Fiber Connectors and Components |
|
TR42 |
User Premises Telecommunications Infrastructure Committee |
|
TR42.1 |
Commercial Building Cabling Committee |
|
TR42.2 |
Residential Telecommunications Infrastructure Committee |
|
TR42.3 |
Commercial Building Telecommunications Pathways and Spaces Committee |
|
TR42.4 |
Customer-owned Outside Plant Telecommunications Infrastructure Committee |
|
TR42.5 |
Telecommunications Infrastructure Terms and Symbols Committee |
|
TR42.6 |
Telecommunications Infrastructure and Equipment Administration Committee |
|
TR42.7 |
Copper Cabling Systems Committee |
|
TR42.7.1 |
Copper Connecting Hardware Subcommittee |
|
TR42.7.2 |
Copper Cable Subcommittee |
|
TR42.8 |
Telecommunications Optical Fiber Cabling Systems Committee |
|
TR42.9 |
Industrial Telecommunications Infrastructure Committee |
|
IEEE 802.3 |
Working Group develops standards for CSMA/CD (Ethernet) based LANs |
=
TC
- See
TRANSVERSE CONVERSION LOSS.
TOKEN
- A unique combination of bits that
passes from station to station in a
token passing network. When a station
has the token, it may communicate with
the network.
TOKEN BUS - A
bus topology that uses token passing as its
contention method.
TOKEN PASSING -
Moving a special combination of bits from
station to station in a ring or bus when
there is no traffic. When a workstation has
the token, it may then use the network
channel for communications.
TOKEN RING - A
logical ring topology that passes a token in
one direction around the ring. A given
device must possess the token to communicate
with any other device. If it does not gain
control of the token as it passes, it must
wait until the token goes around the ring.
TOPOLOGY - The
geometric form describing a network’s
logical and physical layout.
TR42
- See TIA/IEEE
STANDARDS COMMITTEES.
TRAFFIC - A
measure of the activity on a network at a
given time. Network analyzers can monitor
traffic and when Ethernet segments start to
exceed 30% to 40% utilization, they run much
slower and need to be segmented with
switches.
TRANSCEIVER - A
device which can transmit and receive
information, typically to a workstation from
a network connection.
TRANSFER IMPEDANCE
- A measure of shielding performance
determined by the ratio of the voltage on
the conductors enclosed by a shield to the
surface currents on the outside of the
shield.
TRANSPORT LAYER
- Level 4 of the OSI model, this layer deals
with end-to-end control of the transmitted
information and provides results to the
session layer.
TRANSPOSED PAIR
- A transposed pair occurs when the ends of
two twisted pairs are interchanged. This
condition is detected by a LAN Cable
Tester’s Wiremap test. (also see
SPLIT PAIR
and REVERSED
PAIR).
TRANSVERSE CONVERSION LOSS
- A ratio expressed in dB, of measured
common mode voltage on a pair relative to
the differential mode voltage on the same
pair applied at the same end.
TSB
- 67, TSB - 95
- Technical Service Bullets that augmented
the ANSI/EIA/TIA-A Standard. TSBs were
incorporated into the body of
ANSI/EIA/TIA-B, and further updates are
issued as updated Standards.
TWINAXIAL CABLE
- Cable constructed of two insulated center
conductors surrounded by a braided shield.
Widely used in midrange IBM systems (AS
400’s).
TWISTED PAIR -
Two insulated wires twisted around each
other at regular intervals. May be shielded
or unshielded. The number of twists per foot
directly relates to the relative noise
immunity of the pair.
U
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UART
- Universal Asynchronous Receiver
Transmitter. A common integrated circuit
used in many personal computer serial data
ports.
UL
- See
UNDERWRITERS LABORATORIES.
UNDERWRITERS LABORATORIES (UL) -
A testing body formed
primarily to certify fire safety of
electrical equipment dealing with voltages
greater than 48 VAC or DC. UL has the most
recently assumed the responsibility for
certification of data grade unshielded
twisted pair media for conformance to
EIA/TIA and NEMA specifications. The cable
categories III through V from the EIA/TIA
TSB 36 document serve as the basis for UL
cable LEVELS 2 through 5. Cable certified by
the UL to meet these standards would bear a
marking indicating.
UNIVERSAL SERVICE ORDERING CODE
- USOC. A wiring standard for telephone
service to an individual phone. In a modular
plug, the two center conductors are the
primary pair, and supplementary pairs
radiate out concentrically. For example, in
an RJ-45 (eight pin) plug, pins 4,5 are the
primary pair with pins 3,6 - 2,7 - 1,8
forming the supplementary pairs. Note that
this is not compatible with TIA/EIA 568-A’s
recommendation of T-568A or T-568B.
UNIVERSAL SYSTEMS BUS (USB)
- A bus for transmitting data between
computing devices. Rated at 11 Mbits per
second, it offers about 100 times the
throughput of a Serial bus.
USART -
Universal Synchronous/Asynchronous Receiver
Transmitter.
USB
- See UNIVERSAL
SYSTEMS BUS.
UTP
- Unshielded
Twisted Pair. Cable constructed of typically
multiple twisted pairs of wires, unshielded
in a PVC- or plenum-rated sheath.
µV
- Microvolt. One millionth of a volt.
µm
- A
"micro-meter" equals one millionth of a
meter.
V
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VAMPIRE TAP
- A tap system for 10BASE5 systems that does
not require cutting and splicing the cable.
This system uses a sharp pin that pierces
the insulator and contacts the center
conductor of the thick 10BASE5 cable.
VCSEL - See VERTICAL CAVITY SIDE-EMITTING
LASER
VERTICAL CAVITY SIDE-EMITTING LASER (VCSEL)
- A type of
light source usually operating at 850 nm and
used for Gigabit Ethernet applications.
VOICE GRADE - A
designation for a facility capable of
carrying signals with a frequency range of
200 - 4000 Hertz.
VOLTAGE - The
potential difference in energy between two
points.
VTAM
- Virtual
Telecommunications Access Method. A software
suite designed by IBM for their 370 line to
manage remote communications for the host
and users.
W
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WAN
- Wide Area Network. A
network typically spanning a continent or
the globe and connected by routers.
WATS
- Wide Area
Telecommunications Service.
WAVELENGTH DIVISION MULTIPLEXING
- WDM is a method encoding data for
transmission over an optical fiber.
WDM
- See
WAVELENGTH DIVISION MULTIPLEXING.
WIRING CLOSET -
Typically called a telecommunications closet
(TC). It is a central point for horizontal
floor wiring to connect to vertical riser
cable or to backbones running to an IC or
MC.
WIREMAP - A
test performed in the suite of
ANSI/EIA/TIA-B.2 requirements that
determines the pinout configuration of the
wiring pairs. This is the first test a
Category 5 tester runs and it looks for
opens, shorts, reversals, split pairs and
any other miswiring. TIA/EIA 568-B.2
specifies that all four pairs are terminated
for Category 5 UTP. Each respective protocol
has different pinouts as shown by the
WIREMAP test results. Ethernet uses pins 1,2
and 3,6 and Token Ring uses 3,6 and 4,5.
(also see LINEMAP)
WORD
- The number of
bits transmitted in parallel on a data bus.
WORK AREA (work
station) - A
building space where the occupants interact
with telecommunications terminal equipment.
X
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X-ON/X-OFF
- A basic form of information flow control
for data communications, the receiving
device would issue an X-OFF to the
transmitter while it emptied its buffer to
disk or performed another operation. When
the receiver was ready for more data, it
would then issue an X-ON.
XC
- Abbreviation for cross-connect.