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Module 4

Module 4. PHYSICAL MEDIA. 7. 6. 5. 4. 3. 2. 1. Physical Media Types Covered. Coaxial Cable Twisted Pair Fiber Optic Cable WAN Cables. Coaxial Cables. 10Base2 (ThinLAN) - 10 Mbps baseband, 2 for 200 (actually 185 meters)

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Module 4

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  1. Module 4 PHYSICAL MEDIA

  2. 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Physical Media Types Covered • Coaxial Cable • Twisted Pair • Fiber Optic Cable • WAN Cables

  3. Coaxial Cables • 10Base2 (ThinLAN) - 10 Mbps baseband, 2 for 200 (actually 185 meters) • 10Base5 (ThickLAN) - Maximum data transfer speed of 10 Mbps, uses baseband transmission; 500 meters maximum cable length Baseband transmission is a type of digital data transmission in which each medium (wire) carries only one signal, or channel, at a time. In contrast, Broadband transmission enables a single wire to carry multiple signals simultaneously.

  4. Coax - 10Base2 (ThinLAN) • Cable Type - RG-58A/U • Impedance - 50W • Terminated with 50W terminators • Connection method - BNC (as opposed to the F connector used for cable TV) • Grounding - As determined by local electrical code

  5. Coax - 10Base2 Rules • Minimum distance between two nodes: 0.5m (1.64 ft) • Maximum number of nodes / segment: 30 • Maximum segment length: 185m (606.7 ft)

  6. Coax - 10Base5 (Thick LAN) • Impedance - 50W • Terminated with 50W terminators • Connections - ‘N’ type connections to terminate. ‘Vampire’ tap for node connections. • Grounding - Grounded at one point only.

  7. Coax - 10Base5 Rules • Minimum Distance between two nodes: 2.5m • Maximum number of nodes / segment: 100 • Maximum segment length: 500m

  8. WARNING Breaking any of these rules will cause excessive error conditions!

  9. Twisted Pair Cable • Cable Type: Low grade telephone cable through to cat.5. (data cables normally cat.3 to cat.5) • Shielding: Shielded (STP) Unshielded (UTP) • Connectors: RJ45, Telco, IBM Type 1 connector (genderless), 9 pin. • Use: 10BaseT, 100BaseTX, 100VG ANYLAN, Token Ring

  10. Twisted Pair Rules • Cable must be twisted • Maximum distance depends on quality of cable, shielding and speed of transmission • Maximum cable length for Cat3, Cat4 and Cat5 is 100m

  11. Fiber Optic • Cable type determined by - diameter of core, diameter of cladding (e.g.. 62.5 /125) • Light source - Single mode- Laser, Multimode - LED • Connectors - SC, ST, MIC • Use - FOIRL, 10BaseFL, FDDI, 100BaseF, Fiber Channel, SONET/SDH (for WAN) Gigabit Ethernet (future)

  12. FOIRL: Fiber Optic Inter-Repeater Link is a vendor independent standard means for connecting only 2 repeater units based on the IEEE 802.3 fiber optic specification. It is being replaced by 10BaseFL. 10BaseFL segments can be up to 2000 meters. FDDI: Fiber Distributed Data Interface handles data rates of up to 100Mbps; typical application: used as backbone for campus and wide-area networks. FDDI networks are token-passing networks, using dual-ring topology over fiber-optic transmission media. Fiber Channel is a technology for serially transmitting data between computer devices at a data rate of up to 1 Gbps. SONET/SDH: Synchronous Optical Network is an optical fiber-based network standard; handles 51.8Mbps to 2.48Gbps. SDH is its international equivalent.

  13. Fiber Optic Rules • Maximum distance determined by type of cable and light source used. • Need to ensure cable connection is from TX on one device to RX on the other

  14. Fiber Optic Safety Considerations • Never look at the output of a fiber optic transmitter • Do not handle unterminated fiber • Do not attach connectors to fiber as special skills and tools are required.

  15. WAN Cables • Cable Type: Various • Shielding: Shielded & Unshielded cable • Connectors: RS232 (‘D’ type 25, 15, 9 pin), X.21, V.35 • Common pairs use: TX/RX, CTS/RTS, Control/Indicate • Uses: RS232, X.21, V.35

  16. WAN Cable Rules Cable Distance + Cable quality = Maximum Speed

  17. Cable Connectivity

  18. Simple RS232 25 pin straight through DTE/DCE DTE DCE TX RX PIN 2 PIN 2 RX TX PIN 3 PIN 3 TO PSTN/NETWORK PC

  19. Logical pinout groupings Pinouts used to transfer the data (such as TX/RX) DATA Pinouts used to control the flow of data such as RTS/CTS (used in DTE/DCE handshaking) CONTROL

  20. Use of straight through and cross over cabling DTE DCE TX RX PIN 2 PIN 2 RX TX PIN 3 PIN 3 R TS C TS PIN 4 PIN 4 RTS CTS PIN 5 PIN 5 MODEM PC DTE DTE TX TX PIN 2 PIN 2 RX RX PIN 3 PIN 3 R TS R TS PIN 4 PIN 4 CTS CTS PIN 5 PIN 5 NOTE: More pinouts may be required

  21. Twisted pair cable connectivity in a LAN environment MDI MDI-X LAN card HUB PC MDI=Media Dependent Interface X in MDI-X=Crossed MDI (for LAN) is equivalent to DTE (for WAN) & MDI-X (for LAN) is equivalent to DCE (for WAN).

  22. MDI to MDI-X connection MDI MDI-X Twisted pair cabling 1 1 2 2 3 3 6 6 HUB PC

  23. Use of straight through and cross over cabling MDI MDI-X MDI-X CROSS STRAIGHT O VER THROUGH CABLE CABLE PC HUB HUB CROSS O VER CABLE MDI-X MDI MDI STRAIGHT THROUGH CABLE SWITCH R OUTER PC Hubs and Switches are MDI-X devices Hosts and Routers are MDI devices

  24. Summary • Media Types - Coaxial Cable - Twisted Pair - Fiber - WAN Cables • Safety Considerations for Fiber • Connectivity Conventions - WAN Cables = DTE/DCE - Twisted Pair LAN = MDI/MDI-X

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