1. Trang chủ
  2. » Công Nghệ Thông Tin

KRONE - White Paper - TrueNet KUK

5 281 0
Tài liệu đã được kiểm tra trùng lặp

Đang tải... (xem toàn văn)

THÔNG TIN TÀI LIỆU

Thông tin cơ bản

Tiêu đề Where did all the bandwidth go?
Thể loại White paper
Định dạng
Số trang 5
Dung lượng 496 KB

Các công cụ chuyển đổi và chỉnh sửa cho tài liệu này

Nội dung

But, as KRONE have recently unveiled, there’s a lot more to “How many megabits per second will my network pass” than meets the eye.. According to Krone, the main reason for this is Bit E

Trang 1

Where did all the Bandwidth go?

Day after day, we hear about the need for ever greater bandwidth We fear applications as yet unthought of, but which

we are sure will appear in three, four or five years time with even more bandwidth-hunger than we have so far seen And so we invest heavily, now, in the latest and greatest infrastructure such

as Category 6 cabling – even in the knowledge that the standard

is far from finalised – in the hope that this will buy us extra safety margin for the future

But, as KRONE have recently unveiled, there’s a lot more to

“How many megabits per second will my network pass” than meets the eye

But is what you get actually what it says on the box? It should be of course Any properly installed Cat 5 network should happily handle 100Megabit/s and likewise Cat 5e should give you 1000 megabit/s however, in practice quite often they don’t According to Krone, the main reason for this

is Bit Errors in the channel

Bit errors – more bandwidth hungry than any application!

Trang 2

When bit errors occur “1s” arrive as “0s”, “0s” arrive as “1s” and either way the chunk of data that we were trying to send ends up as garbage

Ethernet and other protocols are thankfully not stupid and can detect when they receive a packet of garbage

This is OK for one or two garbled packets, but as the incidence of garbling increases so the requests for retransmissions, and the retransmissions themselves, become a significant but invisible part of the network traffic In fact they quickly become the major part of network traffic (Table 1)

According to recent research at Krone’s labs, the major cause

of these Bit Errors is signal reflections caused by impedance changes – or mismatches – at various points through the channel And with the ‘Cat’ specs allowing individual components to vary from 85 ohms impedance to 115 ohms, there’s a lot of scope for reflections and Bit Errors

TABLE 1

tempfile_66138.doc Page 2 of 5

Trang 3

Is there a solution?

Readers who have had any dealings with radio – and after all our Cat

5 and Cat 6 systems are actually operating at VHF radio frequencies –

will know that closely matching the impedance of all elements of

the system will reduce reflected power, as well as distortion and

standing waves This rids us of the majority of the problems, and this

is what Krone say they’ve now done

Zero Bit Error Rate

TrueNet is a physical layer solution, impedance matched to within

+/-3 ohms throughout, both in the time domain and the frequency domain, which exhibits such low levels of reflection, attenuation deviation and alien crosstalk that Krone is prepared to guarantee the network to be completely Bit Error-free for five years (in addition to the normal twenty year warranty) Krone has even coined the term ZeBER, standing for zero bit error rate, to describe the result!

Trang 4

Diagram: The reflection effect of impedance mismatch

Diagram: Impedance variation – Normal system

tempfile_66138.doc Page 4 of 5

Trang 5

Diagram: Impedance variation – KRONE TrueNet system

Ngày đăng: 26/10/2013, 19:15

TỪ KHÓA LIÊN QUAN

w