ADC Campus RS Destop Unit 사용자 설명서

다운로드
페이지 32
 About 
the 
Product
Campus-RS Line Unit User Manual
May 29, 2002
 5
HDSL R
EACH
 
AND
 T
RANSMISSION
 R
ATE
Four factors determine the maximum transmission rate and loop length of the 
HDSL line:
the wire gauge of the line
the condition of the line (presence of bridge taps, splices, and so on)
whether the line uses one or two loops
the amount of noise on the line
The following charts show the maximum loop length over the range of HDSL 
transmission rates for 26 AWG (.40 mm), 24 AWG (.51 mm), 22 AWG 
(.61 mm), and 19 AWG (.91 mm), respectively. The shaded area on each 
chart shows a range of expected maximum loop lengths that will provide a bit 
error rate (BER) of greater than 5E
-8
:
The best case (longest reach) is measured in a noiseless environment.
The worst case is measured using an industry-standard noise model that 
simulates the cable pair in a bundle with 49 other cable pairs each 
transmitting with similar frequency characteristics.
The actual reach will fall somewhere between these two cases, and will vary 
according to such factors as the condition of the loop pairs, the presence of 
bridge taps, splices, line noise, and so on.
Depending upon the desired data rate and wire gauge, 
two-loop operation provides between 12% and 47% greater 
reach than one loop operation at the same data rate. For 
example, for a 24 AWG loop, a unit configured for two-loop 
operation at 1152 kbps will have a maximum reach of 
approximately 4.6 miles, whereas a one-loop configuration 
at 1152 kbps will have a maximum reach of approximately 
3.0 miles.
1061.book  Page 5  Wednesday, May 29, 2002  8:59 AM