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                                     SOLUTIONS FOR PREMISES AND CAMPUS
                 JUNE 2010           COMMUNICATION SYSTEMS WORLDWIDE




      CELEBRATING
     100 years                                       PAGE 2




                                                                                    INSTALLATION    PAGE 11


                                                                           Putting optical
                                                                       theory into practice
                                                                                           DESIGN   PAGE 5

                                                                              Connecting the
                                                                            collocated facility
           w w w.c ablingins t all.c o m


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                                                Why
                                           Settlefor
                                                         Less                        ?

             While other manufacturers want extra for birdie performance in a cable, here at Corning Cable Systems,
             we thought we’d just make that par for the course. All LANscape® Solutions 50 micron multimode cables
             contain ClearCurve® Multimode Fiber. That’s bend-insensitive multimode – so no matter what your
             network faces, you’ve got signal integrity in the bag.

                                                Learn more at offers.corning.com/1-CIM-CC
                                                              _______________________


             © 2010 Corning Cable Systems LLC




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                                                                                                          JUNE 2010 | VOLUME 18 NO. 6

           ABOUT THE COVER
           The parent company of this magazine                                                      ::    FEATURES
           turns 100 years old, motivating our edi-
                                                                                                          DESIGN
           tor to take a then-and-now look at a few
           items in telecom and other industries.
           SEE EDITORIAL ON PAGE 2.
                                                                                                    5     Optical solutions for the
                                                                                                          collocation data center
                                                                                                          Making the case for fiber and certain fiber
           Group Publisher Susan Smith
           (603) 891-9447; susans@pennwell.com
                                                                                                          connection interfaces in high-density data center
           Chief Editor Patrick McLaughlin                                                                environments. DAVID ECKELL
           (603) 891-9222; patrick@pennwell.com
           Senior Editor Matt Vincent
           (603) 891-9262; mattv@pennwell.com
                                                                                                          INSTALLATION
           Marketing Manager Joni Montemagno
           Art Director Kelli Mylchreest
           Production Manager Mari Rodriguez                                                        11    Optical fiber cabling and component
                                                                                                          specification considerations
           Senior Illustrator Dan Rodd
           Development Manager Michelle Blake                                                             Put optical theory into practice for optimal netwok
           Ad Traffic Manager Alison Boyer
                                                                                                          performance. VALERIE MAGUIRE

           EDITORIAL OFFICES                                                                              TECHNOLOGY
           PennWell Corporation,
           Cabling Installation & Maintenance
           98 Spit Brook Road LL-1
           Nashua, NH 03062-5737
                                                                                                    19    Codes, standards and technologies
                                                                                                          driving green building development
           Tel: (603) 891-0123, fax: (603) 891-9245
           www.cablinginstall.com                                                                         A jointly developed building code aims to increase
           CORPORATE OFFICERS                                                                             energy efficiency in facilities. PATRICK MCLAUGHLIN
           Chairman Frank T. Lauinger
           President and CEO Robert F. Biolchini
           Chief Financial Officer Mark C. Wilmoth                                                        DATA CENTER
           TECHNOLOGY GROUP
           Senior Vice President & Publishing Director
                                                                                                    23    EPA tackling energy efficiency
                                                                                                          in storage equipment
           Christine A. Shaw
           Senior Vice President, Audience Development
           Gloria Adams
                                                                                                          Agency issues first draft of Energy Star specification
           For subscription inquiries:                                                                    one year after announcing the program.
           Tel: (847) 559-7520; Fax: (847) 291-4816
           e-mail: cim@omeda.com;                                                                         PATRICK MCLAUGHLIN
           web:www.cim-subscribe.com



           CABLING INSTALLATION & MAINTENANCE © 2010 (ISSN 1073-3108), is
           published 12 times a year, Aprilly, by PennWell Corporation, 1421 South Sheridan
                                                                                                     ::   DEPARTMENTS
           Road, Tulsa, OK 74112; phone (918) 835-3161; fax (918) 831-9497; www.pennwell.
           _ Periodicals postage paid at Tulsa, OK 74112 and other additional
           com.
           offices. Subscription rate in the USA: 1 yr. $88, 2 yr. $119, BG $161; Canada/
           Mexico: 1 yr. $98, 2 yr. $132, BG $178; International via air: 1 yr. $120, 2 yr. $160,
           BG $216; Digital: 1 yr. $60. If available, back issues can be purchased for $22 in
           the U.S. and $32 elsewhere. All rights reserved. No material may be reprinted. Bulk
           reprints can be ordered from The YGS Group (cim@theygsgroup.com).
                                                                                                    2     Editorial
                                                                                                          A century in the making
           We make portions of our subscriber list available to carefully screened companies
           that offer products and services that may be important for your work. If you do not
           want to receive those offers and/or information via direct mail, please let us know
           by contacting us at List Services Cabling Installation & Maintenance, 98 Spit Brook
           Road LL-1, Nashua, NH 03062.
           POSTMASTER: Send address changes to: Cabling Installation & Maintenance,
           P.O. Box 3425, Northbrook, IL 60065-3280. Return undeliverable Canadian
           addresses to: P.O. Box 122, Niagara Falls, ON, Canada L2E 6S4.
                                                                                                    25    Editor’s Picks
                                                                                                          Terminate RJ-45s with one squeeze
           PRINTED IN THE USA.
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             www.cablinginstall.com                                                                          Cabling Installation & Maintenance        JUNE 2010       1


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                  :: EDITORIAL ::
                                                                                                      on cablinginstall.com


            A century in the making
            Long-time readers of Cabling                 premises communications systems are
            Installation & Maintenance may               intricate and complex, to put it mildly.
                                                                                                         DESIGN/INSTALL/TEST
            remember that a few of our issues over       The magazine that could not have                Free reference guide to
                                                                                                         cabling installation available
            the years have fallen into the category      been conceived in 1910 is, at least I like
            of “commemorative anniversary.”              to think, a worthwhile use of its read-
                                                                                                         NETWORK CABLE
                                Established in 1993,     ers’ time and an information source
                                                                                                         Category 6A deployments
                             this magazine has taken     that helps cabling-industry profession-         in the Middle East
                             the look-back/look-ahead    als gain intelligence about the trade.
                             approach to our 5-, 10-,       The “Penn” in PennWell comes from            NETWORK PROTOCOLS
                             and 15-year anniversary     Pennsylvania, where the company                 Optical patch cord paves
                             issues. This month we’ve    originated. The “Well” refers to oil            the way to 100G
                             used our front cover not    wells. Incorporated as the Petroleum
                             to recognize any particu-   Publishing Company, my employer’s               WIRELESS
                             lar milestone of the mag-   deepest roots are in the oil and gas            Multi-gig wireless
            azine itself, but rather to acknowledge      industries. As I write this column in           specification published
            the 100th birthday of PennWell, the          May 2010 the BP oil spill continues to
                                                                                                         DATA CENTER
            company that owns this title.                belch from the ocean floor, and also
                                                                                                         International standard
                  Telephone deregulation, which          continues to dominate headlines in
                                                                                                         for data center facilities
            took effect in the 1980s, was really         every form of media, from newscasts to          management
            the watershed event that eventually          newspapers and across the Web.
            brought this publication to fruition.           While retelling the state of commu-          CABLING STANDARDS
                  When our parent company                nications in 1910 earlier, I was tempted        Standards reference
            PennWell was born 100 years ago              to include a sarcastic comment like,            guide focuses on 568-C
            there was no concept of an informa-          “A lot can happen in 100 years.” But
            tion source for building owners who          in light of the current state of affairs        CONNECTIVITY
            were challenged to operate the grow-         off the coast of Louisiana, it’s more           Cat 6A plug assembles
            ing and changing cabling systems             appropriate to remind myself that a lot
                                                                                                         in one minute
            within their properties. As the image        can happen in one second. This pub-
                                                                                                         BLOG
            on the left side of this month’s cover       lication, its parent company, and I bet
                                                                                                         FBI points to VoIP as
            depicts, communications systems              most of you reading this column have
                                                                                                         element of online scheme
            within buildings were, well, differ-         learned that lesson, perhaps the hard
            ent from what they are now. American         way. In this brief space where I recog-
                                                                                                         Visit cablinginstall.com for
            Telephone and Telegraph was a mere           nize a company’s 100th birthday, I’ll
                                                                                                         these and other news stories.
            25 years old then. Alexander Graham          ask each of you to make every second
            Bell’s patent on the telephone was still     of every day of all your years, count.
            in effect.                                                   PATRICK McLAUGHLIN
                  Today, as the image on the right                                  Chief Editor
            side of this month’s cover illustrates,                       patrick@pennwell.com


           2        JUNE 2010       Cabling Installation & Maintenance                                          www.cablinginstall.com


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              Which of these is a bigger threat to your security investment?




                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                               Products. Technology. Services. Delivered Globally.
             The wrong cabling                                                                                                                   The right cabling
             infrastructure can                                                                                                                  infrastructure is
             hinder the performance                                                                                                              critical to the
             of even the most                                                      Blurred, unusable video over
                                                                                                                                                 successful operation                                             Crystal clear video over
             sophisticated video                                                   minimally compliant                                           and useful life of a                                             ipAssured IP-ClassSM 10+ cable
                                                                                   Category 5e cable
             surveillance system.                                                                                                                security system.
             Factors that affect the performance of cabling infrastructure:                                                                     Anixter ipAssuredSM is an infrastructure assurance program that matches
             • The migration of a security                              • The need for Power over Ethernet                                      the cabling infrastructure to the security equipment based on the technical,
               system to IP                                               Plus and beyond                                                       application and life-cycle requirements of the user.
             • Minimally compliant                                      • Installation practices                                                Receive the best performance for the anticipated life of your security system
               Category 5e cable                                        • Environmental conditions                                              by installing an ipAssured cabling infrastructure.
             • Increasing bandwidth requirements                        • Quality of IP cable manufacturing


                                                              ADC’s TrueNet® Structured Cabling System is an end-to-end, integrated portfolio of high-performance copper and fiber cable, connectivity
                                                              and cable management solutions. Designed for data center, desktop and security applications, TrueNet solutions are backed by an industry
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                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                     © 2010 Anixter Inc.




                      Anixter is a leading global supplier of communications and security products, electrical and electronic wire and cable, fasteners and other small components. We help our customers specify solutions and make informed purchasing
                             decisions around technology, applications and relevant standards. Throughout the world, we provide innovative supply chain management services to reduce our customers’ total cost of production and implementation.




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                                                                         ____________________




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                  :: DESIGN ::


            Optical solutions for the
            collocation data center
                                                                                                            computing and services like SaaS.
                                                                                                            SaaS is an application delivery model
            Making the case for fiber and certain fiber connection                                          in which an instance of software is
            interfaces in high-density data center environments.                                            hosted by the collocation data center
                                                                                                            and is used by the end user. The end
            DAVID ECKELL, CORNING CABLE SYSTEMS                                                             user may be billed through subscrip-
                                                                                                            tion or with a pay-as-you-go model.
            We read about cloud computing, soft-         for moves, adds and changes, while                 This may sound like an application ser-
            ware as a service (SaaS) and man-            adhering to industry standards. But                vice provider (ASP) model, but there is
            aged information technology (IT) ser-        fi rst, let’s explore the drivers behind           a key difference. SaaS is a multi-tenant
            vices, among others, and fi nd that the      the need for this type of facility.                application that may be provisioned
            term “collocation data center” is com-          Today’s telecommunications infra-               quickly with an automated front end.
            mon among these services. But what           structure is seeing the traffic growth             ASP, on the other hand, requires man-
            exactly is a collocation data center?        that was expected
            At its core, it is a common meet-point       in the late 1990s and             What major silicon vendors are saying
            for businesses to interconnect with          early 2000s. The                      Enterprise
            telecommunications and network ser-          Wall Street Journal          Distance: 0.1–10km 10G                      <=40G

            vice providers. The facility leases cage     reported in March in                                                                Optical
                                                                                           Rack to rack
            space to end users that populate the         its Data Hosting and           Distance: 1–100m 3.125G 10G                           40G
            space with their hardware and soft-          Data Storage Report                                                          Tr
                                                                                        Board to board                                  an
                                                                                                                                          sit
            ware, and manage it. Some facilities         that analysts are very       Distance: 50–100cm 3.125G 6.25G 10G                     ion 20G
            provide less-expensive in-row collo-         encouraged by the                                     Electical
                                                                                           Chip to chip
            cation services with lockable cabi-          data hosting space             Distance: 5–50cm 3.125G 6.25G 10G                        15–20G
            nets as well. The data center portion        as well. They see                                  2004      2006     2008          2010      2012
            of the facility provides value-added         strong trends for data                                                        Source: Silicon vendors

            outsourced services for businesses by        hosting based on
            supplying the hardware, software and         current demand and future needs with               According to silicon vendors,
                                                         customer-facing, front-end and back-               networking equipment is trending
            the IT support staff.
                                                                                                            toward all-optic devices and the
                  Of major concern in these facilities   end solutions. They cited the increased
                                                                                                            transition will be largely complete
            is the capability of the physical cable      consumption of applications and video              within a few years.
            plant to handle future needs as well         content with smartphones as a driver
            as today’s requirements. The answer          in this space.                                     ual intervention to have an end user up
            to this concern involves a complete                                                             and running. SaaS provides consider-
            view of capabilities, capital expendi-       SaaS and clouds mean business                      able cost savings for the end user and
            tures, operation expenses, green initia-     A few key drivers for outsourced data              mitigates software service level agree-
            tives and whether it provides flexibility    hosting and storage involve cloud                  ments while enabling the collocation


             www.cablinginstall.com                                          Cabling Installation & Maintenance                       JUNE 2010                  5


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               :: DESIGN ::
                                                                                                    Energy savings comparison of
            data center manager to scale their         as there is a comfort level due to skill
                                                                                                      10G optical vs. 10G copper
                                                                                                    %
            offerings with less manual interaction.    set or familiarity; however there are       90
                  Cloud computing is a model that      several key reasons to migrate to an
            delivers a variety of virtual services,    optical physical plant.                     85
            much like SaaS, to a geographically           First, the industry is clearly follow-
            diverse group of end users. A cloud        ing an optical path. As seen in the fig-    80
            computing facility aggregates the          ure titled “What major silicon vendors
            common features found in a data cen-       are saying,” manufacturers of telecom-      75
            ter, such as power, cooling, physical      munications networking equipment
            plant and networking equipment, and        are trending toward all-optical devices.    70
                                                                                                          48    96  144 192 240        288
            spreads those costs across hundreds        Network equipment in the enterprise                      Number of 10G ports
            and thousands of users throughout          backbone operating at 10 Gigabit
                                                                                                   This graph shows the energy-efficiency
            the year. It provides the end user with    Ethernet (GbE) became all-optical prior     gains of using an optical system
            massive scalability, access to high-end    to 2004. In the period since, the opti-     versus a copper system for 10-Gbit/sec
            switching equipment, reliability, disas-   cal trend has been increasing within        transmission. At a density of 288 10-Gig
                                                                                                   ports, fi ber offers an 86% efficiency gain
            ter recovery and cost savings.             the horizontal as data rates move from
                                                                                                   over copper.
                  This is a good-news story for        1 to 10 GbE. As data rates increase
            today’s data center collocation man-       to 40 GbE and beyond, the landscape         SFP+ transceiver consumes 0.5 watts
            agers. Over the next few years, even       becomes all-optical in the horizontal.      of power. A dual-port 10G copper net-
            if bandwidth use is conservative,          There is no existing guidance from the      work interface card (NIC) on a server
            the demand for collocation data cen-       Institute of Electrical and Electronics     card weighs in at 24 watts with the
            ter servers and storage will increase.     Engineers (IEEE; www.ieee.org)              optical SFP+ NIC averaging 9 watts.
            However, in order to adequately meet       for using 40/100 GbE unshielded or          This allows network equipment man-
            this demand curve, decisions regard-       shielded cabling, and the trend is that     ufacturers to provide optical switches
            ing legacy and existing telecommu-         it will not be included in the future.      with three to six times the density of
            nications infrastructure will need to      This significantly impacts the TCO as       current copper-based switches.
            be addressed. Questions will surface       a completely copper backbone would               Added to the cost for the additional
            regarding physical media, design con-      need to be replaced entirely to sup-        power is the need for appropriate cool-
            siderations, latency, effects on capital   port 40/100 GbE, while existing OM3         ing. According to the Environmental
            expenditures and operation expendi-        and OM4 fi ber-optic physical plants are    Protection Agency (EPA), each unit of
            tures incurred to support the physi-       well-equipped to handle the migration.      additional network power must be com-
            cal plant over the long term. A solid         While 40 Gbits/sec is available          plemented with an equal unit of cool-
            approach to designing and refreshing       now for Infi niBand and will be avail-      ing. For example, a 288 10G optical port
            collocation data centers is necessary.     able for Ethernet in 2011, some data        has 86% enhanced energy efficiency
                                                       center managers see a migration to          compared to 10G copper, resulting in
            Media choices and TCO                      40G far in the future, leading them to      significant cooling savings over a cop-
            Media choice is the fi rst consideration   believe that a legacy copper solution       per solution. According to researcher
            in a new-build or refresh. This decision   is warranted. However the total cost        IDC (www.idc.com), some estimates
            significantly impacts the total cost of    of doing so throughout the lifespan of      blame up to 60% of data center down-
            ownership (TCO) of your data center        the physical plant can be consider-         time on heat-related issues. With ser-
            and, ultimately, the margins that will     able. The fi rst consideration is power     vice level agreements (SLAs) and the
            be generated. At times, it may seem        consumption. A typical 10G copper           potential for liquidated damages, heat-
            like a sound course of action to con-      PHY chip consumes six to eight watts        related risks are simply not worth tak-
            tinue with legacy copper media types       of power, while the typical optical         ing. As seen in the energy-savings


           6        JUNE 2010      Cabling Installation & Maintenance                                              www.cablinginstall.com


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                               Fiber Cabling Made Easy




                                                             For small and mid-size installers
                                                             You are good at copper cabling. You can pull hundreds of drops a day, but
                                                             then your customer needs six fiber drops. What do you do?

                                                             Option 1. Buy expensive equipment, get certified, terminate, splice, polish, and test.
                                                             Option 2. Sub it out to your competitor who does fiber.
                                                             Option 3. Call ICC and we will build to your customer’s spec. No more field terminations!

                                                             LC, SC, ST, MTRJ, MPO, OM3, 10G…..you name it, we’ll do it. We beat TIA spec by
                                                             a mile (0.2dB Insertion Loss) and guarantee for 15 years. Best of all, we cost 50%
                                                             less than big brands, even less than on-site cabling.

                                                             Curious? Give us a call. You will be surprised how easy your life can be.



       Join Elite, Earn Rewards and Perks   888.ASK.4ICC   icc.com/cim         csr@icc.com
                    icc.com/Elite

      © Copyright 2010, ICC.




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               :: DESIGN ::

            chart, as port count increases in the        300-pound maximum pulling tension,               ready for the migration to 40 GbE par-
            data center, there is significant energy     depending on cable type. As a result,            allel optics is a high-density fi ber-
            savings in using a fiber-based solution      more extensive testing is required to            optic solution based on the TIA-942
            over a UTP-based solution.                   certify copper media, which requires             Telecommunications Infrastructure
                  The added benefit of reducing          elaborate test equipment. However,               Standard for Data Centers.
            power and heating/ventilation/air-           fi ber-optic testing in high-data-rate
            conditioning (HVAC) consumption is           environments is fast and cost-effec-             Standards-based designs
            a greener facility. Each kilowatt-hour       tive, which helps to reduce the total            This standard was designed with
            consumed results in 1.6 pounds of            cost of the project as well as the time          speed and flexibility in mind. As the
            CO2 emissions. By using fi ber optics,       to install the physical plant.                   diagram shows, the design is based
            data centers use less power at both             At this point, the data center man-           on a star topology using a main distri-
            the networking level and cooling level.
            Because they are using less power,
                                                                              Star topology per TIA-942
            they reduce their carbon footprint and                                                                                    Main distribution
                                                                       Possible logical and physical architectures for “A”              area (MDA)
            their costs. As elements of cap-and-
            trade or other governmental controls
                                                              Caged                                                           Caged
            are initiated, those facilities with cop-           colo   EDA EDA EDA EDA HDA EDA EDA EDA EDA                    colo
            per-based infrastructures may face
            considerably more costs to offset their
                                                              Server   HDA HDA HDA HDA ZDA HDA HDA HDA HDA
            carbon footprints.                                  farm
                                                          for hosted                                                                    “A”       “B”
                                                            services
            Is copper the fragile medium?                              HDA HDA HDA HDA ZDA HDA HDA HDA HDA
            An additional cost to consider when
            installing the physical plant is the frag-
                                                                       HDA HDA HDA HDA HDA HDA HDA HDA HDA
            ile nature of Category 6 and 6A media.             colo

            As Category 6 and 6A cables have
            advanced, they have become increas-          This schematic shows a TIA-942 standard-based layout of a collocation data center.
            ingly susceptible to noise and alien
            crosstalk. While power-intensive digi-       ager understands that fi ber-optic cable         bution area (MDA) as its focal point. It
            tal signal processing on the line card       has significant operational and fi nan-          is from here that the data center man-
            assists in reducing deterministic noise,     cial advantages over copper UTP/STP              ager establishes a main crosscon-
            the physical media must protect itself       cable media at 10G. The question is              nect that can easily manage moves,
            against alien crosstalk through tight        how to address the needs of the data             adds and changes to facilitate grow-
            twists and narrow tolerances for physi-      center collocation facility. The data            ing customer needs. The MDA feeds
            cal separation of copper pairs.              center manager must meet the same                several areas within the facility and
                It is a curious statement to say that    reliability, performance and scalabil-           can do so in different ways. The advan-
            in some respects, the high-data-rate         ity requirements that all data centers           tage is that it helps to create an effi-
            copper plant is more fragile than fi ber-    demand, but they must provide these              cient infrastructure. In a typical data
            optic cable, but it is. For example, in      requirements for numerous and some-              center configuration, the MDA houses
            order to maintain protection against         times very different customers, all              the core, aggregation and storage area
            alien crosstalk, a Category 6A cable         within the same facility and all at a            network (SAN) switching. In order to
            has a maximum pulling tension of 25          quick deployment velocity. The key to            do this effectively, high-density fiber-
            pounds. A typical fi ber-optic cable         being able to provide a scalable solu-           backbone cabling with preterminated
            found in the horizontal has a 100- to        tion that meets today’s needs and is             MPO-style connectors should be used.


           8        JUNE 2010      Cabling Installation & Maintenance                                                        www.cablinginstall.com


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                                                           :: DESIGN ::

            The benefits include reduced congestion in pathways and
                                                                                  a new world of
            spaces, improved airflow and higher-density patching areas.           unrivaled integrated solutions
                  In the diagram, the horizontal distribution area (HDA) at
            the cage is performing the traditional function as a cross-
            connect, housing the row’s switching equipment. From here
            horizontal cabling terminates in the equipment distribution
            area (EDA). However, the industry is moving to a top-of-rack
            topology in preparation for parallel optics, so this pushes the
            HDA to each rack.
                  This configuration is seen in the bottom row with edge
            switches distributed to the top of each rack and terminated
            with point-to-point fiber-optic uplinks back to the MDA. The
            problem with this scenario is that the home runs back to
            the MDA from each HDA do not take advantage of the den-
            sity found in fiber-optic cabling. An additional option being
            reviewed by TIA/EIA is the addition of a zone distribution
            area (ZDA) between the MDA and HDA as seen in the mid-
            dle rows. Here high-density backbone cabling extends from
            the MDA to a ZDA and terminates with lower-density fiber-
            optic cabling at the HDA in each rack, which helps further                          OCC is recognized as the
            improve congestion in the spaces and pathways.                                      gold standard in an industry
                  With the higher-density MPO-style connectors and                              that demands speed,
            advances in bend-optimized fiber-optic technology, it is now                        technology, and durability.
            possible to terminate more than 2,300 fibers in a 4U rack                           Our expanded product
                                                                                                offering includes fiber optic
            space. It would take 127U to accommodate the same num-
                                                                                                and copper cabling, as well
            ber of copper terminations. Providing this level of density                         as connectivity components
            allows the data center manager to build the backbone in                             designed for commercial,
            anticipation of customer needs, while leaving the short runs                        specialty, and harsh-environment
            from the ZDAs to be installed quickly and cost effectively.                         applications. We have
                  As we have seen, the trend for data consumption is rising                     broade
                                                                                                broadened our scope, creating
                                                                                                a singl source of integrated
                                                                                                  single
            at a tremendous rate. The value of each rack space is increas-
                                                                                                solutio for our customers.
                                                                                                solutions
            ing as businesses opt to outsource their hosting, storage and
            application needs. In an effort to cut costs and improve densi-
            ties within the facility, fiber-optic media is the clear choice. In
            order to provide an infrastructure that will meet the demand
            of today as well as the requirements of the future, it is critical
            to employ an MPO-style preterminated fiber-optic solution
            with bend-optimized fiber. This will significantly improve
            patching density, minimize congestion in the pathways and                               80
                                                                                                    800-622-7711
            spaces and provide the necessary migration path to parallel                             C
                                                                                                    Canada 800-443-5262
            optics that facilitates 40 GbE and beyond.                                              To learn more,
                                                                                                    vi occfiber.com or
                                                                                                    visit
                                                                                                    ca for a free catalog.
                                                                                                    call
            DAVID ECKELL is systems engineer with Corning Cable
            Systems (www.corning.com/cablesystems).


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                                                         Fits 3x as much.
                                                         Go ahead, pull 3x as many cables as usual. MaxCell
                                                         can take it. And you’ll only need 1/3 the manpower to
                                                         get the job done. Plus you can overlay with MaxCell.
                                                         More cables per conduit, less labor, and the ability to
                                                         overlay. That’s the flexibility of MaxCell.


                                                         www.maxcell.us
                                                         __________________                 888.387.3828




                                                         More space. More productivity.




                                                          10 Y E A R S O F M A X I M I ZI N G P RO D U CTIV IT Y




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                  :: INSTALLATION ::


            Optical fiber cabling and component
            specification considerations
                                                                                                        is typically easier to terminate and
                                                                                                        install in the field than singlemode.
            Put optical theory into practice for                                                        Additionally, it is always more cost-
            optimal network performance.                                                                effective to transmit at 850 nm for mul-
                                                                                                        timode applications and at 1310 nm for
            BY VALERIE MAGUIRE, SIEMON                                                                  singlemode applications. Finally, opto-
                                                                                                        electronics that use multiple transmit
            In last month’s issue I provided infor-      requirements, as well as optical speci-        lasers (e.g. 10GBase-LX4 uses four sep-
            mation on fundamentals of optical light      fications such as attenuation and band-        arate laser sources per fiber) or other
            sources and transmission. In this con-       width are specified. It is important to        multiplexing techniques cost signifi-
            tinuation of that discussion, I will pres-   keep in mind that these specifications         cantly more than optoelectronics that
            ent information on the means by which        are for the “raw” optical fiber before it is   transmit over one wavelength.
            that optical theory is put into practice     subjected to the cabling process. TIA
            by professionals in the networking and       and ISO use these optical fiber require-
            cabling industries.                          ments to then specify requirements
                  Unlike balanced twisted-pair           for OM1, OM2, OM3, OM4, OS1
            media, optical fi ber cabling can be         and OS2 optical fiber cables
            considered application-dependent             and cabling.
            media. This means that consider-                While media selection
            ations such as distance, application         may seem onerous, com-
            and equipment cost play a role in the        paring the throughput
            media selection process.                     and distance needs in your
                  The Telecommunications Industry        target environment against                     The XLR8 tool from Siemon combines
            Association (TIA; www.tiaonline.org)         performance parameters is a good               splice activation and mechanical
                                                         way to initiate the selection process.         crimping into a single step, enabling
            and the International Organization for
                                                                                                        quick and reliable field termination of
            Standardization (ISO; www.iso.org),          Although such comparisons may lead
                                                                                                        LC and SC connectors.
            through reference to specifications          to the conclusion that singlemode fi ber
            from the International Electrotechnical      is the optimum medium under all sce-              A good rule of thumb is to consider
            Commission (IEC; www.iec.ch) and             narios, there are tradeoffs to consider        multimode fi ber to be the most cost-
            the International Telecommunication          related to the cost of optoelectronics         effective choice for applications up to
            Union (ITU-T; www.itu.int), recog-           and application implementation.                550 meters in length.
            nize six grades of multimode and sin-           In particular, singlemode optoelec-
            glemode optical fiber as shown in the        tronics rely on much more powerful and         Optical fiber cabling configurations
            table on page 12. Physical dimensions        precise light sources and can cost 2           Optical fi ber cabling is typically
            related to the optical fiber, e.g. diam-     to 4 times more than multimode opto-           deployed in pairs; one fi ber is used
            eter, non-circularity and mechanical         electronics. Also, multimode media             to transmit and the other is used to


             www.cablinginstall.com                                          Cabling Installation & Maintenance                 JUNE 2010             11


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               :: INSTALLATION ::

            receive. Due to its extended distance        common telecommunications rooms,              area and the centralized crosscon-
            support of applications compared to          equipment rooms, telecommunications           nect is 90 meters (295 feet). Centralized
            balanced twisted-pair cabling, optical       rooms, and telecommunications enclo-          cabling requirements are specified in
            fi ber cabling is the perfect media for      sures within a commercial building.           ANSI/TIA-568-C.0, ANSI/TIA-568-C.1,
            use in customer-owned outside plant          Backbone cabling must be configured           and ISO/IEC 11801 Ed2.0.
            (OSP), backbone cabling, and central-        in a star topology and may contain one           Optical fi ber cabling may also be
            ized cabling applications.                   (main) or two (main and intermedi-            used in the horizontal cabling infra-
                  Customer-owned OSP cabling is          ate) levels of crossconnects. Backbone        structure, although there are no provi-
            deployed between buildings in a cam-         cabling requirements are specified in         sions allowing extended distance in
            pus environment and includes the ter-        ANSI/TIA-568-C.0, ANSI/TIA-568-C.1,           the TIA and ISO standards.
            minating connecting hardware at or           and ISO/IEC 11801 Ed2.0.                         Horizontal cabling is deployed
            within the structures. Interestingly,              Centralized optical fiber cabling       between the work area and the tele-
            customer-owned OSP cabling is typi-          may be deployed as an alternative to          communications room or enclosure.
            cally intended to have a useful life in      the optical crossconnect to support           Horizontal cabling includes the con-
            excess of 30 years, so great care should     centralized electronics deployment in         nector and cords at the work area and
                                                                                                                    the optical fi ber patch
                             Supportable application distances by fiber type (meters)
                                                                                                                    panel. A full crosscon-
              Application       OM 1           OM2              OM3            OM4           OS1/ OS2
                                                                                                                    nect or interconnect may
              Wavelength         850   1300    850     1300      850   1300    850   1300      1310       1550
                                                                                                                    be deployed along with
              FDDI PMD                 2,000           2,000           2,000         2,000
                                                                                                                    an optional multi-user
              FDDI SMF-PMD                                                                    10,000
                                                                                                                    telecommunications out-
              10/100Base-SX      300           300              300            300
                                                                                                                    let assembly (MUTOA) or
              100Base-FX               2,000           2,000           2,000         2,000
                                                                                                                    consolidation point (CP)
              1000Base-SX        275           550               800           800
                                                                                                                    for a total of four connec-
              1000Base-LX                550           550             800           800      5,000
                                                                                                                    tors in the channel. The
              10GBase-S          33             82              300            550
                                                                                                                    maximum horizontal cable
              10GBase-LX4                300           300             300           300      10,000
                                                                                                                    length shall be 90 meters
              10GBase-L                                                                       10,000
                                                                                                                    (295 feet) and the total
              10GBase-LRM                220           220             220           220
                                                                                                                    length of work area cords,
              10GBase-E                                                                                  40,000
                                                                                                                    patch cords or jump-
              40GBase-SR4                                       100            125
                                                                                                                    ers, and equipment cords
              40GBase-LR4                                                                     10,000
                                                                                                                    shall be 10 meters (32
              100GBase-SR10                                     100            125
              100GBase-LR4                                                                    10,000                feet) for both optical fi ber

              100GBase-ER4                                                                               30,000     and balanced twisted-
                                                                                                                    pair cabling channels.
            be taken to specify robust cabling           single-tenant buildings. Centralized          Horizontal cabling requirements are
            media. Requirements pertaining to            optical fi ber cabling supports direct        specified in ANSI/TIA-568-C.0, ANSI/
            customer-owned outside plant cabling         connections from the work area to the         TIA-568-C.1, and ISO/IEC 11801 Ed2.0.
            and pathways can be found in ANSI/           centralized crossconnect via a pull-
            TIA-758-A and BS EN 50174-3.                 through cable and the use of an inter-        Optical fiber cable
                  Backbone cabling is deployed           connect or splice in the telecommuni-         The optical fi ber that enables light
            between entrance facilities, access-         cations room or enclosure. Note that          transmission is actually an assembly
            provider spaces, service-provider            the maximum allowed distance of the           of three subcomponents: the core, the
            spaces, common equipment rooms,              pull-through cable between the work           cladding, and the coating. The core is


         12         JUNE 2010      Cabling Installation & Maintenance                                                www.cablinginstall.com


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                                                                                                                       :: INSTALLATION ::

            made of glass (or, more accurately, sil-       are then encircled with aramid yarns          aluminum, interlocking steel armor, or
            ica) and is the medium through which           for strength, and then enclosed by an         dual jackets may be applied for addi-
            the light propagates. The core may             overall flame-retardant thermoplastic         tional protection against crushing and
            have an overall diameter of 9 μm for           jacket to form a fi nished optical fi ber     rodent damage. Supported fi ber counts
            singlemode or 50 μm or 62.5 μm for             cable. For indoor cables with higher          are typically between 12 and 144.
            multimode transmission. Surrounding            than 12-fi ber counts, groups of jack-           Indoor/outdoor optical fi ber cables
            the glass is a second layer of glass           eted optical fi ber cables (typically 6- or   offer the ultraviolet and water resis-
            with a vastly different index of refrac-       12-fi ber count) are bundled together         tance benefits of outdoor optical fi ber
            tion that focuses and contains the light       with a central strength member (for           cables combined with a fi re-retar-
            by reflecting it back into the core. This      support and to maintain cable geom-           dant jacket that allows the cable to be
            second layer is called the cladding            etry) and are enclosed by an overall          deployed inside the building entrance
            and, regardless of the glass core con-         flame-retardant thermoplastic jacket.         facility beyond the maximum 15.2-
            struction, has an overall diameter of          Supported fi ber counts are typically         meter (50-foot) distance that is speci-
            125 μm. Combining the core and clad-           between 2 and 144.
            ding diameters is the source of optical           Outdoor (also
            fi ber descriptors, such as 50/125 μm or       known as outside
            62.5/125 μm, that are applied to opti-         plant or OSP) optical
            cal fi bers commonly used for telecom-         fi ber cables are used
            munications applications. The purpose          outside of the build-
            of the outermost layer, called the coat-       ing and are suitable
            ing, is to add strength and build up the       for lashed aerial, duct,
            outer diameter to a manageable 250-            and underground con-
            μm diameter (about three times the             duit applications. To
            diameter of a human hair). The coat-           protect the optical
                                                                                       Several of the optical interconnection technologies
            ing is not glass, but rather a protec-         fi ber core from water      described in this article are shown here. Clockwise from
            tive polymer such as urethane acrylate,        and freezing, up to 12      upper left are MTP/MPO-style trunking cable assemblies,
            that may be optionally colored for iden-       250-μm optical fi ber       duplex LC-connected optical fi ber cables, plug-and-play
                                                                                       array modules (one with MPO/MTP-style connectors
            tification purposes.                           cores are enclosed in
                                                                                       showing and the other with LC connectors showing),
                  Cabling optical fi bers makes them       a loose buffer tube         and a pass-through adapter plate.
            easier to handle, facilitates connec-          that is fi lled with
            tor termination, provides protection,          water-blocking gel. For up to 12-fi ber       fied for OSP cables. Note that there is
            and increases strength and durability.         applications, the gel-fi lled loose tube      no length limitation in countries out-
            The cabling process differs depend-            is encircled with water-blocking tapes        side of the United States that do not
            ing upon whether the optical fi bers are       and aramid yarns and enclosed within          specify riser- or plenum-rated cabling.
            intended for use in indoor, outdoor, or        an overall ultraviolet and water-resis-       The advantage of using indoor/outdoor
            indoor/outdoor environments.                   tant black polyolefi n jacket. For out-       optical fi bers cables in this scenario is
                  Indoor optical fi ber cables are suit-   door cables with higher than 12-fi ber        that the number of transition splices
            able for inside (including riser and ple-      counts, groups of loose buffer tubes          and hardware connections is reduced.
            num) building applications. To facili-         (typically 6- or 12-fi ber count) are bun-    Indoor/outdoor optical fi ber cables are
            tate connector terminations, a 900μm           dled together with a central strength         similar in construction to outdoor opti-
            plastic buffer is applied over the opti-       member and water-blocking tapes and           cal fi ber cables except that the 250-μm
            cal fi ber core, cladding, and coating         aramid yarns and then enclosed within         optical fi ber cores may be either tight
            subassembly to create a tight buff-            an overall ultraviolet and water-resis-       buffered or enclosed within loose buf-
            ered fi ber. Up to 12 tight buffered fi bers   tant black polyolefi n jacket. Corrugated     fer tubes. Loose tube indoor/outdoor


             www.cablinginstall.com                                               Cabling Installation & Maintenance              JUNE 2010           13


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               :: INSTALLATION ::

            optical fi ber cables have a smaller             alignment sleeve. These components           the reason why different optical fi ber
            overall diameter than tight buffered             work in tandem to retain and prop-           types, including 62.5-μm and 50-μm
            indoor/outdoor optical fi ber cables,            erly align the optical fibers in the plug-   multimode fi ber, should never be
            however tight buffered indoor/outdoor            adapter-plug configuration. The inter-       mixed in the same link or channel.
            cables are typically more convenient to          nal connector ferrule is fabricated             Optical fi ber breakout kits are used
                                                                                 using a high-preci-      to facilitate termination of loose-tube
                                                                                 sion manufacturing       optical fi bers used in indoor/out-
                        Centralized optical fiber cabling using                  process to ensure        door and outdoor applications. Once
                                  an interconnection
                                                                                 that the optical fiber   the water-blocking gel is thoroughly
        Telecommunications
             room (TR)                                                           is properly seated       removed from the optical fi bers, the
                                                     Work area (WA)              and its position is      breakout kit allows furcation tubes
                                 Horizontal cable
                                90 m (295 ft. max)                               tightly controlled.      (typically 1.2mm to 3.0mm in diam-
                                                     Work area
                                                     equipment                   The high tolerances      eter) to be installed over the 250-μm
                                                        cord                     of the alignment         optical fi bers, increasing the diameter
                                       Work area outlet                          sleeve ensure that       and forming a short “jacket” so that
        Equipment                                                                the optical fibers       the optical fi bers may be terminated
          room
                                                                                 held in place by the     to the desired optical fi ber connector.
                                                                                 ferrule are aligned      Selection of the correct furcation tube
                                                                                 as perfectly as pos-     ensures compatibility with all optical
                                    Equipment cord connected to                  sible. Although          fi ber connectors.
                                       centralized equipment
                                                                                 more expensive,             Users can choose from many optical
                                                                                 ceramic alignment        fi ber connector options.
             Shown here is a typical schematic for centralized optical
             fi ber cabling using an interconnection; the centralized            sleeves maintain            Traditional optical fiber connec-
             system supports direct connections from the work area to            slightly tighter tol-    tors are represented by the SC and
             the centralized crossconnect via a pull-through cable and           erances than metal       ST connector styles. These two types
             the interconnect.
                                                                                 or plastic alignment     of optical fiber connectors were rec-
            terminate because they do not contain            sleeves, are not as susceptible to per-      ognized when optical fiber cabling
            water-blocking gel or require the use of         formance variations due to temperature       was described in the first published
            breakout kits (described later).                 fluctuations, and may be specified for       TIA and ISO/IEC telecommunica-
                                                             extremely low-loss applications.             tions cabling standards. The ST con-
            Optical fiber interconnections                        Accurate plug-adapter-plug align-       nector features a round metal coupling
            Unlike the plug-and-jack combina-                ment minimizes light energy lost at the      ring that twists and latches onto the
            tion that makes up a mated balanced              optical fi ber interconnection and main-     adapter and is only available as a sim-
            twisted-pair connection, an intercon-            taining precision tolerances becomes         plex assembly (two assemblies are
            nection is used to mate two tight-buff-          especially critical as the optical fi ber    required per link or channel). SC con-
            ered optical fibers. An optical fiber            diameter decreases. For example, if          nectors feature a quick push-pull latch-
            interconnection typically consists of            two 62.5-μm optical fi bers are off-cen-     ing mechanism and have an advantage
            two plugs (connectors) that are aligned          ter by 4 μm in opposite directions, then     in that they may be used in conjunc-
            in a nose-to-nose orientation and held           13% of the light energy escapes or is        tion with a duplex clip that more eas-
            in place with an adapter (also called            lost at the interconnection point. This      ily supports the interconnection of the
            a coupler or bulkhead). The perfor-              same misalignment in a 9-μm single-          two optical fibers in a link or channel.
            mance of the optical fiber interconnec-          mode fi ber would result in almost a         SC optical fiber connectors are gener-
            tion is highly reliant upon the connec-          total loss of light energy. The criti-       ally recommended over ST optical fiber
            tor’s internal ferrule and the adapter’s         cal nature of the core alignment is          connectors for use in new installations


         14         JUNE 2010         Cabling Installation & Maintenance                                                www.cablinginstall.com


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                                                                                                                           :: INSTALLATION ::

                                          Optical fiber cross-section                 The most common         method. The main difference between
                                                                                      SFF interface is the    the MT-RJ and LC optical connector is
                                                                         Coating
                                                                                      LC connector, with      related to the performance of the inter-
                                                                                      the MT-RJ having        nal ferrule. The LC’s internal ferrule

                             Core
                                                                                      some limited legacy     maintains sufficiently tight tolerances
                                                                    Diameter          market presence.        to fully support both singlemode and
                                                     Core     9μm, 50μm, or 62.5μm
                                    Cladding       Cladding          125μm            Both interfaces fea-    multimode applications, while the
                                                   Coating           250μm
                                                                                      ture duplex configu-    MT-RJ connector is recommended for
                                                                                      rations and a small     use in legacy applications only. Field
             Singlemode fi ber cores are 9 μm in diameter, while
                                                                                      pluggable form with     termination of MT-RJ connectors is
             multimode fi ber cores may be 50 or 62.5 μm. Regardless of
             core size, the cladding is 125 μm and the coating 250 μm.                external plug latch     not recommended for singlemode
                                                                                      that is approximately   applications.
            due to their duplexing capability. Both                  the same size as the 8-position modu-       Array optical fi ber connectors are
            ST and SC connectors may be field-                       lar plug used for copper connections.    the newest recognized style of opti-
            terminated using an epoxy/polish or                      The LC connector may be field termi-     cal fi ber interfaces and are intended to
            mechanical splice method.                                nated using an epoxy/polish method       support extremely high-density envi-
                  Small form factor (SFF) refers to a                or mechanical splice method. The         ronments as well as emerging tech-
            family of optical fi ber interfaces that                 MT-RJ connector is field terminated      nologies such as 40GBase-SR4 and
            support double the connector density                     using a traditional no-epoxy/no-pol-     100GBase-SR10 that will require more
            of traditional optical fi ber connectors.                ish mechanical splice termination        than two optical fi bers per link or




                                        _______________




             www.cablinginstall.com                                                    Cabling Installation & Maintenance             JUNE 2010            15


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               :: INSTALLATION ::

            channel. There are typically 12 or 24       skill-level requirements are higher,          benefits to this approach are the assur-
            fibers in an array connector, although      which may increase the project instal-        ance of low-loss performance at the
            one array connector may support             lation costs. No-epoxy/no-polish and          interconnection and the elimination of
            as many as 144 fibers. A multi-fiber        certain mechanical-splice-style termi-        the need for endface inspections and
            push on (MPO) style interface is the        nation methods require less installation      possible connector reterminations.
            most basic array interface. MTP opti-       skill than the epoxy/polish method,              Trunking cable assemblies provide
            cal fiber connectors are intermateable      however the connectors used in con-           an efficient alternative to field-termi-
            with MPO connectors; however they           junction with mechanical termination          nated components or splice connec-
            are engineered to deliver improved          methods are more expensive and the            tions and allow up to 75% faster field
            mechanical and optical performance          performance (especially using the no-         deployment times. Trunking cable
            and are recommended for deployment                                                                       assemblies are custom
            in new installations. MPO/MTP con-            Sample optical fiber cable constructions                   factory preterminated
            nectors cannot be field terminated.                                     Jacket                           and tested lengths of
            Array or “plug-and-play” modules are                                    Central strength member          optical fi ber cable termi-
            self-contained and typically support                                    Rip cord                         nated on both ends with
            the interconnection of two, 12-fiber                                    Color coded tight-buffered       SC, ST, LC, MT-RJ, or
                                                                                    fibers and jackets
            MPO/MTP interfaces with 24 LC con-                                                                       MPO/MTP optical fi ber
                                                                                    Aramid yarns
            nections or one 12-fiber MPO/MTP                    Tight-buffered                                       connectors that are sim-
            interface with 12 SC or LC connections.                                 Jacket
                                                                                                                     ply pulled and plugged
                                                                                    Water-blocking swellable         in. When deploying
                                                                                    tape
            Optical fiber cabling deployment                                                                         trunking cable assem-
                                                                                    Gel-filled tubes
            The most common optical fi ber cabling                                                                   blies, cable-length
                                                                                    Water-blocking aramid yarn
            deployment approach is to field termi-                                  Central strength member
                                                                                                                     specification is criti-
            nate the optical fi ber connectors to the                               Rip cord                         cal and precise plan-
            optical fi ber cable using the appropri-                                Aramid yarns                     ning is required up front.
            ate epoxy/polish or no-epoxy/no-pol-                 Loose-tube         Color-coded fibers and tubes     Trunking cable assem-
            ish mechanical termination method.                                                                       blies that have an MPO/
            However, the new MPO/MTP plug-              The environment in which the fi ber cable will be            MTP connector on one
            and-play modules and MPO/MTP array          used, e.g. indoor or outdoor, will determine the cable’s     or both ends are com-
                                                        construction and the treatment of the fi bers within
            connectors are not supported by field                                                                    monly referred to as
                                                        that cable.
            termination and there are consider-                                                                      “plug-and-play” cable
            ations, such as installer expertise and     epoxy/no-polish method) may be lower          assemblies. MPO/MTP plug-and-play
            the IT construction/upgrade schedule,       and more variable.                            cable assemblies have the smallest
            that may favor the use of factory-termi-       Optical fiber pigtails feature a fac-      connector profi le and, therefore, have
            nated pigtails or trunking assemblies       tory preterminated and tested SC,             the smallest pathway, cabinet, and
            over field termination methods.             ST, LC or MT-RJ optical fi ber connec-        rack-space requirements of all trunk-
                The pros and cons of these termina-     tor and a 1-meter stub of 62.5/125-μm         ing cable assembly options.
            tion methods are described here.            multimode, 50/125-μm multimode, or               Always maintain the fi bers’ polarity
                Field termination supports the low-     singlemode optical fi ber. The stub end       to ensure the transmit fi ber is matched
            est raw material cost for SC, ST, LC,       of the pigtail is then fusion-spliced to      to the receive port on each end of the
            and MT-RJ optical fiber cabling sys-        the optical fi ber. Fusion splicing pro-      link or channel.
            tems. However, the time needed for          vides a consistent, nearly loss-free ter-
            field termination is the longest of the     mination and can be fast with proper          VALERIE MAGUIRE is global sales
            three deployment options and installer      technicians and equipment. The main           engineer with Siemon (siemon.com).
                                                                                                                           ________




         16         JUNE 2010    Cabling Installation & Maintenance                                                 www.cablinginstall.com


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                     EMT        BUSHINGS                                                        THE                                         LOOP
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                      • Less expensive
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                                                                Air Handling                                         bundle                                 the same amount of
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                Keep sensitive data under
                lock and key.




                                            Introducing the smartest keyed LC
                                            system on the market.
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                                            Keyed LC Fiber System creates an ideal lock-in system
                                            with patch cords, trunks, and harnesses that can only
                                            be removed with a matching color-keyed extraction
                                            tool. The U.S.-made, patent-pending system works with
                                            standard LC duplex or quad adapters, allowing you to
                                            easily retrofit your network - without having to rebuild it.
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                                            800.722.2082 or online at leviton.com/securelc.



                                                                          THE FUTURE IS ON
                                                             © 2010 Leviton Manufacturing Co., Inc. All rights reserved.




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                  :: TECHNOLOGY ::


            Codes, standards and technologies
            driving green building development
                                                                                                    Performance, Green Buildings Except
                                                                                                    Low-Rise Residential Buildings.
            A jointly developed building code aims to increase                                      Describing the standard as “an alter-
            energy efficiency in newly constructed facilities.                                      nate path of compliance,” USGBC
                                                                                                    says it “is a set of technically rigorous
            BY PATRICK McLAUGHLIN                                                                   requirements, which like the IGCC,
                                                                                                    covers criteria including water use effi-
            Earlier this year a group of organiza-         USGBC explained that ICC and             ciency, indoor environmental qual-
            tions from various construction-indus-      ASHRAE have collaborated for                ity, energy efficiency, materials and
            try sectors announced the culmina-          decades to develop codes and stan-          resource use, and the building’s impact
            tion of their collaborative effort in the   dards for the design, construction,         on its site and its community. Standard
            form of a model building code aimed         operations and maintenance of resi-
            at advancing green building prac-           dential and commercial buildings
            tices in the United States. Dubbed          in the U.S. as well as internation-
            the International Green Construction        ally. In coordination with the efforts
            Code (IGCC), the specification rep-         of those two bodies, the USGBC has
            resents “the merger of two national         led a green-building movement cen-
            efforts to develop adoptable and            tered on its Leadership in Energy and
            enforceable green building codes,”          Environmental Design (LEED) Green
            the USGBC stated when announcing            Building rating, which was launched
            it in March. “The IGCC provides the         10 years ago.
            building industry with language that           “Leveraging ICC’s unrivaled deliv-
            both broadens and strengthens build-        ery infrastructure to reach all 50 states
            ing codes in a way that will accelerate     and more than 22,000 local jurisdic-
            the construction of high performance        tions and ASHRAE, USGBC and IES’s
            green buildings across the U.S.”            technical strengths, this partner-
                  It resulted from efforts put in by    ship will accelerate the proliferation of
            the International Code Council (ICC;        green building codes and standards          “Organizations working collaboratively
            www.iccsafe.org); the American              developed jointly by ICC, ASHRAE             will advance green buildings
                                                                                                     nationwide in a way that was never
            Society of Heating, Refrigeration and       and USGBC and IES,” the USGBC fur-
                                                                                                     before possible.” –Rick Fedrizzi, USGBC
            Air Conditioning Engineers (ASHRAE;         ther stated.                                 president and CEO.
            www.ashrae.org); the U.S. Green                The organization then specifi-
            Building Council (USGBC; www.
                                     ____               cally pointed out the significance of       189.1 was written by experts represent-
            usgbc.org);
            _______          and the Illuminating       a specific standard within the IGCC:        ing all areas of the building industry
            Engineering Society of North America        ANSI/ASHRAE/USGBC/IES Standard              who contributed tens of thousands of
            (IES; www.iesna.org).                       189.1 Standard for the Design of High       man hours. Developed in a little over


             www.cablinginstall.com                                        Cabling Installation & Maintenance                JUNE 2010           19


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               :: TECHNOLOGY ::

            three years, the standard underwent         the wrong reasons since the mortgage       construction of the facility’s structured
            four public reviews in which some           meltdown that began in 2008. But the       cabling system played little or no role
            2,500 comments were received.”              organization gained a favorable head-      in its earning LEED certification. Five
                  Executives from the organiza-         line recently as it reached a milestone    years ago cabling systems may not
            tions that collaborated on the IGCC         related to the USGBC’s LEED pro-           have appeared at all on the USGBC’s
            offered comments on the importance          gram. Five years ago Fannie Mae’s          proverbial radar screen. More recently
            of the groups’ collective work. ICC         247,000-square-foot data center was        however, the group has begun to pay
            chief executive officer Richard Weiland     the fi rst to earn LEED certification.     more attention to a cabling system’s
            said, “The IGCC provides a vehicle for      The organization recently announced        role in the total facility’s sustainability.
            jurisdictions to regulate green for the     that in the five years since earning the      Last November the USGBC issued
            design and performance of new and           designation, the facility has realized     what it calls LEED Pilot Credit 2.
            renovated buildings in a manner that        $1.7 million in energy savings, which      Organizations that want to earn LEED
            is integrated with existing codes as an     has resulted in a 35% cost reduction in    certification must accumulate enough
            overlay, allowing all new buildings to      that time.                                 credits to qualify. The USGBC uses
            reap the rewards of improved design            “When it was decided that Fannie        pilot credits to test and refi ne its cred-
            and construction practices.”                Mae’s data center should be con-           iting process. The pilot credit issued
                  ASHRAE president Gordon Holness       structed to meet LEED requirements,        in November is the fi rst to mention a
            said combining the expertise of his         there was a host of challenges for the     building’s wiring and cable jacketing;
            organization with that of the ICC “will     architects and engineers because there     it specifically mentions electrical cable
            accelerate our transformation to more       was no previous model to follow,” said     and wire jacketing. Its official name is
            sustainable building practices.”            Fannie Mae’s executive vice president      Pilot Credit 2: PBT Source Reduction:
                  USGBC’s president and CEO Rick        of operations and technology Edward        Dioxins and Halogenated Organic
            Fedrizzi said the council has “long         Watson. “We’re pleased that the energy-    Compounds. “PBT” stands for persis-
            recognized the need to reach beyond         saving features that earned the presti-    tent bioaccumulative toxic chemicals.
            the market leaders served by LEED           gious LEED certification have helped       The credit’s stated intent is to reduce
            to accomplish” its mission of market        Fannie Mae be more environmentally         the release of PBTs associated with the
            transformation. “Broadening the scope       responsible and cut costs as well.”        life cycle of building materials. While
            of the codes and establishing a higher         According to Fannie Mae, among          the credit mentions electrical cable
            floor allows us to continue to raise        the energy-saving innovations built        exclusively, USGBC communications
            the ceiling, a critical factor in how the   into the data center are an irrigation     manager Ashley Katz explained, “The
            building industry is working to miti-       design that uses waste water from the      opportunity to use an alternative cable
            gate climate change. We are thrilled        cooling plant and captured rain water,     to achieve this credit would extend to
            to see this set of complementary green      coupled with landscaping that features     communications cable, but the credit
            building codes and standards; our           drought-tolerant plants. The facil-        language intentionally doesn’t seek
            organizations working collaboratively       ity preserves nearly 13,000 gallons of     to detail one type of cable and its use
            will advance green buildings nation-        municipal water daily and has saved        from another.”
            wide in a way that was never before         more than 23 million gallons over five        In order to gain the credit, a facil-
            possible.”                                  years, it adds. While the data center      ity must use materials without haloge-
                                                        was being built, regionally manufac-       nated organic compounds for at least
            A million-plus in savings                   tured materials were used and 80% of       75%, by cost, of the materials total in
            The Federal National Mortgage               construction waste was recycled.           a minimum of three out of four groups.
            Association, commonly known as                                                         In addition to building-installed cable
            Fannie Mae (FNMA; www.fannie-
                                 _________              Cable and LEED credits                     and wire jacketing, the other groups
            ______ has been in the news for all
            mae.com)                                    As has historically been the case, the     are exterior components; interior


         20         JUNE 2010      Cabling Installation & Maintenance                                             www.cablinginstall.com


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                                                                                                                 :: TECHNOLOGY ::

            fi nishes; and piping, conduit and elec-   credit issue as an opportunity to capi-    and can speak to the symbiosis
            trical boxes.                              talize on the halogen-free design of the   between intelligent buildings and
                  Polyvinyl chloride (PVC) and fluo-   product line it calls 17 Free—referring    energy efficiency.
            rinated ethylene propylene (FEP) are       to Group 17 of the Periodic Table of          A recent market study commis-
            two of the halogenated organic com-        Elements, which includes halogens.         sioned by CABA and conducted
            pounds covered in the credit. Both are                                                by Building Services Research and
            used in high quantities to manufacture     Building intelligence                      Information Association (BSRIA;
            communications cable; in the case of       Over the past half-decade many data        www.bsria.co.uk) found that energy
            plenum cable FEP is used, while PVC        center developers have embraced            conservation is the most important
            is used in cables of all ratings includ-   LEED and incorporated its credit sys-      driver for growth in the intelligent and
            ing plenum, riser and general. As such,    tem into their construction processes.     integrated building technology mar-
            the communications cables typically        And while some data center facili-         ketplace. The research also found that
            used in buildings today will not help a    ties have been noted for their LEED        advanced technologies are taking
            building owner gain this pilot credit.     certifications, the commercial build-      on a wider role in integrating build-
                  Nearly coinciding with the USGBC     ing space has seen a growing corre-        ing services such as lighting controls,
            issuing this pilot credit, General Cable   lation between energy efficiency and       fi re detection and alarm and physical
            (www.generalcable.com) introduced a        building intelligence. The Continental     security systems.
            set of halogen-free riser-rated cables     Automated Buildings Association
            it had been developing for a number        (CABA; www.caba.org) is an organiza-       PATRICK MCLAUGHLIN is our chief
            of years. General saw the LEED pilot       tion focused on intelligent buildings,     editor.




                                                __________________




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              Be in the spotlight




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                  :: DATA CENTER ::


            EPA tackling energy efficiency
            in storage equipment
                                                                                                     the process, followed by a stakeholder
                                                                                                     meeting at which the draft was dis-
            Agency issues first draft of Energy Star specification                                   cussed. Official comments on the first
            one year after announcing the program.                                                   draft were due to the EPA by May 21.
                                                                                                        Fanara pointed specifically to the
            BY PATRICK McLAUGHLIN                                                                    efficiency of storage power supply
                                                                                                     units (PSUs) as an area of continued
            Add storage equipment to the list             Development timeline                       study for this specification. He said,
            of data center technologies that will         To that end, the process the EPA is        “With the understanding that storage
            soon be part of the United States             taking to establish the rating pro-        PSUs are often installed in redundant
            Environmental Protection Agency’s             gram for data center storage is essen-     configurations, EPA intends to focus
            (EPA) Energy Star program (www.
                                       ____               tially the same as it has taken for the    its efforts on encouraging: 1) the use
            energystar.gov). In April the EPA
            __________                                    data center facilities and server pro-     of PSUs that are most efficient at low
            issued a fi rst draft of the Energy Star      grams. It announced the storage pro-       loads (<40%); 2) right-sizing of PSUs to
            Program Requirements for Data Center          gram in April 2009; at that time it        application requirements; and 3) novel
            Storage. As we previously reported, the       stated that after market review and        approaches to achieve overall system
            agency has also established an Energy         discussions with product manufac-          efficiencies.”
            Star program for computer servers, is         turers, industry associations and             According to the Storage
            about to officially launch a program for      other parties, “EPA concluded that IT      Networking Industry Association
            data center facilities, and is in the early   purchasers would benefit from access       (SNIA; www.snia.org) a power sup-
            stages of developing a program for            to standardized information about the      ply unit (or simply power supply) is
            uninterruptible power supplies (UPSs).        energy performance of storage equip-       “a component which converts an AC
                  On April 9 the EPA sent to all inter-   ment made available through the            or DC voltage input to one or more
            ested stakeholders Draft 1 Version 1.0        Energy Star program.”                      DC voltage outputs for the purpose
            of the storage document. In an accom-            In June 2009 a framework document       of powering a system or subsystem.
            panying letter, Andrew Fanara of the          was established and the next month at      Power supplies may be redundant and
            agency’s climate protection partner-          a stakeholder meeting that document’s      hot swappable.” It goes on to say that,
            ships division and Energy Star program        contents were discussed. Over the fol-     “In storage subsystems, power distri-
            manager acknowledged “there are               lowing months the EPA held a test-         bution units, power supplies, cooling
            many aspects of Draft 1 that are still        ing workshop for storage equipment,        devices and controllers are often con-
            to be determined based on the results         established a data-collection procedure    figured to be redundant.”
            of ongoing analysis,” and that Draft 1        and held a stakeholder information ses-
            represents the EPA’s “latest thinking         sion coinciding with the Green Grid        Much work to be done
            based on stakeholder comments on the          Technical Forum in February 2010.          Draft 1.0 of the Energy Star specifica-
            specification framework and subse-            Issuing the first draft of the program’s   tion includes no figures at all for PSU
            quent meetings with industry.”                requirements was the next step in          power factor requirements. The draft


             www.cablinginstall.com                                         Cabling Installation & Maintenance               JUNE 2010             23


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               :: DATA CENTER ::

            includes the following note. “EPA will   familiarity with the NPL concept in      urges further research or pilot pro-
            not be implementing Net Power Loss       both manufacturer and end user com-      grams on NPL to evaluate benefits of
            (NPL) requirements in the Version        munities. EPA continues to believe       the metric to end users.”
            1.0 specification. During the com-       that power supply requirements              The SNIA has been actively
            puter server specification develop-      should show the impact of power sup-     involved in each step of the process.
            ment process, stakeholders expressed     ply sizing and sourcing practices, and   The association formed its Green
            broad concern with the approach,         intends to address this in future ver-   Storage Initiative (GSI) in 2007, so it
            both in terms of testing burden and      sions of the specification. EPA also     has been leading storage energy-effi-
                                                                                              ciency efforts for years. The group
                                                                                              recently stated, “The SNIA has sub-
                                                                                              mitted 31 data sets to the EPA for their
                                                                                              data collection project and contin-
                                                                                              ues to work closely with the EPA to
                                                                                              ensure efforts, initiatives and industry
                                                                                              resources are complementary for users.
                                                                                              Several member companies use the
                                                                                              SNIA as a way to anonymously submit
                                                                                              data to the EPA. The SNIA has also
                                                                                              shared test data with the EPA for vali-
                                                                                              dating power supply efficiency mea-
                                                                                              surement methods.”
                                                                                                 While the EPA may have officially
                                                                                              issued an initial draft of this speci-
                                                                                              fication, it realizes it has significant
                                                                                              research and effort ahead of it before it
                                                                                              will produce a fi nished product. PSUs
                                                                                              represent just one of several prod-
                                                                                              uct and technology types the EPA
                                                                                              must sort out before it can realistically
                                                                                              assign efficiency metrics. Fanara said,
                                                                                              “A discussion of storage system soft-
                                                                                              ware as a contributor to overall system
                                                                                              energy is included in … the document.
                                                                                              EPA recognizes the energy efficiency
                                                                                              potential of software features such as
                                                                                              data de-duplication, data compression,
                             _______________
                                                                                              delta snapshots and thin provisioning.”
                                                                                                 The agency had not even fi nished
                                                                                              Version 1.0 of the specification for com-
                                                     ________
                                                                                              puter servers before it began work
                                                                                              on Version 2.0. It may take a similar
                                                                                              approach with this storage spec.


                                                                                              Patrick McLaughlin is our chief editor.


         24 JUNE 2010               Cabling Installation & Maintenance                                       www.cablinginstall.com


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                  :: EDITOR’S PICKS ::                             C OMPILED BY   PATRICK McL AUGHLIN



                                                                                  Technologies and the paper’s author, comments, “Our goal
            Terminate RJ-45s with one squeeze                                     with this paper is to share insights from our more than 25
             ICC’s (www.icc.com) JackEasy is described as an all-in-              years of experience designing, building and managing data
             one tool that seats and terminates an 8-position 8-contact           centers and critical facilities for some of the biggest names
             RJ-45-style connector, and simultaneously cuts off excess            in commercial enterprises and government agencies. The
            wires, with a single squeeze. It is made with a 16-gauge              TCO approach we recommend will prepare data center
             steel frame and has an ergonomically designed handle.                leaders to confront various problems that arise during the
            JackEasy includes two blades to terminate ICC’s easy (EZ)             planning process and position themselves for success.”
             and slim-body (HD) style jacks, the company says.                       While Hagan was the paper’s primary author, other
                                                                                  contributors included Lee’s director of technical engineer-
                                                                                  ing John Lusky; manager of mechanical engineering Tuan
                                                                                  Hoang, P.E.; and mechanical project engineer Scott Walsh,
                                                                                  P.E., LEED A.P.
                                                                                    “The data center market outlook shows significant
                                                                                  growth in 2010 and 2011,” Hagan adds. “We stand ready to
                                                                                  support both commercial and public-sector organizations
                                                                                  in developing the most time- and cost-efficient plans to
                                                                                  build sustainable data centers that will meet both uptime
                                                                                  requirements and future business goals.”


                                                                                  Demarc extensions lack guidance of standards
                                                                                  The white paper entitled “The Demarc Extension and its
                                                                                  Critical Role in Enterprise Network Telecommunications
                  The tool is also designed with a surface base, allowing         Infrastructure” authored by Concert Technologies exposes
             it to rest on a table or floor for support during termination.       the fact that the loss of standardization for this impor-
            The manufacturer says that by using this tool, installers             tant piece of cabling has led to poor installation practices.
             save time because the one-squeeze termination is carried             Addressing the information needs of telecommunications
             out by a balanced blade that will not damage connectors.             agents and carriers, the paper arms these professionals
                                                                                  with the knowledge to ensure the circuit’s complete oper-
             Pinpointing data center planning mistakes                            ability at the time of delivery.
             Data center facilities design, construction and man-                    The paper defi nes the demarc extension as follows: The
             agement fi rm Lee Technologies (www.leetechnologies.                 transmission path originating from the interface of the
             com)
             ___       recently released a white paper entitled “The Top          access provider’s side of the telecommunications circuit
             9 Mistakes in Data Center Planning: The Total Cost of                demarcation point within a premises, and ending at the
            Ownership Approach to Building or Expanding Data                      termination point prior to the interface of the edge cus-
            Centers.” The company says the paper addresses the                    tomer premises equipment. This may include in-segment
             question, “Why do so many data center builds and expan-              equipment, media converters and patch cords as required
             sions fail?” by pointing out the most common, and most               to complete the circuit’s transmission path to the edge
             significant, mistakes organizations make when designing              customer premises equipment.
             and building new data center space. The paper also exam-               “This white paper sets industry standards and guid-
             ines an effective way to achieve success through the com-            ance for the most important transmission path in commer-
             pany’s TCO approach, it says.                                        cial buildings,” said Dennis Mazaris, developer of Demarc
                  Mike Hagan, executive vice president at Lee                     Extension Nationwide (www.demarcextension.com) and


             www.cablinginstall.com                                           Cabling Installation & Maintenance               JUNE 2010           25


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               :: EDITOR’S PICKS ::


             president of Concert Technologies                                                      implementation of ITS infrastructure.
            (www.concerttech.com). “Without              BICSI releases RITP                           The RITP exam includes 150
             standards and guidelines, the poten-        credential details                         questions drawn from BICSI’s
             tial to install the demarc extension        BICSI (www.bicsi.org) has released its     Telecommunications Distribution
             incorrectly increases and can threaten      Registered Information Technology          Methods Manual. It is a closed-book
             business and affect productivity. This      Professional (RITP) credential exam        exam with multiple-choice and true/
             issue is important for the telecom          application. The RITP is similar to        false questions. The organization rec-
             agent and the carrier to address in         the Registered Communications              ommends a minimum of 125 hours of
             order to increase customer satisfaction     Distribution Designer (RCDD) creden-       study in preparation for the exam.
             and ensure future business.”                tial with the exception that there is no      The fi rst RITP beta exam was held
                  The paper also emphasizes the          requirement for actual design expe-        during BICSI’s Canadian Conference
             impact that this piece of cabling, the      rience. The focus of the designation       and Exhibition in May, with another
             demarc extension, has on businesses         are those individuals who work in the      scheduled during its European
             and buildings across the United States      information transport systems (ITS)        Conference and Exhibition this month.
             and internationally. It also highlights     industry but do not design ITS sys-        The fi rst official exam will be held at
             the following topics: importance of the     tems, or have limited design experi-       the 2010 BICSI Fall Conference and
             demarc extension to essential circuit       ence, including instructors, educators,    Exhibition in September.
             delivery and customer satisfaction;         project managers and sales personnel.
             isolating circuit versus inside-wir-          The RITP requires a minimum of           Poster highlights 10
             ing problems quickly; the correlation       two years of industry-related experi-      fiber-safety rules
             between the loss of standardization         ence, including but not limited to mili-   A free downloadable poster offered
             and poor installation practices; clarifi-   tary experience, site or project man-      by The Fiber Optic Association (FOA;
             cation regarding who is responsible for     agement, or industry sales. Applicants     www.thefoa.org) highlights important
             the installation; installer survey data     also need either to have graduated         safety rules for installers and tech-
             for demarc extensions; demarc exten-        with an Associate of Science, Bachelor     nicians handling fi ber-optic cabling.
             sion standards and resources.               of Science, or Master of Science degree    Derived from the safety section of
                                                              in an approved technical field of     the FOA’s online reference guide, the

      :: BULLETIN BOARDS
                                                              study or have achieved two or         poster lists 10 detailed safety mea-
                                                              more approved industry certifica-     sures to take when working with fi ber.
                                                              tions. Applicants must also have        “Safety in the lab or on the job site
                                                              successfully passed BICSI’s ITS       must be the number one concern of
                                                              Design Fundamentals exam.             everyone,” the FOA says in its online
                                                                 BICSI explains that the pri-       guide. “Besides the usual safety issues
                                                              mary difference between the           for construction, generally covered
                                                              RCDD and RITP written exams           under OSHA rules, fi ber optics adds
                                                              is the distribution of knowledge      concerns for eye safety, chemicals,
                                                              versus design-application ques-       sparks from fusion splicing, disposal
                                                              tions. The RITP exam is focused       of fi ber shards and more. Before begin-
                                                              on the knowledge content of the       ning any installation, safety rules
                                                              technology involved in the ITS        should be posted on the classroom
                                                              industry rather than the work-        wall, lab wall or on the job site and
                                                              ing application of the technol-       reviewed with all on-site personnel.”
                                  _________
                                                              ogy required to produce design           The poster enables network owners,
                                                              documents for construction and        crew foremen and other responsible


         26         JUNE 2010      Cabling Installation & Maintenance                                             www.cablinginstall.com


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                                                                                                                                       SHOWCASE                        ::
                         Extend T1/E1 over:

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             www.cablinginstall.com                                                                             Cabling Installation & Maintenance     JUNE 2010       27


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               :: EDITOR’S PICKS ::


             personnel to keep fi ber safety rules in front of every fi ber           architecture deployed within buildings. 802.11 systems
             technician.                                                              comprise distributed access points with connected anten-
                                                                                      nas, rather than distributed antennas. And he further cau-
            Wireless expert addresses mixing Wi-Fi, DAS                               tions users not to give in to the temptation to include
             In a recent post on The Cabling Blog, Oberon Inc.’s (www.
                                                                  ____                 private wireless LAN traffic over the DAS. “Generally
             oberonwireless.com) director of engineering and co-                       speaking,” he says, “When you use something in a way for
             founder Scott Thompson discussed dos and don’ts of                       which it was not intended, you don’t get the results you
             in-building distributed antenna systems (DAS). As we                     want.” He also points out that Cisco (www.cisco.com) has
             reported in our April issue, in-building DAS are growing                  issued a positioning statement indicating the company
             in popularity as wireless-device users demand connectiv-                 “does not certify, endorse, or provide RF support for Wi-Fi
             ity everywhere, including inside buildings constructed of                deployments over any distributed antenna system.”
             materials that can interfere with the wireless antenna sys-                 “Although not specifically precluding the use of Cisco
             tems residing outdoors.                                                  wireless LAN products in a DAS, the statement recom-
                  In his post, Thompson notes, “Clearly as people become              mends special consideration of signal coverage, client-to-
             more dependent on mobile voice and data services, there                  access point density, client roaming, location-based ser-
             is a growing expectation for network connectivity every-                 vices, and the impact on the 802.11n antennas used by
            where, indoors and outdoors. DAS and related in-building                  802.11n access points,” Thompson says in the blog.
            wireless systems provide a means to match this expecta-                      We have asked Thompson to turn his blog entry into a
             tion, even in the most challenging indoor environments.”                 full-scale article for publication in this magazine. He has
                  He stresses, though, that a DAS is a different architec-            agreed to do so and we look forward to bringing that article
             ture than the 802.11-based wireless local area network                   to you in an upcoming issue.




                                                                                                                 INDEX OF ADVERTISERS
                                                                                          Anixter, Inc. ....................................................................................3
                                   ADVERTISING SALES OFFICES                              Arlington Industries, Inc. .............................................................. 17
                        MAIN OFFICE 98 Spit Brook Road LL-1, Nashua, NH 03062-5737
                                    (603) 891-0123, fax: (603) 891-9245                   Berk-Tek Inc. ................................................................................C4
                                                                                          BTR Netcom .................................................................................. 15
             Group Publisher Susan Smith              Austria, Eastern Europe,
             (603) 891-9447                           Germany, Northern Switzerland       Byte Brothers ...............................................................................24
             susans@pennwell.com                      Holger Gerisch
             Associate Publisher/National Sales       +49 8801-302430                     Corning Cable Systems ................................................................C2
             Manager Ed Murphy                        fax: +49 8801 913220
                                                      holgerg@pennwell.com                Datacom for Business .................................................................. 27
             (603) 891-9260; fax: (603) 891-9245
             edm@pennwell.com                         India Rajan Sharma                  Diamond Ground Products, Inc. .................................................... 27
             Reprints The YGS Group                   +91 11 686 1113
                                                      fax: +91 11 686 1112                FSR, Inc. ....................................................................................... 27
             cim@theygsgroup.com
                                                      rajan@interadsindia.com
             Director, List Sales Bob Dromgoole                                           ICC Premise Wiring ........................................................................ 7
             (603) 891-9128; bobd@pennwell.com        Israel Dan Aronovic
                                                      +972 9 899 5813                     Leviton Network Solutions ........................................................... 18
             INTERNATIONAL                            aronovic@actcom.co.il
                                                                                          Live Wire & Cable .........................................................................26
             U.K. & Scandinavia Tony Hill             Asia Adonis Mak
             +44 0 1442-239547                        +852 2 838 6298                     Optical Cable Corporation ..............................................................9
             tonyh@pennwell.com                       fax: +852 2 838 2766
                                                      adonism@actintl.com.hk              Seikoh Giken USA, Inc. ................................................................. 27
             France, Netherlands, Belgium,
             Andora, Greece, Spain, Portugal,         Japan Manami Konishi                Senko Advanced Components Inc. .................................................4
             Western Switzerland                      +81 3 5771 8886
             Luis Matutano                            fax: +81 3 5771 8887               TVC Communications ...................................................................10
             +33 1 39 66 16 87                        manami.konishi@ex-press.jp
             fax: +33 1 39 23 84 18                                                      Tyco Electronics Corporation ........................................................ 21
                                                      Taiwan Cindy Yang
             luism@pennwell.com                       +886 2 2396-5128 #246
                                                      fax: +886 2 8751 8861                 The index of advertisers is published as a service, and the publisher
                                                                                                   does not assume any liability for errors or omissions.
                                                      cindy@arco.com.tw



         28         JUNE 2010            Cabling Installation & Maintenance                                                                     www.cablinginstall.com


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                                                           FIRESTOPPING Products,
                                                           Technologies, and Systems
                                                           MODERATED BY:         Patrick McLaughlin, Chief Editor


                                                        VIEW THIS WEBCAST TODAY
                                                           WHO SHOULD ATTEND:
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                                                           floors of a building, and/or that penetrate a building‚ walls; CONTRACTORS who
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                                                           CONSULTANTS who specify cabling projects that should include the installation
                                                           of firestopping systems.
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                                                           This Webcast provides detailed information
                                                           on two important firestop-related topics.
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                                                           the corresponding ratings a firestop system can achieve depending on its
                                                           performance in these tests. The presentation also explains the letter-based
                                                           ratings within UL 1479: the mandatory F and T ratings as well as the
                                                           optional L and W ratings.
                                                           PRESENTATION 2:
                                                           The Evolution of Firestopping Technologies
                                                           This presentation looks at the familiar set of tried-and-true firestopping
                                                           devices and materials, and also discusses some of the latest, innovative
                                                           firestop systems as well as the trends that led to their development.




                              VIEW ALL CURRENT, FUTURE AND ARCHIVED EVENTS AT:

                             www.cablinginstall.com
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                                                                                 to be four of the highest performing UTP cables manufactured in the United States today.
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Cim 20100601 jun_2010

  • 1.
    Contents Zoom In Zoom Out For navigation instructions please click here Search Issue Next Page SOLUTIONS FOR PREMISES AND CAMPUS JUNE 2010 COMMUNICATION SYSTEMS WORLDWIDE CELEBRATING 100 years PAGE 2 INSTALLATION PAGE 11 Putting optical theory into practice DESIGN PAGE 5 Connecting the collocated facility w w w.c ablingins t all.c o m Contents Zoom In Zoom Out For navigation instructions please click here Search Issue Next Page
  • 2.
    C Previous Page| Contents | Zoom in | Zoom out | Refer a Friend A Installation 7Maintenance | Search Issue | Next Page BMaGS E F Why Settlefor Less ? While other manufacturers want extra for birdie performance in a cable, here at Corning Cable Systems, we thought we’d just make that par for the course. All LANscape® Solutions 50 micron multimode cables contain ClearCurve® Multimode Fiber. That’s bend-insensitive multimode – so no matter what your network faces, you’ve got signal integrity in the bag. Learn more at offers.corning.com/1-CIM-CC _______________________ © 2010 Corning Cable Systems LLC C Previous Page | Contents | Zoom in | Zoom out | Refer a Friend A Installation 7Maintenance | Search Issue | Next Page BMaGS E F
  • 3.
    C Previous Page| Contents | Zoom in | Zoom out | Refer a Friend A Installation 7Maintenance | Search Issue | Next Page BMaGS E F JUNE 2010 | VOLUME 18 NO. 6 ABOUT THE COVER The parent company of this magazine :: FEATURES turns 100 years old, motivating our edi- DESIGN tor to take a then-and-now look at a few items in telecom and other industries. SEE EDITORIAL ON PAGE 2. 5 Optical solutions for the collocation data center Making the case for fiber and certain fiber Group Publisher Susan Smith (603) 891-9447; susans@pennwell.com connection interfaces in high-density data center Chief Editor Patrick McLaughlin environments. DAVID ECKELL (603) 891-9222; patrick@pennwell.com Senior Editor Matt Vincent (603) 891-9262; mattv@pennwell.com INSTALLATION Marketing Manager Joni Montemagno Art Director Kelli Mylchreest Production Manager Mari Rodriguez 11 Optical fiber cabling and component specification considerations Senior Illustrator Dan Rodd Development Manager Michelle Blake Put optical theory into practice for optimal netwok Ad Traffic Manager Alison Boyer performance. VALERIE MAGUIRE EDITORIAL OFFICES TECHNOLOGY PennWell Corporation, Cabling Installation & Maintenance 98 Spit Brook Road LL-1 Nashua, NH 03062-5737 19 Codes, standards and technologies driving green building development Tel: (603) 891-0123, fax: (603) 891-9245 www.cablinginstall.com A jointly developed building code aims to increase CORPORATE OFFICERS energy efficiency in facilities. PATRICK MCLAUGHLIN Chairman Frank T. Lauinger President and CEO Robert F. Biolchini Chief Financial Officer Mark C. Wilmoth DATA CENTER TECHNOLOGY GROUP Senior Vice President & Publishing Director 23 EPA tackling energy efficiency in storage equipment Christine A. Shaw Senior Vice President, Audience Development Gloria Adams Agency issues first draft of Energy Star specification For subscription inquiries: one year after announcing the program. Tel: (847) 559-7520; Fax: (847) 291-4816 e-mail: cim@omeda.com; PATRICK MCLAUGHLIN web:www.cim-subscribe.com CABLING INSTALLATION & MAINTENANCE © 2010 (ISSN 1073-3108), is published 12 times a year, Aprilly, by PennWell Corporation, 1421 South Sheridan :: DEPARTMENTS Road, Tulsa, OK 74112; phone (918) 835-3161; fax (918) 831-9497; www.pennwell. _ Periodicals postage paid at Tulsa, OK 74112 and other additional com. offices. Subscription rate in the USA: 1 yr. $88, 2 yr. $119, BG $161; Canada/ Mexico: 1 yr. $98, 2 yr. $132, BG $178; International via air: 1 yr. $120, 2 yr. $160, BG $216; Digital: 1 yr. $60. If available, back issues can be purchased for $22 in the U.S. and $32 elsewhere. All rights reserved. No material may be reprinted. Bulk reprints can be ordered from The YGS Group (cim@theygsgroup.com). 2 Editorial A century in the making We make portions of our subscriber list available to carefully screened companies that offer products and services that may be important for your work. If you do not want to receive those offers and/or information via direct mail, please let us know by contacting us at List Services Cabling Installation & Maintenance, 98 Spit Brook Road LL-1, Nashua, NH 03062. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to: Cabling Installation & Maintenance, P.O. Box 3425, Northbrook, IL 60065-3280. Return undeliverable Canadian addresses to: P.O. Box 122, Niagara Falls, ON, Canada L2E 6S4. 25 Editor’s Picks Terminate RJ-45s with one squeeze PRINTED IN THE USA. GST No. 126813153 Publications Mail Agreement no. 1421727 www.cablinginstall.com Cabling Installation & Maintenance JUNE 2010 1 C Previous Page | Contents | Zoom in | Zoom out | Refer a Friend A Installation 7Maintenance | Search Issue | Next Page BMaGS E F
  • 4.
    C Previous Page| Contents | Zoom in | Zoom out | Refer a Friend A Installation 7Maintenance | Search Issue | Next Page BMaGS E F :: EDITORIAL :: on cablinginstall.com A century in the making Long-time readers of Cabling premises communications systems are Installation & Maintenance may intricate and complex, to put it mildly. DESIGN/INSTALL/TEST remember that a few of our issues over The magazine that could not have Free reference guide to cabling installation available the years have fallen into the category been conceived in 1910 is, at least I like of “commemorative anniversary.” to think, a worthwhile use of its read- NETWORK CABLE Established in 1993, ers’ time and an information source Category 6A deployments this magazine has taken that helps cabling-industry profession- in the Middle East the look-back/look-ahead als gain intelligence about the trade. approach to our 5-, 10-, The “Penn” in PennWell comes from NETWORK PROTOCOLS and 15-year anniversary Pennsylvania, where the company Optical patch cord paves issues. This month we’ve originated. The “Well” refers to oil the way to 100G used our front cover not wells. Incorporated as the Petroleum to recognize any particu- Publishing Company, my employer’s WIRELESS lar milestone of the mag- deepest roots are in the oil and gas Multi-gig wireless azine itself, but rather to acknowledge industries. As I write this column in specification published the 100th birthday of PennWell, the May 2010 the BP oil spill continues to DATA CENTER company that owns this title. belch from the ocean floor, and also International standard Telephone deregulation, which continues to dominate headlines in for data center facilities took effect in the 1980s, was really every form of media, from newscasts to management the watershed event that eventually newspapers and across the Web. brought this publication to fruition. While retelling the state of commu- CABLING STANDARDS When our parent company nications in 1910 earlier, I was tempted Standards reference PennWell was born 100 years ago to include a sarcastic comment like, guide focuses on 568-C there was no concept of an informa- “A lot can happen in 100 years.” But tion source for building owners who in light of the current state of affairs CONNECTIVITY were challenged to operate the grow- off the coast of Louisiana, it’s more Cat 6A plug assembles ing and changing cabling systems appropriate to remind myself that a lot in one minute within their properties. As the image can happen in one second. This pub- BLOG on the left side of this month’s cover lication, its parent company, and I bet FBI points to VoIP as depicts, communications systems most of you reading this column have element of online scheme within buildings were, well, differ- learned that lesson, perhaps the hard ent from what they are now. American way. In this brief space where I recog- Visit cablinginstall.com for Telephone and Telegraph was a mere nize a company’s 100th birthday, I’ll these and other news stories. 25 years old then. Alexander Graham ask each of you to make every second Bell’s patent on the telephone was still of every day of all your years, count. in effect. PATRICK McLAUGHLIN Today, as the image on the right Chief Editor side of this month’s cover illustrates, patrick@pennwell.com 2 JUNE 2010 Cabling Installation & Maintenance www.cablinginstall.com C Previous Page | Contents | Zoom in | Zoom out | Refer a Friend A Installation 7Maintenance | Search Issue | Next Page BMaGS E F
  • 5.
    C Previous Page| Contents | Zoom in | Zoom out | Refer a Friend A Installation 7Maintenance | Search Issue | Next Page BMaGS E F Which of these is a bigger threat to your security investment? Products. Technology. Services. Delivered Globally. The wrong cabling The right cabling infrastructure can infrastructure is hinder the performance critical to the of even the most Blurred, unusable video over successful operation Crystal clear video over sophisticated video minimally compliant and useful life of a ipAssured IP-ClassSM 10+ cable Category 5e cable surveillance system. security system. Factors that affect the performance of cabling infrastructure: Anixter ipAssuredSM is an infrastructure assurance program that matches • The migration of a security • The need for Power over Ethernet the cabling infrastructure to the security equipment based on the technical, system to IP Plus and beyond application and life-cycle requirements of the user. • Minimally compliant • Installation practices Receive the best performance for the anticipated life of your security system Category 5e cable • Environmental conditions by installing an ipAssured cabling infrastructure. • Increasing bandwidth requirements • Quality of IP cable manufacturing ADC’s TrueNet® Structured Cabling System is an end-to-end, integrated portfolio of high-performance copper and fiber cable, connectivity and cable management solutions. Designed for data center, desktop and security applications, TrueNet solutions are backed by an industry leading 20-year performance and a Zero Bit-Error Warranty that guarantees signal integrity and throughput. Contact your local Anixter representative or visit anixter.com/ipassured10 to learn how Anixter ipAssured can protect your security investment. 1.800.ANIXTER anixter.com © 2010 Anixter Inc. Anixter is a leading global supplier of communications and security products, electrical and electronic wire and cable, fasteners and other small components. We help our customers specify solutions and make informed purchasing decisions around technology, applications and relevant standards. Throughout the world, we provide innovative supply chain management services to reduce our customers’ total cost of production and implementation. C Previous Page | Contents | Zoom in | Zoom out | Refer a Friend A Installation 7Maintenance | Search Issue | Next Page BMaGS E F
  • 6.
    C Previous Page| Contents | Zoom in | Zoom out | Refer a Friend A Installation 7Maintenance | Search Issue | Next Page BMaGS E F ____________________ C Previous Page | Contents | Zoom in | Zoom out | Refer a Friend A Installation 7Maintenance | Search Issue | Next Page BMaGS E F
  • 7.
    C Previous Page| Contents | Zoom in | Zoom out | Refer a Friend A Installation 7Maintenance | Search Issue | Next Page BMaGS E F :: DESIGN :: Optical solutions for the collocation data center computing and services like SaaS. SaaS is an application delivery model Making the case for fiber and certain fiber connection in which an instance of software is interfaces in high-density data center environments. hosted by the collocation data center and is used by the end user. The end DAVID ECKELL, CORNING CABLE SYSTEMS user may be billed through subscrip- tion or with a pay-as-you-go model. We read about cloud computing, soft- for moves, adds and changes, while This may sound like an application ser- ware as a service (SaaS) and man- adhering to industry standards. But vice provider (ASP) model, but there is aged information technology (IT) ser- fi rst, let’s explore the drivers behind a key difference. SaaS is a multi-tenant vices, among others, and fi nd that the the need for this type of facility. application that may be provisioned term “collocation data center” is com- Today’s telecommunications infra- quickly with an automated front end. mon among these services. But what structure is seeing the traffic growth ASP, on the other hand, requires man- exactly is a collocation data center? that was expected At its core, it is a common meet-point in the late 1990s and What major silicon vendors are saying for businesses to interconnect with early 2000s. The Enterprise telecommunications and network ser- Wall Street Journal Distance: 0.1–10km 10G <=40G vice providers. The facility leases cage reported in March in Optical Rack to rack space to end users that populate the its Data Hosting and Distance: 1–100m 3.125G 10G 40G space with their hardware and soft- Data Storage Report Tr Board to board an sit ware, and manage it. Some facilities that analysts are very Distance: 50–100cm 3.125G 6.25G 10G ion 20G provide less-expensive in-row collo- encouraged by the Electical Chip to chip cation services with lockable cabi- data hosting space Distance: 5–50cm 3.125G 6.25G 10G 15–20G nets as well. The data center portion as well. They see 2004 2006 2008 2010 2012 of the facility provides value-added strong trends for data Source: Silicon vendors outsourced services for businesses by hosting based on supplying the hardware, software and current demand and future needs with According to silicon vendors, customer-facing, front-end and back- networking equipment is trending the IT support staff. toward all-optic devices and the Of major concern in these facilities end solutions. They cited the increased transition will be largely complete is the capability of the physical cable consumption of applications and video within a few years. plant to handle future needs as well content with smartphones as a driver as today’s requirements. The answer in this space. ual intervention to have an end user up to this concern involves a complete and running. SaaS provides consider- view of capabilities, capital expendi- SaaS and clouds mean business able cost savings for the end user and tures, operation expenses, green initia- A few key drivers for outsourced data mitigates software service level agree- tives and whether it provides flexibility hosting and storage involve cloud ments while enabling the collocation www.cablinginstall.com Cabling Installation & Maintenance JUNE 2010 5 C Previous Page | Contents | Zoom in | Zoom out | Refer a Friend A Installation 7Maintenance | Search Issue | Next Page BMaGS E F
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    C Previous Page| Contents | Zoom in | Zoom out | Refer a Friend A Installation 7Maintenance | Search Issue | Next Page BMaGS E F :: DESIGN :: Energy savings comparison of data center manager to scale their as there is a comfort level due to skill 10G optical vs. 10G copper % offerings with less manual interaction. set or familiarity; however there are 90 Cloud computing is a model that several key reasons to migrate to an delivers a variety of virtual services, optical physical plant. 85 much like SaaS, to a geographically First, the industry is clearly follow- diverse group of end users. A cloud ing an optical path. As seen in the fig- 80 computing facility aggregates the ure titled “What major silicon vendors common features found in a data cen- are saying,” manufacturers of telecom- 75 ter, such as power, cooling, physical munications networking equipment plant and networking equipment, and are trending toward all-optical devices. 70 48 96 144 192 240 288 spreads those costs across hundreds Network equipment in the enterprise Number of 10G ports and thousands of users throughout backbone operating at 10 Gigabit This graph shows the energy-efficiency the year. It provides the end user with Ethernet (GbE) became all-optical prior gains of using an optical system massive scalability, access to high-end to 2004. In the period since, the opti- versus a copper system for 10-Gbit/sec switching equipment, reliability, disas- cal trend has been increasing within transmission. At a density of 288 10-Gig ports, fi ber offers an 86% efficiency gain ter recovery and cost savings. the horizontal as data rates move from over copper. This is a good-news story for 1 to 10 GbE. As data rates increase today’s data center collocation man- to 40 GbE and beyond, the landscape SFP+ transceiver consumes 0.5 watts agers. Over the next few years, even becomes all-optical in the horizontal. of power. A dual-port 10G copper net- if bandwidth use is conservative, There is no existing guidance from the work interface card (NIC) on a server the demand for collocation data cen- Institute of Electrical and Electronics card weighs in at 24 watts with the ter servers and storage will increase. Engineers (IEEE; www.ieee.org) optical SFP+ NIC averaging 9 watts. However, in order to adequately meet for using 40/100 GbE unshielded or This allows network equipment man- this demand curve, decisions regard- shielded cabling, and the trend is that ufacturers to provide optical switches ing legacy and existing telecommu- it will not be included in the future. with three to six times the density of nications infrastructure will need to This significantly impacts the TCO as current copper-based switches. be addressed. Questions will surface a completely copper backbone would Added to the cost for the additional regarding physical media, design con- need to be replaced entirely to sup- power is the need for appropriate cool- siderations, latency, effects on capital port 40/100 GbE, while existing OM3 ing. According to the Environmental expenditures and operation expendi- and OM4 fi ber-optic physical plants are Protection Agency (EPA), each unit of tures incurred to support the physi- well-equipped to handle the migration. additional network power must be com- cal plant over the long term. A solid While 40 Gbits/sec is available plemented with an equal unit of cool- approach to designing and refreshing now for Infi niBand and will be avail- ing. For example, a 288 10G optical port collocation data centers is necessary. able for Ethernet in 2011, some data has 86% enhanced energy efficiency center managers see a migration to compared to 10G copper, resulting in Media choices and TCO 40G far in the future, leading them to significant cooling savings over a cop- Media choice is the fi rst consideration believe that a legacy copper solution per solution. According to researcher in a new-build or refresh. This decision is warranted. However the total cost IDC (www.idc.com), some estimates significantly impacts the total cost of of doing so throughout the lifespan of blame up to 60% of data center down- ownership (TCO) of your data center the physical plant can be consider- time on heat-related issues. With ser- and, ultimately, the margins that will able. The fi rst consideration is power vice level agreements (SLAs) and the be generated. At times, it may seem consumption. A typical 10G copper potential for liquidated damages, heat- like a sound course of action to con- PHY chip consumes six to eight watts related risks are simply not worth tak- tinue with legacy copper media types of power, while the typical optical ing. As seen in the energy-savings 6 JUNE 2010 Cabling Installation & Maintenance www.cablinginstall.com C Previous Page | Contents | Zoom in | Zoom out | Refer a Friend A Installation 7Maintenance | Search Issue | Next Page BMaGS E F
  • 9.
    C Previous Page| Contents | Zoom in | Zoom out | Refer a Friend A Installation 7Maintenance | Search Issue | Next Page BMaGS E F Fiber Cabling Made Easy For small and mid-size installers You are good at copper cabling. You can pull hundreds of drops a day, but then your customer needs six fiber drops. What do you do? Option 1. Buy expensive equipment, get certified, terminate, splice, polish, and test. Option 2. Sub it out to your competitor who does fiber. Option 3. Call ICC and we will build to your customer’s spec. No more field terminations! LC, SC, ST, MTRJ, MPO, OM3, 10G…..you name it, we’ll do it. We beat TIA spec by a mile (0.2dB Insertion Loss) and guarantee for 15 years. Best of all, we cost 50% less than big brands, even less than on-site cabling. Curious? Give us a call. You will be surprised how easy your life can be. Join Elite, Earn Rewards and Perks 888.ASK.4ICC icc.com/cim csr@icc.com icc.com/Elite © Copyright 2010, ICC. C Previous Page | Contents | Zoom in | Zoom out | Refer a Friend A Installation 7Maintenance | Search Issue | Next Page BMaGS E F
  • 10.
    C Previous Page| Contents | Zoom in | Zoom out | Refer a Friend A Installation 7Maintenance | Search Issue | Next Page BMaGS E F :: DESIGN :: chart, as port count increases in the 300-pound maximum pulling tension, ready for the migration to 40 GbE par- data center, there is significant energy depending on cable type. As a result, allel optics is a high-density fi ber- savings in using a fiber-based solution more extensive testing is required to optic solution based on the TIA-942 over a UTP-based solution. certify copper media, which requires Telecommunications Infrastructure The added benefit of reducing elaborate test equipment. However, Standard for Data Centers. power and heating/ventilation/air- fi ber-optic testing in high-data-rate conditioning (HVAC) consumption is environments is fast and cost-effec- Standards-based designs a greener facility. Each kilowatt-hour tive, which helps to reduce the total This standard was designed with consumed results in 1.6 pounds of cost of the project as well as the time speed and flexibility in mind. As the CO2 emissions. By using fi ber optics, to install the physical plant. diagram shows, the design is based data centers use less power at both At this point, the data center man- on a star topology using a main distri- the networking level and cooling level. Because they are using less power, Star topology per TIA-942 they reduce their carbon footprint and Main distribution Possible logical and physical architectures for “A” area (MDA) their costs. As elements of cap-and- trade or other governmental controls Caged Caged are initiated, those facilities with cop- colo EDA EDA EDA EDA HDA EDA EDA EDA EDA colo per-based infrastructures may face considerably more costs to offset their Server HDA HDA HDA HDA ZDA HDA HDA HDA HDA carbon footprints. farm for hosted “A” “B” services Is copper the fragile medium? HDA HDA HDA HDA ZDA HDA HDA HDA HDA An additional cost to consider when installing the physical plant is the frag- HDA HDA HDA HDA HDA HDA HDA HDA HDA ile nature of Category 6 and 6A media. colo As Category 6 and 6A cables have advanced, they have become increas- This schematic shows a TIA-942 standard-based layout of a collocation data center. ingly susceptible to noise and alien crosstalk. While power-intensive digi- ager understands that fi ber-optic cable bution area (MDA) as its focal point. It tal signal processing on the line card has significant operational and fi nan- is from here that the data center man- assists in reducing deterministic noise, cial advantages over copper UTP/STP ager establishes a main crosscon- the physical media must protect itself cable media at 10G. The question is nect that can easily manage moves, against alien crosstalk through tight how to address the needs of the data adds and changes to facilitate grow- twists and narrow tolerances for physi- center collocation facility. The data ing customer needs. The MDA feeds cal separation of copper pairs. center manager must meet the same several areas within the facility and It is a curious statement to say that reliability, performance and scalabil- can do so in different ways. The advan- in some respects, the high-data-rate ity requirements that all data centers tage is that it helps to create an effi- copper plant is more fragile than fi ber- demand, but they must provide these cient infrastructure. In a typical data optic cable, but it is. For example, in requirements for numerous and some- center configuration, the MDA houses order to maintain protection against times very different customers, all the core, aggregation and storage area alien crosstalk, a Category 6A cable within the same facility and all at a network (SAN) switching. In order to has a maximum pulling tension of 25 quick deployment velocity. The key to do this effectively, high-density fiber- pounds. A typical fi ber-optic cable being able to provide a scalable solu- backbone cabling with preterminated found in the horizontal has a 100- to tion that meets today’s needs and is MPO-style connectors should be used. 8 JUNE 2010 Cabling Installation & Maintenance www.cablinginstall.com C Previous Page | Contents | Zoom in | Zoom out | Refer a Friend A Installation 7Maintenance | Search Issue | Next Page BMaGS E F
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    C Previous Page| Contents | Zoom in | Zoom out | Refer a Friend A Installation 7Maintenance | Search Issue | Next Page BMaGS E F :: DESIGN :: The benefits include reduced congestion in pathways and a new world of spaces, improved airflow and higher-density patching areas. unrivaled integrated solutions In the diagram, the horizontal distribution area (HDA) at the cage is performing the traditional function as a cross- connect, housing the row’s switching equipment. From here horizontal cabling terminates in the equipment distribution area (EDA). However, the industry is moving to a top-of-rack topology in preparation for parallel optics, so this pushes the HDA to each rack. This configuration is seen in the bottom row with edge switches distributed to the top of each rack and terminated with point-to-point fiber-optic uplinks back to the MDA. The problem with this scenario is that the home runs back to the MDA from each HDA do not take advantage of the den- sity found in fiber-optic cabling. An additional option being reviewed by TIA/EIA is the addition of a zone distribution area (ZDA) between the MDA and HDA as seen in the mid- dle rows. Here high-density backbone cabling extends from the MDA to a ZDA and terminates with lower-density fiber- optic cabling at the HDA in each rack, which helps further OCC is recognized as the improve congestion in the spaces and pathways. gold standard in an industry With the higher-density MPO-style connectors and that demands speed, advances in bend-optimized fiber-optic technology, it is now technology, and durability. possible to terminate more than 2,300 fibers in a 4U rack Our expanded product offering includes fiber optic space. It would take 127U to accommodate the same num- and copper cabling, as well ber of copper terminations. Providing this level of density as connectivity components allows the data center manager to build the backbone in designed for commercial, anticipation of customer needs, while leaving the short runs specialty, and harsh-environment from the ZDAs to be installed quickly and cost effectively. applications. We have As we have seen, the trend for data consumption is rising broade broadened our scope, creating a singl source of integrated single at a tremendous rate. The value of each rack space is increas- solutio for our customers. solutions ing as businesses opt to outsource their hosting, storage and application needs. In an effort to cut costs and improve densi- ties within the facility, fiber-optic media is the clear choice. In order to provide an infrastructure that will meet the demand of today as well as the requirements of the future, it is critical to employ an MPO-style preterminated fiber-optic solution with bend-optimized fiber. This will significantly improve patching density, minimize congestion in the pathways and 80 800-622-7711 spaces and provide the necessary migration path to parallel C Canada 800-443-5262 optics that facilitates 40 GbE and beyond. To learn more, vi occfiber.com or visit ca for a free catalog. call DAVID ECKELL is systems engineer with Corning Cable Systems (www.corning.com/cablesystems). www.cablinginstall.com C Previous Page | Contents | Zoom in | Zoom out | Refer a Friend A Installation 7Maintenance | Search Issue | Next Page BMaGS E F
  • 12.
    C Previous Page| Contents | Zoom in | Zoom out | Refer a Friend A Installation 7Maintenance | Search Issue | Next Page BMaGS E F Fits 3x as much. Go ahead, pull 3x as many cables as usual. MaxCell can take it. And you’ll only need 1/3 the manpower to get the job done. Plus you can overlay with MaxCell. More cables per conduit, less labor, and the ability to overlay. That’s the flexibility of MaxCell. www.maxcell.us __________________ 888.387.3828 More space. More productivity. 10 Y E A R S O F M A X I M I ZI N G P RO D U CTIV IT Y C Previous Page | Contents | Zoom in | Zoom out | Refer a Friend A Installation 7Maintenance | Search Issue | Next Page BMaGS E F
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    C Previous Page| Contents | Zoom in | Zoom out | Refer a Friend A Installation 7Maintenance | Search Issue | Next Page BMaGS E F :: INSTALLATION :: Optical fiber cabling and component specification considerations is typically easier to terminate and install in the field than singlemode. Put optical theory into practice for Additionally, it is always more cost- optimal network performance. effective to transmit at 850 nm for mul- timode applications and at 1310 nm for BY VALERIE MAGUIRE, SIEMON singlemode applications. Finally, opto- electronics that use multiple transmit In last month’s issue I provided infor- requirements, as well as optical speci- lasers (e.g. 10GBase-LX4 uses four sep- mation on fundamentals of optical light fications such as attenuation and band- arate laser sources per fiber) or other sources and transmission. In this con- width are specified. It is important to multiplexing techniques cost signifi- tinuation of that discussion, I will pres- keep in mind that these specifications cantly more than optoelectronics that ent information on the means by which are for the “raw” optical fiber before it is transmit over one wavelength. that optical theory is put into practice subjected to the cabling process. TIA by professionals in the networking and and ISO use these optical fiber require- cabling industries. ments to then specify requirements Unlike balanced twisted-pair for OM1, OM2, OM3, OM4, OS1 media, optical fi ber cabling can be and OS2 optical fiber cables considered application-dependent and cabling. media. This means that consider- While media selection ations such as distance, application may seem onerous, com- and equipment cost play a role in the paring the throughput media selection process. and distance needs in your The Telecommunications Industry target environment against The XLR8 tool from Siemon combines Association (TIA; www.tiaonline.org) performance parameters is a good splice activation and mechanical way to initiate the selection process. crimping into a single step, enabling and the International Organization for quick and reliable field termination of Standardization (ISO; www.iso.org), Although such comparisons may lead LC and SC connectors. through reference to specifications to the conclusion that singlemode fi ber from the International Electrotechnical is the optimum medium under all sce- A good rule of thumb is to consider Commission (IEC; www.iec.ch) and narios, there are tradeoffs to consider multimode fi ber to be the most cost- the International Telecommunication related to the cost of optoelectronics effective choice for applications up to Union (ITU-T; www.itu.int), recog- and application implementation. 550 meters in length. nize six grades of multimode and sin- In particular, singlemode optoelec- glemode optical fiber as shown in the tronics rely on much more powerful and Optical fiber cabling configurations table on page 12. Physical dimensions precise light sources and can cost 2 Optical fi ber cabling is typically related to the optical fiber, e.g. diam- to 4 times more than multimode opto- deployed in pairs; one fi ber is used eter, non-circularity and mechanical electronics. Also, multimode media to transmit and the other is used to www.cablinginstall.com Cabling Installation & Maintenance JUNE 2010 11 C Previous Page | Contents | Zoom in | Zoom out | Refer a Friend A Installation 7Maintenance | Search Issue | Next Page BMaGS E F
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    C Previous Page| Contents | Zoom in | Zoom out | Refer a Friend A Installation 7Maintenance | Search Issue | Next Page BMaGS E F :: INSTALLATION :: receive. Due to its extended distance common telecommunications rooms, area and the centralized crosscon- support of applications compared to equipment rooms, telecommunications nect is 90 meters (295 feet). Centralized balanced twisted-pair cabling, optical rooms, and telecommunications enclo- cabling requirements are specified in fi ber cabling is the perfect media for sures within a commercial building. ANSI/TIA-568-C.0, ANSI/TIA-568-C.1, use in customer-owned outside plant Backbone cabling must be configured and ISO/IEC 11801 Ed2.0. (OSP), backbone cabling, and central- in a star topology and may contain one Optical fi ber cabling may also be ized cabling applications. (main) or two (main and intermedi- used in the horizontal cabling infra- Customer-owned OSP cabling is ate) levels of crossconnects. Backbone structure, although there are no provi- deployed between buildings in a cam- cabling requirements are specified in sions allowing extended distance in pus environment and includes the ter- ANSI/TIA-568-C.0, ANSI/TIA-568-C.1, the TIA and ISO standards. minating connecting hardware at or and ISO/IEC 11801 Ed2.0. Horizontal cabling is deployed within the structures. Interestingly, Centralized optical fiber cabling between the work area and the tele- customer-owned OSP cabling is typi- may be deployed as an alternative to communications room or enclosure. cally intended to have a useful life in the optical crossconnect to support Horizontal cabling includes the con- excess of 30 years, so great care should centralized electronics deployment in nector and cords at the work area and the optical fi ber patch Supportable application distances by fiber type (meters) panel. A full crosscon- Application OM 1 OM2 OM3 OM4 OS1/ OS2 nect or interconnect may Wavelength 850 1300 850 1300 850 1300 850 1300 1310 1550 be deployed along with FDDI PMD 2,000 2,000 2,000 2,000 an optional multi-user FDDI SMF-PMD 10,000 telecommunications out- 10/100Base-SX 300 300 300 300 let assembly (MUTOA) or 100Base-FX 2,000 2,000 2,000 2,000 consolidation point (CP) 1000Base-SX 275 550 800 800 for a total of four connec- 1000Base-LX 550 550 800 800 5,000 tors in the channel. The 10GBase-S 33 82 300 550 maximum horizontal cable 10GBase-LX4 300 300 300 300 10,000 length shall be 90 meters 10GBase-L 10,000 (295 feet) and the total 10GBase-LRM 220 220 220 220 length of work area cords, 10GBase-E 40,000 patch cords or jump- 40GBase-SR4 100 125 ers, and equipment cords 40GBase-LR4 10,000 shall be 10 meters (32 100GBase-SR10 100 125 100GBase-LR4 10,000 feet) for both optical fi ber 100GBase-ER4 30,000 and balanced twisted- pair cabling channels. be taken to specify robust cabling single-tenant buildings. Centralized Horizontal cabling requirements are media. Requirements pertaining to optical fi ber cabling supports direct specified in ANSI/TIA-568-C.0, ANSI/ customer-owned outside plant cabling connections from the work area to the TIA-568-C.1, and ISO/IEC 11801 Ed2.0. and pathways can be found in ANSI/ centralized crossconnect via a pull- TIA-758-A and BS EN 50174-3. through cable and the use of an inter- Optical fiber cable Backbone cabling is deployed connect or splice in the telecommuni- The optical fi ber that enables light between entrance facilities, access- cations room or enclosure. Note that transmission is actually an assembly provider spaces, service-provider the maximum allowed distance of the of three subcomponents: the core, the spaces, common equipment rooms, pull-through cable between the work cladding, and the coating. The core is 12 JUNE 2010 Cabling Installation & Maintenance www.cablinginstall.com C Previous Page | Contents | Zoom in | Zoom out | Refer a Friend A Installation 7Maintenance | Search Issue | Next Page BMaGS E F
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    C Previous Page| Contents | Zoom in | Zoom out | Refer a Friend A Installation 7Maintenance | Search Issue | Next Page BMaGS E F :: INSTALLATION :: made of glass (or, more accurately, sil- are then encircled with aramid yarns aluminum, interlocking steel armor, or ica) and is the medium through which for strength, and then enclosed by an dual jackets may be applied for addi- the light propagates. The core may overall flame-retardant thermoplastic tional protection against crushing and have an overall diameter of 9 μm for jacket to form a fi nished optical fi ber rodent damage. Supported fi ber counts singlemode or 50 μm or 62.5 μm for cable. For indoor cables with higher are typically between 12 and 144. multimode transmission. Surrounding than 12-fi ber counts, groups of jack- Indoor/outdoor optical fi ber cables the glass is a second layer of glass eted optical fi ber cables (typically 6- or offer the ultraviolet and water resis- with a vastly different index of refrac- 12-fi ber count) are bundled together tance benefits of outdoor optical fi ber tion that focuses and contains the light with a central strength member (for cables combined with a fi re-retar- by reflecting it back into the core. This support and to maintain cable geom- dant jacket that allows the cable to be second layer is called the cladding etry) and are enclosed by an overall deployed inside the building entrance and, regardless of the glass core con- flame-retardant thermoplastic jacket. facility beyond the maximum 15.2- struction, has an overall diameter of Supported fi ber counts are typically meter (50-foot) distance that is speci- 125 μm. Combining the core and clad- between 2 and 144. ding diameters is the source of optical Outdoor (also fi ber descriptors, such as 50/125 μm or known as outside 62.5/125 μm, that are applied to opti- plant or OSP) optical cal fi bers commonly used for telecom- fi ber cables are used munications applications. The purpose outside of the build- of the outermost layer, called the coat- ing and are suitable ing, is to add strength and build up the for lashed aerial, duct, outer diameter to a manageable 250- and underground con- μm diameter (about three times the duit applications. To diameter of a human hair). The coat- protect the optical Several of the optical interconnection technologies ing is not glass, but rather a protec- fi ber core from water described in this article are shown here. Clockwise from tive polymer such as urethane acrylate, and freezing, up to 12 upper left are MTP/MPO-style trunking cable assemblies, that may be optionally colored for iden- 250-μm optical fi ber duplex LC-connected optical fi ber cables, plug-and-play array modules (one with MPO/MTP-style connectors tification purposes. cores are enclosed in showing and the other with LC connectors showing), Cabling optical fi bers makes them a loose buffer tube and a pass-through adapter plate. easier to handle, facilitates connec- that is fi lled with tor termination, provides protection, water-blocking gel. For up to 12-fi ber fied for OSP cables. Note that there is and increases strength and durability. applications, the gel-fi lled loose tube no length limitation in countries out- The cabling process differs depend- is encircled with water-blocking tapes side of the United States that do not ing upon whether the optical fi bers are and aramid yarns and enclosed within specify riser- or plenum-rated cabling. intended for use in indoor, outdoor, or an overall ultraviolet and water-resis- The advantage of using indoor/outdoor indoor/outdoor environments. tant black polyolefi n jacket. For out- optical fi bers cables in this scenario is Indoor optical fi ber cables are suit- door cables with higher than 12-fi ber that the number of transition splices able for inside (including riser and ple- counts, groups of loose buffer tubes and hardware connections is reduced. num) building applications. To facili- (typically 6- or 12-fi ber count) are bun- Indoor/outdoor optical fi ber cables are tate connector terminations, a 900μm dled together with a central strength similar in construction to outdoor opti- plastic buffer is applied over the opti- member and water-blocking tapes and cal fi ber cables except that the 250-μm cal fi ber core, cladding, and coating aramid yarns and then enclosed within optical fi ber cores may be either tight subassembly to create a tight buff- an overall ultraviolet and water-resis- buffered or enclosed within loose buf- ered fi ber. Up to 12 tight buffered fi bers tant black polyolefi n jacket. Corrugated fer tubes. Loose tube indoor/outdoor www.cablinginstall.com Cabling Installation & Maintenance JUNE 2010 13 C Previous Page | Contents | Zoom in | Zoom out | Refer a Friend A Installation 7Maintenance | Search Issue | Next Page BMaGS E F
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    C Previous Page| Contents | Zoom in | Zoom out | Refer a Friend A Installation 7Maintenance | Search Issue | Next Page BMaGS E F :: INSTALLATION :: optical fi ber cables have a smaller alignment sleeve. These components the reason why different optical fi ber overall diameter than tight buffered work in tandem to retain and prop- types, including 62.5-μm and 50-μm indoor/outdoor optical fi ber cables, erly align the optical fibers in the plug- multimode fi ber, should never be however tight buffered indoor/outdoor adapter-plug configuration. The inter- mixed in the same link or channel. cables are typically more convenient to nal connector ferrule is fabricated Optical fi ber breakout kits are used using a high-preci- to facilitate termination of loose-tube sion manufacturing optical fi bers used in indoor/out- Centralized optical fiber cabling using process to ensure door and outdoor applications. Once an interconnection that the optical fiber the water-blocking gel is thoroughly Telecommunications room (TR) is properly seated removed from the optical fi bers, the Work area (WA) and its position is breakout kit allows furcation tubes Horizontal cable 90 m (295 ft. max) tightly controlled. (typically 1.2mm to 3.0mm in diam- Work area equipment The high tolerances eter) to be installed over the 250-μm cord of the alignment optical fi bers, increasing the diameter Work area outlet sleeve ensure that and forming a short “jacket” so that Equipment the optical fibers the optical fi bers may be terminated room held in place by the to the desired optical fi ber connector. ferrule are aligned Selection of the correct furcation tube as perfectly as pos- ensures compatibility with all optical Equipment cord connected to sible. Although fi ber connectors. centralized equipment more expensive, Users can choose from many optical ceramic alignment fi ber connector options. Shown here is a typical schematic for centralized optical fi ber cabling using an interconnection; the centralized sleeves maintain Traditional optical fiber connec- system supports direct connections from the work area to slightly tighter tol- tors are represented by the SC and the centralized crossconnect via a pull-through cable and erances than metal ST connector styles. These two types the interconnect. or plastic alignment of optical fiber connectors were rec- terminate because they do not contain sleeves, are not as susceptible to per- ognized when optical fiber cabling water-blocking gel or require the use of formance variations due to temperature was described in the first published breakout kits (described later). fluctuations, and may be specified for TIA and ISO/IEC telecommunica- extremely low-loss applications. tions cabling standards. The ST con- Optical fiber interconnections Accurate plug-adapter-plug align- nector features a round metal coupling Unlike the plug-and-jack combina- ment minimizes light energy lost at the ring that twists and latches onto the tion that makes up a mated balanced optical fi ber interconnection and main- adapter and is only available as a sim- twisted-pair connection, an intercon- taining precision tolerances becomes plex assembly (two assemblies are nection is used to mate two tight-buff- especially critical as the optical fi ber required per link or channel). SC con- ered optical fibers. An optical fiber diameter decreases. For example, if nectors feature a quick push-pull latch- interconnection typically consists of two 62.5-μm optical fi bers are off-cen- ing mechanism and have an advantage two plugs (connectors) that are aligned ter by 4 μm in opposite directions, then in that they may be used in conjunc- in a nose-to-nose orientation and held 13% of the light energy escapes or is tion with a duplex clip that more eas- in place with an adapter (also called lost at the interconnection point. This ily supports the interconnection of the a coupler or bulkhead). The perfor- same misalignment in a 9-μm single- two optical fibers in a link or channel. mance of the optical fiber interconnec- mode fi ber would result in almost a SC optical fiber connectors are gener- tion is highly reliant upon the connec- total loss of light energy. The criti- ally recommended over ST optical fiber tor’s internal ferrule and the adapter’s cal nature of the core alignment is connectors for use in new installations 14 JUNE 2010 Cabling Installation & Maintenance www.cablinginstall.com C Previous Page | Contents | Zoom in | Zoom out | Refer a Friend A Installation 7Maintenance | Search Issue | Next Page BMaGS E F
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    C Previous Page| Contents | Zoom in | Zoom out | Refer a Friend A Installation 7Maintenance | Search Issue | Next Page BMaGS E F :: INSTALLATION :: Optical fiber cross-section The most common method. The main difference between SFF interface is the the MT-RJ and LC optical connector is Coating LC connector, with related to the performance of the inter- the MT-RJ having nal ferrule. The LC’s internal ferrule Core some limited legacy maintains sufficiently tight tolerances Diameter market presence. to fully support both singlemode and Core 9μm, 50μm, or 62.5μm Cladding Cladding 125μm Both interfaces fea- multimode applications, while the Coating 250μm ture duplex configu- MT-RJ connector is recommended for rations and a small use in legacy applications only. Field Singlemode fi ber cores are 9 μm in diameter, while pluggable form with termination of MT-RJ connectors is multimode fi ber cores may be 50 or 62.5 μm. Regardless of core size, the cladding is 125 μm and the coating 250 μm. external plug latch not recommended for singlemode that is approximately applications. due to their duplexing capability. Both the same size as the 8-position modu- Array optical fi ber connectors are ST and SC connectors may be field- lar plug used for copper connections. the newest recognized style of opti- terminated using an epoxy/polish or The LC connector may be field termi- cal fi ber interfaces and are intended to mechanical splice method. nated using an epoxy/polish method support extremely high-density envi- Small form factor (SFF) refers to a or mechanical splice method. The ronments as well as emerging tech- family of optical fi ber interfaces that MT-RJ connector is field terminated nologies such as 40GBase-SR4 and support double the connector density using a traditional no-epoxy/no-pol- 100GBase-SR10 that will require more of traditional optical fi ber connectors. ish mechanical splice termination than two optical fi bers per link or _______________ www.cablinginstall.com Cabling Installation & Maintenance JUNE 2010 15 C Previous Page | Contents | Zoom in | Zoom out | Refer a Friend A Installation 7Maintenance | Search Issue | Next Page BMaGS E F
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    C Previous Page| Contents | Zoom in | Zoom out | Refer a Friend A Installation 7Maintenance | Search Issue | Next Page BMaGS E F :: INSTALLATION :: channel. There are typically 12 or 24 skill-level requirements are higher, benefits to this approach are the assur- fibers in an array connector, although which may increase the project instal- ance of low-loss performance at the one array connector may support lation costs. No-epoxy/no-polish and interconnection and the elimination of as many as 144 fibers. A multi-fiber certain mechanical-splice-style termi- the need for endface inspections and push on (MPO) style interface is the nation methods require less installation possible connector reterminations. most basic array interface. MTP opti- skill than the epoxy/polish method, Trunking cable assemblies provide cal fiber connectors are intermateable however the connectors used in con- an efficient alternative to field-termi- with MPO connectors; however they junction with mechanical termination nated components or splice connec- are engineered to deliver improved methods are more expensive and the tions and allow up to 75% faster field mechanical and optical performance performance (especially using the no- deployment times. Trunking cable and are recommended for deployment assemblies are custom in new installations. MPO/MTP con- Sample optical fiber cable constructions factory preterminated nectors cannot be field terminated. Jacket and tested lengths of Array or “plug-and-play” modules are Central strength member optical fi ber cable termi- self-contained and typically support Rip cord nated on both ends with the interconnection of two, 12-fiber Color coded tight-buffered SC, ST, LC, MT-RJ, or fibers and jackets MPO/MTP interfaces with 24 LC con- MPO/MTP optical fi ber Aramid yarns nections or one 12-fiber MPO/MTP Tight-buffered connectors that are sim- interface with 12 SC or LC connections. Jacket ply pulled and plugged Water-blocking swellable in. When deploying tape Optical fiber cabling deployment trunking cable assem- Gel-filled tubes The most common optical fi ber cabling blies, cable-length Water-blocking aramid yarn deployment approach is to field termi- Central strength member specification is criti- nate the optical fi ber connectors to the Rip cord cal and precise plan- optical fi ber cable using the appropri- Aramid yarns ning is required up front. ate epoxy/polish or no-epoxy/no-pol- Loose-tube Color-coded fibers and tubes Trunking cable assem- ish mechanical termination method. blies that have an MPO/ However, the new MPO/MTP plug- The environment in which the fi ber cable will be MTP connector on one and-play modules and MPO/MTP array used, e.g. indoor or outdoor, will determine the cable’s or both ends are com- construction and the treatment of the fi bers within connectors are not supported by field monly referred to as that cable. termination and there are consider- “plug-and-play” cable ations, such as installer expertise and epoxy/no-polish method) may be lower assemblies. MPO/MTP plug-and-play the IT construction/upgrade schedule, and more variable. cable assemblies have the smallest that may favor the use of factory-termi- Optical fiber pigtails feature a fac- connector profi le and, therefore, have nated pigtails or trunking assemblies tory preterminated and tested SC, the smallest pathway, cabinet, and over field termination methods. ST, LC or MT-RJ optical fi ber connec- rack-space requirements of all trunk- The pros and cons of these termina- tor and a 1-meter stub of 62.5/125-μm ing cable assembly options. tion methods are described here. multimode, 50/125-μm multimode, or Always maintain the fi bers’ polarity Field termination supports the low- singlemode optical fi ber. The stub end to ensure the transmit fi ber is matched est raw material cost for SC, ST, LC, of the pigtail is then fusion-spliced to to the receive port on each end of the and MT-RJ optical fiber cabling sys- the optical fi ber. Fusion splicing pro- link or channel. tems. However, the time needed for vides a consistent, nearly loss-free ter- field termination is the longest of the mination and can be fast with proper VALERIE MAGUIRE is global sales three deployment options and installer technicians and equipment. The main engineer with Siemon (siemon.com). ________ 16 JUNE 2010 Cabling Installation & Maintenance www.cablinginstall.com C Previous Page | Contents | Zoom in | Zoom out | Refer a Friend A Installation 7Maintenance | Search Issue | Next Page BMaGS E F
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    C Previous Page| Contents | Zoom in | Zoom out | Refer a Friend A Installation 7Maintenance | Search Issue | Next Page BMaGS E F EMT BUSHINGS THE LOOP L OW- C O S T H A N G E R ™ THE BEST in CABLE PROTECTION f o r C O M M U N I C AT I O N S C A B L E 5" • Fast & easy 2" 2.5" TL50 Flexible and press-on TL20 TL25 non-metallic, installation The LOOP holds • Holds tight as ▼ a 2" to 5" cables are pulled diameter bundle EMT400 of CAT5 or • Protects cable Also for rigid, fiber optic cable from abrasion IMC and PVC without sagging, rigid conduit bending or damaging • Less expensive TL50 the cable! alternative to costly for a fittings when used The 2.5" TL25 holds 5" diameter just for wire Listed for Air Handling bundle the same amount of Spaces cable as a J-hook at In a variety of sizes 1/2 the COST! for 1/2" to 4" EMT, rigid, PVC © 2001-2006 Arlington Industries, Inc. Listed for Air Handling Spaces Patented. Arlington 800/233-4717 • www.arlnew.com/emt Arlington 800/233-4717 • www.aifittings.com C Previous Page | Contents | Zoom in | Zoom out | Refer a Friend A Installation 7Maintenance | Search Issue | Next Page BMaGS E F
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    C Previous Page| Contents | Zoom in | Zoom out | Refer a Friend A Installation 7Maintenance | Search Issue | Next Page BMaGS E F Keep sensitive data under lock and key. Introducing the smartest keyed LC system on the market. Prevent unauthorized and inadvertent changes in sensitive applications such as data centers, telecommunications rooms, and workstation areas. Leviton’s new Secure Keyed LC Fiber System creates an ideal lock-in system with patch cords, trunks, and harnesses that can only be removed with a matching color-keyed extraction tool. The U.S.-made, patent-pending system works with standard LC duplex or quad adapters, allowing you to easily retrofit your network - without having to rebuild it. For more information, contact Leviton Inside Sales at 800.722.2082 or online at leviton.com/securelc. THE FUTURE IS ON © 2010 Leviton Manufacturing Co., Inc. All rights reserved. C Previous Page | Contents | Zoom in | Zoom out | Refer a Friend A Installation 7Maintenance | Search Issue | Next Page BMaGS E F
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    C Previous Page| Contents | Zoom in | Zoom out | Refer a Friend A Installation 7Maintenance | Search Issue | Next Page BMaGS E F :: TECHNOLOGY :: Codes, standards and technologies driving green building development Performance, Green Buildings Except Low-Rise Residential Buildings. A jointly developed building code aims to increase Describing the standard as “an alter- energy efficiency in newly constructed facilities. nate path of compliance,” USGBC says it “is a set of technically rigorous BY PATRICK McLAUGHLIN requirements, which like the IGCC, covers criteria including water use effi- Earlier this year a group of organiza- USGBC explained that ICC and ciency, indoor environmental qual- tions from various construction-indus- ASHRAE have collaborated for ity, energy efficiency, materials and try sectors announced the culmina- decades to develop codes and stan- resource use, and the building’s impact tion of their collaborative effort in the dards for the design, construction, on its site and its community. Standard form of a model building code aimed operations and maintenance of resi- at advancing green building prac- dential and commercial buildings tices in the United States. Dubbed in the U.S. as well as internation- the International Green Construction ally. In coordination with the efforts Code (IGCC), the specification rep- of those two bodies, the USGBC has resents “the merger of two national led a green-building movement cen- efforts to develop adoptable and tered on its Leadership in Energy and enforceable green building codes,” Environmental Design (LEED) Green the USGBC stated when announcing Building rating, which was launched it in March. “The IGCC provides the 10 years ago. building industry with language that “Leveraging ICC’s unrivaled deliv- both broadens and strengthens build- ery infrastructure to reach all 50 states ing codes in a way that will accelerate and more than 22,000 local jurisdic- the construction of high performance tions and ASHRAE, USGBC and IES’s green buildings across the U.S.” technical strengths, this partner- It resulted from efforts put in by ship will accelerate the proliferation of the International Code Council (ICC; green building codes and standards “Organizations working collaboratively www.iccsafe.org); the American developed jointly by ICC, ASHRAE will advance green buildings nationwide in a way that was never Society of Heating, Refrigeration and and USGBC and IES,” the USGBC fur- before possible.” –Rick Fedrizzi, USGBC Air Conditioning Engineers (ASHRAE; ther stated. president and CEO. www.ashrae.org); the U.S. Green The organization then specifi- Building Council (USGBC; www. ____ cally pointed out the significance of 189.1 was written by experts represent- usgbc.org); _______ and the Illuminating a specific standard within the IGCC: ing all areas of the building industry Engineering Society of North America ANSI/ASHRAE/USGBC/IES Standard who contributed tens of thousands of (IES; www.iesna.org). 189.1 Standard for the Design of High man hours. Developed in a little over www.cablinginstall.com Cabling Installation & Maintenance JUNE 2010 19 C Previous Page | Contents | Zoom in | Zoom out | Refer a Friend A Installation 7Maintenance | Search Issue | Next Page BMaGS E F
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    C Previous Page| Contents | Zoom in | Zoom out | Refer a Friend A Installation 7Maintenance | Search Issue | Next Page BMaGS E F :: TECHNOLOGY :: three years, the standard underwent the wrong reasons since the mortgage construction of the facility’s structured four public reviews in which some meltdown that began in 2008. But the cabling system played little or no role 2,500 comments were received.” organization gained a favorable head- in its earning LEED certification. Five Executives from the organiza- line recently as it reached a milestone years ago cabling systems may not tions that collaborated on the IGCC related to the USGBC’s LEED pro- have appeared at all on the USGBC’s offered comments on the importance gram. Five years ago Fannie Mae’s proverbial radar screen. More recently of the groups’ collective work. ICC 247,000-square-foot data center was however, the group has begun to pay chief executive officer Richard Weiland the fi rst to earn LEED certification. more attention to a cabling system’s said, “The IGCC provides a vehicle for The organization recently announced role in the total facility’s sustainability. jurisdictions to regulate green for the that in the five years since earning the Last November the USGBC issued design and performance of new and designation, the facility has realized what it calls LEED Pilot Credit 2. renovated buildings in a manner that $1.7 million in energy savings, which Organizations that want to earn LEED is integrated with existing codes as an has resulted in a 35% cost reduction in certification must accumulate enough overlay, allowing all new buildings to that time. credits to qualify. The USGBC uses reap the rewards of improved design “When it was decided that Fannie pilot credits to test and refi ne its cred- and construction practices.” Mae’s data center should be con- iting process. The pilot credit issued ASHRAE president Gordon Holness structed to meet LEED requirements, in November is the fi rst to mention a said combining the expertise of his there was a host of challenges for the building’s wiring and cable jacketing; organization with that of the ICC “will architects and engineers because there it specifically mentions electrical cable accelerate our transformation to more was no previous model to follow,” said and wire jacketing. Its official name is sustainable building practices.” Fannie Mae’s executive vice president Pilot Credit 2: PBT Source Reduction: USGBC’s president and CEO Rick of operations and technology Edward Dioxins and Halogenated Organic Fedrizzi said the council has “long Watson. “We’re pleased that the energy- Compounds. “PBT” stands for persis- recognized the need to reach beyond saving features that earned the presti- tent bioaccumulative toxic chemicals. the market leaders served by LEED gious LEED certification have helped The credit’s stated intent is to reduce to accomplish” its mission of market Fannie Mae be more environmentally the release of PBTs associated with the transformation. “Broadening the scope responsible and cut costs as well.” life cycle of building materials. While of the codes and establishing a higher According to Fannie Mae, among the credit mentions electrical cable floor allows us to continue to raise the energy-saving innovations built exclusively, USGBC communications the ceiling, a critical factor in how the into the data center are an irrigation manager Ashley Katz explained, “The building industry is working to miti- design that uses waste water from the opportunity to use an alternative cable gate climate change. We are thrilled cooling plant and captured rain water, to achieve this credit would extend to to see this set of complementary green coupled with landscaping that features communications cable, but the credit building codes and standards; our drought-tolerant plants. The facil- language intentionally doesn’t seek organizations working collaboratively ity preserves nearly 13,000 gallons of to detail one type of cable and its use will advance green buildings nation- municipal water daily and has saved from another.” wide in a way that was never before more than 23 million gallons over five In order to gain the credit, a facil- possible.” years, it adds. While the data center ity must use materials without haloge- was being built, regionally manufac- nated organic compounds for at least A million-plus in savings tured materials were used and 80% of 75%, by cost, of the materials total in The Federal National Mortgage construction waste was recycled. a minimum of three out of four groups. Association, commonly known as In addition to building-installed cable Fannie Mae (FNMA; www.fannie- _________ Cable and LEED credits and wire jacketing, the other groups ______ has been in the news for all mae.com) As has historically been the case, the are exterior components; interior 20 JUNE 2010 Cabling Installation & Maintenance www.cablinginstall.com C Previous Page | Contents | Zoom in | Zoom out | Refer a Friend A Installation 7Maintenance | Search Issue | Next Page BMaGS E F
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    C Previous Page| Contents | Zoom in | Zoom out | Refer a Friend A Installation 7Maintenance | Search Issue | Next Page BMaGS E F :: TECHNOLOGY :: fi nishes; and piping, conduit and elec- credit issue as an opportunity to capi- and can speak to the symbiosis trical boxes. talize on the halogen-free design of the between intelligent buildings and Polyvinyl chloride (PVC) and fluo- product line it calls 17 Free—referring energy efficiency. rinated ethylene propylene (FEP) are to Group 17 of the Periodic Table of A recent market study commis- two of the halogenated organic com- Elements, which includes halogens. sioned by CABA and conducted pounds covered in the credit. Both are by Building Services Research and used in high quantities to manufacture Building intelligence Information Association (BSRIA; communications cable; in the case of Over the past half-decade many data www.bsria.co.uk) found that energy plenum cable FEP is used, while PVC center developers have embraced conservation is the most important is used in cables of all ratings includ- LEED and incorporated its credit sys- driver for growth in the intelligent and ing plenum, riser and general. As such, tem into their construction processes. integrated building technology mar- the communications cables typically And while some data center facili- ketplace. The research also found that used in buildings today will not help a ties have been noted for their LEED advanced technologies are taking building owner gain this pilot credit. certifications, the commercial build- on a wider role in integrating build- Nearly coinciding with the USGBC ing space has seen a growing corre- ing services such as lighting controls, issuing this pilot credit, General Cable lation between energy efficiency and fi re detection and alarm and physical (www.generalcable.com) introduced a building intelligence. The Continental security systems. set of halogen-free riser-rated cables Automated Buildings Association it had been developing for a number (CABA; www.caba.org) is an organiza- PATRICK MCLAUGHLIN is our chief of years. General saw the LEED pilot tion focused on intelligent buildings, editor. __________________ C Previous Page | Contents | Zoom in | Zoom out | Refer a Friend A Installation 7Maintenance | Search Issue | Next Page BMaGS E F
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    C Previous Page| Contents | Zoom in | Zoom out | Refer a Friend A Installation 7Maintenance | Search Issue | Next Page BMaGS E F Utility Products Conference & Exposition Be in the spotlight February 1 - 3, 2011 | San Diego, Calif. San Diego Convention Center w w w. u t i l i t y p r o d u c t s e x p o . c o m The Utility Products Conference & Exposition brings the pages of Utility Products magazine to life and brings together buyers and sellers of power, telecom, CATV and water equipment, providing them an opportunity to learn firsthand about their industries’ latest products. Owned & Produced by: Flagship Media Sponsor: Supporting Publications: Host Utility: C Previous Page | Contents | Zoom in | Zoom out | Refer a Friend A Installation 7Maintenance | Search Issue | Next Page BMaGS E F
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    C Previous Page| Contents | Zoom in | Zoom out | Refer a Friend A Installation 7Maintenance | Search Issue | Next Page BMaGS E F :: DATA CENTER :: EPA tackling energy efficiency in storage equipment the process, followed by a stakeholder meeting at which the draft was dis- Agency issues first draft of Energy Star specification cussed. Official comments on the first one year after announcing the program. draft were due to the EPA by May 21. Fanara pointed specifically to the BY PATRICK McLAUGHLIN efficiency of storage power supply units (PSUs) as an area of continued Add storage equipment to the list Development timeline study for this specification. He said, of data center technologies that will To that end, the process the EPA is “With the understanding that storage soon be part of the United States taking to establish the rating pro- PSUs are often installed in redundant Environmental Protection Agency’s gram for data center storage is essen- configurations, EPA intends to focus (EPA) Energy Star program (www. ____ tially the same as it has taken for the its efforts on encouraging: 1) the use energystar.gov). In April the EPA __________ data center facilities and server pro- of PSUs that are most efficient at low issued a fi rst draft of the Energy Star grams. It announced the storage pro- loads (<40%); 2) right-sizing of PSUs to Program Requirements for Data Center gram in April 2009; at that time it application requirements; and 3) novel Storage. As we previously reported, the stated that after market review and approaches to achieve overall system agency has also established an Energy discussions with product manufac- efficiencies.” Star program for computer servers, is turers, industry associations and According to the Storage about to officially launch a program for other parties, “EPA concluded that IT Networking Industry Association data center facilities, and is in the early purchasers would benefit from access (SNIA; www.snia.org) a power sup- stages of developing a program for to standardized information about the ply unit (or simply power supply) is uninterruptible power supplies (UPSs). energy performance of storage equip- “a component which converts an AC On April 9 the EPA sent to all inter- ment made available through the or DC voltage input to one or more ested stakeholders Draft 1 Version 1.0 Energy Star program.” DC voltage outputs for the purpose of the storage document. In an accom- In June 2009 a framework document of powering a system or subsystem. panying letter, Andrew Fanara of the was established and the next month at Power supplies may be redundant and agency’s climate protection partner- a stakeholder meeting that document’s hot swappable.” It goes on to say that, ships division and Energy Star program contents were discussed. Over the fol- “In storage subsystems, power distri- manager acknowledged “there are lowing months the EPA held a test- bution units, power supplies, cooling many aspects of Draft 1 that are still ing workshop for storage equipment, devices and controllers are often con- to be determined based on the results established a data-collection procedure figured to be redundant.” of ongoing analysis,” and that Draft 1 and held a stakeholder information ses- represents the EPA’s “latest thinking sion coinciding with the Green Grid Much work to be done based on stakeholder comments on the Technical Forum in February 2010. Draft 1.0 of the Energy Star specifica- specification framework and subse- Issuing the first draft of the program’s tion includes no figures at all for PSU quent meetings with industry.” requirements was the next step in power factor requirements. The draft www.cablinginstall.com Cabling Installation & Maintenance JUNE 2010 23 C Previous Page | Contents | Zoom in | Zoom out | Refer a Friend A Installation 7Maintenance | Search Issue | Next Page BMaGS E F
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    C Previous Page| Contents | Zoom in | Zoom out | Refer a Friend A Installation 7Maintenance | Search Issue | Next Page BMaGS E F :: DATA CENTER :: includes the following note. “EPA will familiarity with the NPL concept in urges further research or pilot pro- not be implementing Net Power Loss both manufacturer and end user com- grams on NPL to evaluate benefits of (NPL) requirements in the Version munities. EPA continues to believe the metric to end users.” 1.0 specification. During the com- that power supply requirements The SNIA has been actively puter server specification develop- should show the impact of power sup- involved in each step of the process. ment process, stakeholders expressed ply sizing and sourcing practices, and The association formed its Green broad concern with the approach, intends to address this in future ver- Storage Initiative (GSI) in 2007, so it both in terms of testing burden and sions of the specification. EPA also has been leading storage energy-effi- ciency efforts for years. The group recently stated, “The SNIA has sub- mitted 31 data sets to the EPA for their data collection project and contin- ues to work closely with the EPA to ensure efforts, initiatives and industry resources are complementary for users. Several member companies use the SNIA as a way to anonymously submit data to the EPA. The SNIA has also shared test data with the EPA for vali- dating power supply efficiency mea- surement methods.” While the EPA may have officially issued an initial draft of this speci- fication, it realizes it has significant research and effort ahead of it before it will produce a fi nished product. PSUs represent just one of several prod- uct and technology types the EPA must sort out before it can realistically assign efficiency metrics. Fanara said, “A discussion of storage system soft- ware as a contributor to overall system energy is included in … the document. EPA recognizes the energy efficiency potential of software features such as data de-duplication, data compression, _______________ delta snapshots and thin provisioning.” The agency had not even fi nished Version 1.0 of the specification for com- ________ puter servers before it began work on Version 2.0. It may take a similar approach with this storage spec. Patrick McLaughlin is our chief editor. 24 JUNE 2010 Cabling Installation & Maintenance www.cablinginstall.com C Previous Page | Contents | Zoom in | Zoom out | Refer a Friend A Installation 7Maintenance | Search Issue | Next Page BMaGS E F
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    C Previous Page| Contents | Zoom in | Zoom out | Refer a Friend A Installation 7Maintenance | Search Issue | Next Page BMaGS EF :: EDITOR’S PICKS :: C OMPILED BY PATRICK McL AUGHLIN Technologies and the paper’s author, comments, “Our goal Terminate RJ-45s with one squeeze with this paper is to share insights from our more than 25 ICC’s (www.icc.com) JackEasy is described as an all-in- years of experience designing, building and managing data one tool that seats and terminates an 8-position 8-contact centers and critical facilities for some of the biggest names RJ-45-style connector, and simultaneously cuts off excess in commercial enterprises and government agencies. The wires, with a single squeeze. It is made with a 16-gauge TCO approach we recommend will prepare data center steel frame and has an ergonomically designed handle. leaders to confront various problems that arise during the JackEasy includes two blades to terminate ICC’s easy (EZ) planning process and position themselves for success.” and slim-body (HD) style jacks, the company says. While Hagan was the paper’s primary author, other contributors included Lee’s director of technical engineer- ing John Lusky; manager of mechanical engineering Tuan Hoang, P.E.; and mechanical project engineer Scott Walsh, P.E., LEED A.P. “The data center market outlook shows significant growth in 2010 and 2011,” Hagan adds. “We stand ready to support both commercial and public-sector organizations in developing the most time- and cost-efficient plans to build sustainable data centers that will meet both uptime requirements and future business goals.” Demarc extensions lack guidance of standards The white paper entitled “The Demarc Extension and its Critical Role in Enterprise Network Telecommunications The tool is also designed with a surface base, allowing Infrastructure” authored by Concert Technologies exposes it to rest on a table or floor for support during termination. the fact that the loss of standardization for this impor- The manufacturer says that by using this tool, installers tant piece of cabling has led to poor installation practices. save time because the one-squeeze termination is carried Addressing the information needs of telecommunications out by a balanced blade that will not damage connectors. agents and carriers, the paper arms these professionals with the knowledge to ensure the circuit’s complete oper- Pinpointing data center planning mistakes ability at the time of delivery. Data center facilities design, construction and man- The paper defi nes the demarc extension as follows: The agement fi rm Lee Technologies (www.leetechnologies. transmission path originating from the interface of the com) ___ recently released a white paper entitled “The Top access provider’s side of the telecommunications circuit 9 Mistakes in Data Center Planning: The Total Cost of demarcation point within a premises, and ending at the Ownership Approach to Building or Expanding Data termination point prior to the interface of the edge cus- Centers.” The company says the paper addresses the tomer premises equipment. This may include in-segment question, “Why do so many data center builds and expan- equipment, media converters and patch cords as required sions fail?” by pointing out the most common, and most to complete the circuit’s transmission path to the edge significant, mistakes organizations make when designing customer premises equipment. and building new data center space. The paper also exam- “This white paper sets industry standards and guid- ines an effective way to achieve success through the com- ance for the most important transmission path in commer- pany’s TCO approach, it says. cial buildings,” said Dennis Mazaris, developer of Demarc Mike Hagan, executive vice president at Lee Extension Nationwide (www.demarcextension.com) and www.cablinginstall.com Cabling Installation & Maintenance JUNE 2010 25 C Previous Page | Contents | Zoom in | Zoom out | Refer a Friend A Installation 7Maintenance | Search Issue | Next Page BMaGS EF
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    C Previous Page| Contents | Zoom in | Zoom out | Refer a Friend A Installation 7Maintenance | Search Issue | Next Page BMaGS E F :: EDITOR’S PICKS :: president of Concert Technologies implementation of ITS infrastructure. (www.concerttech.com). “Without BICSI releases RITP The RITP exam includes 150 standards and guidelines, the poten- credential details questions drawn from BICSI’s tial to install the demarc extension BICSI (www.bicsi.org) has released its Telecommunications Distribution incorrectly increases and can threaten Registered Information Technology Methods Manual. It is a closed-book business and affect productivity. This Professional (RITP) credential exam exam with multiple-choice and true/ issue is important for the telecom application. The RITP is similar to false questions. The organization rec- agent and the carrier to address in the Registered Communications ommends a minimum of 125 hours of order to increase customer satisfaction Distribution Designer (RCDD) creden- study in preparation for the exam. and ensure future business.” tial with the exception that there is no The fi rst RITP beta exam was held The paper also emphasizes the requirement for actual design expe- during BICSI’s Canadian Conference impact that this piece of cabling, the rience. The focus of the designation and Exhibition in May, with another demarc extension, has on businesses are those individuals who work in the scheduled during its European and buildings across the United States information transport systems (ITS) Conference and Exhibition this month. and internationally. It also highlights industry but do not design ITS sys- The fi rst official exam will be held at the following topics: importance of the tems, or have limited design experi- the 2010 BICSI Fall Conference and demarc extension to essential circuit ence, including instructors, educators, Exhibition in September. delivery and customer satisfaction; project managers and sales personnel. isolating circuit versus inside-wir- The RITP requires a minimum of Poster highlights 10 ing problems quickly; the correlation two years of industry-related experi- fiber-safety rules between the loss of standardization ence, including but not limited to mili- A free downloadable poster offered and poor installation practices; clarifi- tary experience, site or project man- by The Fiber Optic Association (FOA; cation regarding who is responsible for agement, or industry sales. Applicants www.thefoa.org) highlights important the installation; installer survey data also need either to have graduated safety rules for installers and tech- for demarc extensions; demarc exten- with an Associate of Science, Bachelor nicians handling fi ber-optic cabling. sion standards and resources. of Science, or Master of Science degree Derived from the safety section of in an approved technical field of the FOA’s online reference guide, the :: BULLETIN BOARDS study or have achieved two or poster lists 10 detailed safety mea- more approved industry certifica- sures to take when working with fi ber. tions. Applicants must also have “Safety in the lab or on the job site successfully passed BICSI’s ITS must be the number one concern of Design Fundamentals exam. everyone,” the FOA says in its online BICSI explains that the pri- guide. “Besides the usual safety issues mary difference between the for construction, generally covered RCDD and RITP written exams under OSHA rules, fi ber optics adds is the distribution of knowledge concerns for eye safety, chemicals, versus design-application ques- sparks from fusion splicing, disposal tions. The RITP exam is focused of fi ber shards and more. Before begin- on the knowledge content of the ning any installation, safety rules technology involved in the ITS should be posted on the classroom industry rather than the work- wall, lab wall or on the job site and ing application of the technol- reviewed with all on-site personnel.” _________ ogy required to produce design The poster enables network owners, documents for construction and crew foremen and other responsible 26 JUNE 2010 Cabling Installation & Maintenance www.cablinginstall.com C Previous Page | Contents | Zoom in | Zoom out | Refer a Friend A Installation 7Maintenance | Search Issue | Next Page BMaGS E F
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    C Previous Page| Contents | Zoom in | Zoom out | Refer a Friend A Installation 7Maintenance | Search Issue | Next Page BMaGS EF SHOWCASE :: Extend T1/E1 over: Ethernet IP/Ethernet Fiber Miles of Fiber Wire Up to Several Miles of 2-pair Wire www.textender.com 800-432-2638 Data Comm for Business, Inc. _____________ ~Global Solutions in Optical Precision~ Do you really want to trust your network’s reliability to the lowest bidder? Seikoh Giken’s MPO Platinum cabling products are uniquely designed and engineered for all multi-channel broadband and high density data networks. Contact us today to find out more about how our full line of TechMate products can improve your network’s performance and integrity. Your customers will be glad you did. ____________ Tel: 770-279-6602 ● www.SeikohGiken.com ● Sales@sg-usa.com www.cablinginstall.com Cabling Installation & Maintenance JUNE 2010 27 C Previous Page | Contents | Zoom in | Zoom out | Refer a Friend A Installation 7Maintenance | Search Issue | Next Page BMaGS EF
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    C Previous Page| Contents | Zoom in | Zoom out | Refer a Friend A Installation 7Maintenance | Search Issue | Next Page BMaGS E F :: EDITOR’S PICKS :: personnel to keep fi ber safety rules in front of every fi ber architecture deployed within buildings. 802.11 systems technician. comprise distributed access points with connected anten- nas, rather than distributed antennas. And he further cau- Wireless expert addresses mixing Wi-Fi, DAS tions users not to give in to the temptation to include In a recent post on The Cabling Blog, Oberon Inc.’s (www. ____ private wireless LAN traffic over the DAS. “Generally oberonwireless.com) director of engineering and co- speaking,” he says, “When you use something in a way for founder Scott Thompson discussed dos and don’ts of which it was not intended, you don’t get the results you in-building distributed antenna systems (DAS). As we want.” He also points out that Cisco (www.cisco.com) has reported in our April issue, in-building DAS are growing issued a positioning statement indicating the company in popularity as wireless-device users demand connectiv- “does not certify, endorse, or provide RF support for Wi-Fi ity everywhere, including inside buildings constructed of deployments over any distributed antenna system.” materials that can interfere with the wireless antenna sys- “Although not specifically precluding the use of Cisco tems residing outdoors. wireless LAN products in a DAS, the statement recom- In his post, Thompson notes, “Clearly as people become mends special consideration of signal coverage, client-to- more dependent on mobile voice and data services, there access point density, client roaming, location-based ser- is a growing expectation for network connectivity every- vices, and the impact on the 802.11n antennas used by where, indoors and outdoors. DAS and related in-building 802.11n access points,” Thompson says in the blog. wireless systems provide a means to match this expecta- We have asked Thompson to turn his blog entry into a tion, even in the most challenging indoor environments.” full-scale article for publication in this magazine. He has He stresses, though, that a DAS is a different architec- agreed to do so and we look forward to bringing that article ture than the 802.11-based wireless local area network to you in an upcoming issue. INDEX OF ADVERTISERS Anixter, Inc. ....................................................................................3 ADVERTISING SALES OFFICES Arlington Industries, Inc. .............................................................. 17 MAIN OFFICE 98 Spit Brook Road LL-1, Nashua, NH 03062-5737 (603) 891-0123, fax: (603) 891-9245 Berk-Tek Inc. ................................................................................C4 BTR Netcom .................................................................................. 15 Group Publisher Susan Smith Austria, Eastern Europe, (603) 891-9447 Germany, Northern Switzerland Byte Brothers ...............................................................................24 susans@pennwell.com Holger Gerisch Associate Publisher/National Sales +49 8801-302430 Corning Cable Systems ................................................................C2 Manager Ed Murphy fax: +49 8801 913220 holgerg@pennwell.com Datacom for Business .................................................................. 27 (603) 891-9260; fax: (603) 891-9245 edm@pennwell.com India Rajan Sharma Diamond Ground Products, Inc. .................................................... 27 Reprints The YGS Group +91 11 686 1113 fax: +91 11 686 1112 FSR, Inc. ....................................................................................... 27 cim@theygsgroup.com rajan@interadsindia.com Director, List Sales Bob Dromgoole ICC Premise Wiring ........................................................................ 7 (603) 891-9128; bobd@pennwell.com Israel Dan Aronovic +972 9 899 5813 Leviton Network Solutions ........................................................... 18 INTERNATIONAL aronovic@actcom.co.il Live Wire & Cable .........................................................................26 U.K. & Scandinavia Tony Hill Asia Adonis Mak +44 0 1442-239547 +852 2 838 6298 Optical Cable Corporation ..............................................................9 tonyh@pennwell.com fax: +852 2 838 2766 adonism@actintl.com.hk Seikoh Giken USA, Inc. ................................................................. 27 France, Netherlands, Belgium, Andora, Greece, Spain, Portugal, Japan Manami Konishi Senko Advanced Components Inc. .................................................4 Western Switzerland +81 3 5771 8886 Luis Matutano fax: +81 3 5771 8887 TVC Communications ...................................................................10 +33 1 39 66 16 87 manami.konishi@ex-press.jp fax: +33 1 39 23 84 18 Tyco Electronics Corporation ........................................................ 21 Taiwan Cindy Yang luism@pennwell.com +886 2 2396-5128 #246 fax: +886 2 8751 8861 The index of advertisers is published as a service, and the publisher does not assume any liability for errors or omissions. cindy@arco.com.tw 28 JUNE 2010 Cabling Installation & Maintenance www.cablinginstall.com C Previous Page | Contents | Zoom in | Zoom out | Refer a Friend A Installation 7Maintenance | Search Issue | Next Page BMaGS E F
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    C Previous Page| Contents | Zoom in | Zoom out | Refer a Friend A Installation 7Maintenance | Search Issue | Next Page BMaGS E F FIRESTOPPING Products, Technologies, and Systems MODERATED BY: Patrick McLaughlin, Chief Editor VIEW THIS WEBCAST TODAY WHO SHOULD ATTEND: OWNERS and MANAGERS of structured cabling systems that run on multiple floors of a building, and/or that penetrate a building‚ walls; CONTRACTORS who install riser or horizontal cabling systems, firestopping products, or cable trays; CONSULTANTS who specify cabling projects that should include the installation of firestopping systems. SPONSORED BY: This Webcast provides detailed information on two important firestop-related topics. PRESENTATION 1: Overview of UL 1479 This presentation details what the UL 1479 test measures, as well as the corresponding ratings a firestop system can achieve depending on its performance in these tests. The presentation also explains the letter-based ratings within UL 1479: the mandatory F and T ratings as well as the optional L and W ratings. PRESENTATION 2: The Evolution of Firestopping Technologies This presentation looks at the familiar set of tried-and-true firestopping devices and materials, and also discusses some of the latest, innovative firestop systems as well as the trends that led to their development. VIEW ALL CURRENT, FUTURE AND ARCHIVED EVENTS AT: www.cablinginstall.com C Previous Page | Contents | Zoom in | Zoom out | Refer a Friend A Installation 7Maintenance | Search Issue | Next Page BMaGS E F
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    C Previous Page| Contents | Zoom in | Zoom out | Refer a Friend A Installation 7Maintenance | Search Issue | Next Page BMaGS E F BECAUSE YOUR BUSINESS RUNS THROUGH US Verified performance. Beyond the standards. Beyond our specifications. Beyond your expectations. For nearly two decades, our LANmark™ UTP cables have been leaders in the cabling industry. LANmark-10G2, LANmark-2000, LANmark-1000, and LANmark-350™ continue to be four of the highest performing UTP cables manufactured in the United States today. Through the ETL LANmark Verification Program, Intertek now provides you with independent third-party verification that LANmark Category 5e, 6, and 6a cables will perform to our specifications, not just to the standard. So you can be sure that you receive every dB of performance that you specify. Who else other than Berk-Tek will verify and guarantee that? No matter which LANmark UTP product you choose, all offer guaranteed performance that exceed industry standards, providing headroom to support evolving applications… for many years to come. For more information on verified performance of Berk-Tek’s premium LANmark UTP products, call 1-800-BERK-TEK or visit www.berktek.com. Search Term: ETL VERIFIED LANmark-10G2 LANmark-1000 LANmark-2000 LANmark-350 www.berktek.com C Previous Page | Contents | Zoom in | Zoom out | Refer a Friend A Installation 7Maintenance | Search Issue | Next Page BMaGS E F