AV Technology - November/December 2008 - (Page 58) avmo CABLE MANAGEMENT IN EQUIPMENT RACKS It’s always critical to properly plan and maintain cabling in and around equipment racks. 5 AREAS OF CABLE MANAGEMENT 1. Horizontal cabling runs from each workstation outlet to the telecommunication closet. 2. Backbone cabling runs up through the floors of the building (risers) or across a campus and provides the interconnection for equipment rooms and telecommunication closets. 3. Telecommunications rooms contain the connection equipment for workstations in the immediate area and a cross-connection to an equipment room. 4. Equipment rooms provide a termination point for backbone cabling that is connected to one or more telecommunication closets. The design aspects of the equipment room are specified in the EIA/TIA 569 standard. Equipment rooms usually house equipment of higher complexity than telecommunication closets. 5. Equipment racks in IDF closets or rooms house the individual pieces of electronic equipment. METHODS OF BRINGING CABLE INTO RACK SYSTEM ABOVE — Through Top of Rack Select rack enclosures with wide-open tops for large cable bundles. When adding a top option, select one that includes a removable panel for service convenience. BELOW — Through Bottom of Rack. Some enclosure bases feature an open design to accept large cable bundles from below. Enclosures with a unique “upformed base” provide interior room for cable management and coiling unused wire. BENEATH AND BETWEEN RACKS. Riser bases can provide enclosures with an additional 2 1/2 inches clearance off the floor and can be used for cabling below each enclosure or cabling from one to another when ganged. Laser knockouts on the ends of many riser bases simplify cable pass-through when they are ganged together. INSIDE THE RACK Segregation: Segregation of cables inside the rack is important — AC power cables or speaker cables should not be run parallel in close proximity to signal wires (within 2 inches), unless the wires are twisted. Speaker wires (in high-power situations) can create the same AC magnetic field as AC power cables, so the same care should be taken in keeping signal wires away from close parallel runs. Speaker and AC wires can be run in closer proximity, however. Bend radius for twisted-pair cables is standardized at 11⁄2 inches (3 inches diameter). This needs to be taken into consideration during the internal wiring layout of a rack. Coax cables should not be kinked, although they are more tolerant than high speed data cables. Bundling: Bundling of conductors is addressed in the 2005 National Electrical Code (NEC) in Article 310.15(B)(2): Where the number of current carrying conductors in a raceway or cable exceeds three, or where single conductor or multiconductor cables are stacked or bundled longer than 2 inches without maintaining spacing and are not installed in raceways, the allowable ampacity (current rating) of each conductor shall be reduced as shown in Table 310.15(B)(2)(a): Number of CurrentCarrying Conductors 4 to 6 7 to 9 10 to 20 21 to 30 31 to 40 41 and above Adjust Ampacity To 80% 70% 50% 45% 40% 35% The reason for the required derating is to compensate for the accumulated heating effects that may deteriorate the insulation over time. INDUSTRY REQUIREMENTS Different cables and signals have different requirements. The data market has high densities and is bend radius sensitive. Video broadcast has a large quantity of coax cables and/or high definition cables that are bend radius sensitive. Security installations often have DVRs (Digital Video Recorders) where camera cables do not run to a switcher. The DVR provides that function, which means many cables need to be dressed directly to the equipment. Audio, with its sensitive gain structure, needs special care to minimize grounding and RFI issues. By following standards and commonsense rules, today’s complicated rack integration can look good and work well thanks to proper cable management. Source: Middle Atlantic Products 58 | AVTECHNOLOGY | november | december 2008 www.avtechnologyonline.com http://www.avtechnologyonline.com
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of AV Technology - November/December 2008 AV Technology - November/December 2008 Contents Precedent Corporate: Finishing with Style Government: It’s Still About People Education: Surviving Budget Cuts Applying Metrics to AV ROI Selecting Room Scheduling Software Six Things You Need to Know About Webcasting The Way I See It: Becoming an Internet Native Casino Uses AV for Dramatic Impact Just What the Doctor Ordered The Loneliest Help Desk in Town Product Forum Product Spotlight Tech Horizons New Products Ad Index AV MO AV Technology - November/December 2008 AV Technology - November/December 2008 - AV Technology - November/December 2008 (Page Cover1) AV Technology - November/December 2008 - AV Technology - November/December 2008 (Page Cover2) AV Technology - November/December 2008 - AV Technology - November/December 2008 (Page 3) AV Technology - November/December 2008 - AV Technology - November/December 2008 (Page 4) AV Technology - November/December 2008 - Contents (Page 5) AV Technology - November/December 2008 - Contents (Page 6) AV Technology - November/December 2008 - Contents (Page 7) AV Technology - November/December 2008 - Contents (Page 8) AV Technology - November/December 2008 - Contents (Page 9) AV Technology - November/December 2008 - Precedent (Page 10) AV Technology - November/December 2008 - Precedent (Page 11) AV Technology - November/December 2008 - Precedent (Page 12) AV Technology - November/December 2008 - Precedent (Page 13) AV Technology - November/December 2008 - Precedent (Page 14) AV Technology - November/December 2008 - Precedent (Page 15) AV Technology - November/December 2008 - Corporate: Finishing with Style (Page 16) AV Technology - November/December 2008 - Corporate: Finishing with Style (Page 17) AV Technology - November/December 2008 - Government: It’s Still About People (Page 18) AV Technology - November/December 2008 - Government: It’s Still About People (Page 19) AV Technology - November/December 2008 - Education: Surviving Budget Cuts (Page 20) AV Technology - November/December 2008 - Education: Surviving Budget Cuts (Page 21) AV Technology - November/December 2008 - Applying Metrics to AV ROI (Page 22) AV Technology - November/December 2008 - Applying Metrics to AV ROI (Page 23) AV Technology - November/December 2008 - Applying Metrics to AV ROI (Page 24) AV Technology - November/December 2008 - Applying Metrics to AV ROI (Page 25) AV Technology - November/December 2008 - Selecting Room Scheduling Software (Page 26) AV Technology - November/December 2008 - Selecting Room Scheduling Software (Page 27) AV Technology - November/December 2008 - Selecting Room Scheduling Software (Page 28) AV Technology - November/December 2008 - Selecting Room Scheduling Software (Page 29) AV Technology - November/December 2008 - Selecting Room Scheduling Software (Page 30) AV Technology - November/December 2008 - Six Things You Need to Know About Webcasting (Page 31) AV Technology - November/December 2008 - Six Things You Need to Know About Webcasting (Page 32) AV Technology - November/December 2008 - Six Things You Need to Know About Webcasting (Page 33) AV Technology - November/December 2008 - Six Things You Need to Know About Webcasting (Page 34) AV Technology - November/December 2008 - The Way I See It: Becoming an Internet Native (Page 35) AV Technology - November/December 2008 - The Way I See It: Becoming an Internet Native (Page 36) AV Technology - November/December 2008 - The Way I See It: Becoming an Internet Native (Page 37) AV Technology - November/December 2008 - Casino Uses AV for Dramatic Impact (Page 38) AV Technology - November/December 2008 - Casino Uses AV for Dramatic Impact (Page 39) AV Technology - November/December 2008 - The Loneliest Help Desk in Town (Page 40) AV Technology - November/December 2008 - The Loneliest Help Desk in Town (Page 41) AV Technology - November/December 2008 - The Loneliest Help Desk in Town (Page 42) AV Technology - November/December 2008 - The Loneliest Help Desk in Town (Page 43) AV Technology - November/December 2008 - Product Forum (Page 44) AV Technology - November/December 2008 - Product Forum (Page 45) AV Technology - November/December 2008 - Product Spotlight (Page 46) AV Technology - November/December 2008 - Product Spotlight (Page 47) AV Technology - November/December 2008 - Tech Horizons (Page 48) AV Technology - November/December 2008 - Tech Horizons (Page 49) AV Technology - November/December 2008 - New Products (Page 50) AV Technology - November/December 2008 - New Products (Page 51) AV Technology - November/December 2008 - New Products (Page 52) AV Technology - November/December 2008 - New Products (Page 53) AV Technology - November/December 2008 - New Products (Page 54) AV Technology - November/December 2008 - New Products (Page 55) AV Technology - November/December 2008 - New Products (Page 56) AV Technology - November/December 2008 - Ad Index (Page 57) AV Technology - November/December 2008 - AV MO (Page 58) AV Technology - November/December 2008 - AV MO (Page Cover3) AV Technology - November/December 2008 - AV MO (Page Cover4)
For optimal viewing of this digital publication, please enable JavaScript and then refresh the page. If you would like to try to load the digital publication without using Flash Player detection, please click here.