AV Technology - January 2009 - (Page 50) avmo THE CABLED PART OF WIRELESS lthough it may seem like an oxymoron, the “wired” side of wireless networks must be carefully planned and installed in order to take advantage of the faster 802.11n technology. 802.11n offers many advantages for the wireless portion of enterprise networks. Before those advantages can be realized, the wired infrastructure needs comprehensive evaluation. 802.11n Access Points might require new cabling, but some or all of the existing cable could suffice. There is only one way to know for sure: test it. WHY 802.11N? INCREASED SPEEDS. At 200 Mbps, 802.11n is about four times the speed of 802.11g wireless. If higher data rates are achieved, so much the better. BETTER COVERAGE. 802.11n Access Points offer greater range and promise to reduce the number and size of “deadzones.” This translates to fewer access points and simpler management. FLEXIBILITY AND COST. If users roam or change work areas frequently, then it is easiest to support them with a wireless LAN. Equally compelling is cost. The price A of copper has and tripled 2004. This is the cost of cable. doubled since early 2005 since early reflected in twisted-pair OPTIONS FOR 802.11N ACCESS POINT CABLING INSTALL NEW CAT 6 (OR BETTER) CABLE. Proper installation followed by certification to TIA Cat 6 link performance standards will remove any doubt in support for 802.11n Access Points. For some organizations, however, the cost of new wiring is prohibitive. TEST EXISTING CABLING. Proper testing may determine that a good deal of installed twisted-pair cabling links may be already suitable for 802.11n Access Points. A program to re-test installed twisted-pair can save a network owner significant money and raise the confidence in the deployment of 802.11n. RECOMMENDED TEST STEPS All 802.11n uplinks should be able to support 1 Gigabit Ethernet (1000BASE-T) traffic. CAT 5. The Category 5 cabling standard predates the IEEE 1000BASE-T standard, so Cat 5 was not defined to support 1 Gigabit Ethernet. But before retiring it and investing in new cabling, a certification test for compliance to the Cat 5e standard will indicate if 1 Gigabit support is possible. Many high-quality Cat 5 links will pass the certification test to the TIA/EIA-568-B Cat 5e performance level. If they do, you have assurance it is a usable uplink for an 802.11n Access Point. CAT 5E. The Category 5e cabling system was designed for 1 Gigabit Ethernet. Certifying an installed link to TIA/EIA-568-B The wired link between an Ethernet switch and the wireless access point can affect overall WLAN performance. Cat 5e performance is definitive proof that it is ready for 802.11n Access Points. CAT 6. Category 6 cable is more than sufficient to support 1 Gbps traffic if it was certified upon installation and no changes have been made. If there is any uncertainty about its status, it’s a good idea to recertify to TIA/EIA-568-B. Upgrading to 802.11n may encompass upgrading Ethernet switch ports or replacing the entire switch. If the twisted-pair cable and patch cords are already in place, the certification should be done as a channel test. That is to say, include the installed patch cords in the test configuration and use channel adaptors with the cable certification tool and select the channel test. If the patch cords are not in place, the test should be a permanent link test. [Source: Fluke Networks] www.avtechnologyonline.com 50 | AVTECHNOLOGY | january 2009 http://www.avtechnologyonline.com
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of AV Technology - January 2009 AV Technology - January 2009 Contents Precedent Corporate: Hunkering Down Government: The Great Unifier Education: Technological Self-Sufficiency Integrating Communications into Your Business Process DVI/HDMI Signals over Twisted-Pair Cable AV Helps Explain the Unexplainable AV Enhancements at the Coliseum Product Forum Tech Horizons Product Spotlight New Products Ad Index AV MO AV Technology - January 2009 AV Technology - January 2009 - AV Technology - January 2009 (Page Cover1) AV Technology - January 2009 - AV Technology - January 2009 (Page Cover2) AV Technology - January 2009 - Contents (Page 3) AV Technology - January 2009 - Contents (Page 4) AV Technology - January 2009 - Contents (Page 5) AV Technology - January 2009 - Contents (Page 6) AV Technology - January 2009 - Contents (Page 7) AV Technology - January 2009 - Precedent (Page 8) AV Technology - January 2009 - Precedent (Page 9) AV Technology - January 2009 - Precedent (Page 10) AV Technology - January 2009 - Precedent (Page 11) AV Technology - January 2009 - Precedent (Page 12) AV Technology - January 2009 - Precedent (Page 13) AV Technology - January 2009 - Precedent (Page 14) AV Technology - January 2009 - Precedent (Page 15) AV Technology - January 2009 - Corporate: Hunkering Down (Page 16) AV Technology - January 2009 - Corporate: Hunkering Down (Page 17) AV Technology - January 2009 - Government: The Great Unifier (Page 18) AV Technology - January 2009 - Government: The Great Unifier (Page 19) AV Technology - January 2009 - Education: Technological Self-Sufficiency (Page 20) AV Technology - January 2009 - Education: Technological Self-Sufficiency (Page 21) AV Technology - January 2009 - Integrating Communications into Your Business Process (Page 22) AV Technology - January 2009 - Integrating Communications into Your Business Process (Page 23) AV Technology - January 2009 - Integrating Communications into Your Business Process (Page 24) AV Technology - January 2009 - Integrating Communications into Your Business Process (Page 25) AV Technology - January 2009 - DVI/HDMI Signals over Twisted-Pair Cable (Page 26) AV Technology - January 2009 - DVI/HDMI Signals over Twisted-Pair Cable (Page 27) AV Technology - January 2009 - DVI/HDMI Signals over Twisted-Pair Cable (Page 28) AV Technology - January 2009 - DVI/HDMI Signals over Twisted-Pair Cable (Page 29) AV Technology - January 2009 - DVI/HDMI Signals over Twisted-Pair Cable (Page 30) AV Technology - January 2009 - DVI/HDMI Signals over Twisted-Pair Cable (Page 31) AV Technology - January 2009 - DVI/HDMI Signals over Twisted-Pair Cable (Page 32) AV Technology - January 2009 - DVI/HDMI Signals over Twisted-Pair Cable (Page 33) AV Technology - January 2009 - DVI/HDMI Signals over Twisted-Pair Cable (Page 34) AV Technology - January 2009 - DVI/HDMI Signals over Twisted-Pair Cable (Page 35) AV Technology - January 2009 - AV Helps Explain the Unexplainable (Page 36) AV Technology - January 2009 - AV Helps Explain the Unexplainable (Page 37) AV Technology - January 2009 - AV Enhancements at the Coliseum (Page 38) AV Technology - January 2009 - AV Enhancements at the Coliseum (Page 39) AV Technology - January 2009 - Product Forum (Page 40) AV Technology - January 2009 - Tech Horizons (Page 41) AV Technology - January 2009 - Product Spotlight (Page 42) AV Technology - January 2009 - Product Spotlight (Page 43) AV Technology - January 2009 - New Products (Page 44) AV Technology - January 2009 - New Products (Page 45) AV Technology - January 2009 - New Products (Page 46) AV Technology - January 2009 - New Products (Page 47) AV Technology - January 2009 - New Products (Page 48) AV Technology - January 2009 - Ad Index (Page 49) AV Technology - January 2009 - AV MO (Page 50) AV Technology - January 2009 - AV MO (Page Cover3) AV Technology - January 2009 - AV MO (Page Cover4)
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