ISO/IEC 11801

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International standard ISO/IEC 11801 specifies general-purpose telecommunication cabling systems (structured cabling) that are suitable for a wide range of applications (analog and ISDN telephony, various data communication standards, building control systems, factory automation). It covers both balanced copper cabling and optical fibre cabling. The standard was designed for use within commercial premises that may consist of either a single building or of multiple buildings on a campus. It was optimized for premises that span up to 3 km, up to 1 km² office space, with between 50 and 50,000 persons, but can also be applied for installations outside this range. A corresponding standard for small-office/home-office (SOHO) environments is ISO/IEC 15018, which covers also 1.2 GHz links for cable and satellite TV applications.

[edit] Link and channel classes

The standard defines several classes of twisted-pair copper interconnects, which differ in the maximum frequency for which a certain channel performance is required:

  • Class A: up to 100 kHz
  • Class B: up to 1 MHz
  • Class C: up to 16 MHz
  • Class D: up to 100 MHz
  • Class E: up to 250 MHz
  • Class F: up to 600 MHz

The standard link impedance is 100 Ω. (The older 1995 version of the standard also permitted 120 Ω and 150 Ω in classes A−C, but this was removed from the 2002 edition.)

[edit] References

  • International standard ISO/IEC 11801: Information technology — Generic cabling for customer premises.
  • European standard EN 50173: Information technology — Generic cabling systems. 1995.
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