Industrial Data Communications 4th Edition

Chapter 7 - Wide Area Networks: Various Networks

The two DDS digital signaling channels—a digital service unit (DSU) and its corresponding
channel service unit (CSU)—transmit up to 56 Kbps (actually a multiplexed DS0), offering
digital transmission without the need for modems. These two units perform the services
analogous to a modem on an analog line. The previous name for this service (as offered by
AT&T) was Digital Dataphone Service. DDS is a leased-line (not switched) service that offers
data rates from 2,400 to 56,000 bps.

Fractional T1

Fractional T1 is a line that consists of one or more DS0 channels. Multiplexers are required
to put the information on a T1 line. Various fractional T1 combinations provide different
amounts of bandwidth:

  DDS 1 DS0 64 Kbps
  H0 6 DS0 384 Kbps
  H11 24 DS0 1.536 Mbps (T1 without framing)
  H12 30 DS0 1.920 Mbps

Actually, most fractional T1 (FT1) runs at 384 Kbps (6 DS0), 512 Kbps (8 DS0), or 768 Kbps
(12 DS0).

Fiber Distributed Data Interface (FDDI)

The original high-speed data bus, fiber distributed data interface (FDDI) is a fiber-optic
token-passing ring. It may use single- or multimode fiber. Actually, FDDI consists of a dual
fiber ring (primary and secondary) where information may circulate in opposite directions.
More than one frame will be on the line at a time due to FDDI’s high speed (this is the same
method used with the 16 Mbps token ring). This high speed is the result of the Early Token
Release (ETR), in which the transceiver is usually receiving its own signal before it finishes
transmission and marks the poll bit as a token on the fly. There is always data on the line.

FDDI allows up to one thousand connections (not nodes). A node with both a primary and a
secondary ring connection will count as two connections. FDDI does allow a 100-kilometer
network span with up to 2 kilometers between any two nodes. (It can actually extend much
farther—up to twenty times farther—if single-mode rather than multi-mode cable is used.)

FDDI has been modified from its original packet-switching format to be able to handle (if
necessary) circuit switching for voice and video transmission. This is FDDI-II. FDDI requires
125 Megabaud media for 100 Mbps transmission because it uses the 4B/5B method of
encoding, where 4 bits are transmitted as 5 bits. This represents an efficiency of 80 percent.
(Conversely, 100 Mbps Ethernet requires a 200 Megabaud media. Two cycles of clock per
bit time make for a zero and one cycle of clock for a 1, which results in a 50 percent efficiency
of media capacity.) The encoding of 4 bit (Hex) groups by the five bits is such that for
data no combinations of 5-bit patterns will have more than three consecutive zeros.

Metropolitan Area Network (MAN)

The Metropolitan Area Network is described in IEEE 802.6 (there are other MANs, but this is
the only one we will describe). Installed in the United States usually in governmental centers
(Washington D.C.; Tallahassee, Florida; and Sacramento, California), MANs generally use
ATM and a methodology called Distributed Queue Dual Bus DQDB. They are currently operated
at 155 Mbps, with accommodation for SMDS with speeds up to 600 Mbps when
Switched Multi-Megabit Data Service (SMDS) is standardized. The typical industrial user will
probably not be concerned with a MAN, and if he or she were, it would be through a DSUlike
device and at the data rate of the LAN (or near it).

 

UNLIMITED FREE
ACCESS
TO THE WORLD'S BEST IDEAS

SUBMIT
Already a GlobalSpec user? Log in.

This is embarrasing...

An error occurred while processing the form. Please try again in a few minutes.

Customize Your GlobalSpec Experience

Category: Communications Software
Finish!
Privacy Policy

This is embarrasing...

An error occurred while processing the form. Please try again in a few minutes.