Industrial Data Communications 4th Edition

Appendix C - Media

In the text we look at the way data is represented (a set of patterns referred to as “1” or
“0”) generally in a set of these patterns called an octet or a byte (or sometimes a character
when referring to text), and we have looked at the abstraction of a model to see the functions
required to move these data representations from one end user to another. We will
now look at another of the fundamentals of communications, the medium over which we
transmit those data representations, the very bottom of the OSI Model, the media. This is the
location where the Physical layer attaches to the outside world, the conduit for information.

All things in data communications are related, and if they are all not correct you do not
communicate very well. Sometimes called pipes, the media is the main constraint on data
transfer speed. There are three types of media in general we will discuss, these are: the
copper types, fiber-optic types, and wireless types. Since this probably covers all media normally
used, that isn’t too restrictive. Of the copper types, three generally come to mind in
the LAN and industrial areas: the Unshielded Twisted Pair (UTP), the Shielded Twisted Pair
(STP), and coaxial cable.

UTP

Unshielded Twisted Pair is just as the name implies. It is two conductors twisted over each
other. In theory, by twisting the two, an induced field (such as spark noise or other electromagnetic
radiation) will be induced equally in both conductors, and since they are of
opposite polarity in relation to each other (the signal voltage is across the pairs, not across
one conductor and the 0 DC reference known as ground) they will cancel out. This, of
course, is dependent upon the number of turns per inch and the uniformity of the twist
symmetry. In other words, the larger number of turns per inch, and the more uniform the
turns, the higher data rate the cable can pass and the typically, the higher its cost. Normally
there is either two or four pair (4 or 8 conductors) surrounded by a sheath that keeps them
all together. They are color coded. That is one cable will be a solid color, its partner will be
(usually) white with a trace of the partners cable color, typically a stripe so it may be identified.
According to EIA TSB 36 (a cabling standard) UTP has 6 Category Levels, 1 through 6,
with 1 being the lowest performer and loosest standard to 6 which is the tightest standard
and passes the highest data rate.

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