Anixter Standards Reference Guide

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The document discusses various telecommunications, networking and electrical standards and provides an overview of Anixter's services and capabilities.

The main standards discussed include ANSI/TIA-568-C.0, ANSI/TIA-568-C.1, ANSI/TIA-568-C.2, ANSI/TIA-568-C.3, ANSI/TIA-569-D, ANSI/TIA-606-B, ANSI/TIA-607-C, ANSI/TIA-862-A, ANSI/TIA-942-A, ANSI/TIA-1005-A, ANSI/TIA-1179, ISO/IEC 11801, IEEE 802.3af, IEEE 802.3at, IEEE 802.3an, IEEE 802.3ba and IEEE 802.11.

Anixter provides services such as supply chain management, technical expertise, global distribution, and technology advisory services to help customers build, connect, power and protect critical infrastructure and assets.

ANSI/TIA-568-C.

0
ANSI/TIA-568-C.1
ANSI/TIA-568-C.2
ANSI/TIA-568-C.3
ANSI/TIA-569-D
ANSI/TIA-606-B
ANSI/TIA-607-C
ANSI/TIA-862-A
ANSI/TIA-942-A
ANSI/TIA-1005-A
ANSI/TIA-1179
ISO/IEC 11801
IEEE 802.3af
IEEE 802.3at
IEEE 802.3an
IEEE 802.3ba
IEEE 802.11

STANDARDS
REFERENCE
GUIDE
1.800.ANIXTER | anixter.com
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At Anixter, we help build, connect, power and protect valuable
assets and critical infrastructures. From enterprise networks
to industrial support and supplies to video surveillance
applications and electric power transmission and distribution,
we offer full-line solutions—and intelligence—that create
reliable, resilient systems that can sustain your business
and community.
Through our unmatched global distribution network, supply
chain management expertise and technical know-how, we
drive efficiency and effectiveness to benefit your bottom line.

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Purpose of Industry Standards
Industry standards guide the installation, maintenance and testing
of products and technologies for a variety of security, industrial and
enterprise networks. Today’s standards are designed to provide critical
uptime, support mission-critical applications, create operational
efficiencies and increase productivity. They also allow for open-
architecture systems that promote multimanufacturer environments
that enable organizations to freely choose the solutions that best
fit their needs. Standards provide recommended best practices to
support a variety of existing and future systems to extend
the life span of the infrastructure.
Anixter strives to be the industry expert within the data center,
security, in-building wireless, industrial communication, wire and
cable and utility power industries. Anixter is active within a number
of industry associations and participates in committees and
organizations around the world and continues to educate customers
on updates, announcements and meaningful benefits that are
grounded in those standards and best practices.
SCOPE OF THIS GUIDE
This document is meant as a reference that highlights the key points
of the ANSI/TIA-568-C.0, ANSI/TIA-568-C.1, ANSI/TIA-568-C.2,
ANSI/TIA-568-C.3, ANSI/TIA-569-D, ANSI/TIA-606-B, ANSI/TIA-607-C,
ANSI/TIA-862-A, ANSI/TIA-942-A, ANSI/TIA-1005-A, ANSI/TIA-1179,
ISO/IEC 11801, ISO/IEC 11801, IEEE 802.3af, IEEE 802.3at,
IEEE 802.3an, IEEE 802.3ba and IEEE 802.11 standards.
It is not intended as a substitute for the original documents. For
further information on any topic in the guide, refer to the actual
standard. See the section called “Obtaining Standards Documents”
for instructions on how to order a copy of the standard itself.
Abbreviation References
ANSI American National Standards Institute
ASTM American Society for Testing and Materials
CSA Canadian Standards Association
IEC International Electrotechnical Commission
IEEE Institute of Electrical & Electronics Engineers
ISO International Organization for Standardization
NEC National Electrical Code® (NEC®)
NEMA National Electrical Manufacturers Association
NFPA National Fire Protection Association
TIA Telecommunications Industry Association
ANIXTER STANDARDS REFERENCE GUIDE |1
THE ANIXTER INFRASTRUCTURE SOLUTIONS LABSM
Anixter’s Infrastructure Solutions Lab is at the center of a worldwide
collection of technical facilities that research, test and evaluate
products to help customers meet their application challenges.
This world-class research and educational center encompasses
more than 4,000 square feet where Anixter’s technical experts
push the boundaries of technology, products and solutions.
Our mission for The Lab is simple – educate,
demonstrate and evaluate.
• Educate customers on the latest industry
standards and technologies
• Demonstrate the latest infrastructure and security product
solutions available from our manufacturer partners
• E valuate our network infrastructure and security
solutions to make sure that our customers are selecting
the right products for their specific needs
We are continually testing products in The Lab to establish that:
• Quality products are recommended and
delivered to our customers
• Performance across product lines and
within systems is consistent
• Products and systems recommended to customers can be
integrated and follow the trend toward convergence.
Networking and security product testing at The Lab includes:
• Random performance testing of Anixter’s inventory
to make sure products comply to standards
• Network throughput and interoperability testing
• C opper and fiber cabling compliance
verification (ANSI/TIA, ISO/IEC, IEEE)
• Customer proof of concept
• Power over Ethernet (PoE)
• Application testing
• 10 Gig Ethernet cabling testing
• Video over IP, video quality and bandwidth utilization
• Power over Ethernet capability and verification
• Digital compression image quality vs. analog technology testing
• Evaluation of analog and IP cameras, video management
software evaluation, DVR, NDVR and NVR products.
Register for a Lab visit or take a video tour: anixter.com/lab

2| 1.800.ANIXTER | ANIXTER.COM
ANIXTER STANDARDS REFERENCE GUIDE |3
ANIXTER’S INFRASTRUCTURE SOLUTIONS LAB
IN ACTION
Challenge: Leading Pennsylvania University Explores
Campuswide Rewiring Project
A university was attempting to determine which copper cabling
system would best meet its current and future information
technology needs. The university had a variety of copper cabling
products installed in its network infrastructure: Category 3,
Category 5 and some Category 5e.
How The Lab Helped
The Anixter Infrastructure Solutions Lab deployed computer
applications that the university typically carried over its cabling
infrastructure, including Lotus Notes, SAP and streaming video.
Testing found that its current infrastructure was consistently dropping
information, causing the network to operate slowly and inefficiently.
This same traffic was sent over a Category 6 infrastructure with no
degradation to the data.
Result: New Standards Set to Meet Campus Needs
Armed with testing from the Anixter Infrastructure Solutions Lab,
university IT professionals wrote cabling infrastructure specifications
around a higher-performing Category 6 system that better met the
university’s network performance needs.
Challenge: Major Railway Company Needs Video
Surveillance to Monitor Switchyard
A railroad company wanted to use video surveillance to monitor
yards as it assembled unit trains, but it had a big cabling challenge.
Installing traditional cabling in the switchyard would have entailed
major disruptions and expense for them.
How The Lab Helped
Anixter’s Infrastructure Solutions Lab recommended a sophisticated
wireless Internet video surveillance system that did not require
cabling. Anixter was able to simulate the wireless surveillance
solution in the Infrastructure Solutions Lab for the customer.
Result: An Informed Decision
Test results from Anixter’s Infrastructure Solutions Lab illustrated how
much bandwidth the video solution would absorb on the customer’s
network as well as the video quality the customer could expect from
the recommended system.
4| 1.800.ANIXTER | ANIXTER.COM
Challenge: National Insurance Company with Data Center
Cabling Choice
A national insurance provider needed assistance choosing between
a few different cabling options based on its current and future
bandwidth needs.
How The Lab Helped
The Anixter Infrastructure Solutions Lab ran representative
network traffic over 62.5-micron, 50-micron and laser-optimized
50-micron fiber (OM3) to ascertain which would best meet the
company’s needs.
Result: An Optimized Selection Process
The series of tests in the Anixter Infrastructure Solutions Lab were key
in determining that the OM3 was the customer’s best choice.

Anixter’s 10 Gigabit Ethernet Cabling Testing


Anixter’s Infrastructure Solutions Lab is the only UL Certified lab
to conduct rigorous, independent third-party testing of
10 Gigabit cabling solutions. Anixter’s 10 Gigabit cabling testing
examines electrical characteristics such as insertion loss, return
loss and crosstalk, but also looks at alien crosstalk (which is part
of the Augmented Category 6 spec). To make sure the 10 Gigabit
cabling solutions we sell meet the highest levels of performance
and reliability, the Anixter Infrastructure Solutions Lab tests
the toughest performance parameter, alien crosstalk, in the
“worst-case” scenario. Customers can rest assured that
the cabling solutions Anixter sells will provide the network
performance they require.

ANIXTER STANDARDS REFERENCE GUIDE |5


TABLE OF CONTENTS
ANSI/TIA-568-C.0 Generic Telecommunications
Cabling for Customer Premises...................................................................3
ANSI/TIA-568-C.1 Commercial Building Telecommunications
Cabling Standard.....................................................................................15
ANSI/TIA-568-C.2 Balanced Twisted-Pair Telecommunications
Cabling and Components Standard..........................................................25
ANSI/TIA-568-C.3 Optical Fiber Cabling Components...................................49
ANSI/TIA-569-D Telecommunications Pathways and Spaces.........................53
ANSI/TIA-606-B Administration Standard for
Telecommunications Infrastructure...........................................................76
ANSI/TIA-607-C Generic Telecommunications Bonding and Grounding
(Earthing) for Customer Premises.............................................................92
ANSI/TIA-862-A Building Automation Systems Cabling Standard.................106
ANSI/TIA-942-A Telecommunications Infrastructure
Standard for Data Centers......................................................................112
ANSI/TIA-1005-A Telecommunications Infrastructure Standard
for Industrial Premises............................................................................120
ANSI/TIA-1179 Healthcare Facility Telecommunications
Infrastructure Standard .........................................................................137
ISO/IEC 11801 Generic Cabling for Customer Premises..............................149
IEEE 802 Standards....................................................................................153
IEEE 802.3af Power over Ethernet (PoE) Standard.................................155
IEEE 802.3at Power over Ethernet+ (Plus) Standard..............................155
IEEE 802.3an Physical Layer and Management
Parameters for 10 Gbps Operation Type 10GBASE-T...........................155
IEEE 802.3ba Media Access Control Parameters, Physical Layers and
Management Parameters for 40 Gbps and 100 Gbps Operation........156
IEEE 802.11 Wireless Standard.............................................................157
The Anixter Infrastructure Solutions LabSM.....................................................159
Reference Documents..................................................................................163
Technology Alliance Partners........................................................................166

6| 1.800.ANIXTER | ANIXTER.COM
PURPOSE OF THE ANSI/TIA-568-C.0 STANDARD
The ANSI/TIA-568-C.0 standard enables the planning and installation
of a structured cabling system for all types of customer premises.
It specifies a system that will support generic telecommunications
cabling in a multiproduct, multimanufacturer environment. By
serving as the foundation for premises telecommunications
cabling infrastructure, the ANSI/TIA-568-C.0 standard provides
additional requirements for other standards specific to the
type of premises (e.g., ANSI/TIA-568-C.1 contains additional
requirements applicable to commercial building cable).
The standard specifies requirements for generic
telecommunications cabling, including:
• Cabling system structures
• Topologies and distances
• Installation, performance and testing
• Optical fiber transmission and test requirements.

This standard replaces ANSI/TIA/EIA-568-B.1 dated April 12, 2001,


and its addenda. It incorporates and refines the technical content
of ANSI/TIA/EIA-568-B.1-1 Addendum 1, 568-B.1-2 Addendum 2,
568-B.1-3 Addendum 3, 568-B.1-7 Addendum 7, TSB125, TSB140
and TSB153.

ANIXTER STANDARDS REFERENCE GUIDE |7


SECTION CONTENTS
ANSI/TIA-568-C.0
Generic Telecommunications Cabling for Customer Premises
Telecommunications Cabling System Structure.............................................. 5
General..................................................................................................... 5
Topology.................................................................................................... 5
Equipment Outlets (EOs).......................................................................... 6
Distributors............................................................................................... 6
Cabling Subsystem 1................................................................................ 6
Cabling Subsystem 2 and Cabling Subsystem 3........................................ 7
Recognized Cabling.................................................................................. 7
Cabling Lengths........................................................................................ 7
Cabling Installation Requirements............................................................... 10
Balanced Twisted-Pair Cabling................................................................. 10
Maximum Pulling Tension................................................................ 10
Minimum Bend Radius........................................................................... 10
Cable............................................................................................... 10
Cord Cable...................................................................................... 10
Cable Termination........................................................................... 11
8-Position Modular Jack Pin-Pair Assignments........................................ 12
Cords and Jumpers................................................................................. 13
Bonding and Grounding Requirements for Screened Cabling........... 13
Optical Fiber Cabling............................................................................... 14
Minimum Bend Radius and Maximum Pulling Tension...................... 14
Polarity............................................................................................ 14

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TELECOMMUNICATIONS CABLING
SYSTEM STRUCTURE
General
Figure 1 shows a representative model of the functional elements
of a generic cabling system for ANSI/TIA-568-C.0. In a typical
commercial building where ANSI/TIA-568-C.1 applies, Distributor C
represents the main cross-connect (MC), Distributor B represents
the intermediate cross-connect (IC), Distributor A represents the
horizontal cross-connect (HC), and the equipment outlet (EO)
represents the telecommunications outlet and connector.

Cabling DC Cabling
Subsystem 3 Subsystem 3
Cabling DB DB
Subsystem 2
DA DA Cabling
Cabling Subsystem 1
Subsystem 1
EO EO EO EO EO EO EO

Legend
DC
EO Equipment outlet Cabling
DA Distributor A Subsystem 2 DA Cabling
DB Distributor B Subsystem 1
DC Distributor C Cabling
---- Optional cabling Subsystem 1
EO EO EO
Optional consolidation point

Figure 1 – Elements that comprise a generic cabling system

Topology
• Star topology
• No more than two distributors between Distributor C
and an equipment outlet (EO)

ANIXTER STANDARDS REFERENCE GUIDE |9


Equipment Outlets (EOs)
Also called the work area (WA) in ANSI/TIA-568-C.1, equipment outlets
are the outermost location to terminate the cable in a hierarchical
star topology.
Distributors
Distributors provide a location for administration,
reconfiguration and connection of equipment and testing.
They can be either interconnections or cross-connections.

Distributor A
Interconnection Cross-connection
Active equipment

Connecting
Cord hardware
Patch cord
Connecting Connecting
hardware hardware

Equipment outlet Equipment outlet

Figure 2 – Interconnections and cross-connections

Cabling Subsystem 1
• Provides a signal path between Distributor A, Distributor B
or Distributor C and an EO (see Figure 1).
• Contains no more than one transition
point or consolidation point.
• Stipulates that splices shall not be installed as part of a
balanced twisted-pair cabling subsystem and that splitters shall
not be installed as part of optical fiber for Cabling Subsystem 1.

10| 1.800.ANIXTER | ANIXTER.COM


Cabling Subsystem 2 and Cabling Subsystem 3
Cabling Subsystem 2 and Cabling Subsystem 3 provide signal
paths between distributors (see Figure 1). The use of Distributor B
is optional.
Recognized Cabling
The recognized media, which shall be used
individually or in combination, are:
• 100-ohm balanced twisted-pair cabling
• Multimode optical fiber cabling
• Single-mode optical fiber cabling.
Cabling media other than those recognized above may be
specified by the appropriate premises cabling standards.
Cabling Lengths
Cabling lengths are dependent upon the application and
upon the specific media chosen (see following tables).
Cabling lengths
Application Media Distance m (ft.) Comments
Ethernet 10BASE-T Category 3, 5e, 6, 6A 100 (328)
Ethernet 100BASE-TX Category 5e, 6, 6A 100 (328)
Ethernet 1000BASE-T Category 5e, 6, 6A 100 (328)
Ethernet 10GBASE-T Category 6A 100 (328)
ASDL Category 3, 5e, 6, 6A 5,000 (16,404) 1.5 Mbps to 9 Mbps
VDSL Category 3, 5e, 6, 6A 5,000 (16,404) 1,500 m (4,900 ft.) for 12.9 Mbps;
300 m (1,000 ft.) for 52.8 Mbps
Analog phone Category 3, 5e, 6, 6A 800 (2,625)
Fax Category 3, 5e, 6, 6A 5,000 (16,404)
ATM 25.6 Category 3, 5e, 6, 6A 100 (328)
ATM 51.84 Category 3, 5e, 6, 6A 100 (328)
ATM 155.52 Category 5e, 6, 6A 100 (328)
ATM 1.2G Category 6, 6A 100 (328)
ISDN BRI Category 3, 5e, 6, 6A 5,000 (16,404) 128 kbps
ISDN PRI Category 3, 5e, 6, 6A 5,000 (16,404) 1.472 Mbps

Table 1 – Maximum supportable distances for balanced twisted-pair


cabling by application, which includes horizontal and backbone cabling
(application-specific)

ANIXTER STANDARDS REFERENCE GUIDE |11


Parameter Multimode Single-mode

850 nm TIA 492CAAA


62.5/125 µm 50/125 µm laser-optimized (OS1)
50/125 µm
TIA 492AAAA TIA 492AAAB TIA 492CAAB
(OM1) (OM2) TIA 492AAAC (OS2)
(OM3)

Nominal
Application 850 1300 850 1300 850 1300 1310 1550
wavelength (nm)

Channel attenuation (dB) 4.0 – 4.0 – 4.0 – – –


Ethernet
10/100BASE-SX
300 300 300
Supportable distance m (ft.) – – – – –
(984) (984) (984)

Channel attenuation (dB) – 11.0 – 6.0 – 6.0 – –


Ethernet
100BASE-FX
2,000 2,000 2,000
Supportable distance m (ft.) – –­ – –­ –­
(6,850) (6,850) (6,850)

Channel attenuation (dB) 2.6 – 3.6 – 4.5 – – –


Ethernet
1000BASE-SX
275 550 800
Supportable distance m (ft.) – – – – –
(900) (1,804) (2,625)

Channel attenuation (dB) – 2.3 – 2.3 – 2.3 4.5 –


Ethernet
1000BASE-LX
550 550 550 5,000
Supportable distance m (ft.) – – – –
(1,804) (1,804) (1,804) (16,405)

Channel attenuation (dB) 2.4 – 2.3 – 2.6 – – –


Ethernet
10GBASE-S
33 82 300
Supportable distance m (ft.) – – – – –
(108) (269) (984)

Channel attenuation (dB) – 2.5 – 2.0 – 2.0 6.3 –


Ethernet
10GBASE-LX4
300 300 300 10,000
Supportable distance m (ft.) – – – –
(984) (984) (984) (32,810)

Channel attenuation (dB) – – – – – – 6.2 –


Ethernet
10GBASE-L
10,000
Supportable distance m (ft.) – – – – – – –
(32,810)

Channel attenuation (dB) – 1.9 – 1.9 – 1.9 – –


Ethernet
10GBASE-LRM
270 270 270
Supportable distance m (ft.) – – – – –
(720) (720) (720)

Channel attenuation (dB) 3.0 – 3.9 – 4.6 – – –


Fibre Channel
100-MX-SN-I
(1062 Mbaud) 300 500 880
Supportable distance m (ft.) – – – – –
(984) (1,640) (2,822)

Table 2 – M
 aximum supportable distances and attenuation for optical fiber applications
(more on next table)

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Parameter Multimode Single-mode

850 nm TIA 492CAAA


62.5/125 µm 50/125 µm laser-optimized (OS1)
50/125 µm
TIA 492AAAA TIA 492AAAB TIA 492CAAB
(OM1) (OM2) TIA 492AAAC (OS2)
(OM3)

Nominal
Application 850 1300 850 1300 850 1300 1310 1550
wavelength (nm)

Channel attenuation (dB) – – – – – – 7.8 –


Fibre Channel
100-SM-LC-L
(1062 Mbaud) Supportable distance m (ft.) – – – – – –
10,000

(32,810)

Channel attenuation (dB) 2.1 – 2.6 – 3.3 – – –


Fibre Channel
200-MX-SN-I
(2125 Mbaud) Supportable distance m (ft.)
150

300

500
– – –
(492) (984) (1,640)

Channel attenuation (dB) – – – – – – 7.8 –


Fibre Channel
200-SM-LC-L
(2125 Mbaud) Supportable distance m (ft.) – – – – – –
10,000

(32,810)

Channel attenuation (dB) 1.8 – 2.1 – 2.5 – – –


Fibre Channel
400-MX-SN-I
(4250 Mbaud) Supportable distance m (ft.)
70

150

270
– – –
(230) (492) (886)

Channel attenuation (dB) – – – – – – 7.8 –


Fibre Channel
400-SM-LC-L
(4250 Mbaud) Supportable distance m (ft.) – – – – – –
10,000

(32,810)

Channel attenuation (dB) 2.4 – 2.2 – 2.6 – – –


Fibre Channel
1200-MX-SN-I
(10512 Mbaud) Supportable distance m (ft.)
33

82

300
– – –
(108) (269) (984)

Channel attenuation (dB) – – – – – – 6.0 –


Fibre Channel
1200-SM-LL-L
(10512 Mbaud) Supportable distance m (ft.) – – – – – –
10,000

(32,810)

Channel attenuation (dB) – 11.0 – 6.0 – 6.0 – –


FDDI PMD
ANSI X3.166 2,000 2,000 2,000
Supportable distance m (ft.) – – – – –
(6,560) (6,560) (6,560)

Channel attenuation (dB) – – – – – – 10.0 –


FDDI SMF-PMD
ANSI X3.184 10,000
Supportable distance m (ft.) – – – – – – –
(32,810)

Table 3 – M
 aximum supportable distances and attenuation for optical fiber applications

ANIXTER STANDARDS REFERENCE GUIDE |13


CABLING INSTALLATION REQUIREMENTS
• Cabling installations shall comply with the authority having
jurisdiction (AHJ) and applicable regulations.
• Cable stress caused by suspended cable runs and tightly
cinched bundles should be minimized.
• Cable bindings, which are used to tie multiple cables together,
should be irregularly spaced and should be loosely fitted
(easily movable).

Balanced Twisted-Pair Cabling


Maximum Pulling Tension
• The pulling tension for a 4-pair balanced twisted-pair cable
shall not exceed 110 N (25 pound-force) during installation.
• For multipair cable, manufacturers’ pulling tension guidelines
shall be followed.

Minimum Bend Radius


Cable
• The minimum inside bend radius, under no-load or load, for a
4-pair balanced twisted-pair cable shall be four times the
cable diameter.
• The minimum bend radius, under no-load or load, for a
multipair cable shall follow the manufacturer’s guidelines.
Cord Cable
• The minimum inside bend radius for a 4-pair balanced twisted-
pair cord cable shall be one times the cord cable diameter.

14| 1.800.ANIXTER | ANIXTER.COM


Cable Termination
• Cables should be terminated with connecting hardware of the
same performance (Category) or higher.
• The Category of the installed link should be suitably marked and
noted in the administrative records.
• The cable geometry shall be maintained as close as possible to the
connecting hardware and its cable termination points.
• The maximum pair untwist for the balanced twisted-pair cable
termination shall be in accordance with Table 4.

Pair untwist lengths


Category Maximum pair untwist mm (in.)
3 75 (3)
5e 13 (0.5)
6 13 (0.5)
6A 13 (0.5) 

Table 4 – Maximum supportable pair untwist length for Category cable termination

ANIXTER STANDARDS REFERENCE GUIDE |15


8-Position Modular Jack Pin-Pair Assignments
Pin-pair assignments shall be as shown in Figure 3 or, optionally, per
Figure 4 if it is necessary to accommodate certain 8-pin cabling
systems. The colors shown are associated with 4-pair cable.

­­­Figure 3 – Front view of 8-position jack pin-pair assignments (T568A)

Figure 4 – F ront view of optional 8-position jack pin-pair assignment (T568B)

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Cords and Jumpers
Cross-connect jumpers and modular plug cords should be of the
same Category or higher as the Category of the cabling to
which they connect. It is recommended that modular cords be
factory manufactured.
Bonding and Grounding Requirements for Screened Cabling
• The screen of screened twisted-pair (ScTP) cables shall be
bonded to the telecommunications grounding busbar (TGB)
or telecommunications main grounding busbar (TMGB).
• A voltage greater than 1 volt rms between the cable screen
and the ground of the corresponding electrical outlet used to
provide power to the equipment indicates improper grounding.

ANIXTER STANDARDS REFERENCE GUIDE |17


Optical Fiber Cabling
Minimum Bend Radius and Maximum Pulling Tension
Measured to the inside curvature, the bend radius is the minimum
a cable can bend without any risk to kinking it, damaging it or
shortening its life. The smaller the bend radius, the greater the
material flexibility.

Minimum bend radius and maximum pulling tension

Minimum bend radii



Maximum tensile while subjected to
load during maximum tensile load No tensile load
Cable type and installation details installation (during installation) (after installation)
Inside plant cable with 2 or 4 fibers 220 n 50 mm 25 mm
installed in Cabling Subsystem 1 (50 lbf) (2 in.) (1 in.)
Inside plant cable with more than Per manufacturer 20 times the cable 10 times the cable
4 fibers outside diameter outside diameter
Indoor/outdoor cable with up to 1335 n 20 times the cable 10 times the cable
12 fibers (300 lbf) outside diameter outside diameter
Indoor/outdoor cable with more 2670 n 20 times the cable 10 times the cable
than 12 fibers (600 lbf) outside diameter outside diameter
Outside plant cable 2670 n 20 times the cable 10 times the cable
(600 lbf) outside diameter outside diameter
Drop cable installed by pulling 1335 n 20 times the cable 10 times the cable
(300 lbf) outside diameter outside diameter
Drop cable installed by directly 440 n 20 times the cable 10 times the cable
burying, trenching or blowing into ducts (100 lbf) outside diameter outside diameter

Table 5 – Maximum and minimum pulling tension and


bend radius for different cable types

Polarity
Transmit-to-receive polarity must be maintained throughout the
cabling system. (Annex B of the full standard describes methods to
do this.)

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PURPOSE OF THE ANSI/TIA-568-C.1 STANDARD
The purpose of this standard is to provide guidance on the
planning and installation of a structured cabling system for
commercial buildings.

SECTION CONTENTS
ANSI/TIA-568-C.1
Commercial Building Telecommunications Cabling Standard
Commercial Building Telecommunications Cabling Standard ........................ 16
Entrance Facilities................................................................................... 16
Equipment Rooms (ERs).......................................................................... 16
Telecommunications Rooms (TRs) and Telecommunications
Enclosures (TEs)...................................................................................... 16
Centralized Optical Fiber Cabling............................................................ 17
Backbone Cabling (Cabling Subsystems 2 and 3).................................... 18
Length and Maximum Distances...................................................... 18
Recognized Cabling......................................................................... 18
Horizontal Cabling (Cabling Subsystem 1)............................................... 20
Recognized Cabling......................................................................... 20
Work Area................................................................................................ 21
Open Office Cabling (MUTOA).................................................................. 22
Maximum Work Area Cord Lengths........................................................... 23
Consolidation Point (CP).......................................................................... 24

ANIXTER STANDARDS REFERENCE GUIDE |19


COMMERCIAL BUILDING TELECOMMUNICATIONS
CABLING STANDARD
Entrance Facilities
• Entrance facilities (EFs) contain the cables, network
demarcation point(s), connecting hardware, protection
devices and other equipment that connects to the
access provider (AP) or private network cabling.
• Entrance facilities include connections between outside plant
and inside building cabling.
Equipment Rooms (ERs)
• Equipment rooms are considered to be distinct from
telecommunications rooms (TRs) and telecommunications
enclosures (TEs) because of the nature or complexity
of the equipment they contain. An ER may alternatively
provide any or all of the functions of a TR or TE.
• The main cross-connect (MC, Distributor C) of a commercial
building is located in an ER. Intermediate cross-connects (ICs,
Distributor B), horizontal cross-connects (HCs, Distributor A), or
both, of a commercial building may also be located in an ER.
Telecommunications Rooms (TRs) and
Telecommunications Enclosures (TEs)
• Telecommunications rooms and enclosures provide a
common access point for backbone and building pathways
(see Figure 5) and cabling used for cross-connection.
• The horizontal cross-connect (HC, Distributor A) of a
commercial building is located in a TR or TE. The main
cross-connect (MC, Distributor C) and intermediate cross-
connects (IC, Distributor B) of a commercial building
may also be located in a TR. The TR and any TE should be
located on the same floor as the work areas served.
• The telecommunications enclosure (TE) is intended to
serve a smaller floor area than a TR and may be used
in addition to the “minimum one TR per floor” rule.

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Centralized Optical Fiber Cabling (see Figure 5)
• Centralized optical fiber cabling is designed as an
alternative to the optical cross-connect located in the TR
or TE in support of installing centralized electronics.
• It provides connections from work areas (WAs) to centralized
cross-connects by allowing the use of pull-through cables
and the use of an interconnect or splice in the TR or TE.
• The maximum allowed distance for a pull-through cable is
90 m (295 ft.).

Telecommunications
Splice or interconnect
outlet/connectors
Horizontal cable
TE WA
Backbone cable

Telecommunications
Splice or interconnect
outlet/connectors
Horizontal cable
TR WA
Backbone cable
Telecommunications
Pull-through cable outlet/connectors
Horizontal cable
WA
TR

Equipment

Centralized cross-connect ER

Legend
Equipment room ER
Telecommunications room TR
Telecommunications enclosure TE
Work area WA
Backbone cable
Horizontal cable

Figure 5 – Centralized optical fiber cabling

ANIXTER STANDARDS REFERENCE GUIDE |21


Backbone Cabling (Cabling Subsystems 2 and 3)
• Provides interconnections between entrance facilities
(EFs), access provider (AP) spaces, service provider
(SP) spaces, common equipment rooms (CERs),
common telecommunications rooms (CTRs), equipment
rooms (ERs), telecommunications rooms (TRs) and
telecommunications enclosures (TEs) (see Figure 5).
• Makes sure that the backbone cabling shall meet
the requirements of ANSI/TIA-568-C.1 Cabling
Subsystem 2 and Cabling Subsystem 3.
• Uses a star topology (see Figure 6).
• Allows for no more than two hierarchical levels of cross-connects.
Length and Maximum Distances
• Backbone cabling length extends from the termination
of the media at the MC to an IC or HC.
• Cabling lengths are dependent on the application and
the media chosen. They are found in the previous section
covering ANSI/TIA-568-C.0 (see Tables 1, 2 and 3).
• The length of the cross-connect jumpers and patch cords
in the MC or IC should not exceed 20 m (66 ft.).
• The length of the cord used to connect
telecommunications equipment directly to the
MC or IC should not exceed 30 m (98 ft.).
Recognized Cabling
The recognized media, which shall be used individually or in
combination, are:
• 100-ohm balanced twisted-pair cabling (Category 3, 5e, 6 or 6A)
• Multimode optical fiber cabling: 850-nm laser-
optimized 50/125 µm is recommended;
62.5/125 µm and 50/125 µm are allowed
• Single-mode optical fiber cabling.

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Backbone MC Backbone
cabling cabling
Backbone IC IC
cabling
HC HC Horizontal
Horizontal cabling
cabling
TO TO TO TO TO TO TO

Legend
Backbone MC
TO Telecommunications outlet cabling
(equipment outlet) HC Horizontal
HC Horizontal cross-connect cabling
(Distributor A) Horizontal
IC Intermediate cross-connect cabling
(Distributor B) TO TO TO
MC Main cross-connect
(Distributor C)
- - - - Optional cabling
Optional consolidation point

Figure 6 – Commercial building hierarchical star topology

ANIXTER STANDARDS REFERENCE GUIDE |23


Horizontal Cabling (Cabling Subsystem 1)
• Horizontal cabling (see Figure 7) includes horizontal
cable, telecommunications outlets and connectors in
the work area (WA); mechanical terminations and patch
cords or jumpers located in a telecommunications
room (TR) or telecommunications enclosure (TE); and
may incorporate multiuser telecommunications outlet
assemblies (MUTOAs) and consolidation points (CPs).
• A minimum of two permanent links shall be provided for each
work area.
• Each 4-pair cable at the equipment outlet shall be
terminated in an 8-position modular jack.
• Optical fibers at the equipment outlet shall be terminated
to a duplex optical fiber outlet and connector.
• Horizontal cabling uses a star topology.
• The maximum horizontal cable length shall be 90 m
(295 ft.), independent of media type. If a MUTOA is deployed,
the maximum horizontal balanced twisted-pair copper cable
length shall be reduced in accordance with Table 6 (page 23).
• The length of the cross-connect jumpers and patch
cords that connect horizontal cabling with equipment
or backbone cabling should not exceed 5 m (16 ft.).
• For each horizontal channel, the total length allowed
for cords in the WA, plus patch cords or jumpers
and equipment cords in the TR or TE, shall not
exceed 10 m (33 ft.) unless a MUTOA is used.
Recognized Cabling
The recognized media, which shall be used individually or in
combination, are:
• 4-pair 100-ohm unshielded or shielded twisted-
pair cabling (Category 3, 5e, 6 or 6A)
• Multimode optical fiber cabling, 2-fiber (or higher count)
•­­­­Single-mode optical fiber cabling, 2-fiber (or higher count).
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HC

Laptop computer

Telephone WA
Legend
CP
Work area WA
Horizontal
cross-connect HC
Consolidation point CP
Laptop computer Horizontal cabling
(Cabling Subsystem 1)
Telecommunications
outlet
Telephone WA

Figure 7 – Typical horizontal and work area cabling using star topology

Work Area
• The telecommunications outlet and connector shall
meet the requirements of ANSI/TIA-568-C.0.
• The work area (WA) components extend from the
telecommunications outlet/connector end of the
horizontal cabling system to the WA equipment.
• When application-specific adapters are
needed at the WA, they shall be external to the
telecommunications outlet and connector.

ANIXTER STANDARDS REFERENCE GUIDE |25


Open Office Cabling (MUTOA)
Open office design practices use multiuser telecommunications
outlet assemblies (MUTOAs), consolidation points (CPs) or both
to provide flexible layouts. MUTOAs allow horizontal cabling
to remain intact when the open office plan is changed.
• WA cords originating from the MUTOA should be routed
through WA pathways (e.g., furniture pathways).
• The WA cables shall be connected directly to
workstation equipment without the use of any additional
intermediate connections (see Figure 8).
• MUTOAs shall be located in fully accessible, permanent locations,
such as building columns and permanent walls. They should not
be located in ceiling spaces, obstructed areas or in furniture
unless the furniture is secured to the building structure.

Work Telecommunications
area outlet/connectors Equipment
cords cords
Laptop computer
Horizontal HC
cables Backbone
Telephone MUTOA cable
WA TR/TE

Legend

Work area WA
Telecommunications room TR
Telecommunications enclosure TE
Horizontal cross-connect HC
Multiuser telecommunications outlet assembly MUTOA

Figure 8 – Multiuser telecommunications outlet assembly (MUTOA) application

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Maximum Work Area Cord Lengths
• Balanced twisted-pair WA cables: the maximum
cord length used in the context of MUTOAs and
open office furniture is as follows in Table 6.
• Optical fiber WA cords: the maximum horizontal cabling
length is not affected by the deployment of a MUTOA.

Maximum length of horizontal cables and work area cords


24 AWG cords 26 AWG cords
Maximum combined Maximum combined
length of work area length of work area
Length of Maximum length cord, patch cords Maximum length cord, patch cords
horizontal cable of work area cord and equipment cord of work area cord and equipment cord
H W C W C
m (ft.) m (ft.) m (ft.) m (ft.) m (ft.)
90 (295) 5 (16) 10 (33) 4 (13) 8 (26)
85 (279) 9 (30) 14 (46) 7 (23) 11 (35)
80 (262) 13 (44) 18 (59) 11 (35) 15 (49)
75 (246) 17 (57) 22 (72) 14 (46) 18 (59)
70 (230) 22 (72) 27 (89) 17 (56) 21 (70)

Table 6 – Maximum length of work area cord in relation to horizontal cable

ANIXTER STANDARDS REFERENCE GUIDE |27


Consolidation Point (CP)
The CP is an interconnection point within the horizontal
cabling. It differs from the MUTOA in that a CP requires an
additional connection for each horizontal cable run. It may be
useful when reconfiguration is frequent, but not so frequent
as to require the flexibility of a MUTOA (see Figure 9).
• The CP should be located at least 15 m (49 ft.)
from the TR or TE.
• Cross-connections shall not be used at a CP.
• Each horizontal cable extending to the WA
outlet from the CP shall be terminated to a
telecommunications outlet/connector or MUTOA.
• CPs shall be located in fully accessible, permanent locations
such as building columns and permanent walls. They
should not be located in obstructed areas or in furniture
unless the furniture is secured to the building structure.
Telecommunications Patch cords/jumpers
outlet/connectors or
MUTOA

Laptop computer
Equipment
Horizontal cords
cables
Horizontal
Telephone WA cables
HC
Horizontal Backbone
cables cable
CP TR/TE

Legend
Laptop computer Work area WA
Telecommunications room TR
Telecommunications enclosure TE
Horizontal cross-connect HC
Telephone WA Multiuser telecommunications
outlet assembly MUTOA
Consolidation point CP

Figure 9 – Application of consolidation point

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PURPOSE OF THE ANSI/TIA-568-C.2 STANDARD
This standard includes component and cabling specifications
as well as testing requirements for copper cabling, including
Category 3, Category 5e, Category 6 and Category 6A. It
recommends Category 5e to support 100 MHz applications. By using
one laboratory test method to define all categories of connecting
hardware, the standard introduces coupling attenuation parameters
that are under study for characterizing radiated peak power
generated by common-mode currents for screened cables. Balanced
twisted-pair channel and permanent performance requirements were
moved to this document.

SECTION CONTENTS
ANSI/TIA-568-C.2
Balanced Twisted-Pair Telecommunications Cabling and
Components Standard
Balanced Twisted-Pair Telecommunications Cabling and
Components Standard.................................................................................. 26
Channel and Permanent Link Test Configurations..................................... 26
Definitions of Electrical Parameters......................................................... 28
Recognized Categories of Balanced Twisted-Pair
Cabling and Components........................................................................ 30
Channel Transmission Performance.......................................................... 31
Channel Propagation Delay Skew ........................................................... 34
Augmented Category 6 Channel Requirements......................................... 35
Permanent Link Transmission Performance.............................................. 36
Permanent Link Propagation Delay Skew................................................. 39
Horizontal Cable Transmission Performance............................................. 40
Horizontal Cable Propagation Delay Skew............................................... 43
Bundled and Hybrid Cable....................................................................... 46
Patch Cord Transmission Performance..................................................... 46
Patch Cord Cable Construction................................................................ 47

ANIXTER STANDARDS REFERENCE GUIDE |29


BALANCED TWISTED-PAIR TELECOMMUNICATIONS
CABLING AND COMPONENTS STANDARD
Channel and Permanent Link Test Configurations
For the purpose of testing twisted-pair cabling systems, the
worst-case cabling channel configuration is assumed to contain
a telecommunications outlet and connector, a transition point,
90 meters of twisted-pair cable, a cross-connect consisting of
two blocks or panels and a total of 10 meters of patch cords.
The figure below shows the relationship of these components.
Channel under test
Test A B C D E Test
equipment equipment
TO CP C1 C2

Legend
Cables and cords Connecting hardware
Work area cord A Telecommunications
Optional consolidation outlet/connector TO
point cabling B Optional consolidation
Horizontal cabling C point connector CP
Patch cord or jumper cable D Horizontal cross-connect
or interconnect C1, C2
Telecommunications room
equipment cord E

Maximum length
B+C 90 m (295 ft.)
A+D+E 10 m (32.8 ft.)

Figure 10 – Channel test configuration

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The permanent link test configuration includes the horizontal
distribution cable, telecommunications outlet and connector or
transition point and one horizontal cross-connect component
including the mated connections. This is assumed to be
the permanent part of a link. The channel is comprised of
the permanent link plus cross-connect equipment, user
equipment cord and cross-connect patch cable.

Permanent link
under test
Test F B C F Test
equipment equipment
TO CP C1

Legend
Cables and cords Connecting hardware
Test equipment cord F Telecommunications
Optional consolidation outlet/connector TO
point cabling B Optional consolidation
Horizontal cabling C point connector CP
Horizontal cross-connect
or interconnect C1
Maximum length
B+C 90 m (295 ft.)

Figure 11 – Permanent link test configuration

ANIXTER STANDARDS REFERENCE GUIDE |31


Definitions of Electrical Parameters
Return loss: A measure of the degree of impedance mismatch
between two impedances. It is the ratio, expressed in decibels, of the
amplitude of a reflected wave echo to the amplitude of the main wave
at the junction of a transmission line and a terminating impedance.
Insertion loss: This term has replaced the term
“attenuation” (ATTN). It is a measure of the decrease
of signal strength as it travels down the media.
NEXT loss (near-end crosstalk): A measure of the unwanted
signal coupling from a transmitter at the near-end into a
neighboring (nonenergized) pair measured at the near-end.
PSNEXT loss (powersum near-end crosstalk): A computation of the
unwanted signal coupling from multiple transmitters at the near-end
into a neighboring (nonenergized) pair measured at the near-end.
FEXT loss (far-end crosstalk): A measure of the unwanted
signal coupling from a transmitter at the near-end into
a neighboring pair measured at the far-end.
ACRF (attenuation to crosstalk ratio, far-end) or ELFEXT
(equal-level far-end crosstalk): A measure of the unwanted
signal coupling from a transmitter at the near-end into a
neighboring pair measured at the far-end, relative to the
received signal level measured on that same pair.
PSFEXT loss (powersum far-end crosstalk): A computation of
the unwanted signal coupling from multiple transmitters at the
near-end into a neighboring pair measured at the far-end.
PSACRF (powersum attenuation to crosstalk ratio, far-end) or
PSELFEXT (powersum equal-level far-end crosstalk): A computation
of the unwanted signal coupling from multiple transmitters at
the near-end into a neighboring pair measured at the far-end,
relative to the received signal level measured on that same pair.

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Propagation delay: The time needed for the transmission
of signal to travel the length of a single pair.
Propagation delay skew: The difference between the
propagation delay of any two pairs within the same cable
sheath. Delay skew is caused primarily because twisted-pair
cable is designed to have different twists per foot (lay lengths).
Delay skew could cause data transmitted over one wire pair
to arrive out of sync with data over another wire pair.
ANEXT loss (alien near-end crosstalk): A measure of signal coupling
from a near-end disturbing pair into a disturbed pair of a neighboring
cable or connector pair or part thereof, measured at the near-end.
PSANEXT loss (powersum alien near-end crosstalk): A
computation of signal coupling from multiple near-end disturbing
pairs into a disturbed pair of a neighboring channel, cable or
connector pair or part thereof, measured at the near-end.
AFEXT loss (alien far-end crosstalk): A measure of signal coupling
from a near-end disturbing pair into a disturbed pair of a neighboring
cable or connector pair or part thereof, measured at the far-end.
PSAFEXT loss (powersum alien far-end crosstalk): A
computation of signal coupling from multiple near-end
disturbing channel pairs into a disturbed pair of a neighboring
channel or part thereof, measured at the far-end.
PSAACRF (powersum alien attenuation to crosstalk ratio,
far-end) or PSAELFEXT (powersum alien equal-level far-
end crosstalk): A computation of signal coupling from
multiple pairs of disturbing channels to a disturbed pair in
another channel measured at the far-end and relative to the
received signal level in the disturbed pair at the far-end.

ANIXTER STANDARDS REFERENCE GUIDE |33


Recognized Categories of Balanced
Twisted-Pair Cabling and Components
As data transmission rates have increased, higher performance
twisted-pair cabling has become a necessity. In addition, some
means of classifying horizontal twisted-pair cables and connecting
hardware by performance capability had to be established.
These capabilities have been broken down to a series of
categories. The following categories are currently recognized.
Category 3: Cables and connecting hardware with
transmission parameters characterized up to 16 MHz
Category 5e: Cables and connecting hardware with
transmission parameters characterized up to 100 MHz
Category 6: Cables and connecting hardware with
transmission parameters characterized up to 250 MHz
Category 6A: Cables and connecting hardware with
transmission parameters characterized up to 500 MHz.
Additionally, requirements for alien crosstalk are specified
in order to support 10GBASE-T transmission systems.
The following tables show the performance limits for
channel, permanent link and twisted-pair cable for
Category 3, Category 5e, Category 6 and Category 6A.

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Channel Transmission Performance
The following tables reflect the various mitigating
factors that need to be taken into consideration when
calculating a channel’s transmission performance.

Channel return loss


Frequency (MHz) Category 3 (dB) Category 5e (dB) Category 6 (dB) Category 6A (dB)

1.00 - 17.0 19.0 19.0


4.00 - 17.0 19.0 19.0
8.00 - 17.0 19.0 19.0
10.00 - 17.0 19.0 19.0
16.00 - 17.0 18.0 18.0
20.00 - 17.0 17.5 17.5
25.00 - 16.0 17.0 17.0
31.25 - 15.1 16.5 16.5
62.50 - 12.1 14.0 14.0
100.00 - 10.0 12.0 12.0
200.00 - - 9.0 9.0
250.00 - - 8.0 8.0
300.00 - - - 7.2
400.00 - - - 6.0
500.00 - - - 6.0

Table 7 – Minimum channel return loss

Channel insertion loss


Frequency (MHz) Category 3 (dB) Category 5e (dB) Category 6 (dB) Category 6A (dB)

1.00 3.0 2.2 2.1 2.3


4.00 6.5 4.5 4.0 4.2
8.00 9.8 6.3 5.7 5.8
10.00 11.2 7.1 6.3 6.5
16.00 14.9 9.1 8.0 8.2
20.00 - 10.2 9.0 9.2
25.00 - 11.4 10.1 10.2
31.25 - 12.9 11.4 11.5
62.50 - 18.6 16.5 16.4
100.00 - 24.0 21.3 20.9
200.00 - - 31.5 30.1
250.00 - - 35.9 33.9
300.00 - - - 37.4
400.00 - - - 43.7
500.00 - - - 49.3

Table 8 – Maximum channel insertion loss

ANIXTER STANDARDS REFERENCE GUIDE |35


Channel NEXT loss (near-end crosstalk)
Frequency (MHz) Category 3 (dB) Category 5e (dB) Category 6 (dB) Category 6A (dB)

1.00 39.1 60.0 65.0 65.0


4.00 29.3 53.5 63.0 63.0
8.00 24.3 48.6 58.2 58.2
10.00 22.7 47.0 56.6 56.6
16.00 19.3 43.6 53.2 53.2
20.00 - 42.0 51.6 51.6
25.00 - 40.3 50.0 50.0
31.25 - 38.7 48.4 48.4
62.50 - 33.6 43.4 43.4
100.00 - 30.1 39.9 39.9
200.00 - - 34.8 34.8
250.00 - - 33.1 33.1
300.00 - - - 31.7
400.00 - - - 28.7
500.00 - - - 26.1

Table 9 – Minimum channel NEXT loss

Channel PSNEXT loss (powersum near-end crosstalk)


Frequency (MHz) Category 3 (dB) Category 5e (dB) Category 6 (dB) Category 6A (dB)

1.00 - 57.0 62.0 62.0


4.00 - 50.5 60.5 60.5
8.00 - 45.6 55.6 55.6
10.00 - 44.0 54.0 54.0
16.00 - 40.6 50.6 50.6
20.00 - 39.0 49.0 49.0
25.00 - 37.3 47.3 47.3
31.25 - 35.7 45.7 45.7
62.50 - 30.6 40.6 40.6
100.00 - 27.1 37.1 37.1
200.00 - - 31.9 31.9
250.00 - - 30.2 30.2
300.00 - - - 28.8
400.00 - - - 25.8
500.00 - - - 23.2

Table 10 – Minimum channel PSNEXT loss

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Channel ACRF (attenuation to crosstalk ratio, far-end) or ELFEXT
(equal-level far-end crosstalk)

Frequency (MHz) Category 3 (dB) Category 5e (dB) Category 6 (dB) Category 6A (dB)

1.00 - 57.4 63.3 63.3


4.00 - 45.4 51.2 51.2
8.00 - 39.3 45.2 45.2
10.00 - 37.4 43.3 43.3
16.00 - 33.3 39.2 39.2
20.00 - 31.4 37.2 37.2
25.00 - 29.4 35.3 35.3
31.25 - 27.5 33.4 33.4
62.50 - 21.5 27.3 27.3
100.00 - 17.4 23.3 23.3
200.00 - - 17.2 17.2
250.00 - - 15.3 15.3
300.00 - - - 13.7
400.00 - - - 11.2
500.00 - - - 9.3

Table 11 – Minimum channel ACRF

Channel PSACRF (powersum insertion loss to alien crosstalk ratio far-end)


or PSELFEXT (powersum equal-level far-end crosstalk)
Frequency (MHz) Category 3 (dB) Category 5e (dB) Category 6 (dB) Category 6A (dB)

1.00 - 54.4 60.3 60.3


4.00 - 42.4 48.2 48.2
8.00 - 36.3 42.2 42.2
10.00 - 34.4 40.3 40.3
16.00 - 30.3 36.2 36.2
20.00 - 28.4 34.2 34.2
25.00 - 26.4 32.3 32.3
31.25 - 24.5 30.4 30.4
62.50 - 18.5 24.3 24.3
100.00 - 14.4 20.3 20.3
200.00 - - 14.2 14.2
250.00 - - 12.3 12.3
300.00 - - - 10.7
400.00 - - - 8.2
500.00 - - - 6.3

Table 12 – Minimum channel PSACRF

ANIXTER STANDARDS REFERENCE GUIDE |37


Channel Propagation Delay Skew
Channel propagation delay skew shall be less than 50 ns for all
frequencies from 1 MHz to the upper frequency limit of the Category.
For field-testing channels, it is sufficient to test at 10 MHz only and
channel propagation delay skew at 10 MHz shall not exceed 50 ns.

Channel propagation delay


Frequency (MHz) Category 3 (ns) Category 5e (ns) Category 6 (ns) Category 6A (ns)

1.00 580 580 580 580


4.00 562 562 562 562
8.00 557 557 557 557
10.00 555 555 555 555
16.00 553 553 553 553
20.00 - 552 552 552
25.00 - 551 551 551
31.25 - 550 550 550
62.50 - 549 549 549
100.00 - 548 548 548
200.00 - - 547 547
250.00 - - 546 546
300.00 - - - 546
400.00 - - - 546
500.00 - - - 546

Table 13 – Maximum channel propagation delay

Channel PSANEXT loss (powersum alien near-end crosstalk)


Frequency (MHz) Category 3 (dB) Category 5e (dB) Category 6 (dB) Category 6A (dB)

1.00 - - - 67.0
4.00 - - - 67.0
8.00 - - - 67.0
10.00 - - - 67.0
16.00 - - - 67.0
20.00 - - - 67.0
25.00 - - - 66.0
31.25 - - - 65.1
62.50 - - - 62.0
100.00 - - - 60.0
200.00 - - - 55.5
250.00 - - - 54.0
300.00 - - - 52.8
400.00 - - - 51.0
500.00 - - - 49.5

Table 14 – Minimum channel PSANEXT loss

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Channel PSAACRF (powersum insertion loss to alien crosstalk ratio far-end) or
PSAELFEXT (powersum alien equal level far-end crosstalk)
Frequency (MHz) Category 3 (dB) Category 5e (dB) Category 6 (dB) Category 6A (dB)

1.00 - - - 67.0
4.00 - - - 65.0
8.00 - - - 58.9
10.00 - - - 57.0
16.00 - - - 52.9
20.00 - - - 51.0
25.00 - - - 49.0
31.25 - - - 47.1
62.50 - - - 47.1
100.00 - - - 37.0
200.00 - - - 31.0
250.00 - - - 29.0
300.00 - - - 27.5
400.00 - - - 25.0
500.00 - - - 23.0

Table 15 – Minimum channel PSAACRF loss

Augmented Category 6 Channel Requirements


Note: The requirements for ISO (the International Organization
for Standardization) ISO/IEC 11801 Class EA are more
demanding compared to the TIA Augmented Category 6
requirements. Anixter’s Infrastructure Solutions Lab tests
to the more stringent ISO/IEC 11801 standards.

ISO compared to TIA


Characteristics 500 MHz (dB) ISO Class EA TIA Augumented Category 6

PSNEXT loss 24.8 dB 23.2 dB


NEXT loss 27.9 dB 26.1 dB
PSANEXT loss 49.5 dB 49.5 dB
Return loss 6.0 dB 6.0 dB
Insertion loss 49.3 dB 49.3 dB
Referred to by IEEE Yes No

Table 16 – ISO versus TIA performance comparison


Note: See the IEEE 802.3an and ISO/IEC 11801 Class EA section of this book
for more information on 10 Gigabit cabling and protocol methods.

ANIXTER STANDARDS REFERENCE GUIDE |39


Permanent Link Transmission Performance
The tables below show the requirements intended for performance
validation according to the specific cabling Category.
Permanent link return loss
Frequency (MHz) Category 3 (dB) Category 5e (dB) Category 6 (dB) Category 6A (dB)

1.00 - 19.0 19.1 19.1


4.00 - 19.0 21.0 21.0
8.00 - 19.0 21.0 21.0
10.00 - 19.0 21.0 21.0
16.00 - 19.0 20.0 20.0
20.00 - 19.0 20.0 20.0
25.00 - 19.0 19.5 19.5
31.25 - 17.1 18.5 18.5
62.50 - 14.1 16.0 16.0
100.00 - 12.0 14.0 14.0
200.00 - - 11.0 11.0
250.00 - - 10.0 10.0
300.00 - - - 9.2
400.00 - - - 8.0
500.00 - - - 8.0

Table 17 – Minimum permanent link return loss

Permanent link insertion loss


Frequency (MHz) Category 3 (dB) Category 5e (dB) Category 6 (dB) Category 6A (dB)

1.00 2.6 2.1 1.9 1.9


4.00 5.6 3.9 3.5 3.5
8.00 8.5 5.5 5.0 5.0
10.00 9.7 6.2 5.5 5.5
16.00 13.0 7.9 7.0 7.0
20.00 - 8.9 7.9 7.8
25.00 - 10.0 8.9 8.8
31.25 - 11.2 10.0 9.8
62.50 - 16.2 14.4 14.0
100.00 - 21.0 18.6 18.0
200.00 - - 27.4 26.1
250.00 - - 31.1 29.5
300.00 - - - 32.7
400.00 - - - 38.4
500.00 - - - 43.8

Table 18 – Maximum permanent link insertion loss

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Permanent link NEXT loss (near-end crosstalk)
Frequency (MHz) Category 3 (dB) Category 5e (dB) Category 6 (dB) Category 6A (dB)

1.00 40.1 60.0 65.0 65.0


4.00 30.7 54.8 64.1 64.1
8.00 25.9 50.0 59.4 59.4
10.00 24.3 48.5 57.8 57.8
16.00 21.0 45.2 54.6 54.6
20.00 - 43.7 53.1 53.1
25.00 - 42.1 51.5 51.5
31.25 - 40.5 50.0 50.0
62.50 - 35.7 45.1 45.1
100.00 - 32.3 41.8 41.8
200.00 - - 36.9 36.9
250.00 - - 35.3 35.3
300.00 - - - 34.0
400.00 - - - 29.9
500.00 - - - 26.7

Table 19 – Minimum permanent link NEXT loss

Permanent link PSNEXT loss (powersum near-end crosstalk)


Frequency (MHz) Category 3 (dB) Category 5e (dB) Category 6 (dB) Category 6A (dB)

1.00 - 57.0 62.0 62.0


4.00 - 51.8 61.8 61.8
8.00 - 47.0 57.0 57.0
10.00 - 45.5 55.5 55.5
16.00 - 42.2 52.2 52.2
20.00 - 40.7 50.7 50.7
25.00 - 39.1 49.1 49.1
31.25 - 37.5 47.5 47.5
62.50 - 32.7 42.7 42.7
100.00 - 29.3 39.3 39.3
200.00 - - 34.3 34.3
250.00 - - 32.7 32.7
300.00 - - - 31.4
400.00 - - - 27.1
500.00 - - - 23.8

Table 20 – Minimum permanent link PSNEXT loss

ANIXTER STANDARDS REFERENCE GUIDE |41


Permanent link ACRF (attenuation to crosstalk ratio, far-end) or ELFEXT (equal-level
far-end crosstalk)
Frequency (MHz) Category 3 (dB) Category 5e (dB) Category 6 (dB) Category 6A (dB)

1.00 - 58.6 64.2 64.2


4.00 - 46.6 52.1 52.1
8.00 - 40.6 46.1 46.1
10.00 - 38.6 44.2 44.2
16.00 - 34.5 40.1 40.1
20.00 - 32.6 38.2 38.2
25.00 - 30.7 36.2 36.2
31.25 - 28.7 34.3 34.3
62.50 - 22.7 28.3 28.3
100.00 - 18.6 24.2 24.2
200.00 - - 18.2 18.2
250.00 - - 16.2 16.2
300.00 - - - 14.6
400.00 - - - 12.1
500.00 - - - 10.2

Table 21 – Minimum permanent link ACRF

Permanent link PSACRF (powersum insertion loss to alien crosstalk ratio far-end) or
PSELFEXT (powersum equal level far-end crosstalk)
Frequency (MHz) Category 3 (dB) Category 5e (dB) Category 6 (dB) Category 6A (dB)

1.00 - 55.6 61.2 61.2


4.00 - 43.6 49.1 49.1
8.00 - 37.5 43.1 43.1
10.00 - 35.6 41.2 41.2
16.00 - 31.5 37.1 37.1
20.00 - 29.6 35.2 35.2
25.00 - 27.7 33.2 33.2
31.25 - 25.7 31.3 31.3
62.50 - 19.7 25.3 25.3
100.00 - 15.6 21.2 21.2
200.00 - - 15.2 15.2
250.00 - - 13.2 13.2
300.00 - - - 11.6
400.00 - - - 9.1
500.00 - - - 7.2

Table 22 – Minimum permanent link PSACRF

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Permanent link propagation delay
Frequency (MHz) Category 3 (ns) Category 5e (ns) Category 6 (ns) Category 6A (ns)

1.00 521 521 521 521


4.00 504 504 504 504
8.00 500 500 500 500
10.00 498 498 498 498
16.00 496 496 496 496
20.00 - 495 495 495
25.00 - 495 495 495
31.25 - 494 494 494
62.50 - 492 492 492
100.00 - 491 491 491
200.00 - - 490 490
250.00 - - 490 490
300.00 - - - 490
400.00 - - - 490
500.00 - - - 490

Table 23 – Maximum permanent link propagation delay

Permanent Link Propagation Delay Skew


Permanent link propagation delay skew shall be less
than 44 ns for all frequencies from 1 MHz to the upper
frequency limit of the Category. For field-testing channels,
it is sufficient to test at 10 MHz only and permanent link
propagation delay skew at 10 MHz shall not exceed 50 ns.

Permanent link PSANEXT Loss (powersum alien near-end crosstalk)


Frequency (MHz) Category 3 (dB) Category 5e (dB) Category 6 (dB) Category 6A (dB)

1.00 - - - 67.0
4.00 - - - 67.0
8.00 - - - 67.0
10.00 - - - 67.0
16.00 - - - 67.0
20.00 - - - 67.0
25.00 - - - 66.0
31.25 - - - 65.1
62.50 - - - 62.0
100.00 - - - 60.0
200.00 - - - 55.5
250.00 - - - 54.0
300.00 - - - 52.8
400.00 - - - 51.0
500.00 - - - 49.5

Table 24 – Minimum permanent link PSANEXT loss

ANIXTER STANDARDS REFERENCE GUIDE |43


Permanent link PSAACRF (powersum insertion loss to alien crosstalk ratio far-end)
or PSAELFEXT (powersum alien equal-level far-end crosstalk)
Frequency (MHz) Category 3 (dB) Category 5e (dB) Category 6 (dB) Category 6A (dB)

1.00 - - - 67.0
4.00 - - - 65.7
8.00 - - - 59.6
10.00 - - - 57.7
16.00 - - - 53.6
20.00 - - - 51.7
25.00 - - - 49.7
31.25 - - - 47.8
62.50 - - - 41.8
100.00 - - - 37.7
200.00 - - - 31.7
250.00 - - - 29.7
300.00 - - - 28.2
400.00 - - - 25.7
500.00 - - - 23.7

Table 25 – Minimum permanent link PSAACRF loss

Horizontal Cable Transmission Performance


The following tables show the performance specifications
for horizontal cable transmission performance.
Horizontal cable return loss
Frequency (MHz) Category 3 (dB) Category 5e (dB) Category 6 (dB) Category 6A (dB)

1.00 - 20.0 20.0 20.0


4.00 - 23.0 23.0 23.0
8.00 - 24.5 24.5 24.5
10.00 - 25.0 25.0 25.0
16.00 - 25.0 25.0 25.0
20.00 - 25.0 25.0 25.0
25.00 - 24.3 24.3 24.3
31.25 - 23.6 23.6 23.6
62.50 - 21.5 21.5 21.5
100.00 - 20.1 20.1 20.1
200.00 - - 18.0 18.0
250.00 - - 17.3 17.3
300.00 - - - 16.8
400.00 - - - 15.9
500.00 - - - 15.2

Table 26 – Minimum horizontal cable return loss

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Horizontal cable insertion loss
Frequency (MHz) Category 3 (dB) Category 5e (dB) Category 6 (dB) Category 6A (dB)

0.772 2.2 - - -
1.00 2.6 2.0 2.0 2.1
4.00 5.6 4.1 3.8 3.8
8.00 8.5 5.8 5.3 5.3
10.00 9.7 6.5 6.0 5.9
16.00 13.1 8.2 7.6 7.5
20.00 - 9.3 8.5 8.4
25.00 - 10.4 9.5 9.4
31.25 - 11.7 10.7 10.5
62.50 - 17.0 15.4 15.0
100.00 - 22.0 19.8 19.1
200.00 - - 29.0 27.6
250.00 - - 32.8 31.1
300.00 - - - 34.3
400.00 - - - 40.1
500.00 - - - 45.3

Table 27 – Maximum horizontal cable insertion loss

Horizontal cable NEXT loss (near-end crosstalk)


Frequency (MHz) Category 3 (dB) Category 5e (dB) Category 6 (dB) Category 6A (dB)

0.772 43.0 - - -
1.00 41.3 65.3 74.3 74.3
4.00 32.3 56.3 65.3 65.3
8.00 27.8 51.8 60.8 60.8
10.00 26.3 50.3 59.3 59.3
16.00 23.2 47.2 56.2 56.2
20.00 - 45.8 54.8 54.8
25.00 - 44.3 53.3 53.3
31.25 - 42.9 51.9 51.9
62.50 - 38.4 47.4 47.4
100.00 - 35.3 44.3 44.3
200.00 - - 39.8 39.8
250.00 - - 39.3 38.3
300.00 - - - 37.1
400.00 - - - 35.3
500.00 - - - 33.8

Table 28 – Minimum horizontal cable NEXT loss

ANIXTER STANDARDS REFERENCE GUIDE |45


Horizontal cable PSNEXT loss (powersum near-end crosstalk)
Frequency (MHz) Category 3 (dB) Category 5e (dB) Category 6 (dB) Category 6A (dB)

1.00 - 62.3 72.3 72.3


4.00 - 53.3 63.3 63.3
8.00 - 48.8 58.8 58.8
10.00 - 47.3 57.3 57.3
16.00 - 44.2 54.2 54.2
20.00 - 42.8 52.8 52.8
25.00 - 41.3 51.3 51.3
31.25 - 39.9 49.9 49.9
62.50 - 35.4 45.4 45.4
100.00 - 32.3 42.3 42.3
200.00 - - 37.8 37.8
250.00 - - 36.3 36.3
300.00 - - - 35.1
400.00 - - - 33.3
500.00 - - - 31.8

Table 29 – Minimum horizontal cable PSNEXT loss

Horizontal cable ACRF (attenuation to crosstalk ratio, far-end)


or ELFEXT (equal-level far-end crosstalk)
Frequency (MHz) Category 3 (dB) Category 5e (dB) Category 6 (dB) Category 6A (dB)

1.00 - 63.8 67.8 67.8


4.00 - 51.8 55.8 55.8
8.00 - 45.7 49.7 49.7
10.00 - 43.8 47.8 47.8
16.00 - 39.7 43.7 43.7
20.00 - 37.8 41.8 41.8
25.00 - 35.8 39.8 39.8
31.25 - 33.9 37.9 37.9
62.50 - 27.9 31.9 31.9
100.00 - 23.8 27.8 27.8
200.00 - - 21.8 21.8
250.00 - - 19.8 19.8
300.00 - - - 18.3
400.00 - - - 15.8
500.00 - - - 13.8

Table 30 – Minimum horizontal cable ACRF

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Horizontal cable PSACRF (powersum insertion loss to alien crosstalk ratio far-end)
or PSELFEXT (powersum equal-level far-end crosstalk)
Frequency (MHz) Category 3 (dB) Category 5e (dB) Category 6 (dB) Category 6A (dB)

1.00 - 60.8 64.8 64.8


4.00 - 48.8 52.8 52.8
8.00 - 42.7 46.7 46.7
10.00 - 40.8 44.8 44.8
16.00 - 36.7 40.7 40.7
20.00 - 34.8 38.8 38.8
25.00 - 32.8 36.8 36.8
31.25 - 30.9 34.9 34.9
62.50 - 24.9 28.9 28.9
100.00 - 20.8 24.8 24.8
200.00 - - 18.8 18.8
250.00 - - 16.8 16.8
300.00 - - - 15.3
400.00 - - - 12.8
500.00 - - - 10.8

Table 31 – Minimum horizontal cable PSACRF

Horizontal Cable Propagation Delay Skew


Horizontal cable propagation delay skew shall be less
than 45 ns/100 m for all frequencies from 1 MHz
to the upper frequency limit of the Category.

Horizontal cable propagation delay


Frequency (MHz) Category 3 (ns/100 m) Category 5e (ns/100 m) Category 6 (ns/100 m) Category 6A (ns/100 m)

1.00 570 570 570 570


4.00 552 552 552 552
8.00 547 547 547 547
10.00 545 545 545 545
16.00 543 543 543 543
20.00 - 542 542 542
25.00 - 541 541 541
31.25 - 540 540 540
62.50 - 539 539 539
100.00 - 538 538 538
200.00 - - 537 537
250.00 - - 536 536
300.00 - - - 536
400.00 - - - 536
500.00 - - - 536

Table 32 – Maximum horizontal cable propagation delay

ANIXTER STANDARDS REFERENCE GUIDE |47


Horizontal cable PSANEXT loss (powersum alien near-end crosstalk)
Frequency (MHz) Category 3 (dB) Category 5e (dB) Category 6 (dB) Category 6A (dB)

1.00 - - - 67.0
4.00 - - - 67.0
8.00 - - - 67.0
10.00 - - - 67.0
16.00 - - - 67.0
20.00 - - - 67.0
25.00 - - - 67.0
31.25 - - - 67.0
62.50 - - - 65.6
100.00 - - - 62.5
200.00 - - - 58.0
250.00 - - - 56.5
300.00 - - - 55.3
400.00 - - - 53.5
500.00 - - - 52.0

Table 33 – Minimum horizontal cable PSANEXT loss

Horizontal cable PSAACRF (powersum insertion loss to alien crosstalk ratio far-end)
or PSAELFEXT (powersum alien equal level far-end crosstalk)
Frequency (MHz) Category 3 (dB) Category 5e (dB) Category 6 (dB) Category 6A (dB)

1.00 - - - 67.0
4.00 - - - 66.2
8.00 - - - 60.1
10.00 - - - 58.2
16.00 - - - 54.1
20.00 - - - 52.2
25.00 - - - 50.2
31.25 - - - 48.3
62.50 - - - 42.3
100.00 - - - 38.2
200.00 - - - 32.2
250.00 - - - 30.2
300.00 - - - 28.7
400.00 - - - 26.2
500.00 - - - 24.2

Table 34 – Minimum horizontal cable PSAACRF loss

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IEEE 10GBASE-T application support

TIA Category TIA Category TIA Augmented ISO Class EA


5e UTP 6 UTP Category 6 UTP
Recognized
by IEEE 802.3an No Yes Yes Yes
55-Meter
Distance Support No Yes Yes Yes
100-Meter
Distance Support No No Yes Yes
Extrapolated Test
Limits for NEXT
and PSNEXT
to 500 MHz No No No Yes

Table 35 – IEEE 10GBASE-T application support

Note: T able 35 compares current TIA Category 6 cabling with new


TIA and ISO specifications for 10 Gigabit cabling. This table
summarizes the various twisted-pair cabling options and their
respective 10 Gigabit performance attributes as defined by the
latest standards. Category 5e is not recognized as a viable cabling
media to support 10 Gigabit transmission regardless of its installed
cabling distance. Category 6 cabling will only support 10 Gigabit
Ethernet at a maximum installed distance of 55 meters.

ANIXTER STANDARDS REFERENCE GUIDE |49


Bundled and Hybrid Cable
Bundled, wrapped or hybrid cables are allowed for use in horizontal
cabling, provided that each individual cable type meets the
ANSI/TIA-568-C.2 transmission specifications and that the PSNEXT
loss created by adjacent jacketed cables is 3 dB better than the
normally allowed pair-to-pair NEXT for the cable type being tested.
Color codes must follow individual cable standards to distinguish
them from multipair twisted-pair backbone cabling.
Patch Cord Transmission Performance
Jumper and patch cord maximum length limitations:
20 m (66 ft.) in main cross-connect
20 m (66 ft.) in intermediate cross-connect
6 m (20 ft.) in telecommunications room
3 m (10 ft.) in the work area
Assembled patch cords: Insertion loss (attenuation): per 100 m
(328 ft.) at 20° C = horizontal UTP cable insertion loss + 20 percent
(due to stranded conductors) for all performance categories

Matrix of backward-compatible mated component performance


Category of modular connecting hardware performance
Category 3 Category 5e Category 6 Category 6A

Modular plug Category 3 Category 3 Category 3 Category 3 Category 3


and cord Category 5e Category 3 Category 5e Category 5e Category 5e
performance Category 6 Category 3 Category 5e Category 6 Category 6
Category 6A Category 3 Category 5e Category 6 Category 6A

Table 36 – Matrix of backward-compatible mated component performance

Table 36 illustrates that the lowest-rated component


determines the rating of the permanent link or channel.

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Patch Cord Cable Construction
Stranded conductors for extended flex-life cables used for patch
cords and cross-connect jumpers need to be of the
same performance Category (or higher) as the horizontal
cables they connect.

Patch cord return loss


Frequency (MHz) Category 3 (dB) Category 5e (dB) Category 6 (dB) Category 6A (dB)

1.00 - 19.8 19.8 19.8


4.00 - 21.6 21.6 21.6
8.00 - 22.5 22.5 22.5
10.00 - 22.8 22.8 22.8
16.00 - 23.4 23.4 23.4
20.00 - 23.7 23.7 23.7
25.00 - 24.0 24.0 24.0
31.25 - 23.0 23.0 23.0
62.50 - 20.0 20.0 20.0
100.00 - 18.0 18.0 18.0
200.00 - - 15.0 15.0
250.00 - - 14.0 14.0
300.00 - - - 12.8
400.00 - - - 10.9
500.00 - - - 9.5

Table 37 – Minimum patch cord return loss

2-Meter patch cord NEXT loss (near-end crosstalk)


Frequency (MHz) Category 3 (dB) Category 5e (dB) Category 6 (dB) Category 6A (dB)

1.00 - 65.0 65.0 65.0


4.00 - 65.0 65.0 65.0
8.00 - 60.6 65.0 65.0
10.00 - 58.7 65.0 65.0
16.00 - 54.7 62.0 62.0
20.00 - 52.8 60.1 60.1
25.00 - 50.9 58.1 58.2
31.25 - 49.0 56.2 56.3
62.50 - 43.2 50.4 50.4
100.00 - 39.3 46.4 46.4
200.00 - - 40.6 40.7
250.00 - - 38.8 38.9
300.00 - - - 36.2
400.00 - - - 31.9
500.00 - - - 28.4

Table 38 – Minimum 2-meter patch cord NEXT loss

ANIXTER STANDARDS REFERENCE GUIDE |51


5-Meter patch cord NEXT loss (near-end crosstalk)
Frequency (MHz) Category 3 (dB) Category 5e (dB) Category 6 (dB) Category 6A (dB)

1.00 - 65.0 65.0 65.0


4.00 - 64.5 65.0 65.0
8.00 - 58.6 65.0 65.0
10.00 - 56.7 64.5 64.5
16.00 - 52.8 60.5 60.5
20.00 - 50.9 58.6 58.7
25.00 - 49.1 56.8 56.8
31.25 - 47.2 54.9 54.9
62.50 - 41.6 49.2 49.2
100.00 - 37.8 45.3 45.4
200.00 - - 39.8 39.9
250.00 - - 38.1 38.1
300.00 - - - 35.9
400.00 - - - 32.1
500.00 - - - 29.0

Table 39 – Minimum 5-meter patch cord NEXT loss

10-Meter patch cord NEXT loss (near-end crosstalk)

Frequency (MHz) Category 3 (dB) Category 5e (dB) Category 6 (dB) Category 6A (dB)
1.00 - 65.0 65.0 65.0
4.00 - 62.5 65.0 65.0
8.00 - 56.7 64.8 64.8
10.00 - 54.9 62.9 63.0
16.00 - 51.0 59.0 59.1
20.00 - 49.2 57.2 57.3
25.00 - 47.4 55.4 55.4
31.25 - 45.6 53.6 53.6
62.50 - 40.2 48.1 48.1
100.00 - 36.7 44.4 44.5
200.00 - - 39.3 39.3
250.00 - - 37.6 37.7
300.00 - - - 35.8
400.00 - - - 32.5
500.00 - - - 29.8

Table 40 – Minimum 10-meter patch cord NEXT loss

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PURPOSE OF THE ANSI/TIA-568-C.3 STANDARD
The purpose of the ANSI/TIA-568-C.3 standard is to specify cable
and component transmission performance requirements for premises
optical fiber cabling. Although this standard is primarily intended to
be used by manufacturers of optical cabling solutions, other groups
such as end-users, designers and installers may also find it useful.

SECTION CONTENTS
ANSI/TIA-568-C.3
Optical Fiber Cabling Components
Optical Fiber Cabling Components................................................................ 50
Optical Fiber Connector ......................................................................... 51
Color Identification ................................................................................. 51
Optical Fiber Telecommunications Outlet Required Features.................... 52
Optical Fiber Splices, Fusion or Mechanical............................................ 52
Optical Fiber Connector (Mated Pair)...................................................... 52
Patch Cords............................................................................................. 52

ANIXTER STANDARDS REFERENCE GUIDE |53


OPTICAL FIBER CABLING COMPONENTS

Optical fiber cabling transmission performance parameters


Minimum Minimum
overfilled modal effective modal
Optical fiber Maximum bandwidth-length bandwidth-length
and Wavelength attenuation product product
cable type2 (nm) (dB/km) (MHz•km)1 (MHz•km)1
62.5/125 µm
Multimode 850 3.5 200 Not required
TIA 492AAAA (OM1) 1300 1.5 500 Not required
50/125 µm
Multimode 850 3.5 500 Not required
TIA 492AAAB (OM2) 1300 1.5 500 Not required
850-nm
Laser-optimized
50/125 µm multimode 850 3.5 1,500 2,000
TIA 492AAAC (OM3) 1300 1.5 500 Not required
Single-mode
indoor-outdoor
TIA 492CAAA (OS1) 1310 0.5 - -
TIA 492CAAB (OS2)3 1550 0.5 - -
Single-mode
inside plant
TIA 492CAAA (OS1) 1310 1.0 - -
TIA 492CAAB (OS2)3 1550 1.0 - -
Single-mode
outside plant
TIA 492CAAA (OS1) 1310 0.5 - -
TIA 492CAAB (OS2)3 1550 0.5 - -
NOTES
1 – T he bandwidth-length product, as measured by the fiber manufacturer, can be used to demonstrate
compliance with this requirement.
2 – T he fiber designation (OM1, OM2, OM3, OS1 and OS2) corresponds to the designation of ISO/IEC 11801
or ISO/IEC 24702.
3 – O S2 is commonly referred to as “low water peak” single-mode fiber and is characterized by having
a low attenuation coefficient in the vicinity of 1383 nm.

Table 41 – Optical fiber cable transmission performance parameters

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Optical fiber bend radius
Fiber type Bend radius
Small Inside Plant Cable (2–4 fibers) 1 in. (no load)
2 in. (with load)
All Other Inside Plant Cable 10 x diameter (no load)
15 x diameter (with load)
Outside Plant Cable 10 x diameter (no load)
20 x diameter (with load)

Table 42 – Optical fiber bend radius

Outside plant cable must be water-blocked and have a minimum


pull strength of 600 lb. (drop cable pull strength may be 300 lb.).

Optical Fiber Connector


No specified connector: 568 “SC” and other duplex designs may
be used in addition to the MPO or MTP array connectors.

Color Identification
Unless color coding is used for some other purpose,
the connector strain relief and adapter housing
should be identifiable by the following colors:
a) 850-nm laser-optimized 50/125 µm fiber – aqua
b) 50/125 µm fiber – black
c) 62.5/125 µm fiber – beige
d) Single-mode fiber – blue
e) Angled contact ferrule single-mode connectors – green
In addition, unless color coding is used for some other purpose,
the connector plug body should be generically identified by the
following colors, where possible:
a) Multimode – beige, black or aqua
b) Single-mode – blue
c) Angled contact ferrule single-mode connectors – green

ANIXTER STANDARDS REFERENCE GUIDE |55


Optical Fiber Telecommunications Outlet Required Features
• Capability to terminate minimum of two fibers into
568“SC” couplings or other duplex connection
• Means of securing fiber and maintaining minimum
bend radius of 25 mm (1 in.)

Optical Fiber Splices, Fusion or Mechanical


Maximum insertion loss 0.3 dB
• Minimum return loss:
– Multimode: 20 dB
– Single-mode: 26 dB
– Single-mode: 55 dB (analog CATV)

Optical Fiber Connector (Mated Pair)


• Maximum insertion loss 0.75 dB

Patch Cords
• S hall be dual fiber of the same type as the horizontal
and backbone fiber
• Polarity shall be keyed duplex

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PURPOSE OF THE ANSI/TIA-569-D STANDARD
Telecommunication systems have an impact on almost every area
within and between buildings. The complexity of telecommunications
has increased and now includes voice, data, video, access control,
fire and security, audio, environmental and other intelligent building
controls over media that includes copper data cabling, fiber optics
and various forms of wireless transmission. This standard recognizes
that buildings have a long life cycle and must be designed to
support dynamically changing telecommunications systems and
media over the life of the building. This document standardizes on
specific pathway and space design and construction practices in
order to support telecommunications media and equipment within
buildings. It does not standardize on the media or equipment.
It provides useful information on the industry-standard design
alternatives available for telecommunications pathways and
spaces. It is up to the telecommunications designer to properly
select among the alternatives based upon the applications
being employed and the various constraints imposed.
This is a summary document that highlights portions of the key
provisions of the standard.

ANIXTER STANDARDS REFERENCE GUIDE |57


SECTION CONTENTS
ANSI/TIA-569-D
Telecommunications Pathways and Spaces
Design Considerations.................................................................................. 56
Building Spaces............................................................................................ 59
Temperature and Humidity Requirements................................................ 59
Common Requirements for Rooms.......................................................... 60
General and Architectural................................................................ 60
Racks and Cabinets......................................................................... 61
Distributor Room (Equipment Room/Telecommunications Room)............ 63
Architectural and Environmental.............................................................. 64
Entrance Room or Space......................................................................... 65
Distributor Enclosure (Formerly Telecom Enclosure)................................. 65
Equipment Outlet (EO)............................................................................ 66
Multiuser Telecommunications Outlet Assembly .............................. 67
Consolidation Point ........................................................................ 68
Other Spaces Covered in the Standard
(Not summarized in this document).............................................................. 69
Access Provider Spaces and Service Provider Spaces.............................. 69
Multi-Tenant Building Spaces.................................................................. 69
CONTINUES >>

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Building Pathways......................................................................................... 69
General .................................................................................................. 69
Types of Pathways.................................................................................... 69
Areas Above Ceilings........................................................................ 69
Access Floor Systems....................................................................... 69
Cable Support Systems.................................................................... 69
Underfloor Duct Systems................................................................. 69
Cellular Floor................................................................................... 70
Perimeter Raceways......................................................................... 70
Utility Columns................................................................................ 70
Pathway Separation from EMI Sources..................................................... 70
Separation Between Telecommunications and Power Cables............ 70
Separation from Lighting................................................................. 72
Cable Tray and Cable Runway.................................................................. 72
Conduit................................................................................................... 72
Furniture ................................................................................................ 72
Other In-Floor Pathways .......................................................................... 73
Surface Raceway..................................................................................... 73
Vertical Pathway – Sleeves or Conduits, Slots................................................ 73
Annex A – Firestopping.................................................................................. 74

ANIXTER STANDARDS REFERENCE GUIDE |59


DESIGN CONSIDERATIONS

10
3

10
4

8
5

11
8
12
9

6 7

Description
1. Wireless service 6. Entrance room
entrance pathway 7. Distributor enclosure
2. Entrance room 8. Service entrance pathway
3. Building pathways 9. Diversity of entrance routes
4.  Distributor room 10. D istributor room
5. Access provider space, 11. Equipment outlet
service provider space 12. Equipment outlet location

Figure 12 – Example of pathways and spaces in a single-tenant building

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1

8
8

8
3

8 3
8
7
4

6
5
7

Description
1. Wireless service 5. Entrance room
entrance pathway 6. Service entrance pathway
2. Entrance room 7. Diversity of entrance routes
3. Common building 8. Common distributor room
4. Access provider space,
service provider space
Figure 13 – Example of common pathways and spaces in a multi-tenant building

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DC

3 3

DB DB

2 2 2

1
DA DA DA
1

1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1

CP CP CP CP CP
EO EO EO EO EO EO EO EO EO EO

Legend
DA Distributor A 1 Cabling
Subsystem 1 cable
DB Distributor B
DC Distributor C 2 Cabling
Subsystem 2 cable
EO Equipment outlet
CP Optional consolidation point 3 Cabling
Subsystem 3 cable
Optional tie cabling

NOTE – All elements shown represent cables and connecting


hardware, not spaces or pathways.

Figure 14 – Elements of generic cabling topology

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BUILDING SPACES
Temperature and Humidity Requirements
ASHRAE Space Environmental requirements
Class
Class See note 1 • Temperature: 15-32º C (59–90º F) dry bulb2
A1 • Maximum rate of temperature change: 5º C
(9º F) per hour in spaces where tape drives
are present, otherwise 20º C (36º F) per hour
• Relative humidity (RH): 20–80%
• Maximum dew point: 17º C (63º F)

Class See note 1 • Temperature: 10–35º C (50–95º F) dry bulb2


A2 • Maximum rate of temperature change: 5º C
(9º F) per hour in spaces where tape drives
are present, otherwise 20º C (36º F) per hour
• Relative humidity (RH): 20–80%
• Maximum dew point: 21º C (70º F)

Class See note 1 • Temperature: 5–40º C (41–104º F) dry bulb2,3


A3 • Maximum rate of temperature change: 5º C
(9º F) per hour in spaces where tape drives
are present, otherwise 20º C (36º F) per hour
• Relative humidity (RH): 8–85%
• Minimum dew point: -12º C (10º F)
• Maximum dew point: 24º C (75º F)

Class See note 1 • Temperature: 5-45º C (41–113º F) dry bulb2,3


A4 • Maximum rate of temperature change: 5º C
(9º F) per hour in spaces where tape drives
are present, otherwise 20º C (36º F) per hour
• Relative humidity (RH): 8–90%
• Minimum dew point: -12º C (10º F)
• Maximum dew point: 24º C (75º F)

Class Distributor room (6.4) • Temperature: 5-35º C (41–95º F) dry bulb3


B Distributor enclosure (6.6) • Relative humidity (RH): 8 –80%
Entrance room or space (6.5) • Maximum dew point: 28º C (82º F)
Access provider space (7)
Service provider space (7)
Common
distributor room (8.2)

Class See note 1 • Temperature: 5–40º C (41–104º F) dry bulb3


C • Relative humidity (RH): 8–80%
• Maximum dew point: 28º C (82º F)

Table 43 – Temperature and humidity chart


Note: 1. Class A1, Class A2, Class A3, Class A4 and Class C are not referenced by this
Standard. They are included for reference by specific premises standards.
2. Reduce maximum temperature at altitude above 950 m (3,100 ft.):
A1, A2: 1º C per 300 m (1.8º F per 1,000 ft.); A3: 1º C per 175 m
(1.8º F per 575 ft.); A4: 1º C per 125 m (1.8º F per 410 ft.).
3. Minimum temperature with a diskette in a drive is 10º C (50º F).
4. The ASHRAE Thermal Guidelines for Data Processing Environments
provide both recommended and allowable ranges. The
requirements in this table are based on the allowable ranges.

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Common Requirements for Rooms
The requirements of this section apply to the following
telecommunications spaces: distributor room, common distributor
room, entrance room or space, access provider space and service
provider space.
General and Architectural
• A void selecting locations that are restricted by building
components that limit expansion such as elevators, core, outside
walls or other fixed building walls.
• There should be accessibility for delivery of large equipment. A
minimum of one wall shall be covered with 19 mm
(3/4 in.) plywood covered with two coats of fire-retardant paint.
• A minimum of one wall should be covered with 19 mm
(3/4 in.) plywood. The backboard shall be 1.2 m (4 ft.) x 2.4 m
(8 ft.) sheets, mounted vertically with bottom of plywood mounted
150 mm (6 in.) above the finished floor. Plywood shall be A/C
grade and finished with two coats of fire-retardant paint. Plywood
shall be painted prior to installation of any equipment.
•M
 inimum ceiling height shall be 2.4 m (8 ft.) without obstructions. The
height between the finished floor and the lowest point of the ceiling
should be a minimum of 3 m (10 ft.) to accommodate taller frames and
overhead pathways.
• F loor loading shall be sufficient to bear all the installed loads in
the building and a structural engineer consulted to do the design.
• L ighting shall be a minimum of 500 lux in the horizontal plane
and 200 lux in the vertical plane measured 1 m (3 ft.) above the
finished floor when occupied by personnel.
• The door shall be a minimum of 0.9 m (36 in.) wide and 2 m
(80 in.) high with no doorsill, hinged to open outward (code
permitting). The door shall be fitted with a lock. A double door
1.8 m (72 in.) wide by 2.3 m (90 in.) high is recommended if large
equipment delivery is anticipated.

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• There should be no exterior windows.
• Temperature and humidity shall meet the
requirements for ASHRAE Class B in Table 43.
• Environmental control such as power distribution and
conditioner systems, and UPS systems, up to 100 kVA,
dedicated for use by telecommunications systems in the
room are permitted to be installed in the space. A UPS
larger than 100 kVA must be located in a separate room.
• Equipment not related to the support of the telecommunications
space (e.g., piping, ductwork, pneumatic tubing) shall
not be installed in, pass through, or enter that room.
• F ire protection shall be provided per code.
• Telecom spaces shall not be located below water level,
unless preventative measures are employed to prevent water
infiltration. The space shall be free of water or drain pipes
not directly required to support equipment in the room.
Racks and Cabinets
• Racks are equipped with fixed or adjustable side mounting
rails to which equipment and hardware are mounted.
Cabinets can be equipped with fixed or adjustable side
mounting rails, side panels, a top, and front and rear
doors, and are frequently equipped with locks.
• A minimum of 1 m (3 ft.) of clearance in front of racks and
cabinets shall be provided but a 1.2 m (4 ft.) clearance is
preferred. A minimum of 0.6 m (2 ft.) of rear clearance shall
be provided but a clearance of 1 m (3 ft.) is preferred.
• Cabinets shall be selected and configured to provide
adequate cooling for the equipment they contain.
There are many cooling methods available.
• R acks and cabinets should preferably be no taller than
2.1 m (7 ft.) for easier access to the equipment or
connecting hardware installed at the top. Where floor
space is limited, taller racks and cabinets may be used
if allowed by the Authority Having Jurisdiction (AHJ).

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• C abinets should be of adequate depth to accommodate
the planned equipment to be installed, including front
and rear cabling, power cords, cable management
hardware and power strips. Consideration should be
given to using cabinets that are at least 150 mm (6 in.)
deeper or wider than the largest installed equipment.
• C abinets should have adjustable front and rear rails,
which should provide 42 or more rack mount units of
space. If patch panels are installed on the front or rear
of cabinets, the front or rear rails should be recessed at
least 100 mm (4 in.) to allow for cable management.
• P ower strips should be used with cabinets and racks that
contain active electronics. Power circuits should have
dedicated neutral and ground conductors. Power strips
should have a locking plug but not have an on/off switch
or breaker reset button to minimize accidental shut-off.
• A vertical cable manager shall be installed between each
pair of racks and at both ends of every row of racks.
Vertical cord managers should extend from the floor
to the top of the racks. The vertical cable managers
shall be not less than 83 mm (3.25 in.) in width.

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Distributor Room
(Equipment Room/Telecommunications Room)
The distributor room is a common access point for
cabling subsystems and building pathways. It may contain
telecommunications equipment, cable terminations and associated
cross-connect cabling. The distributor room may also contain
information technology equipment and building automation
systems remote powering over structured cabling, wireless
access points, distributed antenna systems, intelligent building
systems and security systems. The distributor room shall be
dedicated to the telecommunications function and should not
be shared with electrical installations other than those used for
telecommunications or related equipment. Equipment not related
to the support of the distributor room (piping, ductwork, pneumatic
tubing etc.) shall not be installed in or pass through this room.

Figure 15 – Typical distributor room

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Architectural and Environmental
• Locate the distributor room as close as possible to the center
of the area served.
• If multiple distributor rooms are on the same floor they should be
interconnected with a minimum of one trade size 3 conduit
or equivalent pathway.
• S ize: Minimum floor space shall be based on the number of
(Distributor A) equipment outlets served directly as shown in
Table 44. The minimum dimension is 3 m (10 ft.) long by 3 m
(10 ft.) wide. A distributor room containing Distributor B should
be a minimum of 10 m² (100 ft.²). A distributor room containing
Distributor C should be sized at a minimum of 11 m2 (120 ft2) for
building with gross area of up to 50,000 m2 (500,000 ft2). In larger
buildings the size of the distributor room containing Distributor
C should be increased in increments of 1 m2 (10 ft.2) for every
increase of 10,000 m2 (100,000 ft.2) in gross building area.
• There shall be a minimum of one distributor room per floor.
• There shall be a minimum of two dedicated 120 VAC,
nonswitched, AC duplex receptacles provided, each
on a separate 20 A dedicated branch circuit.
• Temperature and humidity shall be controlled
to meet the requirements of Table 43.
• A bonding and grounding system as specified
by ANSI/TIA-607-C shall be provided.

Equipment Minimum floor space Typical dimensions


outlets served m2 (ft.2) m (ft.)
Up to 100 9 (100) 3 x 3 (10 x 10)
101 to 200 13.5 (150) 3 x 4.5 (10 x 15)
201 to 800 36 (400) 6 x 6 (20 x 20)
801 to 1,600 72 (800) 6 x 12 (20 x 40)
1,601 to 2,400 108 (1,200) 9 x 12 (30 x 40)
Note: The minimum recommended floor spaces are calculated from the typical
dimensions given.
Table 44 – Floor space

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Entrance Room or Space
The entrance room is a space in which the joining of inter- or
intrabuilding telecommunications facilities takes place. It is
an entrance point for outside plant cabling and may contain
incoming service provider cables, protectors and building cables.
An entrance room may also serve as a distributor room.
•M
 ust meet the Common Requirements for Rooms (page 60).
• S hall be located in a dry area not subject to flooding and
as close as possible to the building entrance point.
• S ized to meet the present and future requirements of Distributor C.
•M
 ay be an open area or room. For buildings exceeding
2,000 m² (20,000 ft.²), an enclosed room should be provided. In
buildings up to 10,000 m² (100,000 ft.²), it may be suitable to
use wall-mounted termination hardware. A larger floor area may
require the use of free-standing frames for terminating cables.
• A bonding and grounding system as specified
in ANSI/TIA-607-C shall be provided.
Distributor Enclosure (Formerly Telecom Enclosure)
A distributor enclosure is a case or housing that is designed
to contain Distributor A, Distributor B or Distributor C. It is a
common access point for cabling subsystems and pathways.
• It shall be located as close as possible to
the center of the area served.
• It must have CEA-310E-compliant mounting
holes installed or equipped with a plywood
backboard to facilitate hardware mounting.
• There should be a minimum of 500 lux
of light within the enclosure.
• A minimum of one dedicated 120 V/20 A nonswitched,
duplex electrical outlet shall be provided.

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Equipment Outlet (EO)
An equipment outlet is the outermost connection facility in a
hierarchical star topology. The type of equipment outlet hardware is
based on the service area it serves and the environment. In an
office area, it can be a telecom outlet or a MUTOA, while in a
data center the equipment outlet can be a patch panel or other
connecting hardware.
• A minimum of one equipment outlet space shall be provided per
area serviced. Two separate equipment outlets should be provided
in areas where it may be difficult to add outlets at a later date.
• B end radius requirements should not be violated
in the space behind equipment outlets.
• O utlet boxes, if used, should be no smaller than 50 mm
(2 in.) wide, 75 mm (3 in.) high, and 64 mm (2.5 in.) deep.
• If furniture is used, there are two standard
sizes of openings specified:
– Equivalent to NEMA OS 1, WD 6 openings with
a minimum depth of 30.5 mm (1.2 in.)
– Alternative furniture opening as specified in Figure 16 below:

n
bstr uctio H
F irst o
C
T

Dimensions Tolerance
mm (in.) mm (in.)
L 68.8 (2.71) 1.02 (0.040)
H 35.1 (1.38) 0.90 (0.035)
T 1.4 (0.055) 0.64 (0.025)
R 4.06 (0.16) max. – –
C 30.5 (1.2) min. – –

Figure 16 – Dimensions for furniture equipment outlet opening


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• F or wall telephones - Flush or surface-mount outlets
designed for mounting of wall telephones shall
use the mounting plate shown in Figure 17.

Figure 17 – Telecommunications wall outlet mounting plate

Multiuser Telecommunications Outlet Assembly (MUTOA)


MUTOAs should have appropriate security, such as key locking,
tool removable covers, or other suitable means. They shall
not be located under access flooring. The MUTOA shall be
mounted in such a way that it does not obstruct the intended
pathway cabling capacity and furniture used to house the
MUTOA shall have sufficient space to allow for anticipated
horizontal cable slack storage, strain relief and terminations.

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Consolidation Point
Consolidation points should have appropriate security, such as
key locking, tool removable covers, or other suitable means.
Furniture used to house consolidation points shall have sufficient
space to allow for anticipated horizontal cable slack storage,
strain relief and terminations. Suspended ceiling spaces or
access floors may be used, provided the space is accessible
without moving building fixtures, equipment, heavy furniture
or disturbing building occupants. Consolidation points in
plenum spaces shall conform to applicable building codes.

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OTHER SPACES COVERED IN THE STANDARD
(NOT SUMMARIZED IN THIS DOCUMENT)
Access Provider Spaces and Service Provider Spaces
These spaces are used for the provider’s transmission,
reception and support equipment.
Multi-Tenant Building Spaces
These spaces include distributor rooms, pathways and other spaces
that serve multiple tenants in a multi-tenant building.

BUILDING PATHWAYS
General
• Shall not be located in elevator shafts.
• S hall be installed in “dry” locations that protect the
cables from moisture levels that are beyond the
normal operating range of indoor premises cable.
• “Slab-on-grade” designs where pathways are installed
underground or in concrete slabs that are in direct
contact with earth are considered “wet” locations.
• F irestop should be used or maintained for all
penetrations of cable, wires and pathways.
Types of Pathways
Areas Above Ceilings
May be used as pathways as well as spaces for connecting hardware.
Access Floor Systems
Consist of modular floor panels supported by pedestals and stringers.
Cable Support Systems
Cable trays and runways can be located below or above the ceiling
or within an access floor system.
Underfloor Duct Systems
Pathways consisting of distribution and feeder ducts embedded in
concrete containing cables for telecommunications and
power services.

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Cellular Floor
Generally used in steel-frame buildings in floors above grade,
the steel or concrete cell sections act as the concrete floor form
and later, with header ducts, act as the distribution raceways.
Perimeter Raceways
Surface-mounted pathways may contain equipment outlets and
are often installed at baseboard, chair-rail or ceiling height.
Utility Columns
Extending from the ceiling to the service area, these
columns provide pathways for wire and cable.

Pathway Separation from EMI Sources


Separation Between Telecommunications and Power Cables
• The requirements of the National Electrical Code (NFPA 70)
shall apply.
• Z ero separation distance is permitted when either the electrically
conductive telecommunications cables, the power cables
or both are enclosed in metallic pathways that meet the
following conditions:
– Metallic pathway(s) completely enclose the cables and
are continuous.
– Metallic pathway(s) are properly grounded and bonded per
ANSI/TIA-607-C.
Very Imp
– Walls of the pathway(s) have a minimum thickness of 1 mm
(0.04 in.) nominal if made of steel or 1.5 mm (0.06 in.) nominal
if made of aluminum.
– No separation is required between telecommunications and
power cables crossing at right angles.
• Table 45 (page 71) covers the guidelines for separation between
balanced twisted-pair cables and adjacent power wiring. The
separation distances in Table 45 may be halved if the data and
power cables are installed in separate solid metallic or wire mesh
cable trays.

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Power Number Minimum recommended separation, mm (in.) 1
circuit type of radial E1 (EFT/B = 500 V) E2 (EFT/B = 500 V),
(sinusoidal) power E3 (EFT/B = 1,000 V)
circuits Unscreened Armored Unscreened power Armored
power or cables or
cables screened Unshielded Shielded screened
power cables cables power
cables 2 cables 2
120/230 1 0 (0) 0 (0) 50 (2) 1 (0.04)3 0 (0)
VAC, 20 A 2 0 (0) 0 (0) 50 (2) 5 (0.2)3 2.5 (0.1)
1-phase 3 0 (0) 0 (0) 50 (2) 10 (0.4)3 5 (0.2)
4 0 (0) 0 (0) 50 (2) 12 (0.5)3 6 (0.2)
5–15 0 (0)3 0 (0) 50 (2) 50 (2) 25 (1)
16–30 100 (4) 50 (2) 100 (4) 100 (4) 50 (2)
31–60 200 (8) 100 (4) 200 (8) 200 (8) 100 (4)
61–90 300 (12) 150 (6) 300 (12) 300 (12) 150 (6)
≥ 91 600 (24) 300 (12) 600 (24) 600 (24) 300 (12)
120/230 1 10 (0.4)3 5 (0.2) 50 (2) 10 (0.4)3 5 (0.2)
VAC, 32 A 2 20 (0.8)3 10 (0.4) 50 (2) 20 (0.8)3 10 (0.4)
1-phase 3 30 (1)3 15 (0.6) 50 (2) 30 (1)3 15 (0.6)
4–5 50 (2) 25 (1) 50 (2) 50 (2) 25 (1)
6–9 100 (4) 50 (2) 100 (4) 100 (4) 50 (2)
10–19 200 (8) 100 (4) 200 (8) 200 (8) 100 (4)
20–28 300 (12) 150 (6) 300 (12) 300 (12) 150 (6)
≥ 29 600 (24) 300 (12) 600 (24) 600 (24) 300 (12)
120/230 1 50 (2) 25 (1) 50 (2) 50 (2) 25 (1)
VAC, 63 A 2–3 100 (4) 50 (2) 100 (4) 100 (4) 50 (2)
1-phase 4–8 200 (8) 100 (4) 200 (8) 200 (8) 100 (4)
9–14 300 (12) 150 (6) 300 (12) 300 (12) 150 (6)
≥ 15 600 (24) 300 (12) 600 (24) 600 (24) 300 (12)
120/230 1 100 (4) 50 (2) 100 (4) 100 (4) 50 (2)
VAC, 100 A 2 200 (8) 100 (4) 200 (8) 200 (8) 100 (4)
1-phase 3 300 (12) 150 (6) 300 (12) 300 (12) 150 (6)
≥4 600 (24) 300 (12) 600 (24) 600 (24) 300 (12)
480 VAC, 1 300 (12) 300 (12) 300 (12) 300 (12) 300 (12)
100 A ≥2 600 (24) 600 (24) 600 (24) 600 (24) 600 (24)
3-phase

Table 45 – Recommended separation from power wiring for balanced twisted-pair cabling

Note: 1. Separation distances may be halved if the


power cables and data cables are installed in
separate metallic pathways (see above).
2. Armoring or screening must completely surround
the cable (except at the socket) and be
properly bonded and grounded (earthed).
3. 50 mm (2 in.) if loose (individual) power conductors are
used and not bundled or maintained close together.

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Separation from Lighting
Twisted-pair cabling should be separated from fluorescent
lamps and fixtures by a minimum of 125 mm (5 in.).
Cable Tray and Cable Runway
Cable trays shall be planned with an initial fill ratio of 25 percent.
The maximum fill ratio of any cable tray shall be 50 percent. It
should be noted that a fill ratio of 50 percent for four-pair and
similar size cables will physically fill the entire tray due to spaces
between cables and random placement. The maximum depth
of any cable tray shall be 150 mm (6 in.). Span cable support
systems should be done in accordance with the manufacturer’s
recommended load capacity. A support should be placed within 600
mm (24 in.) on each side of connections to a bend, tee or cross.
Noncontinuous pathway supports shall be located at intervals
not to exceed 1.5 m (5 ft.). Cable shall not be laid directly on
ceiling tiles or rails. Wires or rods that are already used for other
functions, such as suspended ceiling grid support, shall not be
used as attachment points for noncontinuous supports.
Conduit
No section of conduit shall be longer than 30 m (100 ft.) between
pull points. Pull boxes shall be placed in conduit runs of over 30 m
(100 ft.) and no section of conduit should have more than two 90
degree bends. The inside bend radius of a conduit 50 mm (2 in.) or
less shall be at least six times the internal diameter. For conduits with
an internal diameter more than 50 mm (2 in.), the inside bend radius
shall be at least 10 times the internal diameter. Pull boxes should be
readily accessible and should be installed in straight sections
of conduit and not used in place of a bend. Conduits extending
from a distributor room shall not serve more than three equipment
outlet boxes.
Furniture
The maximum fill in furniture pathways is 40%. The minimum
furniture pathway cross-sectional area is 950 mm (1.5 sq in.).

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Other In-Floor Pathways
Other in-floor pathways such as underfloor duct systems
and cellular floor are covered in detail in the main
standard and are not included in this summary guide.
Surface Raceway
Surface raceway systems consist of bases, covers, associated
fittings and accessories. They shall be configured as either single
or multi-channel systems. The maximum pathway fill is 40%.

VERTICAL PATHWAY – SLEEVES OR CONDUITS, SLOTS


Sleeves: A minimum of five metric designator 103 (trade
size 4) conduits or sleeves should be provided to service
up to 4,000 m2 (40,000 ft.2) of usable floor space. One
additional conduit or sleeve should be provided for each
additional 4,000 m2 (40,000 ft.2) of usable floor space.
Slots: Slots are typically located flush against the wall within
a space and should be designed at a depth (the dimension
perpendicular to the wall) of 150–600 mm (6–24 in.) or
narrower depths wherever possible. The size of the pathway
using slots should be one slot sized at 0.04 m2 (60 in.2) for
up to 4,000 m2 (40,000 ft.2) of usable floor space served. The
slot area should be increased by 0.04 m2 (60 in.2) with each
4,000 m2 (40,000 ft.2) increase in usable floor space served.
A structural design engineer must approve the
location and configuration of sleeves and slots.

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Figure 18 – Typical office building pathway layout

Figure 19 – Typical sleeve and slot installations

ANNEX A – FIRESTOPPING
This is a normative annex and considered part of the standard.
It provides guidelines and requirements as well as methods,
materials and other considerations for reestablishing the
integrity of fire-rated structures such as walls, floors and ceilings
when these structures are penetrated by components.

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There are two broad categories of firestops:
1. Mechanical: Pre-manufactured elastomeric components
shaped to fit around standard cables, tubes and conduits.
2. Non-mechanical: These come in a variety of forms that
have the benefit of adapting to irregular openings and off-
center penetrating items e.g., putties, caulks, cementitious
materials, intumescent sheets, intumescent wrap strips,
silicone foam and pre-manufactured pillows.

Figure 20 – Mechanical firestops

Figure 21 – Cross-section of through-wall firestop

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PURPOSE OF THE ANSI/TIA-606-B STANDARD
This standard defines the “Classes of Administration” needed
to properly label and administer a telecommunications
infrastructure. It specifies administration for a generic
telecommunications cabling system that will support
a multiproduct, multimanufacturer environment.
This standard provides uniform guidelines for an administration
methodology that is independent of the applications that may
change over the life of the telecommunications infrastructure.
The intention of this standard is to increase the value
of the infrastructure investment by reducing system
maintenance expenses, extending the useful life of the
system and providing effective service to users.
This standard specifies two identifier formats, one fully backward
compatible with legacy TIA-606-A identifiers and one based on
TIA-606-A, but modified to be compatible with the ISO/IEC TR
14763-2-1 identifiers. New administration systems should use the
identifier format compatible with the ISO/IEC TR 14763-2-1.

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SECTION CONTENTS
ANSI/TIA-606-B
Administration Standard for
Telecommunications Infrastructure
Administration Standard for Telecommunications Infrastructure.................... 78
Elements of an Administration System..................................................... 78
Scope..................................................................................................... 79
Classes of Administration........................................................................ 79
Compatible Formats for ANSI/TIA-606-A and ISO/IEC TR 14763-2-1....... 80
Identifiers Grouped by Class – ANSI/TIA-606-A Compatible...................... 80
Identifiers Grouped by Class – ISO/IEC TR 14763-2-1 Compatible........... 83
Class 1 Administration............................................................................. 85
Class 2 Administration............................................................................. 86
Class 3 Administration............................................................................. 86
Class 4 Administration............................................................................. 87
Some Common Generalized Administration Labeling Guidelines.............. 87
Color-Coding Identification...................................................................... 88
Permanent Labels................................................................................... 89
Administration Systems Using Records, Linkages and Reports................. 90
Automated Infrastructure Management Systems...................................... 91

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ADMINISTRATION STANDARD FOR
TELECOMMUNICATIONS STRUCTURE
Elements of an Administration System
• Cabling Subsystem 1 pathways and cabling
• Cabling Subsystem 2 and 3 pathways and cabling
• Telecommunications grounding and bonding
• S paces (e.g., entrance facility, telecommunications
room, equipment room)
• Firestopping

Figure 22 – A typical model for the infrastructure elements


used in an administration system

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Scope
This standard:
• Assigns identifiers to components in the infrastructure
• S pecifies elements of information that make
up records for each identifier
• S pecifies relationships between records to
access information they contain
• Specifies reports providing information on groups of records
• Specifies graphical and symbolic requirements.
Classes of Administration
Four classes of administration are specified in this standard
to accommodate diverse degrees of complexity present in
telecommunications infrastructure. Each class defines the
administration requirements for identifiers, records and labeling.
An administration system can be managed using a paper-based
system, general-purpose spreadsheet, specialized software
or automated infrastructure management (AIM) systems.
The most relevant factors in determining the minimum class of
administration are the size and complexity of the infrastructure. The
number of telecommunications spaces (TS), such as equipment
room (ER), telecommunications room (TR), access provider
spaces, service provider spaces, common distributor room, and
entrance facility (EF) spaces, is one indicator of complexity.

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Compatible Formats for ANSI/TIA-606-A
and ISO/IEC TR 14763-2-1
Two formats are specified for identifiers:
1. A format that is backward compatible with ANSI/TIA-606-A
2. A format that is compatible as specified in ISO/IEC TR 14763-2-1
Note: The following two tables (Table 46 and Table 47) show
the identifiers grouped by their “class” for both the ANSI/
TIA-606-A and the ISO/IEC TR 14763-2-1 standards. It does
not provide all the individual identifier codes and formats or
the specific clauses concerning each identifier that are found
in the table in the master standard document. Providing such
detailed information would require a voluminous amount of
space and is outside the scope of this summarized Anixter
Standards Reference Guide. For more in-depth information,
please refer to the actual ANSI/TIA-606-B document.

Identifiers Grouped by Class – ANSI/TIA-606-A Compatible


Class of Administration
Description of identifier 1 2 3 4
Telecommunications space (TS) R R R R
Cabinet, rack, enclosure, wall segment R R R R
Patch panel or termination block R R R R
Port on patch panel or termination on
R R R R
termination block
Cabling Subsystem 2 or 3 (backbone) cable or cable
between cabinets, racks, enclosures, O R R R
or wall segments
Port within Cabling Subsystem 2 or 3 cable or
cable within distributor telecommunications room, O R R R
equipment room, or computer room
Cabling Subsystem 1 (horizontal ) link R R R R

Table 46 – Identifiers grouped by class – ANSI/TIA-606-A compatible

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Class of Administration
Description of identifier 1 2 3 4
Equipment outlet or telecommunications outlet O O O O
Consolidation point O O O O
Port in ZDA in a data center O O O O
Space in Cabling Subsystem 1 link O O O O
TMGB - Telecommunications main grounding busbar R R R R
TGB - Telecommunications grounding busbar R R R R
RGB - Rack grounding busbar O O O O
mesh-BN - Mesh bonding network O O O O
BCT - Bonding conductor for telecommunications R R R R
TBB - Telecommunications bonding backbone O R R R
GE - Grounding equalizer O R R R
Bonding conductor from object to TMGB R R R R
Bonding conductor from object to TGB R R R R
Bonding conductor from object to mesh-BN O O O O
Bonding conductor from object to RGB O O O O
Building Cabling Subsystem 2 or 3 (backbone) cable O R R R
Building Cabling Subsystem 2 or 3 pair/port O R R R
Building Cabling Subsystem 2 or 3 cable space O O O O
Firestop location O R R R
Campus or site O O O R
Building O O R R
Interbuilding cable O O R R
Interbuilding cable pair/port O O R R

Table 46 – Continued

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Class of Administration
Description of identifier 1 2 3 4
Interbuilding cable space O O O O
Outdoor telecommunications space
(e.g., maintenance holes, handholes, pedestals, O O O O
outdoor cabinets)
Intraspace pathway O O O O
Building pathway O O O O
Building entrance pathway O O O O
Outside plant pathway O O O O
Campus entrance pathway O O O O
Patch cord O O O O
Equipment cord O O O O
Direct cable between equipment O O O O

Table 46 – Continued

Notes:
R = required identifier for O = optional identifier for class
class, when corresponding
element is present

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Identifiers Grouped by Class –
ISO/IEC TR 14763-2-1 Compatible
Class of Administration
Description of identifier 1 2 3 4
Telecommunications space (TS) R R R R
Cabinet, rack, enclosure, wall segment R R R R
Patch panel or termination block R R R R
Port on patch panel or termination on
R R R R
termination block
Cabling Subsystem 2 or 3 (backbone) cable or cable
O R R R
between cabinets, racks, enclosures or wall segments
Port within Cabling Subsystem 2 or 3 cable or
cable within distributor, telecommunications room, O R R R
equipment room or computer room
Cabling Subsystem (horizontal) link R R R R
Equipment outlet or telecommunications outlet O O O O
Consolidation point O O O O
Port in ZDA in a data center O O O O
Space in Cabling Subsystem 1 link O O O O
TMGB - Telecommunications main grounding busbar R R R R
TGB - Telecommunications grounding busbar R R R R
RGB - Rack grounding busbar O O O O
mesh-BN - Mesh bonding network O O O O
BCT - Bonding conductor for telecommunications R R R R
TBB - Telecommunications bonding backbone O R R R
GE - Grounding equalizer O R R R
Bonding conductor from object to TMGB O O O O
Bonding conductor from object to TGB O O O O
Bonding conductor from object to mesh-BN O O O O
Bonding conductor from object to RGB O O O O

Table 47 – Identifiers grouped by class – ISO/IEC TR 14763-2-1 compatible

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Class of Administration
Description of identifier 1 2 3 4
Building Cabling Subsystem 2 or 3 (backbone) cable O R R R
Building Cabling Subsystem 2 or 3 pair/port O R R R
Building Cabling Subsystem 2 or 3 cable space O O O O
Firestop location O R R R
Campus or site O O O R
Building O O R R
Interbuilding cable O O R R
Interbuilding cable pair/port O O R R
Interbuilding cable space O O O O
Outdoor telecommunications space
(e.g. maintenance holes, handholes, pedestals, O O O O
outdoor cabinets)
Intra-space pathway O O O O
Building pathway O O O O
Building entrance pathway O O O O
Outside plant pathway O O O O
Campus entrance pathway O O O O
Patch cord O O O O
Equipment cord O O O O
Direct cable between equipment O O O O

Table 47 – Continued

Notes:
R = required identifier for O = optional identifier for class
class, when corresponding
element is present

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Note: Table 46 and Table 47 show the identifiers grouped by
their “class” for both the ANSI/TIA-606-A and the ISO/IEC TR
14763-2-1 standards. It does not provide all the individual
identifier codes and formats or the specific clauses concerning
each identifier that are found in the table in the master standard
document. Providing such detailed information would require a
voluminous amount of space and is outside the scope of this
summarized Anixter Standards Reference Guide. For more in-depth
information, please refer to the actual ANSI/TIA-606-B document.
Class 1 Administration
Class 1 addresses the administration needs when only one equipment
room (ER) is administered. This ER is the only telecommunications
space (TS) administered and neither TRs, Cabling Subsystem 2 or
3 (backbone) cabling, or outside plant cabling is administered.
The following infrastructure identifiers shall be required in Class 1
Administration when the corresponding elements are present:
• TS (telecommunications space) identifier
• Cabinet, rack, enclosure, wall segment identifier
• Patch panel or termination block identifier
• Patch panel port and termination block position identifiers
• Identifiers for cables between cabinets, racks, enclosures,
or walls in the same space
• Cabling Subsystem 1 (horizontal) link identifier
• Telecommunications main grounding busbar (TMGB) identifier
• Telecommunications grounding busbar (TGB) identifier.
Refer to Tables 46 and 47 for Class 1 identifiers.

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Class 2 Administration
Class 2 addresses the administration of infrastructure with one
or more telecommunications spaces (TS) in a single building.
The following infrastructure identifiers shall be required in Class 2
Administration when the corresponding elements are present:
• Identifiers required in Class 1 Administration
• B uilding Cabling Subsystem 2 and 3
(backbone) cable identifiers
• B uilding Cabling Subsystem 2 and 3 port identifiers
• F irestopping location identifiers.
Class 2 Administration may also include pathway identifiers.
Refer to Tables 46 and 47 for Class 2 identifiers.
Class 3 Administration
Class 3 Administration addresses infrastructure
with multiple buildings at a single site.
The following infrastructure identifiers shall be required
in Class 3 Administration:
• Identifiers required in Class 2 Administration
• B uilding identifier
• C ampus cable identifier
• C ampus cable pair or fiber identifier.
The following infrastructure identifiers are
optional in Class 3 Administration:
• Identifiers optional in Class 2 Administration
• O utside plant pathway element identifier
• C ampus pathway or element identifier.
Additional identifiers may be added if desired.
Refer to Tables 46 and 47 for Class 3 identifiers.

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Class 4 Administration
Class 4 Administration addresses infrastructure
with multiple sites or campuses.
The following infrastructure identifiers shall be
required in Class 4 Administration:
• Identifiers required in Class 3 Administration
• C ampus or site identifier.
The following infrastructure identifiers are
optional in Class 4 Administration:
• Identifiers optional in Class 3 Administration
• Intercampus element identifier.
Additional identifiers may be added if desired.
Refer to Tables 46 and 47 for Class 4 identifiers.
Some Common Generalized Administration
Labeling Guidelines
• E ach telecommunications space (TS) shall be
labeled with the TS identifier inside the room to
be visible to someone working in the room.
• E ach cabinet and rack shall be labeled with its
identifier on the front and rear in plain view.
• Text on labels shall be machine printed.
• P atch panels should be labeled with their identifier and
with the identifier of the patch panel at the far end.
• A unique campus or site identifier shall be
assigned to each campus or site.
• A unique building identifier shall be assigned to each building.
• A ll ports on patch panels and all positions
on terminal blocks shall be labeled.
• C ables terminated on patch panels or termination
blocks shall be identified by the identifiers of the
ports/terminations on both ends of the cable.

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• E ach intrabuilding and interbuilding cable shall
be assigned with a unique identifier.
• E quipment outlets and their associated ports shall be labeled.
• The TMGB and TGB shall be labeled with their identifiers.
• A ll grounding conductors should be
labeled with their identifiers.
• A firestopping location identifier shall identify
each installation of firestopping material.
• D etailed records of all administration elements will
be maintained as defined in the standard.
Color-Coding Identification
Color coding of cables, connectors, cords, jumpers,
termination fields, labels, pathways and other components
may be used to identify the type, application, function, or
position of a component within the infrastructure.

Termination Color Pantone Typical application


Type number
Demarcation Orange 150C Central office connection
Point
Network Green 353C User side of central office connection
Connection
Common Purple 264C Connection to PBX, mainframe
Equipment computer, LAN, multiplexer
Cabling White N/A Terminations of building Cabling
Subsystem 3 Subsystem 3 cable connecting
MC to ICs
Cabling Gray 422C Terminations of building Cabling
Subsystem 2 Subsystem 2 cable connecting IC
to HCs
Campus Brown 465C Termination of campus cable
Cabling between buildings
Cabling Blue 291C Terminations of Cabling Subsystem 1
Subsytem 1 cable in TSs
Miscellaneous Yellow 101C Alarms, security or energy management

Table 48 – Example of termination field color coding

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Figure 23 – Example of color coding of termination fields

Permanent Labels
• The size, color and contrast of all labels should be selected
to make sure that the identifiers are easily read.
• L abels should be visible during normal
maintenance of the infrastructure.
• L abels should be resistant to environmental conditions (such
as moisture, heat or ultraviolet light), and should have a design
life equal to or greater than that of the labeled component.
• The text on labels shall be machine generated.

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Administration Systems Using Records,
Linkages and Reports
Administration may be accomplished using traditional paper-based
methods, spreadsheets, databases or specialized software. In
addition to these systems, the functions of automated infrastructure
management systems may be suitable for more complex installations,
where staffing attributes make the use of automated systems
more effective and efficient, and to meet regulatory compliance
requirements. Generally, these systems maintain a database
of all infrastructure records and may also include linkages to
related records that can be used to generate reports, provide
tracing functions and reduce duplication of information.
Specialized software, if used, may include standard databases and
a variety of detection mechanisms to improve the accuracy and
efficiency of telecommunications infrastructure administration.
It may include technology to detect infrastructure changes and
update records. It should be capable of generating labels or
exporting the data to a device or program that will print them.

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Automated Infrastructure Management Systems
Automated infrastructure management systems
may be used. If used, they should:
• A utomatically document the infrastructure
elements as described in this standard
• P rovide a comprehensive record of all the connected equipment
• F acilitate easy troubleshooting
• P rovide an automated method of discovering and
documenting configuration of LAN and SAN switches
• A utomatically discover and document end
devices that connect to the network
• B e fault tolerant (i.e., retention of
information after a power outage)
• Include the capability of automatically monitoring
patch connections between connections with
automated management, and of generating
alerts and updating documentation when any
of these patch connections are changed
• Be capable of automatically generating reports
about the telecommunications infrastructure.

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PURPOSE OF THE ANSI/TIA-607-C STANDARD
This standard specifies a uniform telecommunications grounding
and bonding infrastructure that shall be followed within
commercial buildings. Following the AT&T divestiture of 1984,
the end-user became responsible for all premises cabling for
voice and data. Advancements in voice communications and
the convergence of voice and data communications led to
increasingly complex interactive systems owned and maintained
by the end-user. These systems require a reliable electrical
ground-reference potential. Grounding by attachment to the
nearest piece of iron pipe is no longer satisfactory to provide
ground-reference for sophisticated active electronics systems.

SECTION CONTENTS
ANSI/TIA-607-C
Generic Telecommunications Bonding and Grounding
(Earthing) for Customer Premises
Overview....................................................................................................... 93
Major Components.................................................................................. 93
Telecommunications Bonding Components................................................... 95
Busbars................................................................................................... 95
Primary Bonding Busbar (PBB)......................................................... 95
Secondary Bonding Busbar (SBB).................................................... 96
Rack Bonding Busbar (RBB)............................................................. 98
Conductors.............................................................................................. 98
Telecommunications Bonding Backbone (TBB)................................. 98
Telecommunications Bonding Conductor (TBC)..............................100
Backbone Bonding Conductor (BBC)..............................................100
Coupled Bonding Conductor (CBC).................................................101
Telecommunications Equipment Bonding Conductor (TEBC)...........101
Rack Bonding Conductors (RBC)....................................................102
Connectors....................................................................................102
Conductors....................................................................................103
Labels...........................................................................................103
Design Requirements..................................................................................104
General Rules........................................................................................104
External Grounding.....................................................................................105

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OVERVIEW
The basic principles, components and design of telecommunications
bonding and grounding infrastructure specified in this standard
shall be followed. Bonding and grounding systems within a
building are intended to have one electrical potential.
Major Components
Within a building the generic telecommunications bonding
infrastructure originates at the electrical entrance facility ground
and extends throughout the building. (See Figure 24.) It includes the
following major components:
a) Primary bonding busbar (PBB);
b) Telecommunications bonding conductor (TBC);
and may also include the following:
c) Telecommunications bonding backbone (TBB);
d) Secondary bonding busbar (SBB); and,
e) Backbone bonding conductor (BBC).
Distributor Distributor
room room

Backbone
bonding
Equipment conductor Equipment
SBB (BBC) SBB

Pathways

Distributor Distributor
room room

Equipment Equipment
SBB SBB

Telecommunications
bonding backbone (TBB)
Electrical
entrance
facility Telecommunications Distributor
entrance facility (TEF) room

Equipment

Equipment
Primary bonding busbar (PBB) Secondary bonding busbar (PBB)
Grounding
electrode
conductor Telecommunications LEGEND
bonding conductor (TBC)
Grounding Structural metal Panelboard
electrode
system
Busbar Building spaces

Service equipment Bonding conductor as labeled

Figure 24 – Example of bonding and grounding infrastructure


in a large multistory building

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Telecommunications
bonding conductor (TBC)
Electrical
entrance
facility Primary bonding busbar (PBB) Secondary bonding busbar (SBB)

Equipment Equipment

Telecommunications Distributor
entrance facility (TEF) room

Telecommunications
bonding backbone (TBB) LEGEND
Pathways Busbar Panelboard

Building spaces
Service equipment
Bonding conductor as labeled

Figure 25 – Example of bonding and grounding infrastructure


in a single-story large building

Electrical
entrance
facility Telecommunications
entrance facility (TEF)

Equipment

Primary bonding busbar (PBB)

Grounding Telecommunications bonding conductor (TBC)


electrode
conductor
LEGEND

Grounding Structural metal Panelboard


electrode
system
Busbar Building spaces

Service equipment Bonding conductor as labeled

Figure 26 – Example of bonding and grounding infrastructure in a smaller building

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TELECOMMUNICATIONS BONDING COMPONENTS
Busbars
Primary Bonding Busbar (PBB)
A busbar placed in a convenient and accessible location and bonded,
by means of the telecommunications bonding conductor, to the
building’s service equipment (power) ground (formerly known as
the telecommunications main grounding busbar). The PBB serves
as the dedicated extension of the building grounding electrode
system for the telecommunications infrastructure. It also serves
as the central attachment point for the TBB(s) and equipment. A
TBC bonds the PBB to the service equipment (power) ground. The
desirable location of the PBB is in the telecommunications entrance
room or space. Typically, there should be a single PBB per building.
The PBB shall:
• B e a busbar provided with holes for use with
correctly matched listed lugs and hardware
• B e made of copper, or copper alloys having a minimum
of 95% conductivity when annealed as specified by the
International Annealed Copper Standard (IACS)
• H ave minimum dimensions of 6.35 mm (0.25 in.) thick
x 100 mm (4 in.) wide and variable in length
• B e listed
• B e cleaned and an antioxidant applied prior
to fastening connectors to the busbar
• B e insulated from its support using an insulator that is listed
for the purpose by a nationally recognized testing laboratory
(NRTL). A minimum of 50 mm (2 in.) separation from the wall
is recommended to allow access to the rear of the busbar.
More:
• The primary protector grounding conductor shall be connected to
the PBB. This conductor is intended to conduct lightning and AC
fault currents from the telecommunication primary protectors.

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• The connections of the TBC and the telecommunications bonding
backbone (TBB) to the PBB shall utilize exothermic welding, listed
compression two-hole lugs, or listed exothermic two-hole lugs.

16 mm 8 mm 11 mm dia. (7/16 in.), typ


(5/8 in.) (5/16 in.) 13 mm
typ typ dia. (1/2 in.) 25 mm (1 in.)

100 mm
(4 in.)
min.

29 mm 50 mm 11 mm dia 29 mm
(1–1/8 in.) (2 in.) (7/16 in.) (1–1/8 in.)
typ Mounting holes, typ typ

Figure 27 – Example of a primary bonding busbar (PBB). Hole spacing, pattern and
size may vary.

Secondary Bonding Busbar (PBB)


A common point of connection for telecommunications system and
equipment bonding to ground, and located in the distributor room
(formerly known as the telecommunications grounding busbar).
The SBB is the bonding connection point for telecommunications
systems and equipment in the area served by a distributor.
The SBB shall:
• B e a busbar provided with holes for use with
correctly matched listed lugs and hardware
• B e a busbar provided with holes for use with
correctly matched listed lugs and hardware
• B e made of copper, or copper alloys having a minimum
of 95% conductivity when annealed as specified by the
International Annealed Copper Standard (IACS)
• H ave minimum dimensions of 6.35 mm (0.25 in.)
thick x 50 mm (2 in.) wide and variable in length
• B e listed
• B e cleaned and an antioxidant applied prior
to fastening connectors to the busbar

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• B e insulated from its support using an insulator that is listed
for the purpose by a nationally recognized testing laboratory
(NRTL). A minimum of 50 mm (2 in.) separation from the wall
is recommended to allow access to the rear of the busbar.
More:
• The bonding conductor between a TBB and an SBB shall be
continuous and routed in the shortest practical straight-line path.
• The TBBs and other SBBs within the same space shall be
bonded to the SBB with a conductor the same size as the TBB.
•M
 ultiple SBBs within a room shall be bonded together with
a conductor the same size as the TBB or with splice bars.
• A ll metallic pathways for telecommunications
cabling located within the same room or space
as the SBB shall be bonded to the SBB.
• The connection of the TBB to the SBB shall utilize
exothermic welding, listed compression two-hole
lugs, or listed exothermic two-hole lugs.

8 mm 11 mm 13 mm
16 mm (5/16 in.) (7/16 in.) (1/2 in.)
(5/8 in.) dia. 11 mm
(7/16 in.) dia.
25 mm
(1 in.)
50 mm
(2 in.)

Mounting holes
29 mm
(1–1/8 in.)

Figure 28 – Example of a secondary bonding busbar (SBB).


Hole spacing, pattern and size may vary.

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Rack Bonding Busbar (RBB)
A rack bonding busbar is a grounding busbar within a cabinet frame
or rack.
• R ack bonding busbars (RBBs) are recommended for cabinets and
racks that need to support multiple unit bonding conductors.
The RBB shall:
• H ave a minimum cross-sectional area equal to a 6 AWG wire
• B e listed.
See Figure 33 - Example of three methods to bond equipment and racks for diagrams
of the use of bonding busbars.

Conductors
A telecommunication bonding connection which interconnects
telecommunications bonding backbones (formerly known as the
grounding equalizer). All bonding conductors shall be copper and
may be insulated. If insulated they shall be listed for the application.
Telecommunications Bonding Backbone (TBB)
A conductor that interconnects the primary bonding
busbar to the secondary bonding busbar.
•M
 inimum TBB conductor size is 6 AWG
based on the length. See Table 49.
• The TBC shall bond the PBB to the service
equipment (power) ground.
• TBB conductors shall be protected from
physical and mechanical damage.
• The TBB conductors should be installed without splices,
however, where splices are necessary, the number of
splices should be minimized. Splices shall be accessible
and be located in telecommunications spaces.
• Joined segments of a TBB shall be joined by means
of a listed exothermic weld, listed irreversible
compression-type connectors, or equivalent.

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•M
 etallic cable shield(s) or any metal pathway for
cable (e.g., conduit) shall not be used as a TBB.
•W
 henever two or more TBBs are used within a multistory
building, the TBBs shall be bonded together with a BBC at the
top floor and at a minimum of every third floor in between.

TBB/BBC linear length m (ft.) Conductor size (AWG)


Less than 4 (13) 6
4–6 (14–20) 4
6–8 (21–26) 3
8–10 (27–33) 2
10–13 (34–41) 1
13–16 (42–52) 1/0
16–20 (53–66) 2/0
20–26 (67–84) 3/0
26–32 (85–105) 4/0
32–38 (106–125) 250 kcmil
38–46 (126–150) 300 kcmil
46–53 (151–175) 350 kcmil
53–76 (176–250) 500 kcmil
76–91 (251–300) 600 kcmil
Greater than 91 (301) 750 kcmil

Table 49 – TBB/BCC conductor size vs. length

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Telecommunications Bonding Conductor (TBC)
A conductor that interconnects the telecommunications bonding
infrastructure to the building’s service equipment (power) ground
(formerly known as the bonding conductor for telecommunications).
• A t a minimum the TBC shall be the same size as the largest TBB.
• The TBC shall bond the PBB to the service equipment
(power) ground.

Electrical entrance Telecommunications


facility entrance facility

Service TBB
equipment
N
Equipment
G
PBB
Grounding Telecommunications
electrode bonding conductor (TBC) Outside the scope of this standard
system
Within the scope of this standard

Figure 29 – Bonding to the service equipment (power) ground

Backbone Bonding Conductor (BBC)


A telecommunication bonding connection which
interconnects telecommunications bonding backbones
(formerly known as the grounding equalizer).
• A t a minimum the BBC shall be the same size as the largest TBB to
which it is connected.

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Coupled Bonding Conductor (CBC)
CBCs provide protection against electromagnetic interference (EMI)
through close proximity and may be integral to the cabling system.
The CBC:
•M
 ay be part of a cable’s shield
•M
 ay be separate conductors that are tie wrapped to
communications cables
• A re typically sized at 10 AWG, although 6 AWG is recommended.
Telecommunications Equipment Bonding Conductor (TEBC)
A conductor that connects the primary bonding busbar or
secondary bonding busbar to equipment racks or cabinets. The
TEBC connects the PBB/SBB to equipment racks/cabinets.
•M
 ore than one TEBC may be installed from the
PBB/TBG (a separate TEBC per rack).
• The TEBC shall be a continuous copper conductor that
is sized no smaller than a 6 AWG or as the largest
size equipment grounding conductor in the AC branch
power circuit(s) serving the racks/cabinet lineup.
• C onnections to the TEBC shall be made with listed
irreversible compression connectors, suitable for multiple
conductors, and with the rack bonding conductors
(RBCs) routed toward the PBB/SBB. See Figure 29.
• The TEBCs may be routed within cable trays, on the outside of
ladder rack, tray supported at no greater than 0.9 m
(3 ft.) intervals, or along equipment platforms, see Figure 30.
• TEBCs shall be separated a minimum of 50.8 mm
(2 in.) from conductors of other cable groups such
as power or telecommunications cables.
• The TEBC shall be connected to the cabinets/equipment
racks, to an RBC or to a vertical/horizontal RBB.

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Irreversible compression connection

TEBC (Telecommunications
equipment bonding conductor)

Rack bonding conductor

Figure 30 – Bonding to the service equipment (power) ground

Cable tray bonding conductor.


Typical at each section
connection point

Telecommunications
equipment bonding To PBB/SBB
conductor (TEBC)

Irreversible
crimp connector

Figure 31 – Example of TEBC routed on cable tray

Rack Bonding Conductors (RBC)


Bonding conductor from the rack or rack bonding busbar to
the telecommunications equipment bonding conductor.
Connectors
Connectors are the hardware that provide a means of cable
termination. All bonding connectors shall be listed for the application.

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Conductors
•W
 here insulated, the TBC, TBB, BBC, TEBC and RBC
conductors shall be green, green with yellow stripe
or marked with a distinctive green color.
• B onds to structural metal shall be made using listed
exothermic welding, listed compression, or listed
mechanical connectors and must be accessible.
• B onding conductors for telecommunications should not
be placed in ferrous metallic conduit. If it is necessary to
place bonding conductors in ferrous metallic conduit the
conductors shall be bonded to each end of the conduit
using a grounding bushing or using a minimum sized
conductor of 6 AWG at both ends of the conduit.
• B ends of bonding conductors terminating at the PBB or SBB shall
have a minimum inside bend radius of 200 mm (8 in.). At other
locations, bends in bonding conductors should be made with the
greatest practical inside bend radius. A minimum bend radius
of 10 times the bonding conductor diameter is recommended.
Labels
Labels shall include the information described below:

IF THIS CONNECTOR OR CABLE IS


LOOSE OR MUST BE REMOVED,
PLEASE CALL THE BUILDING
TELECOMMUNICATIONS
MANAGER

Figure 32 – Label for bonding and grounding conductors

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DESIGN REQUIREMENTS
General Rules
•M
 etallic sheaths of outside plant cables entering a facility shall be
bonded to ground as close as practical to the point of entrance.
•W
 here the building backbone telecommunications cabling
incorporates a shield or metallic member, this shield or
metallic member shall be bonded to the primary bonding
busbar (PBB) or the secondary bonding busbar.
•M
 etallic pathways under 1 m (3 ft.) in length (e.g., wall and
floor sleeves, J-hooks) are not required to be bonded.
• E ach distributor room shall contain either a PBB or
a minimum of one SBB. Distributor A and Distributor
B shall contain a minimum of one SBB.
• E ach computer room shall contain a SBB (or PBB when specified)
and should also contain a supplementary bonding network
that is bonded to the SBB or PBB. This supplementary bonding
network is typically a mesh-bonding network (mesh-BN), which is
identified in this standard but not coved in this reference guide.
•M
 etallic enclosures, such as telecommunications cabinets
and racks, shall be bonded to the mesh-BN, SBB, or
PBB using a minimum sized conductor of 6 AWG.
• E quipment containing metallic parts and patch panels
for shielded cabling in cabinets and racks shall be
bonded to the telecommunications bonding system.
The minimum bonding conductor size is 12 AWG.
• A ll metallic telecommunications pathways
shall be bonded to the PBB or SBB.

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Telecommunications equipment bonding conductor (TEBC)
To PBB/SBB
Irreversible crimp connector Top-mounted RBB

Rack bonding
conductors – All
conductors routed
to PBB/SBB
Unit bonding
conductors

Individual Unit bonding


equipment bonding conductors
conductors from
each piece of
equipment and rack
to the rack bonding
conductor Vertically-
mounted RBB

Individual
equipment
Rack bonding grounding terminal
conductor extended (typical each piece
to bottom of rack to of equipment)
accomodate future
growth

Rack isolation
pads (if
applicable)
Example “A” Example “B” Example “C”

Figure 33 – Example of three methods to bond equipment and racks

External Grounding
• The grounding electrode system shall be designed to have a
resistance of 25 ohms or less for a single grounding electrode.
• F or sites that are critical in nature (e.g., public safety facilities,
military installations, data centers, web hosting facilities, central
offices) the grounding electrode system shall be designed to have
a resistance of 10 ohms or less – preferably 5 ohms or less.

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PURPOSE OF THE ANSI/TIA-862-A STANDARD
This standard specifies the minimum requirements for a
building automation system (BAS) cabling system, including
the topology, architecture, design and installation practices,
test procedures and components. The standard specifies
cabling that is intended to support building management-
related applications in a wide range of premises.

SECTION CONTENTS
ANSI/TIA-862-A
Building Automation Systems Cabling Standard
Building Automation Systems Cabling Standard..........................................107
For Commercial Buildings......................................................................107
Telecommunications Cabling System Structure......................................108
Cabling Subsystem 1.............................................................................109
Cabling Subsystem 2 and Subsystem 3.................................................110
Coverage Area.......................................................................................111

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BUILDING AUTOMATION SYSTEMS
CABLING STANDARD
For Commercial Buildings
Building automation encompasses control systems such as security
and monitoring (e.g., video surveillance), safety systems (e.g.,
fire alarms), environmental conditioning systems (e.g., heating,
ventilation and air conditioning), and energy management systems
(e.g., internal and external lighting). The ANSI/TIA-862-A standard
specifies generic cabling topology, architecture, design, installation
practices, test procedures, and coverage areas to support building
automation systems used in commercial buildings. Because
providers of these building automation services traditionally specify
their own proprietary equipment, cables, interface connections
and topology, this standard offers the distinct advantage of
being able to support multiproduct and multimanufacturer
environments by using one generic structured cabling system.
It is important to note that this standard also supports the
telecommunications cabling infrastructure for other low-voltage
systems (e.g., audio and video paging, service and equipment alarms,
nonvoice and data communications, and wireless access points).
The standard specifies:
• Horizontal cabling
• Backbone cabling
• Coverage area
• Spaces
• Pathways
• Administration.

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Telecommunications Cabling System Structure
This standard establishes a structure for building automation
system (BAS) cabling based on the generic cabling
system structure in ANSI/TIA-568-C.0. Figure 34 shows a
typical building layout that uses a hierarchical star-wired
cabling topology to support various BAS devices.
The elements of a BAS cabling system structure are listed below.
• C abling Subsystem 1, Cabling Subsystem
2 and Cabling Subsystem 3 coverage area
(space containing equipment outlets)
• Telecommunications room (TR) or common
telecommunications room (CTR) (space containing
Distributor A, Distributor B or Distributor C)
• E quipment room (ER) or common equipment room (CER)
(space containing Distributor A, Distributor B or Distributor C)
• M
 echanical room (MR)
• E ntrance facilities (EF)
• R ecognized horizontal and backbone cabling media meeting
the requirements of ANSI/TIA-568-C.2 and ANSI/TIA-568-C.3
• Administration

LEGEND
EF LEGEND
Entrance facility
T DA EF Distributor
EntranceA facility
Coverage Coverage
DA Area Area DC DA Distributor
Distributor
C A
DC Distributor C
HCP Horizontal connection point
HCP Horizontal connection point
MR MR Mechanical
Mechanicalroomroom
HCP SD SD
MC MC MainMain
cross-connect
cross-connect
Coverage Coverage SD Smoke detector
SD Smoke detector (a BAS (a BAS device)
device)
DA
T T Thermostat
Area Area Thermostat (a BAS device)
(a BAS device)
Equipment Outlet
Spaces
Equipment
Camera outlet
(a BAS device)
HCP
Containing
Window Window Window Window
Camera (a BAS device)
Distributors
DA Door
Coverage
Areas

DC MR

EF

Figure 34 – ANSI/TIA-862-A star-wired cabling topology

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Cabling Subsystem 1
This cabling subsystem is intended to provide a structured wiring
framework for the integration of common services, the diversity
of BAS systems and products, redundancy and physical security
requirements such as closed-circuit television (CCTV) and IP-based
video. The elements of Cabling Subsystem 1 include Distributor
A, Distributor B or Distributor C, the cable, horizontal connection
point (HCP) and the equipment outlet as shown in Figure 35.

Coverage Area

Space containing BAS


Distributor A Cabling Subsystem 1 device

Coverage Area
DA HCP
BAS
device

Zone Box
To Cabling Subsystem 2
or Cabling Subsystem 3
or BAS Equipment
LEGEND
LEGEND
BAS Building automation system
DA DistributorBuilding
BAS A automation system
Cross-connect
DA Distributor A
Horizontal connection point
EquipmentCross-connect
outlet
BAS deviceHorizontal
termination
connection point
Coverage Equipment
area cableoutlet
BAS device termination
Coverage area cable
Figure 35 – Example for Cabling Subsystem 1

When planning the cabling infrastructure, the Cabling


Subsystem 1 should accommodate the coverage areas
specified by the standard as defined in Table 50.

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Cabling Subsystem 2 and Subsystem 3
Cabling Subsystem 2 and Cabling Subsystem 3 provide
interconnections between the spaces that contain
Distributor A, Distributor B or Distributor C, MR, terminal
space and EFs that span a campus’ buildings.
The estimates for the Cabling Subsystem 2 and
Cabling Subsystem 3 (balanced twisted-pair and
optical fiber) requirements should be based on:
• The requirements of ANSI/TIA-568-C.0
• The BAS applications projected over the life
expectancy of the cabling system
• The maximum number of BAS devices and electronic controllers
projected over the life expectancy of the cabling system.

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Coverage Area
The coverage area refers to the space that is covered by a single
BAS device. The size of the coverage area is typically determined by
the density of people and devices in a given area, but other factors
such as physical security and BAS equipment requirements should
be considered when allocating the coverage area within a building.

Usage of Coverage
floor space area (m²)

Office 25
Indoor parking 50
Retail 25
Factory 50
Hotel 25
Classroom 25
Hospital 25
Mechanical room 5

Table 50 – Typical coverage area for BAS devices

In order to accommodate moves, adds and changes as well


as conserve space in TRs and ERs, consider zone cabling as
shown in Figure 35. A single zone box can serve both BAS and
telecommunications cabling; additional zone boxes can be
provisioned based on:
• Accessibility
• Security
• Administration
• Special requirements.

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SECTION CONTENTS
ANSI/TIA-942-A
Telecommunications Infrastructure
Standard for Data Centers
Telecommunications Infrastructure Standard for Data Centers....................113
Data Center Cabling Infrastructure........................................................113
Energy-Efficient Design..........................................................................114
Hot and Cold Aisles...............................................................................115
Horizontal Cabling.................................................................................116
Backbone Cabling.................................................................................117
Recognized Cabling Media for Horizontal and Backbone Applications....118
Redundancy..........................................................................................118

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TELECOMMUNICATIONS INFRASTRUCTURE STANDARD
FOR DATA CENTERS
Data Center Cabling Infrastructure
The basic elements of a data center cabling
system include the following:
• H orizontal cabling
• B ackbone cabling
• C ross-connect in the entrance room or main distribution area
• M
 ain cross-connect (MC) in the main distribution area
• H orizontal cross-connect (HC) in the telecommunications
room, horizontal distribution area or main distribution area
• Z one outlet or consolidation point in the zone distribution area
• O utlet in the equipment distribution area

UX

. . .

. . . . . .

Figure 36 – Example of basic data center topology

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Energy-Efficient Design
Data centers consume a disproportionate amount of energy
on a square-foot basis compared to other areas of a building.
The increased energy consumption is largely due to the density
of computing hardware and associated power and cooling
systems needed to support data center operations. Therefore, it’s
recommended that sustainable design practices be incorporated into
the data center’s design to improve power and cooling efficiency.
The following systems should be optimized to make
sure that energy efficiency is achieved.
• Telecommunications cabling: Overhead telecommunications
cabling can improve airflow in data centers by removing
potential obstructions that could be present in underfloor
pathways. Otherwise, cable pathways must be designed to
accommodate cables that could potentially disrupt airflow
and static pressure within a raised-floor environment.
• Lighting: It’s recommended that a three-level lighting protocol
be used in data centers, depending on human occupancy.
- Level 1: Data center unoccupied
- Level 2: Initial entry into the data center
- Level 3: Occupied space
- ­Optional override: Lighting in all zones at level 3

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Hot and Cold Aisles
Cabinets and racks shall be arranged in an alternating pattern
with the fronts of cabinets and racks facing each other in a row
to create hot and cold aisles. Cold aisles are in front of racks
and cabinets. If there is an access floor, power distribution
cables should be installed here under the access floor on
the slab. Hot aisles are behind racks and cabinets. If there is
an access floor, cable trays for telecommunications cabling
should be located under the access floor in the hot aisles.
A minimum of 1 m (3.28 ft.) of front clearance shall be provided
for installation of equipment. A front clearance of 1.2 m (4 ft.) is
preferable to accommodate deeper equipment. A minimum of
0.6 m (2 ft.) of rear clearance shall be provided for service access
at the rear of racks and cabinets. A rear clearance of 1 m (3.28 ft.)
is preferable. Some equipment may require service clearances of
greater than 1 m (3.28 ft.).

Front

Cabinets

Rear
This row of tiles can be lifted Hot aisle (rear of cabinets)
Rear

Cabinets
Align front or rear of cabinets
with edge of floor tiles
Front
This row of tiles can be lifted
Cold aisle (front of cabinets)
This row of tiles can be lifted
Align front or rear of cabinets Front
with edge of floor tiles
Cabinets

Rear

Figure 37 – Hot and cold aisles

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Horizontal Cabling
The horizontal cabling is the portion of the telecommunications
cabling system that extends from the mechanical termination
in the equipment distribution area to either the horizontal
cross-connect in the horizontal distribution area or the main
cross-connect in the main distribution area. The horizontal
cabling includes horizontal cables, mechanical terminations,
and patch cords or jumpers. It may also include a zone outlet
or a consolidation point in the zone distribution area.
The following partial listing of common services and systems
should be considered when designing the horizontal cabling:
• Voice, modem and facsimile telecommunications service
• P remises switching equipment
• C omputer and telecommunications management connections
• K eyboard/video/mouse (KVM) connections
• D ata communications
• Wide area networks (WAN)
• L ocal area networks (LAN)
• S torage area networks (SAN)
• Other building signaling systems (building automation systems
such as fire, security, power, HVAC, etc.)

.
.

Figure 38 – Horizontal cabling using star topology

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Maximum equipment area cord length
24 AWG UTP/24 ScTP patch cords 26 AWG ScTP patch cords
Length of horizontal Maximum length Maximum combined Maximum length Maximum combined
cable (H) m (ft.) of zone area cable length of zone area of zone area cable length of zone area
(Z) m (ft.) cables, patch cords (Z) m (ft.) cables, patch cords
and equipment (C) and equipment
m (ft.) cable (C) m (ft.)
90 (295) 5 (16) 10 (33) 4 (13) 8 (26)
85 (279) 9 (30) 14 (46) 7 (23) 11 (35)
80 (262) 13 (44) 18 (59) 11 (35) 15 (49)
75 (246) 17 (57) 22 (72) 14 (46) 18 (59)
70 (230) 22 (72) 27 (89) 17 (56) 21 (70)
Table 51 – Maximum length horizontal and equipment area cables

Backbone Cabling
The function of the backbone cabling is to provide connections
between the main distribution area, the horizontal distribution area
and entrance facilities in the data center cabling system. Backbone
cabling consists of the backbone cables, main cross-connects,
horizontal cross-connects, mechanical terminations and patch cord
or jumpers used for backbone-to-backbone cross-connections.

Figure 39 – Backbone cabling using star topology

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Recognized Cabling Media for Horizontal
and Backbone Applications
Recognized cables, associated connecting hardware, jumpers, patch
cords, equipment cords and zone area cords shall meet all applicable
requirements specified in ANSI/TIA-568-C.2 and ANSI/TIA-568-C.3.
• 4 -pair 100-ohm twisted-pair cable (ANSI/TIA-568-C.2),
Category 6 or Category 6A, with Category 6A recommended
• 5 0/125 μm 850-nm laser-optimized multimode fiber cable
OM3 or OM4 (ANSI/TIA-568-C.3) with OM4 recommended
• S ingle-mode optical fiber cable
• R ecognized coaxial media:
- 75-ohm (734 and 735 type) coaxial cable
- (Telcordia Technologies GR-139-CORE)
and coaxial connector
- (ANSI T1.404)

Redundancy
Data centers that are equipped with diverse telecommunications
facilities may be able to continue their function under
catastrophic conditions that would otherwise interrupt the
data center’s telecommunications service. This standard
includes four tiers relating to various levels of availability of
the data center facility infrastructure. The tiers are related to
research conducted by the Uptime Institute, which defines
four tiers of performance as shown in the following table.
In addition to the base redundancy requirements specified
by the Uptime Institute tier framework, the ANSI/TIA-942-A
also recommends tier levels for architectural, electrical,
mechanical and telecommunications systems.
From a telecommunications infrastructure redundancy perspective,
providing redundant cross-connect areas and pathways that

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are physically separated can increase the reliability of the
communications infrastructure. It is common for data centers to
have multiple access providers that supply services, redundant
routers, redundant core distribution and edge switches. Although
this network topology provides a certain level of redundancy,
the duplication in services and hardware alone does not make
sure that single points of failure have been eliminated.

Figure 40 – Uptime Institute Tier references

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PURPOSE OF THE ANSI/TIA-1005-A STANDARD
This standard enables the planning and installation of the
telecommunications cabling infrastructure within and between
industrial buildings (such as manufacturing facilities, laboratories,
refineries, etc.). In these industrial premises, the cabling
infrastructure may be exposed to environments more hostile than in
commercial buildings where the cabling must support applications
and topologies specific to industrial premises. It provides cabling
requirements, cabling distances, telecommunications outlet/
connector configurations and topologies. It describes environmental
classifications and provides information that is useful for
designing an appropriate telecommunications infrastructure.
This is a summary document that highlights key provisions
of the standard.

SECTION CONTENTS
ANSI/TIA-1005-A
Telecommunications Infrastructure Standard for
Industrial Premises
Telecommunications Infrastructure Standard for Industrial Premises...........122
Elements of Generic Cabling Topology....................................................122
Industrial Areas.....................................................................................122
General.........................................................................................122
Factory Floor Area .........................................................................123
Work Area......................................................................................123
Automation Island Area..................................................................123
Telecommunications Spaces.................................................................124
General Requirements...................................................................124
Telecommunications Pathways..............................................................125
General Requirements...................................................................125
Firestop.................................................................................................125
CONTINUES >>

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Backbone Cabling (Cabling Subsystem 2 and 3)....................................126
General Requirements...................................................................126
Recognized Media.........................................................................127
Horizontal Cabling (Cabling Subsystem 1).............................................127
General Requirements...................................................................127
Recognized Media.........................................................................128
Work Area..............................................................................................129
General Requirements...................................................................129
Horizontal Cables and Cords..........................................................130
Bonding and Grounding.........................................................................131
General Requirements...................................................................131
Industrial Cabling and Connectors.........................................................133
General Requirements...................................................................133
Annex A.................................................................................................135
Requirements and Guidelines for 2-Pair Cabling............................135
General Requirements...................................................................136

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TELECOMMUNICATIONS INFRASTRUCTURE STANDARD
FOR INDUSTRIAL PREMISES
Elements of Generic Cabling Topology

DC
Backbone Backbone
cabling cabling
DB DB
Backbone
cabling
DA DA Horizontal
cabling
Horizontal
cabling
EO EO EO EO EO EO EO EO
DC

Legend:
EO Equipment outlet
D A Distributor A Backbone
cabling
D B Distributor B
D C Distributor C Horizontal
Optional cabling cabling
Optional consolidation point DA

Horizontal
cabling
EO EO EO

Figure 41 – Typical industrial environment

Industrial Areas
General
Industrial premises cabling may run from the front office through
the factory floor area. The factory floor area (see Figure 42) may
include work areas and automation island areas. Industrial premises
cabling is installed in areas with a wider range of environments. These
environments, that may be localized along a cabling channel, are
generally expressed by “MICE” (M mechanical; I ingress;
C climatic/chemical; and E electromagnetic) as described in
ANSI/TIA-568-C.0. The MICE environmental classification is stated
with the use of subscripts (MaIbCcEd) where a, b, c and d are

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sub-classifications. These sub-classifications are numbered
1, 2 or 3 which relate to the severity of the environmental parameter.
For example, the most benign environmental lassification is
described as M1I1C1E1 whereas the harshest environmental
classification is described as M3I3C3E3. See the TIA document
TSB-185 for tutorial information on the MICE classification system.

Factory floor area


Control, equipment, Automation
telecommunications island area
room Automation
island area Work area

Figure 42 – Example of industrial areas

Factory Floor Area


The factory floor area is the space, beyond the office, in the
manufacturing facility where work areas and automation island
areas exist. These areas are typically high traffic areas that
require special consideration for protection and placement
of communications equipment.The environment of the factory
floor area is generally classified M1I1C1E1 or higher.
Work Area
Work areas are those areas within a manufacturing facility
where personnel interact with the telecommunications devices
and industrial machines. The work area is generally in the
factory floor area and in close proximity to an automation
island area. Work areas often have more severe environments
than the factory floor area. The environment of the work
area is generally classified M1I1C1E1 or higher.
Automation Island Area
The automation island area is the space within the manufacturing
facility in immediate proximity to or on the industrial machines

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and usually associated with a work area. It is usually the most
environmentally harsh area within the industrial premise.
The industrial machines require connectivity to machine
control devices such as machine sensors, vision and general
telecommunications devices. The environment of the automation
island area is generally classified higher than M1I1C1E1.

Telecommunications Spaces
General Requirements:
• Telecommunications spaces in industrial premises shall
meet the requirements of the ANSI/TIA-569-D standard.
• Temperature and humidity requirements shall meet the
requirements for Class 4 in ANSI/TIA-569-D, unless
stated otherwise.
• Temperature and humidity inside industrial equipment
enclosures shall comply with the specifications for the
equipment and cabling installed in the enclosure.
• To facilitate the mounting of telecommunications equipment
and components, mounting holes compliant with EIA/ECA-310-E
(formerly EIA-310-D) should be installed where appropriate.
• To facilitate the mounting of industrial control equipment,
mounting rails compliant with IEC 60715 (commonly referred
to as DIN rails) should be installed where appropriate.
• The location for the telecommunications enclosure should
be chosen based on the following considerations:
– A s close as practical to the center of the area served
– L owest practical MICE classification
–M
 inimizing horizontal cabling length
– A ccessibility and security.
• The telecommunications enclosure shall be installed to
be protected from shock and vibration as needed.

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Telecommunications Pathways
General Requirements
• P athways in industrial premises shall meet the
requirements of ANSI/TIA-569-D and this standard.
• P athways should be designed to be compatible with the
worst-case environment to which they will be exposed (see
ANSI/TIA-568-C.0 for information on environmental classifications).
• P athways in industrial premises shall comply
with local codes and regulations.
• Industrial pathway requirements supersede the requirements
of ANSI/TIA-569-D where they are in conflict.
• A ccess floor systems should not be used in areas with
MICE classifications more severe than M1I1C1E3.
• C abling shall not be in direct contact with steam
pipes, heating ducts or pneumatic pipes.
•M
 etal building structures such as I-beams and roof
trusses may be used for attachment points for direct
support systems that are constructed and installed in a
manner that does not compromise structural integrity.
• C abling located in open ceilings should be installed in
cable tray, cable runway, or conduit, or supported.
• C abling installed on machines shall be protected from
moving machine parts and other sources of damage.
• C abling installed on structural columns shall be properly
secured and protected from mechanical damage.

Firestop
• F irestop systems in industrial premises shall meet the
requirements of ANSI/TIA-569-D.

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Backbone Cabling (Cabling Subsystem 2 and 3)
Backbone cabling is the portion of the industrial building
telecommunications cabling system that provides
interconnections between entrance facilities, access provider
spaces, service provider spaces, common equipment rooms,
common telecommunications rooms, equipment rooms,
telecommunications rooms and telecommunications enclosures.
General Requirements
• B ackbone cabling shall meet the requirements
of ANSI/TIA-568-C.0.
• B ackbone cabling shall meet the hierarchal star topology
requirements of ANSI/TIA-568-C.0, unless otherwise
specified by this standard. (See Figure 40.)
• If requirements for “bus” or “ring” or “redundancy/fault
tolerant” configurations are anticipated, then cabling directly
between TRs or TEs is allowed. Such cabling is in addition to the
connections for the star topology specified in ANSI/TIA-568-C.0.
• C abling lengths are dependent upon the application and upon
the specific media chosen (see ANSI/TIA-568-C.0 and the specific
application standard). The backbone length includes the backbone
cable, patch cords and cross-connect jumpers. Applicable
balanced twisted-pair de-rating factors (see ANSI/TIA-568-C.2)
for cross-connect jumpers and cords shall be taken into account.
• The length of the cross-connect jumpers and patch cords
in the MC or IC should not exceed 20 m (66 ft.).
• The length of the cord used to connect telecommunications
equipment directly to the MC or IC should not exceed
30 m (98 ft.).

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Recognized Media
The recognized media, which shall be used individually
or in combination, are:
• 1 00 ohm balanced twisted-pair cabling (ANSI/TIA-568-C.2)
•M
 ultimode optical fiber cabling (ANSI/TIA-568-C.3)
• S ingle-mode optical fiber cabling (ANSI/TIA-568-C.3).
Horizontal Cabling (Cabling Subsystem 1)
Horizontal cabling includes horizontal cable, telecommunications
outlet/connectors in the work area (WA), mechanical terminations
and patch cords or jumpers located in a telecommunications
room (TR) or telecommunications enclosure (TE), and may
incorporate multiuser telecommunications outlet assemblies
(MUTOAs) and consolidation points (CPs). In an industrial area it
is possible for a single industrial cabling channel to be subjected
to different static and dynamic environments. The cabling
system should be designed to be compatible with its worst-case
environment. Compatibility of the cabling with the environment
can be achieved with enhanced cabling components or through
separation or isolation. See ANSI/TIA-568-C.0 and TIA TSB-185
for additional information on the MICE classification system.
General Requirements
• Industrial horizontal cabling is used when the requirements
are beyond ANSI/TIA-568-C.0 and ANSI/TIA-568-C.1. For
example, when the horizontal cable needs to accommodate
continuous cable movement, balanced twisted pair
copper cable with stranded conductor construction is
allowed If industrial horizontal cabling is used.
• H orizontal cabling topology, distances, requirements and
recommendations as specified in the ANSI/TIA-568-C.0
standard apply unless otherwise specified in this standard.
• E ach WA telecommunications outlet/connector shall be
connected to the horizontal cross-connect (HC).

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• The horizontal cable may be terminated either with a plug or
an IDC block (balanced twisted pair) at one or both ends.
• F or balanced twisted-pair cabling, the maximum
permanent link length shall be 90 m (295 ft.).
• F or recognized optical fiber cabling, cabling lengths
are dependent upon the application and the specific
media chosen (see ANSI/TIA-568-C.0 and Annex C of this
standard and the specific application standard).
• The length of the cross-connect jumpers and patch cords
in the cross-connect facilities, including HCs, jumpers and
patch cords that connect horizontal cabling with equipment
or backbone cabling, should not exceed 5 m (16 ft.).
• F or balanced twisted-pair cabling, the total length for
cords in the work area, patch cords or jumpers, and
equipment cords shall not exceed 10 m (33 ft.) unless
the horizontal cable length is reduced. See Table 1.
Recognized Media
The recognized media, which shall be used individually or in
combination are:
• 4 -pair 100 ohm balanced twisted-pair cabling, Category 5e
or higher (ANSI/TIA-568-C.2)
• 2 -pair 100 ohm balanced twisted-pair cabling
•M
 ultimode optical fiber cabling (ANSI/TIA-568-C.3), 2-fiber
(or higher fiber count)
• S ingle-mode optical fiber cabling (ANSI/TIA-568-C.3), 2-fiber
(or higher fiber count).
Note – 2-pair cables may be limited in scope and may not support a
full set of applications. See Annex A for further guidance on
2-pair cabling.

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Cabling specified by this standard is applicable to different
application requirements within the industrial premises. Choices of
transmission media should be made considering the following factors:
• E nvironmental classifications
•M
 itigation such as separation, protection or isolation
• C abling performance enhancements in accordance with Clause 12
• A pplications to be supported by the cabling system
• E quipment vendor recommendations or specifications.

Work Area
The work area (WA) components extend from the
telecommunications outlet/connector end of the
horizontal cabling system to the WA equipment.
General Requirements
•W
 A cords used in the WA shall meet the requirements
of ANSI/TIA-568-C.2 or ANSI/TIA-568-C.3.
•W
 hen application-specific adaptations are needed at the WA, they
shall be external to the telecommunications outlet/connector.
• 2 -pair, 100 ohm balanced twisted-pair cabling shall only
be connected to the Telecommunications Outlet (TO) in
the automation island area and not used between the
main cross-connect and the TO in the cabling system.
For additional information on 2-pair cabling, including
transitioning from 4-pair to 2-pair cabling, see Annex A.

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Horizontal Cables and Cords
22 to 24 AWG Greater than 24 to 26 AWG
Length of Maximum Maximum Maximum Maximum
horizontal length of combined length of length of combined length of
cable work area work area cords, work area work area cords,
cord patch cords and cord patch cords and
equipment cord equipment cord
H W C W C
m (ft.) m (ft.) m (ft.) m (ft.) m (ft.)
90 (295) 5 (16) 10 (33) 4 (13) 8 (26)
85 (279) 9 (30) 14 (46) 7 (24) 11 (37)
80 (262) 13 (44) 18 (60) 11 (35) 15 (48)
75 (246) 18 (57) 23 (74) 14 (46) 18 (59)
70 (229) 22 (71) 27 (87) 17 (57) 21 (70)
67 (220) 24 (79) 29 (96) 19 (63) 23 (77)
58 (190) 32 (104) 37 (120) 25 (83) 29 (96)
50 (164) 38 (126) 43 (142) 31 (101) 35 (114)
43 (141) 44 (145) 49 (161) 35 (116) 39 (129)
37 (121) 49 (161) 54 (178) 39 (129) 43 (142)
32 (105) 53 (175) 58 (191) 43 (140) 47 (153)
25 (82) 59 (194) 64 (211) 47 (155) 51 (168)
20 (66) 63 (208) 68 (224) 51 (166) 55 (179)
15 (49) 68 (221) 73 (238) 54 (177) 58 (190)
10 (33) 72 (235) 77 (252) 57 (188) 61 (201)
5 (16) 76 (249) 81 (265) 61 (199) 65 (212)
0 80 (262) 85 (279) 64 (211) 68 (223)

Table 52 – Maximum length of horizontal cables and work area cords

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Bonding and Grounding
Bonding and grounding systems are an integral part of the
signal or telecommunications cabling system. In addition to
helping protect personnel and equipment from hazardous
voltages, a proper bonding and grounding system will improve
the electromagnetic compatibility performance of the cabling
system. Improper bonding and grounding can produce induced
voltages and conduct noise that can disrupt signal transmission.
General Requirements
• The telecommunications bonding and grounding (earthing)
and system shall conform to ANSI/TIA-607-C requirements.
The following guidelines can minimize the effect of
multiple grounds and ground potential differences:
a) Single-point grounds are recommended. When safety standards
require the presence of multiple grounds, consider using
active devices that provide a resistor and capacitor (RC)
network. See Figure 43 for an example implementation.

Figure 43 – Example implementation of RC grounding

b) The use of an equipotential bonding conductor to reduce


voltage offset between two grounding points or grounding
systems. See Figure 44 for an example implementation.

ANIXTER STANDARDS REFERENCE GUIDE |135


Communications cable

Equalization conductor

Active Devices

Figure 44 – Equalization conductor for active devices

c) Multiport devices:
• A ll bonding and grounding conductors
should be as short as possible.
• Bonding and grounding conductors should be kept as
close to a grounded metallic pathway as possible.
• C are should be taken when connecting multiport devices
together, to avoid propagating grounds from one device to
another. If it is necessary to use an equalizing conductor
then it should be routed with the communications
cable and both should be in a metallic pathway. Refer
to ANSI/TIA-607-C for additional information.
d) The use of star grounding with the telecommunications
systems can be used to mitigate ground loops in
systems where equal grounding potential is not practical.
See Figure 45 for an example implementation.

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Conductive path for noise
Tu floor
distributor Shielded Communications Cable

Enclosure #1

Enclosure #2
Switch mounted to Comm
Ground within cabinet

Motor

PE
Common

Communications
Common
Cabinet Ground PE Ground
UTP/STP cables
Communications Ground

Figure 45 – Star grounding system

Industrial Cabling and Connectors


Cabling in industrial areas may require a combination
of environmental compatibility (components, protection,
isolation, separation) and enhanced transmission performance
in order to support the intended applications.
General Requirements
• The cabling shall be designed to support the intended
applications during exposure to its environmental
conditions (see MICE Annex in ANSI/TIA-568-C.0).
• The installed 100 ohm balanced twisted-pair channels
and permanent links shall meet the performance
requirements as specified in ANSI/TIA-568-C.2 and
the additional requirements of this standard.

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• 2 -pair cabling shall meet the applicable transmission performance
of the appropriate category as defined in ANSI/TIA-568-C.2 and
additional requirements of this standard.
• Transverse Conversion Loss (TCL) and Equal Level Transverse
Conversion Loss (ELTCL) requirements for UTP channels
depend on the electromagnetic noise environment. (See
MICE Table in the official ANSI/TIA-568-C.0 standard
document). The actual TCL and ELTCL limits are determined
in accordance with ANSI/TIA-568-C.2, Clause 6.1.8., (for
TCL) and ANSI/TIA-568-C.2 Clause 6.1.9. (for ELTCL).
• O ptical fiber cabling shall meet the performance
requirements of ANSI/TIA-568-C.0 and ANSI/TIA-568-C.3.
Depending on the environmental conditions, additional
enhancements or separation/isolation may be required.
• C onnecting hardware shall conform to ANSI/TIA-568-C.0,
unless otherwise specified in this standard.
•W
 hen the telecommunications outlet (TO) is outside the
automation island area the connectors within the TO shall be
an 8-position modular connector (when balanced twisted-pair
copper is used) or should be LC (when fiber media is used)
and may be protected based on environmental requirements.
The protection may be provided by either encapsulating
the TO or the telecommunication outlet connector.
• A telecommunications outlet/connector may be housed
(encapsulated) within a protective housing to provide
protection from the harsh environment. The telecommunications
outlet/connector may provide connectivity from one
cabinet to another or from cabinet to device.
•W
 hen the TO services (into and within) the automation
island area, the connectors within the TO shall be one of
the following: 8-position modular connector or M12-4
D-Coding connector (when twisted-pair copper is used),
or LC (when fiber media is used). The connectors shall
be protected based on environmental requirements.

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• 8 -position modular connectors terminated using the T568A or
T568B pin assignments as specified in ANSI/TIA-568-C.0 shall be
used. The telecommunications outlet/connector shall meet the
requirements of ANSI/TIA-568-C.2. Category 6 or better connectors
should be used.
•W
 here a full set of applications is not required, the M12-4
D-Coding connector as defined in IEC 61076-2-101 may be used.
M12-4 D-Coding is sealed by design. This connector shall exhibit
a minimum of Category 5e performance but Category 6 or better
is recommended.

2 2
3 1 3
1
4 4

M12-4 “D” M12-4 “D”


Coding Plug Coding Jack
Figure 46 – Plug and jack side wiring M12-4 D-Coding

Annex A
Requirements and Guidelines for 2-Pair Cabling
This annex is normative and is considered part of this standard.
This annex covers requirements on the termination and mixing of
generic 4-pair cabling with 2-pair cabling. 2-pair cabling is not
generic and can support a limited set of services with data rates of
100Mb/s or less. Careful long-range planning should be done before
selecting a cable pair count. If the infrastructure needs to support a
full set of applications, then generic 4-pair cabling shall be installed.

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General Requirements
Mixing 2-pair cabling in the same channel with 4-pair cabling
is not recommended. When mixing 2-pair and 4-pair is
necessary the following requirements and guidelines apply:
• A ll unused conductors of a 4-pair cabling shall be
differentially terminated in accordance with the balanced
cable characteristic impedance (100 ohms).
•W
 hen connecting a complete 2-pair cabling system
into equipment interfaces designed for 4-pair but
communicating over only two pairs (e.g. 100BASE-T),
ensure that the correct pair assignment is used.
• N etwork switching equipment with 2-pair physical interfaces
should not be connected to 4-pair cabling. Application specific
to 2-pair cabling systems should be used with such equipment.
•W
 hen adapting 4-pair cabling for use with 2-pair network
interface, the unused pairs of the 4-pair cabling shall be
terminated in accordance with the first bullet point above.
• U nused pairs shall not be left exposed outside the
connector housing.

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PURPOSE OF THE ANSI/TIA-1179 STANDARD
• Enables the planning and installation of a structured cabling
system for healthcare facilities and buildings
• Establishes performance and technical criteria for various
cabling system configurations for accessing and connecting
their respective elements.
Healthcare organizations have a diversity of services available to
them and are constantly adding new services. When applying specific
applications to these cabling systems, consult application standards,
regulations, equipment manufacturers, system suppliers and service
suppliers for applicability, limitations and ancillary requirements.

SECTION CONTENTS
ANSI/TIA-1179
Healthcare Facility Telecommunications Infrastructure Standard
Healthcare Facility Telecommunications Infrastructure Standard.................138
Telecommunications Cabling System Structure .....................................138
Scope...................................................................................................138
Entrance Facilities.................................................................................138
Equipment Rooms.................................................................................139
Telecommunications Rooms and Telecommunications Enclosures ........139
Backbone Cabling Subsystem (Cabling Subsystem 2 and 3)..................140
Horizontal Cabling (Cabling Subsystem 1).............................................141
Work Area..............................................................................................143
Work Area Density..................................................................................144
Multiuser Telecommunications Outlet Assemblies (MUTOAs).................147
Cabling Installation Requirements.........................................................147
Cabling Transmission Performance and Test Requirements.....................148

Note to the reader: This standard duplicates many, but not all, sections of the
ANSI/TIA-568-C.0, C.1, C.2 and C.3 standards that are already covered in this
guide. In the interest of conserving space and avoiding unnecessary duplication,
this summary guide will focus on highlighting the unique aspects of the
ANSI/TIA-1179 standard that are not covered in other standards. It will reference
those other standards when necessary.

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HEALTHCARE FACILITY TELECOMMUNICATIONS
INFRASTRUCTURE STANDARD
Telecommunications Cabling System Structure
This standard establishes a cabling system structure based
on the generic cabling system structure in ANSI/TIA-568-C.0
(see Figure 6 on page 19 in the Anixter Standards Reference
Guide for ANSI/TIA-568-C.1). Even though ANSI/TIA-1179 has
elements that share the same name as those in ANSI/TIA-
568-C.1, they are not necessarily the same physical elements
for the healthcare facility telecommunications system.
Scope
This standard specifies:
• The telecommunications infrastructure for healthcare
facilities (e.g., hospitals and clinics)
• Cabling, cabling topologies and cabling distances
• Pathways and spaces (e.g., size and location)
• Ancillary requirements.
In addition to telecommunications systems, this standard
specifies cabling that is intended to support a wide
range of clinical and nonclinical systems, including:
• RFID (radio frequency identification systems)
• BAS (building automation systems)
• Nurse calls
• Security
• Access control
• Pharmaceutical inventory.
Entrance Facilities
The entrance facilities (EF) shall be designed and installed
in accordance with the requirements of ANSI/TIA-569-D.

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The EF shall:
• Be designed with multiple entrance points and route diversity
• Be sized to accommodate other systems (e.g.,
building automation systems, nurse calls, security,
CATV, biomedical systems) when necessary.
If the EF room size is not large enough to accommodate these
other systems, they shall be installed in the equipment room
(ER) or in another ER dedicated for such applications.
Functions of Entrance Facilities
• The network demarcation point between the access
providers (APs) and customer premises cabling may
be part of the EF. The location of this point may be
determined by federal or local regulations.
• Electrical protection devices for campus backbone cables and
in some cases for antennas and AP cabling may be located
in the EF. Electrical codes apply for electrical protection.
• Connections between building cabling and outside plant
cables via splice or other means may be included in the EF.
Equipment Rooms
• Equipment rooms shall be designed and provisioned
according to the requirements in ANSI/TIA-569-D.
• In many cases, an equipment room is combined with the EF
and contains AP service and other premise terminations.
• Equipment rooms shall provide a minimum of two
diverse pathways between the ER and EF for critical-
care areas that would be severely impacted by a loss of
telecommunications services. These diverse pathways shall
require a route-separation distance as great as practical.
Telecommunications Rooms
and Telecommunications Enclosures
• Telecommunications rooms and enclosures shall be
designed in accordance with ANSI/TIA-569-D.

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• TRs should not have nontelecommunications services
(e.g., medical gases, fluids) routed within them.
• The TR should be larger than that suitable for an office-oriented
commercial building due to the numerous telecommunications
services present in healthcare facilities (e.g., nurse call, patient
tracking). A TR size should be 12 m² (130 ft.²) or larger.
Cross-Connections and Interconnections
Horizontal and backbone building cables shall be terminated
on connecting hardware that meets the requirements
of ANSI/TIA-568-C.2 (for balanced twisted-pair cable)
or ANSI/TIA-568-C.3 (for optical fiber cable).
Centralized Optical Fiber Cabling
Centralized cabling shall meet the requirements of
ANSI/TIA-568-C.0. (See Figure 5 on page 17.)
Backbone Cabling (Cabling Subsystem 2 and 3)
• The backbone cabling shall meet the requirements of
ANSI/TIA-568-C.0 (Cabling Subsystems 2 and 3).
• It should be planned to accommodate future equipment
needs, diverse user applications, ongoing maintenance,
service changes, sustainability, flexibility and relocation.
• A minimum of two diverse-route backbone pathways and cables
shall be provided to each TR or TE that serves critical-care areas
that may be severely impacted by a loss of access-provider
services. Placing cable between HCs, as shown in Figure 6 on
page 19, is one option that can be used to accomplish this.
• Diverse pathways should entail a route separation as great
as practical.
Star Topology
Backbone cabling shall meet the hierarchical star-
topology requirements of ANSI/TIA-568-C.0.
• There shall be no more than two hierarchical levels
of cross-connects in the backbone cabling.

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Centralized Optical Fiber Cabling
Centralized optical cabling is designed as an alternative to the
optical cross-connect located in the TR or TE when deploying
recognized optical fiber cabling to the work area (WA) from
a centralized cross-connect. (See Figure 5 on page 17 in the
Anixter Standards Reference Guide for ANSI/TIA-568-C.1.)
Length
Cabling lengths are dependent upon the application
and upon the specific media chosen (see ANSI/TIA-
568-C.0 and the specific application standard).
Recognized Cabling
The transmission media, which shall be used individually
or in combination in backbone cabling, are as follows:
• Use 100-ohm balanced twisted-pair cabling (ANSI/
TIA-568-C.2); Category 6 or higher is recommended.
- Category 6A is recommended for new installations.
- For backbone cabling, Category 3 cabling should
be limited to analog voice applications.
• Use multimode optical fiber cabling (ANSI/TIA-568-C.3);
850-nm laser-optimized 50/125 µm is recommended.
• Use single-mode optical fiber cabling (ANSI/TIA-568-C.3).
Horizontal Cabling (Cabling Subsystem 1)
General
Horizontal cabling (See Figure 7 in the Anixter Standards
Reference Guide for ANSI/TIA-568-C.1) includes horizontal
cable, telecommunications outlet/connectors in the work
area (WA), mechanical terminations and patch cords or
jumpers located in a telecommunications room (TR) or
telecommunications enclosure (TE), and may incorporate
multiuser telecommunications outlet assemblies (MUTOAs).
• The pathways and spaces to support horizontal
cabling shall be designed and installed in accordance
with the requirements of ANSI/TIA-569-D.

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• Application-specific electrical components, such
as impedance-matching devices required by some
networks or services, shall not be installed as part of
the horizontal cabling. When needed they will be placed
external to the telecommunications outlet/connector.
For healthcare applications, the meaning of the term “work area”
must be expanded to include all the connectivity required by the
various applications used in a healthcare environment to provide
the appropriate level of services. After the initial installation, adding
or changing horizontal cabling could result in a net decrease in
the quality of care being provided, which jeopardizes infection
control measures or compromises life safety measures. Due to the
cost and impact of making changes after the initial installation,
designers need to reduce or eliminate the probability of requiring
changes to the horizontal cabling as the user’s requirements evolve
(e.g., by installing cabling in pathways placed between areas so
the cabling is easily accessed by maintenance personnel).
• The minimum number of permanent links shall be the
number required to provide the needed cabling for each
type of work area. (See “Work Area” in the next section.)
• Each balanced twisted-pair cable shall be terminated in
an 8-position modular jack at the equipment outlet.
• The telecommunications outlet and connector
for 100-ohm balanced twisted-pair cable shall
meet the requirements of ANSI/TIA-568-C.0.
• Optical fibers at the equipment outlet shall be
terminated to a duplex optical fiber outlet and connector
meeting the requirements of ANSI/TIA-568-C.3.
Topology
• The horizontal cabling shall be a star topology that
meets the requirements of ANSI/TIA-568-C.0.
• Each WA outlet connector shall be connected
to the horizontal cross-connect (HC).

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Length
The horizontal cable length extends from the termination of
the media at the HC in the TR or, when used, the TE to the
telecommunications outlet/connector in the work area.
The maximum length should be:
• 90 m (295 ft.) for balanced twisted-pair horizontal cabling
• 90 m (295 ft.) for optical fiber backbone cabling except
for some cases where the length may be increased
according to the application and upon the specific
media chosen (see Annex D of ANSI/TIA-568-C.0)
• 5 m (16 ft.) for cross-connect jumpers and patch cords in
cross-connect facilities.
For each horizontal channel, the total length allowed for cords in
the WA, plus patch cords or jumpers and equipment cords, in the
TR or TE shall not exceed 10 m (33 ft.) unless a MUTOA is used.
Recognized Cabling
Three types of media are recognized and recommended
for use in the horizontal cabling system:
• 100-ohm balanced twisted-pair cabling: Category 5e or higher
(ANSI/TIA-568-C.2); Category 6 or higher is recommended.
Category 6A is recommended for new installations.
• Multimode optical fiber cabling (ANSI/TIA-568-C.3),
2-fiber or higher fiber count; 850 nm laser-
optimized 50/125 µm is recommended.
• Single-mode optical fiber cabling (ANSI/TIA-568-C.3),
2-fiber or higher fiber count is recommended.
Work Area
General
The work area (WA) components extend from the
telecommunications outlet and connector end of the horizontal
cabling system to the WA equipment (e.g., phone, computer,

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wireless access point). The telecommunications outlet and
connector shall meet the requirements of ANSI/TIA-568-C.0.
In healthcare applications, the work area takes on a broader
scope as it is located in a multitude of application-specific
areas and spaces within the healthcare facility. These
areas are divided into the following classifications:
• Patient services
• Surgery, procedure and operating rooms
• Emergency
• Ambulatory care
• Women’s health
• Diagnosis and treatment
• Caregiver
• Service and support
• Facilities
• Operations
• Critical care.

Work Area Density


Table 53 shows the recommended telecommunications outlet
and connector densities based on the classifications above and
the function at that location. This table shows a representative
list of application-specific areas found in healthcare facilities.
The names and functions of the areas are not standards-based,
so they may vary by facility. Each area classification is listed with
representative related spaces and each space is listed with its
associated “cabling services.” The letters L, M or H refer to the
relative cabling density of that work area location. If no other
guidance is provided, the cabling designer should select a number
between the midpoint and upper end of the range to determine
the number of outlets in a particular work area location.

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• L = Low:......................................Two to six outlets in each area
• M = Medium:...............................Six to 14 outlets in each area
• H = High:........................................... > 14 outlets in each area
A) Patient services
Patient Family Waiting Nurses
Administration Registration Library Consultation
room lounge room stations

M M H L L H M L

B) Surgery/procedure/operating rooms
Patient Patient Patient Sterile Substerile Intensive care Operating Anesthesia
prep holding recovery Zone zone rooms room offices

M M M L L H H M

C) Emergency
Ambulance Exam Procedure
Evaluation Observation
bay rooms rooms

L M H M H

D) Ambulatory care
Outpatient
Procedure Exam Patient
surgery Mammography Biopsy X-ray
rooms rooms holding
rooms

M H M L M L L

E) Women’s health
Labor/
Ultrasound Lactation Infant bays Nursery
delivery room

M H M L M

F) Diagnostic and treatment


Magnetic resonance CT scanner
Simulator & Linear accelerator Procedure Operating
imaging (MRI) & & control
control room & control room rooms rooms
control room room

H H H H H H
Radiation
Fluoroscopy Radiograph X-ray Lab
processing

L L L L H
Table 53 – Recommended work area outlet densities

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G) Caregiver
Exam Clean Soiled
Nourishment Charting
room utility utility

M M M L L
Nurse
Workroom Galley Read room
station

H M L M

H) Service/support
Blood bank area Pharmacy area Anesthesia area

M M H

I) Facilities
Janitor Electrical Communication/ Building utility Elevator machine
closet rooms technology rooms rooms rooms

L L L L L
Mechanical Security office Specialty storage (e.g.
Fire command
rooms command center batteries, chemicals)

L H M L

J) Operations
Locker
General Food
Administration Cafeteria rooms/ Laundry
storage service
showers

M L L M L L
Retail Conference General office
Central sterile Lounge On-call suite
areas rooms areas

M L L L M L

K) Critical Care
ICU Neonatal ICU Recovery

H H H

Table 53 – Recommended work area outlet densities (Continued)

Work Area (WA) Cords


• Cords used in the WA shall meet the performance requirements
of ANSI/TIA-568-C.2 or ANSI/TIA-568-C.3.

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Multiuser Telecommunications Outlet Assemblies
(MUTOAs)
MUTOAs can be used to provide flexible layouts for spaces that are
frequently rearranged to meet changing requirements of the end-user.
• MUTOAs must meet the requirements of ANSI/TIA-568-C.1.
• See the Section “Open Office Cabling [MUTOA]” and Figure 8 in
the Anixter Standards Reference Guide for ANSI/TIA-568-C.1.
Maximum Work Area Cord Lengths for MUTOAs
• Balanced twisted-pair cables used in the context of MUTOAs
shall meet the requirements of ANSI/TIA-568-C.2.
• The maximum cord length of balanced twisted-pair WA cables
used in the context of MUTOAs is as shown in Table 6 in the
Anixter Standards Reference Guide for ANSI/TIA-568-C.1.
• Optical fiber work area cords used in the context of MUTOAs
shall meet the requirements of ANSI/TIA-568-C.3. The maximum
horizontal cabling length is not affected by the deployment
of a MUTOA.
Cabling Installation Requirements
• Installation requirements of ANSI/TIA-568-C.0 in
addition to this standard shall be followed.
• Some locations in healthcare facilities may be sensitive
to atmospheric contamination. Cabling products with
specific attributes (e.g., filled or blocked cable, minimal
off-gassing) may be required in these locations.
• Infection control requirements (ICR) could have a serious
impact on the times and conditions for cabling installation,
moves, adds and changes as well as restrictions on removing
ceiling tiles, wall penetrations and access to unoccupied
spaces. Prior to installation or modifications in any occupied
area, the facility ICR should be consulted. Telecommunications
spaces that are subject to ICR should be labeled to indicate
that ICR measures may be necessary prior to entry.

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• Certain cabling products from some areas of healthcare
facilities may require specific and regulated means of
disposal. Reusing or relocating cabling products (e.g.,
patch cords) from certain areas may be restricted due
to infection control measures or related concerns.
• Some areas of healthcare facilities may involve high levels of
electromagnetic interference (EMI). Some cable assemblies
that support data transmission in these areas may
require appropriate components, isolation or mitigation
to comply with electromagnetic environments.
• Cabling in healthcare facilities may be exposed to high
magnetic fields, radiation, high temperature, chemicals, etc.
The design, installation methods and products selected should
be compatible with the environment and support adequate
performance during operation. The location of cabling and
spaces should be selected to minimize these effects.
• Healthcare facilities make use of a number of wireless
applications. It is recommended that the wireless
environment be characterized and understood
prior to the design, selection and installation of
cabling to make sure of satisfactory operation.
Bonding and Grounding
Bonding and grounding shall meet the requirements of
ANSI/TIA-568-C.0. Additional information can be found in
IEEE 602: “Recommended Practice for Electrical Systems in
Healthcare Facilities.”
Cabling Transmission Performance and Test Requirements
The transmission performance and test requirements of
ANSI/TIA-568-C.0, ANSI/TIA-568-C.2 and ANSI/TIA-1152 shall be met.

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PURPOSE OF THE ISO/IEC 11801 STANDARD
This international standard provides users with an application-
independent generic cabling system capable of supporting a wide
range of applications. It provides users with a flexible cabling
scheme, so modifications are both easy and economical. Building
professionals (architects, for example) are given guidance on the
accommodation of cabling at the initial stages of development.

SECTION CONTENTS
ISO/IEC 11801
Generic Cabling for Customer Premises
Generic Cabling for Customer Premises.......................................................150
The International Standard ...................................................................150
ISO/IEC 11801 Standard......................................................................151
The Requirements for ISO (The International Organization
for Standardization)......................................................................151

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GENERIC CABLING FOR CUSTOMER PREMISES
The International Standard
The International Standard specifies a multimanufacturer
cabling system that may be implemented with material
from single and multiple sources and is related to:
• International standards for cabling components
developed by committees in the IEC
• Standards for the installation and operation of information
technology cabling as well as for testing of installed cabling
• Applications developed by technical committees of the IEC
• Planning and installation guides that take into
account the needs of specific applications.
Generic cabling defined within The International Standard:
• Specifies a cabling structure supporting
a wide variety of applications
• Specifies channel and link classes A, B, C, D and E,
meeting the requirements of standardized applications
• Specifies channel and link classes E and F based on higher
performance components to support future applications
• Specifies optical channel and link classes
OF-300, OF-500 and OF-2000
• Involves component requirements and specifies
cabling implementations that make sure performance
of permanent links and channels meet or exceed
the requirements for cabling classes
• Specifies a cabling system that is anticipated to
have a useful life in excess of 10 years.

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ISO/IEC 11801 Standard
The Requirements for ISO (The International Organization
for Standardization)
Class EA are more demanding compared to the ANSI/TIA Augmented
Category 6 requirements. Anixter’s Infrastructure Solutions Lab tests
to the more stringent ISO standards.
ISO compared to TIA
Characteristics 500 MHz (dB) ISO Class EA TIA Augmented Category 6
PSNEXT loss 24.8 dB 23.2 dB
NEXT loss 27.9 dB 26.1 dB
PSANEXT loss 49.5 dB 49.5 dB
Return loss 6.0 dB 6.0 dB
Insertion loss 49.3 dB 49.3 dB
Referred to by IEEE Yes No

Table 54 – ISO/IEC Class EA and TIA Category 6/6A performance comparison

TIA Category 6 versus Augmented Category 6/6A versus ISO Class EA


TIA Category 5e TIA Category 6 TIA Augmented 6 ISO Class EA
Recognized
by IEEE 802.3an No Yes Yes Yes
55-Meter
distance support No Yes Yes Yes
100-Meter
distance support No No Yes Yes
Extrapolated test
limits for NEXT
and PSNEXT
to 500 MHz No No No Yes

Table 55 – ISO and TIA 10GBASE-T media types

Table 55 summarizes the various UTP cabling options and their


respective 10 Gigabit performance attributes as defined by the
latest draft standards. Category 5e is not recognized as a viable
cabling media to support 10 Gigabit transmission regardless of
its installed cabling distance. Category 6 cabling will only support
10 Gigabit at a maximum installed distance of 55 meters.
Today, the only options for operating 10 Gigabit at 100 meters
using RJ45 connectivity are the TIA Augmented Category 6 and
ISO/IEC Class EA standards. The ISO/IEC Class EA system has
superior NEXT and PSNEXT performance values when compared
with the current TIA Augmented Category 6 standard.

ANIXTER STANDARDS REFERENCE GUIDE |155


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PURPOSE OF THE IEEE 802 STANDARDS
This family of standards covers networking standards
and recommended practices for wired and wireless,
local, metropolitan and other area networks.

SECTION CONTENTS
IEEE 802 Standards
IEEE 802 Standards....................................................................................154
IEEE 802.3af – Power over Ethernet (PoE) Standard..............................154
IEEE 802.3at – Power over Ethernet+ (Plus) Standard............................154
IEEE 802.3an – Physical Layer and Management Parameters
for 10 Gbps Operation Type 10GBASE-T.................................................155
IEEE 802.3ba – Media Access Control Parameters, Physical Layers
and Management Parameters for 40 Gbps and 100 Gbps Operation.....156
IEEE 802.11 – Wireless Standard..........................................................157

ANIXTER STANDARDS REFERENCE GUIDE |157


IEEE 802 STANDARDS
IEEE 802.3af
Power over Ethernet (PoE) Standard
The IEEE 802.3af specification calls for power source equipment
(PSE) that operates at 48 volts of direct current. This guarantees
12.95 watts of power over unshielded twisted-pair cable to data
terminal equipment (DTE) 100 meters away (the maximum distance
supported by Ethernet). That’s enough power to support IP phones,
WLAN access points and many other DTE devices. Two PSE types are
supported including Ethernet switches equipped with power supply
modules called endspan devices and a special patch panel called a
midspan device that sits between a legacy switch and powered
equipment, injecting power to each connection.
IEEE 802.3at
Power over Ethernet+ (Plus) Standard
The IEEE 802.3at Power over Ethernet Plus amendment to the
IEEE 802.3af standard offers improved power-management features
and increases the amount of power to end devices. The amendment
allows for the powering devices through standard Category 5e, 6
and 6A cabling. It allows many more devices, such as access control
and video surveillance, to receive power over a twisted-pair
cabling infrastructure.
The standard defines the technology for powering a wide range of
devices up to 25 watts over existing Category 5e and above cables.
The 802.3at standard states that 30 watts at a minimum are
allocated at the port, so 24.6 watts are provided at the end-device
connector 100 meters away. It also allows for gigabit pass-through.
PoE Plus represents a considerable upgrade over the existing
PoE standard.

158| 1.800.ANIXTER | ANIXTER.COM


IEEE 802.3an
Physical Layer and Management Parameters
for 10 Gbps Operation Type 10GBASE-T
Describes the physical layer (PHY) for 10 Gigabit Ethernet
transmission over twisted-pair copper cable.
IEEE 802.3an standard

Standard Media Distance


ISO Class F (individual shields) S/FTP 100 m
ISO Class EA UTP 100 m
TIA Augmented Category 6 UTP 100 m
Shielded Category 6 (overall shield) F/UTP, ScTP, STP 100 m
TIA Standard Category 6/ISO Class E UTP <55 m

Table 56 – Maximum 10GBASE-T cabling distances

ANSI/TIA-568-C.2 (Augmented Category 6) and ISO/IEC 11801


Class EA cable specifications are based on IEEE cabling models.
100 meters over UTP is only guaranteed when using Augmented
Category 6 or ISO/IEC Class EA-compliant cabling systems.

ANIXTER STANDARDS REFERENCE GUIDE |159


IEEE 802.3ba
Media Access Control Parameters, Physical Layers
and Management Parameters for 40 Gbps and
100 Gbps Operation
The 802.3ba amendment to the IEEE 802.3-2008 standard defines
media access control (MAC) parameters, physical layer specifications
and management parameters for the transfer of 802.3 frames at
40 Gbps and 100 Gbps. The amendment facilitates the migration
of 10 Gigabit Ethernet from the network core to the network edge
by providing 40 Gbps and 100 Gbps data rates for backbone
and backhaul applications to effectively remove the bandwidth
bottleneck that exists in many corporate networks today.
The following media types and distances are
approved as part of the 802.3ba amendment:
40 Gigabit Ethernet

Protocol Media Distance


40GBASE-CR4 Twinax 10 m
40GBASE-SR4 OM3 MMF 100 m
40GBASE-SR4 OM4 MMF 150 m
40GBASE-LR4 SMF 10 km

100 Gigabit Ethernet

Protocol Media Distance


100GBASE-CR10 Twinax 10 m
100GBASE-SR10 OM3 MMF 100 m
100GBASE-SR10 OM4 MMF 150 m
100GBASE-LR4 SMF 10 km
100GBASE-ER4 SMF 40 km

Table 57 – 40 Gbps and 100 Gbps approved media types and distances

160| 1.800.ANIXTER | ANIXTER.COM


IEEE 802.11
Wireless Standard
IEEE 802.11, the Wi-Fi standard, denotes a set of wireless LAN/
WLAN standards developed by Working Group 11 of the IEEE LAN/
MAN standards committee (IEEE 802). The term 802.11x is also
used to denote this set of standards and is not to be mistaken for
any one of its elements. There is no single 802.11x standard.
802.11 details a wireless interface between devices to manage
packet traffic (to avoid collisions, etc.). Some common specifications
and their distinctive attributes include the following:
802.11a – Operates in the 5 GHz frequency range (5.125 to
5.85 GHz) with a maximum 54 Mbps signaling rate. The
5 GHz frequency band isn’t as crowded as the 2.4 GHz
frequency because it offers significantly more radio channels
than the 802.11b and is used by fewer applications.
It has a shorter range than 802.11g, is actually newer
than 802.11b and is not compatible with 802.11b.
802.11b – Operates in the 2.4 GHz Industrial, Scientific
and Medical (ISM) band (2.4 to 2.4835 GHz) and provides
signaling rates of up to 11 Mbps. This is a commonly
used frequency. Microwave ovens, cordless phones,
medical and scientific equipment, as well as Bluetooth
devices, all work within the 2.4 GHz ISM band.
802.11e – Ratified by the IEEE in late September 2005,
the 802.11e quality-of-service specification is designed to
guarantee the quality of voice and video traffic. It is particularly
important for companies interested in using Wi-Fi phones.
802.11g – Similar to 802.11b, this standard supports signaling
rates of up to 54 Mbps. It also operates in the heavily used
2.4 GHz ISM band but uses a different radio technology to
boost overall throughput. Compatible with older 802.11b.

ANIXTER STANDARDS REFERENCE GUIDE |161


802.11i – Also sometimes called Wi-Fi Protected Access 2
(WPA 2), 802.11i was ratified in June 2004. WPA 2 supports
the 128-bit-and-above Advanced Encryption Standard, along
with 802.1x authentication and key management features.
802.11k – Passed in June 2008, the 802.11k Radio Resource
Management Standard will provide measurement information
for access points and switches to make wireless LANs run
more efficiently. It may, for example, better distribute traffic
loads across access points or allow dynamic adjustments
of transmission power to minimize interference.
802.11n – Ratified in September 2009, ­­­802.11n is a
set of standards for wireless local area network (WLAN)
communications, developed by the IEEE LAN/WAN Standards
Committee (IEEE 802) in the 5 GHz and 2.4 GHz public
spectrum bands. The proposed amendment improves upon
the previous 802.11 standards by adding multiple-input
multiple-output (MIMO) and many other newer features.
802.11ac – Published in January 2014 by the IEEE 802.11
LAN/WAN Standards Committee, the standard increases WLAN
multi-station throughput from the previous 802.11n standard to
at least 1 gigabit per second and to a single link throughput of
at least 500 megabits per second (500 Mbit/s). The increased
throughput is achieved by utilizing wider RF bandwidth (up to
160 MHz), more MIMO spatial streams (up to eight), downlink
multi-user MIMO (up to four clients), and high-density modulation
(up to 256-QAM).

162| 1.800.ANIXTER | ANIXTER.COM


REFERENCE DOCUMENTS
For further information on cabling standards, please obtain
the full versions of the original standards documents.
ANSI/TIA-568-C.0 (2009)
Generic Telecommunications Cabling for Customer Premises
ANSI/TIA-568-C.1 (2009)
Commercial Building Telecommunications Cabling Standard
ANSI/TIA-568-C.2 (2009)
Balanced Twisted-Pair Telecommunications Cabling and
Components Standard
ANSI/TIA-568-C.3 (2009)
Optical Fiber Cabling Components
ANSI/TIA-569-D (2015)
 Telecommunications Pathways and Spaces
ANSI/TIA-606-B (2012)
Administration Standard for Telecommunications Infrastructure
ANSI/TIA-607-C (2015)
Generic Telecommunications Bonding and
Grounding (Earthing) for Customer Premises
ANSI/TIA-862-A (2011)
Building Automation Systems Cabling Standard
ANSI/TIA-942-A (2012)
Telecommunications Infrastructure Standard for Data Centers
ANSI/TIA-1005-A (2012)
Telecommunications Infrastructure Standard for Industrial Premises
ANSI/TIA-1179 (2010)
Healthcare Facility Telecommunications Infrastructure Standard
IS0/IEC 11801 (2002)
Generic Cabling for Customer Premises

ANIXTER STANDARDS REFERENCE GUIDE |163


IEEE 802.3af (2003)
Power over Ethernet (PoE) Standard
IEEE 802.3at (2009)
Power over Ethernet+ (Plus)
IEEE 802.3an (2006)
Physical Layer and Management Parameters
for 10 Gbps Operation Type 10GBASE-T
IEEE 802.3ba (2010)
Media Access Control Parameters, Physical Layers and
Management Parameters for 40 Gbps and 100 Gbps Operation
IEEE 802.11
Wireless Standard
802.11ac (2014)
802.11n (2009)
802.11k (2008)
802.11e (2005)
802.11i (2004)
802.11a (2003)
802.11b (2003)
802.11g (2003)

164| 1.800.ANIXTER | ANIXTER.COM


Obtaining Standards Documents
ANSI/TIA documents may be purchased through the IHS Standards
Store (Global Engineering Documents) at 877.413.5184 or
global.ihs.com. IEEE documents may be purchased through
IEEE, P.O. Box 1331, Piscataway, NJ 08855 or ieee.org. CSA
documents may be purchased through the Canadian Standards
Association at csa.ca or by calling 416.747.4000.
For further assistance or more information, contact your local
Anixter sales office or 1.800.ANIXTER. Some material in this
publication is reproduced from standards publications, which are
copyrighted by the Telecommunications Industry Association.
This document was prepared by Anixter Inc., which is not
affiliated with the Telecommunications Industry Association.
TIA is responsible for the content of this publication.
For direct assistance in interpreting telecommunications
standards, consider Registered Communications Distribution
Designers (RCDD) certified by the Building Industry Consulting
Service International (BICSI) at 800.242.7405 or bicsi.org. Many
Anixter technical professionals are registered with BICSI.

ANIXTER STANDARDS REFERENCE GUIDE |165


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