TIA 1005 Industrial Ref Guide

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The key takeaways are that the document discusses telecommunications infrastructure standards for industrial premises, specifically ANSI/TIA-1005, and provides an overview of topics covered by the standard including cabling types, architectures, and testing methods.

The purpose of industry standards is to provide guidelines for installation, maintenance and testing to improve availability and reduce expenses associated with downtime.

The different areas defined in industrial premises are control equipment/telecommunications rooms, factory floor area, work area, and automation island area.

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A Reference Guide To: ANSI/TIA-1005

Standards Reference Guide


Telecommunications Infrastructure for Industrial Premises

Anixter: The Cabling System Experts


Anixter is a leading global supplier of products used to connect voice, video, data and security systems. Anixter is also a leading provider of specialty electrical and electronic wire and cable for building construction, industrial maintenance and repair, and original equipment manufacturing, as well as a leader in providing fasteners and C Class components to OEMs and production lines. We bundle our products with our innovative Supply Chain Services to help control the cost of our customers business processes, reduce their investment in inventory and ensure they get the right product when and where they need it.

Purpose of Industry Standards


By providing guidelines for installation, maintenance and testing to improve availability and reduce expenses associated with downtime, the telecommunications standards define cabling types, distances, connections, cable system architectures, cable termination standards, performance characteristics, installation and testing methods. The standards provide recommended practices for the design and installation of cabling systems to support a wide variety of existing and future systems to extend the life span of the telecommunications infrastructure. A single common structured cabling system for all communications and security systems simplifies moves, adds and changes, maximizes system availability and extends the usability of a cabling system. By adhering to industry standards, industrial environments can expect to fully experience the benefits of structured cabling on overall performance.

Scope of this Reference Guide


This document is meant as a reference that highlights the key points of the ANSI/TIA-1005 standard. It is not intended as a substitute for the original documents. For further information on any topic in this guide, refer to the actual standard. See the section called Reference Documents for instructions on how to order a copy of the standard. The cabling described by this standard meets the environmental requirements of the specific areas into which it must be installed. It is equally important that the devices the cabling connects to also meet these environmental requirements, including any Ethernet switches or routers, gateways or other related devices exposed to the specific environment. Abbreviation References: ANSI American National Standards Institute EIA Electronic Industry Alliance (now completely absorbed into the TIA as of March 2008) TIA Telecommunications Industry Association

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Table of Contents
Purpose of the ANSI/TIA-1005 Standard . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 Telecommunications Infrastructure Standard for Industrial Premises . . . . 3 Industrial Areas . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 Control Equipment/Telecommunications Rooms . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 Factory Floor Area . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 Work Area . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 Automation Island Area . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 Horizontal Cabling . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 Recognized Horizontal Cables . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 Horizontal Cabling Allowable Distances for Copper Links . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 Backbone Cabling . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 Recognized Backbone Cables . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 Connecting Hardware: Copper . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 Telecommunications Outlet and Connector . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 Automation Outlet Connector . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13 Alternate Automation Outlet and Connector . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13 Adapters . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 Grounding and Bonding Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 Connecting Hardware: Fiber Optic . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 Telecommunications Outlet Connector . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 Optical Fiber Automation Outlet and Connector . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16 Industrial Cabling Performance Requirements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16 Copper . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16 Fiber Optic . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 Consolidation Point . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21 Normative . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22 Annex A: Requirements for 2-Pair Cabling . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22 Informative . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23 Annex B: MICE Concepts as Described in ANSI/TIA-568-C.0 . . . . . . . . . . 23 MICE Definition and Tables . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24 Annex C: Guidance for Using More than Four Connectors in the Channel . 29 Annex D: Extended Fiber Optic Channels . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30 ANSI/TIA-1005 Summary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32 About Anixter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33 Reference Documents . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38
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Purpose of the ANSI/TIA-1005 Standard


Telecommunications Infrastructure Standard for Industrial Premises The Purpose: This standard helps to enable the planning and installation of telecommunications cabling infrastructure within and between industrial buildings. In contrast to the ANSI/TIA/EIA-568, which addresses commercial buildings, the central concept of this standard is the potential exposure to hostile environments in the industrial space. A prime design principle of this document is the special cabling system requirements for industrial operations. Expected Usefulness: This standard is useful for those responsible for designing a telecommunications infrastructure to meet the requirements of an industrial environment. A working knowledge of this standard may prove beneficial in understanding problems associated with the unique aspects of industrial environments and applications. The Standards Specifics: Definition of structured cabling for commercial networks Definition of structured cabling for industrial networks The proposed ANSI/TIA-1005 draft standard structure Industrial area concepts Recognized cables Recognized connectivity The automation outlet 2-pair cabling Multiconnect or Ethernet channels MICE
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Terms not part of ANSI/TIA/EIA-568-B: Automation island Area in proximity to the industrial machines Automation outlet Where the generic telecommunications cabling ends and the automation-specific cabling begins Device area Where system I/O interacts with control equipment Industrial segment A point-to-point connection between two active industrial communications devices MICE Mechanical, ingress, climate/chemical, electromechanical conditions (see Figure 14 on page 24) Note: Telecommunications for this standard covers all Ethernet transmission cabling.

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Standards Reference Guide

Industrial Areas
Industrial premises cabling may traverse from the front office through the factory floor. The factory floor (see Figure 1) may include work areas and automation islands. Typically, industrial premises encompass environments that are much harsher when compared to commercial office environments. As such, additional performance requirements for industrial-premises telecommunications components must be considered.
Control equipment/ telecommunications room MICE 1 Factory floor MICE 2 or 3

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Work area/cell Automation MICE 2 or 3 island MICE 3 Figure 1 Typical Industrial Environment

Control Equipment/Telecommunications Room This area is equivalent to the MDC or IDC as defined in the ANSI/TIA/EIA-568-B. It is usually enclosed and protected from the factory environment and is located where the primary network interface equipment for the factory is housed. Factory Floor Area The factory floor is the space beyond the office in the manufacturing facility where the machines and work areas exist. These are typically high-traffic areas that require special consideration for the protection and placement of communications equipment. The factory floor environment is generally classified MICE 1 or higher.
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Work Area On a factory floor, the work area is where personnel interact with the telecommunications devices and industrial machines. Work areas often have more severe environments than the factory floor. It is important that the work area be properly designed for both occupants and control devices. The environment of the work area is generally classified MICE 1 or higher. Automation Island Area The automation island is the space on the factory floor in immediate proximity to or on the industrial machines and usually accompanies a work area. It is usually the most environmentally harsh area within the industrial premise. Accordingly, the automation island can often be identified as an area where humans are generally not present during machine cycling. In some cases, the automation island may extend into the work area. Components selected to be installed need to be compatible with the environment local to the components. The industrial machines require connectivity to machine control devices such as machine sensors, vision and general telecommunications devices. The environment of the automation island is generally classified MICE 3.

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Standards Reference Guide

Horizontal Cabling
The horizontal cabling topology of ANSI/TIA/EIA-568-B is followed in this standard.
Laptop computer

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WA Telephone

CP

HC TR/TE

Laptop computer

Legend: TR TE WA WA Telecommunications room Telecommunications enclosure Work area Horizontal cross-connect Consolidation point Horizontal cabling (Level III cabling) Telecommunications outlet

Telephone

HC CP

Figure 2 Horizontal Cabling Topologies

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Recognized Horizontal Cables Twisted-pair copper 4-pair, 100-ohm balanced (unshielded or shielded) 2-pair, 100-ohm balanced (unshielded or shielded) Optical fiber Optical (glass) fiber, single-mode and multimode cable (ANSI/TIA/EIA-568-C.3) Plastic optical fiber (removed from the standard and referred to a working group for later addition as a draft addendum) Plastic polymer optical fiber (ISO/IEC 24702) Plastic polymer clad silica optical fiber (ISO/IEC 24702) Horizontal Cabling Allowable Distances for Copper Links In many cases, industrial cabling can be made almost entirely of work area cabling, which must be accounted for when combined with equipment and patch cabling in the limited 100 m (328 ft.) channel. The following formula must be used to calculate the maximum cord and link lengths: Equation 1: H + (1+D)C Equation 2: W = C T C = the maximum combined length of the work area cable, equipment cable and patch cord (m). W = the maximum length of the work area cable (m). H 90 m is the length of the horizontal cable (m). 102 m

D = 0.2 for 24 AWG patch cables and 0.5 for 26 AWG patch cables. T = the assumed maximum length of patch and equipment cords in the telecommunications room.

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Standards Reference Guide

Cords shall comply with the requirements of ANSI/TIA/EIA-568-B.2 unless exceptions are stated in this standard. For patch cords that meet these requirements, the maximum cord and horizontal link lengths shall be determined by equations 1 and 2. Table 1 (see pages 10-11) illustrates the application of these formulas. The length of the work area cord shall not exceed 82 m (269 ft.). Where a multiuser telecommunications outlet assembly (MUTOA) is deployed, the outlet assembly shall be marked with the maximum allowable work-area cord length. Telecommunications outlets with cabling segments designed for longer cords shall be marked with the maximum cord length. One method to determine this length is to evaluate cable length markings.

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Table 1 Maximum Length of Horizontal and Work Area Cables


24 AWG Patch Cords (D=0.2, T= 0 m) Maximum Combined Length of Work Area Cables, Patch Cords and Equipment Cable C m (ft.) 10 (33) 14 (46) 18 (60) 23 (74) 27 (87) 29 (96) 37 (120) 43 (142) 49 (161) 54 (178) 58 (191) 64 (211) 68 (224) 73 (238) 77 (252) 81 (265) 85 (279)
Standards Reference Guide

Length of Horizontal Cable H m (ft.) 90 (295) 85 (279) 80 (262) 75 (246) 70 (229) 67 (220) 58 (190) 50 (164) 43 (141) 37 (121) 32 (105) 25 (82) 20 (66) 15 (49) 10 (33) 5 (16) 0
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Maximun Length of Work Area Cable W m (ft.) 5 (16) 9 (30) 13 (44) 18 (57) 22 (71) 24 (79) 32 (104) 38 (126) 44 (145) 49 (161) 53 (175) 59 (194) 63 ( 208) 68 (221) 72 (235) 76 (249) N/A

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26 AWG Patch Cords (D=0.5, T= 0 m) Maximum Combined Length of Work Area Cables, Patch Cords and Equipment Cable C m (ft.) 8 (26) 11 (37) 15 (48) 18 (59) 21 (70) 23 (77) 29 (96) 35 (114) 39 (129) 43 (142) 47 (153) 51 (168) 55 (179) 58 (190) 61 (201) 65 (212) 68 (223)
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Maximum Length of Work Area Cable W m (ft.) 4 (13) 7 (24) 11 (35) 14 (46) 17 (57) 19 (63) 25 (83) 31 (101) 35 (116) 39 (129) 43 (140) 47 (155) 51 (166) 54 (177) 57 (188) 61 (199) N/A
Telecommunications Infrastructure for Industrial Premises

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Backbone Cabling
Recognized Backbone Cables Copper 4-pair, 100-ohm balanced (unshielded or shielded) Fiber Optic Optical (glass) fiber, single-mode and multimode cable (ANSI/TIA/EIA-568-C.3) Plastic optical fiber (removed from the standard and referred to a working group for later addition as a draft addendum) Plastic polymer optical fiber (ISO/IEC 24702) Plastic polymer clad silica optical fiber (ISO/IEC 24702)

Connecting Hardware: Copper


Telecommunications Outlet and Connector 8-position modular: A 100-ohm balanced twisted pair per ANSI/TIA/EIA-568-B.1 must use the T568-A or -B wiring method. Non-sealed: Each 4-pair terminated must meet the performance requirements of ANSI/TIA/EIA-568-B.2. Sealed: These may be housed (encapsulated) within a protective housing and must meet the performance requirements of ANSI/TIA/EIA-568-B.2 when subjected to the applicable environmental conditions as defined by the MICE table.

Figure 3 Encapsulated Copper Connector


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Automation Outlet Connector This serves as the interface between generic cabling and the automation island. 8-position modular: Each 100-ohm balanced twisted pair, per ANSI/TIA/EIA-568-B.2, is required to meet Category 6 or better. Non-sealed: Each 100-ohm, 4-pair cable shall terminate on an 8-position connector. Sealed: These shall use connector encapsulation variant 1 from IEC 61076-3-106. Alternate Automation Outlet and Connector A 2-pair sealed connector. Where a full set of applications is not required (100BASE-T max), the M12-4 D-coding connector as defined in IEC 61076-2-100 may be used. It should be a minimum of Category 5e for four connections or less, and Category 6 for more than four connections.
Keyways M12-4 D Plug M12-4 D Jack

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2 1 4
Pin Number with Wiring Color Code Figure 4 Pair Data Connection
Pin Number 1 2 3 4 Signal TX+ RX+ TX RX Color Code White - Orange White - Green Orange Green

Figure 4 2-Pair Data Connection

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Adapters Balanced twisted pair A back-to-back jack is recommended for use on enclosures for bulkhead quick connections. Mated adapters shall conform to the transmission requirements of the appropriate media type and category. When two connections are used in very close proximity, they should be of the next higher performance category. If the space is less than 10 cm, it can count as a single connection.
Single
A) B)

Double

L < 10 cm

L > 10 cm

Figure 5 Bulkhead Connection

Grounding and Bonding Considerations Use ANSI-J-STD-607-A for grounding requirements Single-point grounds must be used. Grounding and bonding should be configured to provide an equal potential grounding system to prevent ground loops. The use of star grounding in communications coverage areas can be used to mitigate ground loops.

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Standards Reference Guide

Electrical entrance facility

Telecommunications entrance facility (TEF)

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Telecommunications equipment

Grounding electrode conductor Legend:

Bonding Telecommunications main conductor for grounding busbar (TMGB) telecommunications

Cross-connect Grounding bar Service equipment Panelboard

Outside scope of this standard Bonding conductor as labeled

Figure 6 Grounding and Bonding Diagram

Connecting Hardware: Fiber Optic


Telecommunications Outlet Connector LC connector family, as specified in ANSI/TIA/EIA-604-10A, shall perform to ANSI/TIA/EIA-568-C.3. Sealed fiber optic connectors may be protected by encapsulation, isolation or separation. Variant 1 of IEC 61076-3-106 methods should be used, but any suitable encapsulation may be used, as long as a single method is used throughout the facility.

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Optical Fiber Automation Outlet and Connector Non-sealed: The LC connector family, as specified in ANSI/TIA/EIA-604-10A, shall perform to ANSI/TIA/EIA-568-C.3. Sealed: The sealed outlet connector housing shall be Variant 1 of IEC 61076-3-106, incorporating the duplex LC connector of ANSI/TIA/EIA-604-10A.

Figure 7 Industrial Fiber Connector

Industrial Cabling Performance Requirements


Copper Industrial cabling requires a combination of environmental and enhanced transmission performance to support the intended applications. The standard states that for channels with more than four connections, Category 6 or better cabling should be used. Twisted-pair copper The installed channels and permanent links shall meet the requirements for cabling as specified for: I Category 5e per ANSI/TIA/EIA-568-B.1, clause 11.2 I Category 6 per ANSI/TIA/EIA-568-B.2, clause 7. Industrial cabling shall meet the requirements of tables in this standard concerning TCL (transverse conversion loss) and ELTCTL (equal level transverse conversion transfer loss) for unshielded pairs and coupling attenuation for shielded pairs. This is a measurement of the cables susceptibility to EMI/RF noise.

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Standards Reference Guide

Table 2 TCL Limits for Unshielded Twisted-Pair Cabling


Minimum TCL (dB) Category Frequency (MHz) 1 5e f 30 E1 E2 63-15 log(f) 70.4-20 log(f) 63-15 log(f) 70.4-0 log(f) E3 73-15 log(f) 80.4-20 log(f) 73-15 log(f) 80.4-20 log(f)

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30 < f 1 f

53-15 log(f) 100 60.4-20 log(f) 53-15 log(f) 250 60.4-20 log(f)

30

30 < f

TCL values greater than 40 dB shall revert to the minimum requirement of 40 dB.

Table 3 ELTCTL Limits for Unshielded Twisted-Pair Cabling


Minimum ELTCTL (dB) Frequency (MHz) 1 f 30 E1 30-20 log(f) E2 40-20 log(f) E3 50-20 log(f)

Category 5e and 6

ELTCTL values greater than 40 dB shall revert to the minimum requirement of 40 dB.

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Fiber Optic Standard fiber optic cables Optical fiber (glass) cabling shall meet the performance requirements of ANSI/TIA/EIA-568-C.3. Depending on the environmental conditions, additional enhancements or separation and isolation may be required.
8 6 Attn (dB) 4 2 0 0 500 1,000 Length (meters) Figure 8 Performance Requirements met by 62.5/125 m or 50/125 m Backbone Cabling Link Attenuation Based on Distance 1,500 2,000 850 nm 1,300 nm

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Standards Reference Guide

Multiuser telecommunications outlet assemblies (MUTOA) Its use facilitates the termination of multiple horizontal cables in a common location within a manufacturing cell and allows cabling to remain intact when the cell is changed. Cables from the MUTOA should be routed through device area pathways. Automation island cabling should be protected from environmental conditions.

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Figure 9 MUTOA Assembly

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Telecommunications room Equipment Patch cords/ cable jumpers Horizontal Backbone cable cross-connect

Multiuser telecommunications outlet assembly

Work area cables

Telecommunications outlet/connectors Work area

Telecommunications room Equipment Patch cords/ cable jumpers Horizontal Backbone cable cross-connect

Multiuser telecommunications outlet assembly

On-machine enclosure

Automation island cables Control device

Telecommunications outlet/connectors Automation island Figure 10 MUTOA Use Diagram

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Standards Reference Guide

Consolidation Point The interconnection point within the horizontal cabling must use ANSI/TIA/EIA-568-B.2- or -B.3-compliant connecting hardware in accordance with the requirements of Clause 6.2.2. It differs from a MUTOA as it requires an additional connection point. No more than a single consolidation point or transition point shall be used in the same horizontal run. Each cable extending to the work area from a consolidation point shall be terminated to a compliant TO, AO or MUTOA.
Industrial equipment enclosure (located in work area)

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One or more Ethernet control devices Cross-connect Automation outlet/connector, telecommunications outlet/connector or consolidation point Automation island Factory floor automation island Figure 11 Consolidation Point Diagram

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Normative
Annex A: Requirements for 2-Pair Cabling All unused conductors of a 4-pair cable shall be common-mode terminated. When connecting a complete 2-pair cabling system into equipment designed for 4-pair cabling (e.g., 100BASE-T), ensure the correct pair assignment is used. Network switches designed for use with 2-pair cabling should not be connected with 4-pair cabling. If mixing 2-pair and 4-pair cabling systems, ensure the resulting cabling channel meets the requirements of the application.
Bulkhead Patch panel Switch Consolidation point Elevated MICE environment Bulkhead TO AO Device

ANSI/TIA-1005 Horizontal channel with 6 connectors

Environmental (MICE) boundaries can change at various points along the channel length. Proper protection, encapsulation or separation are key. Legend: TO = Telecommunications outlet AO = Automation outlet Figure 12 Channel Containing 2-Pair Transition for Automation Outlet

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Standards Reference Guide

Informative
Annex B: MICE Concepts as Described in ANSI/TIA/EIA-568-C.0 There are three basic types of industrial areas: Factory floor (MICE 1 or 2) Work area (MICE 2 or 3) Automation island (MICE 3) The areas have mixed environments and are given classifications (subscripts 1, 2 and 3) based on the MICE limits assigned to that level of hazard.
Control equipment telecommunications room M 1 I 1 C 1E 1 Factory floor M 2I 2C 1E 1

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Distributor Cabling channel

Automation Work area island M 3I 3C 3E 3 M 1I 2C 3E 2

Figure 13 Example of Enviromental Change Along Cable Channel

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MICE Definition and Tables


Increasing severity Classes Mechanical Ingress rating Climatic Electromagnetic M1 I1 C1 E1 M2 I2 C2 E2 M3 I3 C3 E3

The MICE matrix defines environmental classes in three levels and four parameters. Legend: M 1I 1C 1E 1 describes a worst-case environment according to ISO/IEC 11801 M 2I 2C 2E 2 describes a worst-case light industrial environment M 3I 3C 3E 3 describes a worst-case industrial environment The MICE concept is based on the assumption that cabling, even under the worst conditions of an environmental class, is still protected and helps to guarantee reliable network operation. Figure 14 MICE Definition

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Standards Reference Guide

Table 4 MICE Table for MX and IX


Mechanical Peak acceleration M1 40 ms -2 M2 100 ms -2 Vibration Displacement amplitude (2-3 Hz) Acceleration amplitude (9-500 Hz) Tensile force 1.5 mm 5 ms -2 See Note 2 7.0 mm 20 ms -2 See Note 2 1,100 N over 150 mm (linear) min. 10 J See Note 2 I2 50 mm 15.0 mm 50 ms -2 See Note 2 M3 250 ms -2 Shock/bump (see Note 1)

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Crush Impact Bending, flexing and torsion Ingress Particulate ingress (dia. max)

45 N over 25 mm (linear) min. 1J See Note 2 I1 12.5 mm

2,200 N over 150 mm (linear) min. 30 J See Note 2 I3 50 mm

Intermittent liquid jet Intermittent < = 12.5 I/min liquid jet > = 6.3 mm jet < = 12.5 I/min > 2.5 m distance > = 6.3 mm jet and immersion > 2.5 m (< = 1 m for < = 30 distance minutes) Immersion None Note 1: The repetitive nature of the shock experienced by the channel should be taken into account. Note 2: This aspect of environmental classification is installation-specific and should be considered in association with the appropriate specification.
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Table 5 MICE Table for CX


Climatic and Chemicals Ambient temperature C1 -10C to +60C C2 -25C to +70C C3 -40C to +70C

Rate of change of temperature

0.1C per minute 1.0C per minute 3.0C per minute 5% to 85% (non-condensing) 700 Wm-2 5% to 95% (condensing) 1,120 Wm-2 5% to 95% (condensing) 1,120 Wm-2

Humidity Solar radiation

Liquid pollution contaminants Sodium chloride (salt/sea water) Oil (dry-air concentration) (for oil types, see Note 2) Sodium stearate (soap) Detergent

Concentration x 10-6

Concentration x 10-6

Concentration x 10-6

<0.3

<0.3

<0.005

<0.5

0 None

>5 x 104 aqueous >5 x 104 non-gelling aqueous gelling ffs ffs

Conductive materials in solution

None

Temporary

Present

Mean/Peak Mean/Peak Mean/Peak (concentration (concentration Gaseous pollution (concentration x 10-6) x 10-6) contaminants x 10-6) Note 2: This aspect of environmental classification is installation-specific and should be considered in association with the appropriate specification.
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Table 6 MICE Table for EX


Electromagnetic E1 E2 E3

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Electrostatic discharge contact (0.667 C) Electrostatic discharge air (0.132 C)

4 kV

4 kV

4 kV

8 kV 3 V/m at 801,000 MHz 3 V/m at 1,4002,000 MHz 1 V/m at 2,0002,700 MHz

8 kV 3 V/m at 801,000 MHz 3 V/m at 1,4002,000 MHz 1 V/m at 2,0002,700 MHz

8 kV 10 V/m at 801,000 MHz 3 V/m at 1,4002,000 MHz 1 V/m at 2,0002,700 MHz

Radiated RF AM

Conducted RF EFT/B Surge (transient ground potential difference) signal, line to earth Magnetic field (50/60 Hz)

3 V at 3 V at 10 V at 150 kHz80 MHz 150 kHz80 MHz 150 kHz80 MHz 500 V 1,000 V 1,000 V

500 V 1 Am-1

1,000 V 3 Am-1

1,000 V 30 Am-1

Magnetic field (6020,000 Hz)

ffs

ffs

ffs

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A Switch

TO MICE Boundary

TO Device

B Switch

Channel with two connectors Device

Two connection topologies with environmental boundaries shown at the TO. MICE boundaries can change at various points along the channel length. Proper protection encapsulation or separation are key.

Switch Patch Consolidation panel point ANSI/TIA-1005 channel with five connectors

Device

Figure 15 Channel Makeup with Environmental Examples

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Standards Reference Guide

Annex C: Guidance for Using More than Four Connectors in the Channel
Bulkhead Patch panel Switch Consolidation point Elevated MICE environment Channel with six connectors TO Bulkhead TO in the automation island Device

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Environmental (MICE) boundaries can change at various points along the channel length. Proper protection, encapsulation or separation are key. Horizontal cable length with more than four connections in a channel.

Table 7 Multiple Connection Performance Requirements


Minimum Connecting Hardware Return Loss (RL dB) 26-20 log (f/100) 30-20 log (f/100) Minimum Connecting Hardware (NEXT 9dB) 54-20 log (f/100) 60-20 log (f/100)

Desired Channel Category Category 5e Category 6

Number of Connections 5 or 6 5 or 6

Cable Category 5e 6

Note: The elevated RL and NEXT performance levels shown may require the use of Augmented Category 6 connections as specified as ANSI/TIA/EIA-568-B.2-10.

Note: Although Category 5e performance is a minimum requirement for 100 Mbps Ethernet to work correctly. In order to obtain this performance when more than four (4) connections are present in a channel, the use of Cat 6 connectors and Cat 6 cables will have to be used to effectively reach this performance level. In the case of a Category 6 channel requirement, the use of Cat 6A connectors will be required.
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Annex D: Extended Fiber Optic Channels Tables 8 and 9 provide maximum channel and backbone lengths for applications not included in ANSI/TIA/EIA-568-B.1. Table 8 Supported Applications and Maximum Channel Lengths with All-Silica Multimode Optical
nm Network Application 1300 ControlNET --50 62.5 Core Diameter m CIL1 dB 6.5 11.3 OM1 L2 m 1,514 6,533 Class OF-500 OF-2000

Notes: 1. CIL is the maximum channel insertion loss (or optical power budget, as applicable) as defined in the application standard. 2. L is the lower of either the maximum channel length specified in the application standard or a calculated length from the CIL with 1.5 dB allocated to connecting hardware.

Table 9 Supported Applications and Maximum Channel Lengths with All-Silica Single-Mode Fibers
nm CIL1 dB 10.0 OS1 L2 m 8,000

Network Application ControlNET

--1310

Class OF-5000

Notes: 1. CIL is the maximum channel insertion loss (or optical power budget, as applicable) as defined in the application standard. 2. L is the lower of either the maximum channel length specified in the application standard or a calculated length from the CIL with 2.0 dB allocated to connecting hardware.
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OM2 CIL3 dB 6.5 11.3 L2 m 1,514 6,533 Class OF-500 OF-2000 CIL1 dB 6.5 ---

OM3 L2 m 1,514 --Class OF-500 ---

OS2 CIL1 dB 10.0 L2 m 20,000

Class OF-10000

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ANSI/TIA-1005 Summary
By helping to enable the planning and installation of telecommunications cabling infrastructure within and between industrial buildings, the ANSI/TIA-1005 standard addresses the potential exposure to hostile environments in the industrial space. In addition to the special cabling system requirements for industrial operations, including 2-pair cabling systems, the standard provides definitions for areas in the industrial space including automation islands, outlets and cables. To achieve reliability and performance throughout the automation island, a Category 6 or better cabling is recommended. By defining the environmental concerns in concrete terms with the MICE tables as referenced in ANSI/TIA-568-C.0, the standard provides a clear view of the specifications and requirements needed to implement a cabling system to meet performance standards.

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About Anixter
Anixter serves more than 100,000 customers across 49 countries every day with world-class inventory, technical expertise, global capabilities and Supply Chain Services. We stock more than 400,000 items in a global distribution network that encompasses more than $1 billion of inventory and 6 million square feet of distribution space. Anixters expert systems engineers and specialists receive ongoing, extensive training about the latest products and technology. Our in-country sales specialists speak 30 different languages and are familiar with local markets, currencies, standards and customs. Anixters Value for Industrial Automation Applications Anixter supports these networks with the right products to improve each customers unique manufacturing processes. By thoroughly researching and evaluating the industrial networking solutions available, Anixters Infrastructure Solutions Lab extends our technical expertise to reinforce the value of implementing industrial Ethernet. Our READY!SM Deployment Services leverages this expertise with our extensive inventory, global distribution network and material management capabilities to quickly deploy solutions and ensure products arrive in the right condition at the right time and place. Our suite of offerings, customizable packaging and delivery solutions minimize disruptions to the plant floor. Business drivers influencing industrial automation decisions: Efficient installation and troubleshooting Faster and less costly plant upgrades, expansions and change-outs Access to real-time data to improve overall plant operations Remote troubleshooting and corrective action capabilities Reduced manufacturing personnel Total cost of ownership

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Improve Performance: The Migration to Industrial Ethernet

Fieldbuses
e.g., DeviceNet, PROFIBUS, Modbus, AS-i, etc.

Hardwired

Ethernet

Plant floor

Enterprise

Todays plant has several systems communicating without a common backbone: controllers, robots and other intelligent devices. This makes sharing information within a plant environment difficult and cumbersome. With a common Ethernet network and backbone in place, sharing information becomes easier and more effective, in both efficiency and cost. Fieldbuses Ethernet e.g., DeviceNet, PROFIBUS, Hardwired
Modbus, AS-i, etc.

Plant floor Industrial Ethernet

Enterprise
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Security
Standards Reference Guide

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Fieldbuses
e.g., DeviceNet, PROFIBUS, Modbus, AS-i, etc.

Hardwired

Ethernet

Plant floor Industrial Ethernet

Enterprise

Security

Anixter is the technical expert when it comes to traditional systems, next-generation Ethernet networks and the path in between. From traditional systems to fully automated solutions, Anixter has the breadth and depth of inventory to help migrate any industrial Ethernet system for improved operations, plant-to-enterprise communications and security.

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The Anixter Infrastructure Solutions Lab Anixters Infrastructure Solutions Lab allows us to actively demonstrate the most practical technological solutions from best-in-class manufacturers in the areas of enterprise cabling, video security and access control for our customers. Our mission for The Lab is simple educate, demonstrate and evaluate. Educate customers on the latest industry standards and technologies Demonstrate the latest infrastructure product solutions available from our manufacturer partners Evaluate our network infrastructure and security solutions to ensure that our customers are selecting the right products for their specific needs We are continually testing products in our Lab to ensure: Quality products are recommended and delivered to our customers Consistency of performance across product lines and within systems Interoperability of products and systems to ensure customers can integrate systems and follow the trend toward convergence.

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Networking and security product testing at our Lab includes: Random performance testing of Anixter inventory to ensure quality of standards compliance Network throughput and interoperability testing Copper and fiber cabling compliance verification (TIA/EIA, ISO/IEC, IEEE) Customer proof of concept Power over Ethernet (PoE) testing Application testing 10 Gigabit 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. Anixters 10 Gigabit Ethernet Cabling Testing Anixters Infrastructure Solutions Lab is the only UL Certified lab to conduct rigorous, independent third-party testing of the emerging 10 Gigabit cabling solutions. Anixters 10 Gigabit cabling testing not only 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 draft spec). To ensure the 10 Gigabit cabling solutions we sell meet the highest levels of performance and reliability for our customers, the Anixter Infrastructure Solutions Lab tests the toughest performance parameteralien crosstalk in a worst-case scenario. You can rest assured that the cabling solutions Anixter sells will provide the network performance you require.

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Reference Documents
ANSI/TIA/EIA-568-B.1 (2001) Commercial Building Telecommunications Cabling Standard Part 1: General Requirements ANSI/TIA/EIA-568-B.2 (2001) Commercial Building Telecommunications Cabling Standard Part 2: Balanced Twisted-Pair Cabling Components ANSI/TIA/EIA-568-B.2-1 (2002) Transmission Performance Specifications for 4-Pair 100 Augmented Category 6 Cabling ANSI/TIA/EIA-568-B.2-ad10 (2008) Transmission Performance Specifications for 4-Pair 100 Augmented Category 6 Cabling ANSI/TIA/EIA-568-B.3 (2000) Optical Fiber Cabling Components Standard ANSI/TIA-568-C.0 (Pending) Generic Telecommunications Cabling for Customer Premises Standard ANSI/TIA/EIA-569-B (2004) (CSA T530)* Commercial Building Standard for Telecommunications Pathways and Spaces ANSI/TIA/EIA-570-A (1999) (CSA T525)* Residential and Light Commercial Telecommunication Wiring Standard ANSI/TIA/EIA-606-A (2002) (CSA T528)* Administration Standard for the Telecommunications Infrastructure of Commercial Buildings ANSI/TIA-1005 (Pending) Telecommunications Infrastructure for Industrial Premises Standard J-STD-607-A (2002) (CSA T527)* Commercial Building Grounding/Bonding Requirements for Telecommunications

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ANSI/TIA/EIA-758 (1999) Customer-Owned Outside Plant Telecommunications Cabling Standard ANSI/TIA/EIA-942 (2005) Telecommunications Infrastructure Standard for Data Centers ANSI/TIA-1005 Telecommunications Infratructure Standard for Industrial Premises IS0/IEC 11801 (2002) Generic Cabling for Customer Premises IEEE 802.3-1998 (1998) Carrier Sense Multiple Access with Collision Detection (CSMA/CD) Access Method and Physical Layer Specification (also known as ANSI/IEEE Std. 802.3-1998 or ISO 8802-3: 1990 (E)) IEEE 802.3an (2006) Physical Layer and Management Parameters for 10 Gbps Operation, Type 10GBASE-T IEEE 802.5-1998 (1998) Token Ring Access Method and Physical Layer Specifications (also known as ANSI/IEEE Std 802.5-1998) *Canadian Standards Association equivalent document

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Anixter is located in 249 cities in 49 countries 218 warehouses Over six million square feet of warehouse space Over 5,000 suppliers Operating in 30 languages Dealing in 31 currencies

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Obtaining Standards Documents


TIA/EIA documents may be purchased through Global Engineering Documents at 1-800-854-7179 or www.global.ihs.com. IEEE documents may be purchased through IEEE, P.O. Box 1331, Piscataway, NJ 08855 or www.ieee.org. CSA documents may be purchased through the Canadian Standards Association at www.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 handbook was prepared by Anixter Inc., which is not affiliated with the Telecommunications Industry Association or the Electronic Industries Alliance. TIA is not responsible for the content of this publication. For direct assistance in interpreting telecommunications standards, consider contacting Registered Communications Distribution Designers (RCDD) certified by the Building Industry Consulting Service International (BICSI) at 800-242-7405 or www.bicsi.org. Hundreds of Anixter technical professionals are registered with BICSI.

Enterprise Cabling and Security Solutions Electrical and Electronic Wire & Cable Fasteners Supply Chain Services
Anixter Inc. 1.800.ANIXTER anixter.com World Headquarters: 2301 Patriot Boulevard, Glenview, IL 60026-8020 224.521.8000
8W0091X0 2008 Anixter Inc. 12/08 2K 252181

Anixter Inc. is a leading global supplier of Supply Chain Services and products used to connect voice, video, data and security systems. Anixter is also a leading provider of specialty electrical and electronic wire and cable for building construction, industrial maintenance and repair, and original equipment manufacturing, as well as a leader in providing fasteners and C Class components to OEMs and production lines. We bundle our products with our innovative Supply Chain Services to help control the cost of our customers business processes, reduce their investment in inventory, and ensure they get the right product when they need it. A NYSE listed company, Anixter, with its subsidiaries, serves companies in more than 49 countries around the world. Anixters total revenue exceeds $5.8 billion.
Anixter Inc. does not manufacture the items described in this publication. All applicable warranties are provided by the manufacturers. Purchasers are requested to determine directly from the manufacturers the applicable product warranties and limitations. Data and suggestions made in the publication are not to be construed as recommendations or authorizations to use any products in violation of any government law or regulation relating to any material or its use.

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