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SMC Networks VDSL2 User's Manual

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1. 4 8 100 Mbps Fast Ethernet Cable Lengths 4 9 10 Mbps Ethernet Cable Lengths 4 9 Cable Labeling and Connection Records 4 10 T4BLE OF CONTENTS APPENDICES A Troubleshooting 5 us e er RR Rd A 1 Diagnosing Switch Indicators A 1 Power and Cooling Problems A 3 Install tiori ea aeos AUD DE AMIE used Der tee A 3 In Band Access v3 4 8 ll ge RIA KR a A 3 BY Cables EEE CHE HIN B 1 Twisted Pair Cable and Pin Assignments B 1 10BASE T 100BASE TX Pin Assignments B 2 Straight Through Wiring B 3 Crossover Waiting sole hb de HAE rene Dh UE B 4 1000BASE T Pin Assignments B 5 1000BASE T Cable Requirements B 6 Cable Testing for Existing Category 5 Cable B 6 Adjusting Existing Category 5 Cabling to Run 1000BASE T B 6 Fiber Standards ss Sen Biv S en ane ea eee tae S B 7 RJ 21 Port Pin Assignments B 8 Console Port Pin Assignments B 9 DB 9 Port Pin Assignments B 9 Console Port to 9 Pin DTE Port on PC B 10 Console to 25 Pin DTE Porton PC B 10 C Specificati ns Lars cine oh mien das Queue toute cad C 1 Physical Charact ristics 0 e e ia tite
2. 44 0 x 35 2 x 6 6 cm 17 4 x 13 9 x 2 6 in Temperature Operating 0 to 50 C 32 to 122 F Storage 40 to 70 C 40 to 158 F Humidity Operating 5 to 90 Power Supply 100 to 240 VAC 50 to 60 Hz Power Consumption 61 68 Watts maximum Heat Dissipation 211 BTU hr maximum Maximum Current 0 5 A 110 VAC 0 25 A 240 VAC SPECIFICATIONS Switch Features Forwarding Mode Store and forward Throughput Layer 2 wite speed Flow Control Full Duplex IEEE 802 3x Half Duplex Back pressure Management Features In Band Management Web Telnet SSH or SNMP manager Out of Band Management Console port RS 232 DB 9 Isolated management port Gigabit Ethernet RJ 45 Software Loading TFTP in band or XModem out of band C 3 STANDARDS Standards Ethernet Standards IEEE 802 3 2005 Ethernet Access Ethernet Fast Ethernet Gigabit Ethernet Link Aggregation Control Protocol LACP Full duplex flow control ISO IEC 8802 3 IEEE 802 1D Spanning Tree Protocol IEEE 802 1w Rapid Spanning Tree Protocol IEEE 802 1s Multiple Spanning Tree Protocol IEEE 802 1p priority tags IEEE 802 3ac VLAN tagging IEEE 802 1Q Virtual LAN IEEE 802 1v Protocol based VLANs VDSL Standards ANSI T1E1 4 Part 1 VDSL Interface ITU T G 993 1 VDSL ITU T G 993 2 VDSL2 ITU T G 993 2 Annex C Band Plan for Japan ITU T 997 and 998 Band Plans Other evolving ETSI ANSI ITU standards Compliances CA CE Mark Em
3. SMCBGZLCX1 Note that 1000BASE SX transceivers use multimode duplex fiber cable 1000BASE LX and 1000BASE ZX transceivers use single mode duplex fiber cable Management Port The 100BASE TX port labeled Mgmt provides a dedicated management interface which is segregated from the data traffic crossing the other ports This port supports auto negotiation so the optimum data rate and transmission mode 10 100 Mbps at half full duplex can be selected automatically if this feature is also supported by the attached device However note that the interface connection parameters of this port cannot be configured 1 7 ABOUT THE TIGERACCESS EE SWITCH Console Port The console port on the switch s front panel is a DB 9 connector that enables a connection to a terminal for performing switch monitoring and configuration functions The terminal may be a PC or workstation running terminal emulation software or a terminal configured as a Data Terminal Equipment DTE connection A null modem wired serial cable is supplied with the switch for connecting to this interface Ethernet over VDSL CPE Optional Equipment The VDSL switch is designed to connect to the RJ 11 VDSL Line port on a CPE The CPE provides users with a high speed Internet connection via the RJ 45 Ethernet port and a standard telephone connection via the RJ 11 phone jack Port and System Status LEDs 1 8 The switch includes key system and port indica
4. Trademarks SMC is a registered trademark and EZ Switch TigerAccess TigerStack and TigerSwitch are trademarks of SMC Networks Inc Other product and company names ate trademarks or registered trademarks of their respective holders LIMITED WARRANTY Limited Warranty Statement SMC Networks Inc SMC warrants its products to be free from defects in workmanship and materials under normal use and service for the applicable warranty term All SMC products carry a standard 90 day limited warranty from the date of purchase from SMC or its Authorized Reseller SMC may at its own discretion repair or replace any product not operating as warranted with a similar or functionally equivalent product during the applicable warranty term SMC will endeavor to repair or replace any product returned under warranty within 30 days of receipt of the product The standard limited warranty can be upgraded to a Limited Lifetime warranty by registering new products within 30 days of purchase from SMC or its Authorized Reseller Registration can be accomplished via the enclosed product registration card or online via the SMC Web site Failure to register will not affect the standard limited warranty The Limited Lifetime warranty covers a product during the Life of that Product which is defined as the period of time during which the product is an Active SMC product A product is considered to be Active while it is listed on the current SMC pri
5. 4 4 6 O ordering information D 1 P pin assignments B 1 1000BASE T B 5 10BASE T 100BASE TX B 2 console port 3 10 B 9 DB 9 B 9 ports connecting to 4 1 4 4 4 6 power connecting to 3 9 problems troubleshooting A 1 R RJ 21 cable connections 4 1 RJ 45 port connections 4 4 RJ 45 ports pinouts for 10 100BASE TX B 2 pinouts for 1000BASE T B 5 routing applications 2 5 rubber foot pads attaching 3 7 S SC port connections 4 6 screws for rack mounting 3 5 SFP slots 1 7 supported transceivers 1 7 single mode fiber optic cables 4 6 site requirements 3 2 selelction 3 2 SNMP agent 1 4 specifications compliances C 4 environmental C 2 management features C 3 physical C 1 switching features C 3 INDEX standards compliance C 4 IEEE C 4 status LEDs 1 8 switch architecture 1 4 switching introduction to 2 1 T troubleshooting in band access A 3 power and cooling problems A 3 switch indicators A 1 Telnet A 4 twisted pair connections 4 4 V VDSL port connections 4 1 VDSL services 1 3 Index 3 INDEX Index 4 FOR TECHNICAL SUPPORT CALL From U S A and Canada 24 hours a day 7 days a week 800 SMC 4 YOU 949 679 8000 Fax 949 679 1481 From Europe Contact details can be found on www smc europe com or www smc com INTERNET E mail addresses techsupport smc com european techsupport smc europe com Driver updates http www smc com index cfm action tech support drivers dow
6. Cable Type Maximum Length Connector 100ASE T Categories 3 4 5 or 100 m 328 ft RJ 45 better 100 ohm UTP MAKING NETWORK CONNECTIONS Cable Labeling and Connection Records 4 10 When planning a network installation it is essential to label the opposing ends of cables and to record where each cable is connected Doing so will enable you to easily locate inter connected devices isolate faults and change your topology without need for unnecessary time consumption To best manage the physical implementations of your network follow these guidelines Clearly label the opposing ends of each cable Using your building s floor plans draw a map of the location of all network connected equipment For each piece of equipment identify the devices to which it is connected Note the length of each cable and the maximum cable length supported by the switch ports For ease of understanding use a location based key when assigning prefixes to your cable labeling Use sequential numbers for cables that originate from the same equipment Differentiate between racks by naming accordingly Label each separate piece of equipment Display a copy of your equipment map including keys to all abbreviations at each equipment rack APPENDIX A TROUBLESHOOTING Diagnosing Switch Indicators This switch can be easily monitored through panel indicators to identify problems The table below describes c
7. PUNITIVE DAMAGES OF ANY KIND OR FOR LOSS OF REVENUE LOSS OF BUSINESS OR OTHER FINANCIAL LOSS ARISING OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SALE INSTALLATION MAINTENANCE USE PERFORMANCE FAILURE OR INTERRUPTION OF ITS PRODUCTS EVEN IF SMC ORITS AUTHORIZED RESELLER HAS BEEN ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES SOME STATES DO NOT ALLOW THE EXCLUSION OF IMPLIED WARRANTIES OR THE LIMITATION OF INCIDENTAL OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES FOR CONSUMER PRODUCTS SO THE ABOVE LIMITATIONS AND EXCLUSIONS MAY NOT APPLY TO YOU THIS WARRANTY GIVES YOU SPECIFIC LEGAL RIGHTS WHICH MAY VARY FROM STATE TO STATE NOTHING IN THIS WARRANTY SHALL BE TAKEN TO AFFECT YOUR STATUTORY RIGHTS SMC will provide warranty service for one year following discontinuance from the active SMC price list Under the limited lifetime warranty internal and external power supplies fans and cables are covered by a standard one year warranty from date of purchase SMC Networks Inc 20 Mason Irvine CA 92618 COMPLIANCES FCC Class A This equipment has been tested and found to comply with the limits for a Class A digital device pursuant to part 15 of the FCC Rules These limits are designed to provide reasonable protection against harmful interference when the equipment is operated in a commercial environment This equipment generates uses and can radiate radio frequency energy and if not installed and used in accordance with the instruction manual may cause harmful
8. Port 2 16 17 Port 6 10 11 Port 10 4 5 Port 14 45 46 Port 3 39 40 Port 7 33 34 Port 11 27 28 Port 15 19 20 Port 4 13 14 Port 8 7 8 Port 12 1 2 Port 16 B 8 CONSOLE Port PIN_ASSIGNMENTS Console Port Pin Assignments The DB 9 serial port on the switch s front panel is used to connect to the switch for out of band console configuration The on board command line configuration program can be accessed from a terminal or a PC running a terminal emulation program The pin assignments used to connect to the serial port are provided in the following tables Pin 1 Pin 9 Figure B 5 DB 9 Console Port Pin Numbers DB 9 Port Pin Assignments Table B 5 DB 9 Port Pin Assignments EIA CCITT Description Switch s DB9 PC DB9 PC DB25 Circuit Signal DTEPin DTEPin DTEPin BB 104 RxD 2 2 3 Received Data BA 103 TxD 3 3 2 Transmitted Data AB 102 SG 5 5 7 Signal Ground No other pins are used B 9 CABLES Console Port to 9 Pin DTE Port on PC Table B 6 Console Port to 9 Pin DTE Port on PC Switch s 9 Pin Serial Port Null Modem PC s 9 Pin DTE Port 2RXD lt TXD gt 3 TXD 3TXD RXD gt 2RXD 5 SGND lt SGND 5 SGND No other pins are used Console to 25 Pin DTE Port on PC Table B 7 Console to 25 Pin DTE Port on PC Switch s 9 Pin Serial Port Null Mod
9. RD 2 Transmit Data minus TD Receive Data minus RD 3 Receive Data plus RD Transmit Data plus TD 6 Receive Data minus RD Transmit Data minus TD 4 5 7 8 Not used Not used Note The and signs represent the polarity of the wires that make up each wire pair Note Auto negotiation must be enabled for automatic MDI MDI X pinout configuration B 2 TWISTED PAIR CABLE AND PIN ASSIGNMENTS Straight Through Wiring If the twisted pair cable is to join two ports and only one of the ports has an internal crossover MDI X the two pairs of wires must be straight through When auto negotiation is enabled for any RJ 45 port on this switch you can use either straight through or crossover cable to connect to any device type You must connect all four wire pairs as shown in the following diagram to support Gigabit Ethernet connections EIA TIA 568B RJ 45 Wiring Standard 10 100BASE TX Straight through Cable White Orange Stripe Yi Orange N White Green Stripe 1 1 EndA PAAA AN End B Blue c 3 _ uu 3 gt 4 4 ee 5 White Blue Stripe 5 5 Green _ 8 8 White Brown Stripe Brown Figure B 2 Straight through Wiring B 3 CABLES Crossover Wiring If the twisted pair cable is to join two ports and either both ports are labeled with an X indicating MDI X or
10. Vire 5 hone Lines from Central Office Central Office P PSTN Multi dwelling Multi tenant Building 2 Figure 2 2 Remote Connections with Fiber Cable Making VLAN Connections This switch supports VLANs which can be used to organize any group of network nodes into separate broadcast domains VLANs confine broadcast traffic to the originating group and can eliminate broadcast storms in large networks This provides a more secure and cleaner network environment VLANs can be based on untagged port groups or traffic can be explicitly tagged to identify the VLAN group to which it belongs Untagged VLANs 2 3 NETWORK PLANNING can be used for small networks attached to a single switch However tagged VLANs should be used for larger networks and all the VLANs assigned to the inter switch links This switch also has a Private VLAN feature This allows modification of the default VLAN to provide port based security and isolation between ports within the VLAN Data traffic on these ports can only be forwarded to and from the uplink port Private VLANs and normal VLANs can exist simultaneously within the same switch In the figure below ports 1 5 are connected to four end users and a server in a normal VLAN configuration The remaining ports are configured into a private VLAN Ports 6 12 in a Private VLAN EE Ports 1 5 in VLAN 2 Phone Lines to Central Office L
11. are compliant with the requirements of a Class 1 Laser Product and are inherently eye safe in normal operation However you should never look directly at a transmit port when it is powered on Wear an anti static wrist strap or take other suitable measures to prevent electrostatic discharge when handling this equipment Do not plug a phone jack connector in the RJ 45 port This may damage this device Les raccordeurs ne sont pas utilis pour le syst me t l phonique Use only twisted pair cables with RJ 45 connectors that conform to FCC standards Warnings in German Achtung Achtung Achtung Achtung Dieses Produkt enth lt keine Teile die eine Wartung vom Benutzer ben tigen gt g 8 Installation und Deinstallation des Ger tes m ssen von qualifiziertem Servicepersonal durchgef hrt werden Wenn das Ger t an eine Steckdose angeschlossen wird mu der Masscanschlu am dreipoligen Netzstecker mit Schutzerde verbunden werden um elektrische Gefahren zu vermeiden Dieses Ger t nutzt Laser zur Signal bertragung ber Glasfasern Die Laser entsprechen den Anforderungen an eine Lasereinrichtung der Klasse 1 und sind durch ihre Bauart im normalen Betrieb sicher f r die Augen Trotzdem sollte niemals direkt in den einen bertragungskanal geblickt werden wenn er eingeschaltet ist xiii COMPLLANCES xiv Environmental Statement The manufacturer of this product endeavours to sustain an environmentally friendly
12. labeling and connection records 4 10 INDEX cleaning fiber terminators 4 6 compliances electromagnetic immunity C 4 EMC C 4 emissions C 4 safety C 5 connectivity rules 10 Mbps 4 9 100 Mbps 4 9 1000 Mbps 4 8 console port basic description 1 8 pin assignments 3 10 B 9 console port pin assignments 3 10 cooling problems A 3 cotd sets international 3 9 D desktop mounting 3 7 device connections 4 1 E electrical interference avoiding 3 3 F features management 1 12 system 1 12 fiber cables 4 6 duplex fiber 4 6 multimode 4 6 single mode 4 6 full duplex connectivity 2 1 Index 1 INDEX H hardware components 1 5 hardware basic description 1 5 I IEEE 802 3 Ethernet 1 12 IEEE 802 3 2005 1 12 IEEE 802 3u Fast Ethernet 1 12 IEEE 802 3z Gigabit Ethernet 1 12 indicators LED 1 8 installation connecting devices to the CPE 4 5 desktop or shelf mounting 3 7 port connections 4 1 4 4 problems A 3 site requirements 3 3 wiring closet connections 4 3 wiring closet connections from switch to network 4 4 K key features 1 10 L laser safety 4 6 LED indicators Diag 1 9 Fault 1 9 Link Act 1 9 Mgmt 1 9 Power 1 9 problems A 1 location requirements 3 3 Index 2 M management agent 1 4 features 1 12 C 3 SNMP 1 4 management port functional description 1 7 MIB support C 4 mounting the switch on a desktop or shelf 3 7 multimode fiber optic cables 4 6 N network connections 4 1 4
13. local telephone company to determine the maximum REN for your calling area If your equipment causes harm to the telephone network the telephone company may discontinue your service temporarily If possible they will notify you in advance But if advance notice is not practical you will be notified as soon as possible You will be informed of your tight to file a complaint with the FCC Your telephone company may make changes in its facilities equipment operations or procedures that could affect the proper functioning of your equipment If they do you will be notified in advance to give you an opportunity to maintain uninterrupted telephone service If you experience trouble with this telephone equipment please contact please contact our company at the numbers shown on back of this manual for information on obtaining service or repairs The telephone company may ask that you disconnect this equipment from the vil COMPLLANCES vill netwotk until the problem has been corrected or until you are sure that the equipment is not malfunctioning This equipment may not be used on coin service provided by the telephone company Connection to party lines is subject to state tariffs Industry Canada Class A This digital apparatus does not exceed the Class A limits for radio noise emissions from digital apparatus as set out in the interference causing equipment standard entitled Digital Apparatus ICES 003 of the Department of Communica
14. neither port is labeled with an X which indicates MDI a crossover must be implemented in the wiring When auto negotiation is enabled for any RJ 45 port on this switch you can use either straight through or crossover cable to connect to any device type You must connect all four wire pairs as shown in the following diagram to support Gigabit Ethernet connections EIA TIA 568B RJ 45 Wiring Standard 10 100BASE TX Crossover Cable White Orange Stripe White Green Stripe EndA End B White Blue Stripe Green S White Brown Stripe Z Brown Figure B 3 Crossover Wiring NW B 4 TWISTED PAIR CABLE AND PIN ASSIGNMENTS 1000BASE T Pin Assignments 1000BASE T ports switch support automatic MDI MDI X operation so you can use straight through cables for all network connections to PCs or servets ot to other switches or hubs The table below shows the 1000BASE T MDI and MDI X port pinouts These ports require that all four pairs of wires be connected Note that for 1000BASE T operation all four pairs of wires are used for both transmit and receive Use 100 ohm Category 5 5e or better unshielded twisted pair UTP or shielded twisted pair STP cable for 1000BASE T connections Also be sure that the length of any twisted pair connection does not exceed 100 meters 328 feet Table B 2 1000BASE T MDI and MDI X Port Pinout
15. policy throughout the entire production process This is achieved though the following means Adherence to national legislation and regulations on environmental production standards Conservation of operational resources Waste reduction and safe disposal of all harmful un recyclable by products Recycling of all reusable waste content Design of products to maximize recyclables at the end of the product s life span Continual monitoring of safety standards End of Product Life Span This product is manufactured in such a way as to allow for the recovery and disposal of all included electrical components once the product has reached the end of its life Manufacturing Materials There ate no hazardous nor ozone depleting materials in this product Documentation All printed documentation for this product uses biodegradable paper that originates from sustained and managed forests The inks used in the printing process are non toxic Purpose This guide details the hardware features of the switches including Its physical and performance related characteristics and how to install each switch Audience This guide is for system administrators with a working knowledge of network management You should be familiar with switching and networking concepts Zielgruppe Dieser Anleitung ist fuer Systemadministratoren mit Erfahrung im Netzwerkmangement Sie sollten mit Switch und Netzwerkkonzepten vertraut sein Related Publicati
16. suivante avant d installer le Switch AVERTISSEMENT L installation et la d pose de ce groupe doivent tre confi s un petsonnel qualifi Ne branchez pas votre appareil sur une prise secteur alimentation lectrique lorsqu il n y a pas de connexion de mise la terre mise la masse Vous devez raccorder ce groupe une sortie mise la terre mise la masse afin de respecter les normes internationales de s curit Le coupleur d appareil le connecteur du groupe et non pas la prise murale doit respecter une configuration qui permet un branchement sur une entr e d appareil EN 60320 IEC 320 La prise secteur doit se trouver proximit de l appareil et son acc s doit tre facile Vous ne pouvez mettre l appareil hors circuit qu en d branchant son cordon lectrique au niveau de cette prise L appareil fonctionne une tension extr mement basse de s curit qui est conforme la norme IEC 60950 Ces conditions ne sont maintenues que si l quipement auquel il est raccord fonctionne dans les m mes conditions xi COMPLLANCES France et P rou uniquement Ce groupe ne peut pas tre aliment par un dispositif imp dance la terre Si vos alimentations sont du type imp dance la terre ce groupe doit tre aliment par une tension de 230 V 2 P T par le biais d un transformateur d isolement rapport 1 1 avec un point secondaire de connexion portant l appellation Neutre et avec raccordem
17. 00 50 Mbps 2 1000BASE T SFP ports provide 4 Gbps of aggregate bandwidth for network uplink Auto negotiation enables each RJ 45 uplink port to automatically select the optimum speed and communication mode 10 100 Mbps at hal full duplex or 1000 Mbps at full duplex if this feature is supported by the attached device otherwise the port can be configured manually RJ 45 ports support auto MDI MDI X pinout selection Unshielded UTP cable supported on all RJ 45 ports Category 3 or better for 10 Mbps connections Category 5 or better for 100 Mbps connections and Category 5 5e 6 or better for 1000 Mbps connections TEEE 802 3 2005 Ethernet Fast Ethernet Gigabit Ethernet compliance ensures compatibility with standards based hubs network cards and switches from any vendor 1 11 ABOUT THE TIGERACCESS EE SWITCH 1 12 Expandability Supports optional 1000BASE SX 1000BASE LX and 1000BASE ZX SFP transceivers System Features Transparent bridging Aggregate switch fabric bandwidth of 8 8 Gbps Switching table with a total of 8K entries Store and forward switching Wire speed Layer 2 switching Flow control using back pressure for half duplex and IEEE 802 3x for full duplex Management features include At a glance LEDs for easy troubleshooting Network management agent Manages the switch in band or out of band Supports Telnet SSH SNMP v1 v2c v3 RMON 4 groups web ba
18. 000BASE T RJ 45 ports operate at 10 100 Mbps half full duplex or at 1000 Mbps full duplex Because all of the RJ 45 ports support automatic MDI MDI X operation you can use straight through cables for all network connections to PCs or servers or to other switches or hubs See 1000BASE T Pin Assignments on page B 3 Each of these ports support auto negotiation so the optimum transmission mode half or full duplex and data rate 10 100 or 1000 Mbps can be selected automatically If a device connected to one of these ports does not support auto negotiation the communication mode of that port can be configured manually 1 6 DESCRIPTION OF HARDWARE Each port also supports auto negotiation of flow control so the switch can automatically prevent port buffers from becoming saturated Note If an SFP transceiver purchased separately is installed in a slot and has a valid link on the port the associated RJ 45 port is disabled SFP Slots The Small Form Factor Pluggable SFP transceiver slots are shared with RJ 45 ports ports 17 18 In its default configuration if an SFP transceiver purchased separately is installed in a slot and has a valid link on its port the associated RJ 45 port is disabled and cannot be used The switch can also be configured to force the use of an RJ 45 port or SFP slot as required Table 1 1 Optional SFP Transceivers 1000BASE SX SMCBGSLCX1 1000BASE LX SMCBGLLCX1 1000BASE ZX
19. 3 standard provides for integration into the OSI model and extends the physical layer and media with repeaters and implementations that operate on fiber thin coax and twisted pair cable Glossary 2 GLOSSARY Fast Ethernet 100 Mbps network communication system based on Ethernet and the CSMA CD access method Fibre To The Home FTTH Network where an optical fibre runs from the telephone switch to the subscriber s premises or home Full Duplex Transmission method that allows two network devices to transmit and receive concurrently effectively doubling the bandwidth of that link Gigabit Ethernet 1000 Mbps network communication system based on Ethernet and the CSMA CD access method IEEE Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers IEEE 802 3 Defines carrier sense multiple access with collision detection CSMA CD access method and physical layer specifications IEEE 802 3ab Defines CSMA CD access method and physical layer specifications for 1000BASE T Gigabit Ethernet Now incorporated in IEEE 802 3 2005 IEEE 802 3u Defines CSMA CD access method and physical layer specifications for 100BASE TX Fast Ethernet Now incorporated in IEEE 802 3 2005 Glossary 3 GLOSSARY IEEE 802 3x Defines Ethernet frame start stop requests and timers used for flow control on full duplex links Now incorporated in IEEE 802 3 2005 IEEE 802 3z Defines CSMA CD access method and physical layer spec
20. 5 standards 1000 Mbps Gigabit Ethernet Cable Lengths Table 4 1 Maximum 1000BASE T Gigabit Ethernet Cable Length Cable Type Maximum Cable Connector Length Category 5 5e 6 100 ohm UTP or STP 100 m 328 ft RJ 45 Table 4 2 Maximum 1000BASE SX Gigabit Ethernet Cable Length Fiber Size Fiber Maximum Cable Connector Bandwidth Length 62 5 125 micron 160 MHz km 2 220 m 7 722 ft LC multimode fiber 200 MHz km 2 275 m 7 902 ft LC 50 125 micron 400 MHz km 2 500 m 7 1641 ft LC multimode fiber 500 MHz km 2 550 m 7 1805 ft LC CONNECTIVITY RULES Table 4 3 Maximum 1000BASE LX Gigabit Ethernet Cable Length Fiber Size Fiber Maximum Cable Connector Bandwidth Length 9 125 micron N A 2m 10km LC single mode 7 ft 6 2 miles fiber Table 4 4 Maximum 1000BASE ZX Gigabit Ethernet Cable Length Fiber Size Fiber Maximum Cable Connector Bandwidth Length 9 125 micron N A 70 100 km LC single mode fiber 43 5 62 1 miles For link spans exceeding 70 km you may need to use premium sing or dispersion shifted single mode fiber 100 Mbps Fast Ethernet Cable Lengths e mode fiber Table 4 5 Maximum Fast Ethernet Cable Length Type Cable Type Max Cable Length Connector 100BASE TX Category 5 or better 100 m 328 ft RJ 45 100 ohm UTP or STP 10 Mbps Ethernet Cable Lengths Table 4 6 Maximum Ethernet Cable Length Type
21. Figure 1 1 Ports 17 18 The switch also includes one 10 100BASE TX port for dedicated management access which can be operated outside the data channel The VDSL switch combines data and voice signals for delivery over standard telephone cable to multiple users in residential or commercial buildings Ethernet data signals are received on the switch uplink port s and passed to the 16 VDSL ports on the front panel via 16 internal Ethernet ports If an SFP transceiver is plugged in the corresponding RJ 45 port 17 or 18 is disabled 1 5 ABOUT THE TIGERACCESS EE SWITCH The following figure shows the components of the VDSL switch VDSL Line Connector PBX MDF Connectors Ethernet Port to end users to POTS provider Console Port Status Indicators a J Due E Em HD es M A br 100BASE TX 1000BASE T Management Port RJ 45 SFP Uplink Ports VDSL Port System Status Power Socket Status Indicators Indicators Figure 1 2 Front and Rear Panels RJ 21 Ports The RJ 21 ports on the switch front panel support 16 twisted pair connections The Line port connects to end user CPEs through a punch down box The POTS port connects to the local PBX or directly to telephone lines from the CO 1000BASE T Ports The switch contains two Gigabit RJ 45 ports shared with alternate Small Form Factor Pluggable SFP transceiver slots The 1
22. The MPOE is the demarcation point where the service provider s cables end and that of the building s owner customer begins An MPOE typically consists of two sets of punch down blocks one from the service provider and the other from the customer The customer s punch down blocks are connected to PBX or MDF equipment in the building A PBX may have either analog or digital cards that provide the phone lines to individual end users The PBX lines are usually connected to the end users through another set of punch down blocks or patch panels The following figure displays the normal wiring before installing the VDSL switch Existing Phone Lines to Clients Upper Floors Basement Punch Down Blocks Connecting to Clients MPOE gt Telephone Line EE PBX from Central Office ee RE Customer s Service Provider s Punch Down Punch Down Blocks Blocks Figure 3 1 Wiring before VDSL Switch Installation 3 1 INSTALLING THE SWITCH Installing Additional Equipment The VDSL switch should be installed close to the PBX punch down blocks and patch panels usually in the basement or wiring closet You may also want to install a rack for distribution equipment switches routers etc and extra punch down blocks or patch panels for flexibility and future applications or expansion An optional patch panel can be used to connect the circuits between the switch and the punch down blocks If a patch
23. TigerAccess EE 6 Band VDSL2 Switch 606000404040 16 VDSL Downlink Ports 1 RJ 21 Connector 2 Gigabit Ethernet Combination Ports RJ 45 SFP 1 Fast Ethernet Management Port RJ 45 Non blocking switching architecture Spanning Tree Protocol RSTP and MSTP Up to 12 LACP or static 8 port trunks Layer 2 3 4 CoS support through eight priority queues Layer 3 4 traffic priority with IP Precedence and IP DSCP Full support for VLANs with GVRP IGMP multicast filtering and snooping Manageable via console Web SNMP RMON Security features ACL RADIUS 802 1x VDSL line configuration using Long Reach Ethernet LRE commands line profiles and alarm profiles SMC Installation Guide SMC7816M VSW N etworks TigerAccess EE Installation Guide From SMC s Tiger line of feature rich workgroup LAN solutions SMC Networks 20 Mason February 2007 Irvine CA 92618 Phone 949 679 8000 Pub 149100012100H Information furnished by SMC Networks Inc SMC is believed to be accurate and reliable However no responsibility is assumed by SMC for its use nor for any infringements of patents or other rights of third parties which may result from its use No license is granted by implication or otherwise under any patent or patent rights of SMC SMC teserves the right to change specifications at any time without notice Copyright 2007 by SMC Networks Inc 20 Mason Irvine CA 92618 All rights reserved Printed in Taiwan
24. X A telephone exchange local to a particular organization who use rather than provide telephone services RJ 45 Connector A connector for twisted pair wiring Splitter A filter to separate DSL signals from POTS signals to prevent mutual interference Switched Ports Ports that are on separate collision domains or LAN segments Glossary 5 GLOSSARY TIA Telecommunications Industry Association Transmission Control Protocol Internet Protocol TCP IP Protocol suite that includes TCP as the primary transport protocol and IP as the network layer protocol User Datagram Protocol UDP UTP UDP provides a datagram mode for packet switched communications It uses IP as the underlying transport mechanism to provide access to IP like services UDP packets are delivered just like IP packets connection less datagrams that may be discarded before reaching their targets UDP is useful when TCP would be too complex too slow or just unnecessary Unshielded twisted pair cable Very high data rate Digital Subscriber Line VDSL A family of digital telecommunications protocols designed to allow high speed data communication at data rates from below 1 Mbps to 52 8 Mbps with corresponding maximum reach ranging from 4500 feet to 1000 feet using 24 gauge twisted pair cable over the existing copper telephone lines between end users and service providers Very high data rate Digital Subscriber Line 2 VDSL2 VDSL2 as de
25. ZX uses duplex fiber operating at a frequency of 1310 nm for both transmit and receive signals Warning This switch uses lasers to transmit signals over fiber optic cable The lasers are compliant with the requirements of a Class 1 Laser Product and are inherently eye safe in normal operation However you should never look directly at a transmit port when it is powered on Note When selecting a fiber SFP device considering safety please make sure that it can function at a temperature that is not less than the recommended maximum operational temperature of the product You must also use an approved Laser Class 1 SFP transceiver 1 Remove and keep the LC port s rubber cover When not connected to a fiber cable the rubber cover should be replaced to protect the optics 2 Check that the fiber terminators are clean You can clean the cable plugs by wiping them gently with a clean tissue or cotton ball moistened with a little ethanol Dirty fiber terminators on fiber cables will impair the quality of the light transmitted through the cable and lead to degraded performance on the port CONNECTIVITY RULES 3 Connect one end of the cable to the LC port on the switch and the other end to the LC port on the other device Since LC connectors are keyed the cable can be attached in only one orientation Figure 4 5 Making LC Port Connections 4 Asa connecti
26. _ a NN d Local Servers Locally Hosted Services Video Servers Billing MPOE from Central Office Telephone Line Central Office PSTN Multi dwelling Multi tenant Building Fiber Optic Link to ISP ISP Internet Figure 2 1 Internet Connections APPLICATION EXAMPLES Remote Connections with Fiber Cable Fiber optic technology allows for longer cabling than any other media type A 1000BASE SX MMF Gigabit link can connect to a site up to 550m away a 1000BASE LX SMF link up to 10 km and a 1000BASE ZX link up to 70 km This allows end users at two sites to use the same Internet connection share server resources and communicate with each other In the figure below a 1000BASE SX port on the switch in Building 1 is providing 1000 Mbps connectivity to the switch in Building 2 Existing Phone Local Servers Lines to Clients Locally Hosted Services y Servers Billing Punch Down Blocks VDSL Switch Patch Panels ss VDSL Lines m MPOE Telephone Line N Phone Lines from Central Office Central Office PBX PSTN b Fiber Optic Link to ISP ISP Internet Multi dwelling Multi tenant Building 1 1000BASE SX 550 m Existing Phone Lines to Clients Local Servers Localy Hosted Services Punch Down Video Servers Billing Blocks VDSL Switch j Patch Panels MPOE Telephone Line VDSL Lir l
27. ce list As new technologies emerge older technologies become obsolete and SMC will at its discretion replace an older product in its product line with one that incorporates these newer technologies At that point the obsolete product is discontinued and is no longer an Active SMC product A list of discontinued products with their respective dates of discontinuance can be found at http www smc com index cfm action customer service warranty All products that are replaced become the property of SMC Replacement products may be either new or reconditioned Any replaced or repaired product carries either a 30 day limited warranty or the remainder of the initial warranty whichever is longer SMC is not responsible for any custom software or firmware configuration information or memory data of Customer contained in stored on or integrated with any products returned to SMC pursuant to any warranty Products returned to SMC should have any customer installed accessory or add on components such as expansion modules removed prior to returning the product for replacement SMC is not responsible for these items if they are returned with the product Customers must contact SMC for a Return Material Authorization number prior to returning any product to SMC Proof of purchase may be required Any product returned to SMC without a valid Return Material Authorization RM A number clearly marked on the outside of the package will be returned to
28. ceiver Figure 3 7 Inserting an SFP Transceiver into a Slot The switch support the following optional transceivers Table 3 1 Optional SFP Transceivers 1000BASE SX SMCBGSLCX1 1000BASE LX SMCBGLLCX1 1000BASE ZX SMCBGZLCX 1 To install an SFP transceiver do the following 1 Consider network and cabling requirements to select an appropriate SPP transceiver type 2 Insert the transceiver with the optical connector facing outward and the slot connector facing down Note that SFP transceivers are keyed so they can only be installed in the correct orientation 3 Slide the SFP transceiver into the slot until it clicks into place Note SFP transceivers are hot swappable The switch does not need to be powered off before installing or removing a transceiver However always first disconnect the network cable before removing a transceiver 3 8 CONNECTING TO A POWER SOURCE Note SFP transceivers are not provided in the switch package Connecting to a Power Source To connect a device to a power source 1 First verify that the external AC power supply can provide 100 to 240 VAC 50 60 Hz 1 A minimum 2 Plug the power cable into a grounded 3 pin AC power source Note For international use you may need to change the AC line cord You must use a line cord set that has been approved for the socket type in your country 3 In
29. customer at customer s expense For warranty claims within North America please call our toll free customer support number at 800 762 4968 Customers are responsible for all shipping charges from their facility to SMC SMC is responsible for return shipping charges from SMC to customer vi WARRANTIES EXCLUSIVE IF AN SMC PRODUCT DOES NOT OPERATE AS WARRANTED ABOVE CUSTOMER S SOLE REMEDY SHALL BE REPAIR OR REPLACEMENT OF THE PRODUCT IN QUESTION AT SMC S OPTION THE FOREGOING WARRANTIES AND REMEDIES ARE EXCLUSIVE AND ARE IN LIEU OF ALL OTHER WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS EXPRESS OR IMPLIED EITHER IN FACT OR BY OPERATION OF LAW STATUTORY OR OTHERWISE INCLUDING WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE SMC NEITHER ASSUMES NOR AUTHORIZES ANY OTHER PERSON TO ASSUME FOR IT ANY OTHER LIABILITY IN CONNECTION WITH THE SALE INSTALLATION MAINTENANCE OR USE OF ITS PRODUCTS SMC SHALL NOT BE LIABLE UNDER THIS WARRANTY IF ITS TESTING AND EXAMINATION DISCLOSE THE ALLEGED DEFECT IN THE PRODUCT DOES NOT EXIST OR WAS CAUSED BY CUSTOMER S OR ANY THIRD PERSON S MISUSE NEGLECT IMPROPER INSTALLATION OR TESTING UNAUTHORIZED ATTEMPTS TO REPAIR OR ANY OTHER CAUSE BEYOND THE RANGE OF THE INTENDED USE OR BY ACCIDENT FIRE LIGHTNING OR OTHER HAZARD LIMITATION OF LIABILITY IN NO EVENT WHETHER BASED IN CONTRACT OR TORT INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE SHALL SMC BE LIABLE FOR INCIDENTAL CONSEQUENTIAL INDIRECT SPECIAL OR
30. der Anschlu an das Ger t nicht der Wandsteckdosenstecker mu einen gem EN 60320 IEC 320 konfigurierten Ger teeingang haben Die Netzsteckdose mu in der N he des Ger ts und leicht zug nglich sein Die Stromversorgung des Ger ts kann nur durch Herausziehen des Ger tenetzkabels aus der Netzsteckdose unterbrochen werden Der Betrieb dieses Ger ts erfolgt unter den SELV Bedingungen Sicherheitskleinstspannung gem IEC 60950 Diese Bedingungen sind nur gegeben COMPLLANCES wenn auch die an das Ger t angeschlossenen Ger te unter SELV Bedingungen betrieben werden Stromkabel Dies muss von dem Land in dem es benutzt wird gepr ft werden Schweiz Dieser Stromstecker mu die SEV ASE 1011Bestimmungen einhalten Europe Das Netzkabel mu vom Typ HO3VVF3GO 75 Mindestanforderung sein und die Aufschrift lt HAR gt oder lt BASEC gt tragen Der Netzstecker mu die Norm CEE 7 7 erf llen SCHUKO Warnings and Cautionary Messages Warning Warning Warning Warning Caution Caution Caution This product does not contain any serviceable user parts Installation and removal of the unit must be carried out by qualified personnel only When connecting this device to a power outlet connect the field ground lead on the tri pole power plug to a valid earth ground line to prevent electrical hazards i This switch uses lasers to transmit signals over fiber optic cable The lasers
31. e this unit must be powered by 230 V 2P T via an isolation transformer ratio 1 1 with the secondary connection point labelled Neutral connected directly to earth ground t Imp dance la terre Important Before making connections make sure you have the correct cord set Check it read the label on the cable against the following Power Cord Set U S A and Canada The cord set must be UL approved and CSA certified The minimum specifications for the flexible cord are No 18 AWG not longer than 2 meters or 16 AWG Type SV or SJ 3 conductor The cord set must have a rated current capacity of at least 10 A The attachment plug must be an earth grounding type with NEMA 5 15P 15 A 125 V or NEMA 6 15P 15 A 250 V configuration Denmark The supply plug must comply with Section 107 2 D1 Standard DK2 1a or DK2 5a Switzerland The supply plug must comply with SEV ASE 1011 U K The supply plug must comply with BS1363 3 pin 13 A and be fitted with a 5 A fuse which complies with BS1362 The mains cord must be lt HAR gt or lt BASEC gt marked and be of type HO3VVF3GO 75 minimum COMPLIANCES Power Cord Set Continued Europe The supply plug must comply with CEE7 7 SCHUKO The mains cord must be lt HAR gt or lt BASEC gt marked and be of type HO3VVF3GO 75 minimum IEC 320 receptacle Veuillez lire fond l information de la s curit
32. e front panel of the switch for an AC power cord 100 240V 50 60Hz 1A Figure 1 4 Power Supply Socket Key Features 1 10 VDSL Features High speed Internet access over existing phone lines TU T G 993 1 G 993 2 VDSL amp VDSL2 Standard and G 993 2 Annex C Compliant Support programmable band Plan up to 6 band compliant with spectrum utilization up to 30MHz Concurrent data and telephone services voice ISDN over a single connection Always on digital connection eliminates dial up delays and transparent reconnection when initiating any network request Supports evolving ETSI ANSI and ITU VDSL standards for the copper local loop Spectral compatibility with VDSL VDSL2 ADSL ADSL2 POTS ISDN 2B1Q 4B3T or Smartphone digital PBX extensions Port to port isolation for Ethernet Key FEATURES Robust operation on severely distorted lines Supports power back off algorithm that permits a mixed distance deployment Additional VDSL2 features include Fast startup for quick initialization Trellis coding modulation for higher performance Seamless rate adaptation for enhanced quality in video applications Variable tone spacing enables best performance for long and short reach lines Improved framing overhead channel and interleaving Ethernet Connectivity 16 VDSL lines for Ethernet connections to subscribers operating at 100 Mbps symmetric or at asymmetric rates such as 1
33. e missing or damaged contact your local distributor Also be sure you have all the necessary tools and cabling before installing the switch Package Contents 34 TigerAccess EE Switch SMC7816M VSW Four adhesive foot pads Bracket Mounting Kit containing two brackets and four screws for attaching the brackets to the switch Power cord either US Continental Europe or UK Two RJ 21 cables This Installation Guide Management Guide CD MOUNTING If possible retain the carton including the original packing materials Use them again to repack the product in case there is a need to return it for repair Optional Rack Mounting Equipment If you plan to rack mount the switch be sure to have the following equipment available Four mounting screws for each device you plan to install in a rack these are not included A screwdriver Phillips or flathead depending on the type of screws used Mounting The switch may be mounted on any flat surface such as a shelf or in a rack Mounting instructions for each type of site follow Rack Mounting Before rack mounting the switch pay particular attention to the following factors Temperature Since the temperature within a rack assembly may be higher than the ambient room temperature check that the rack environment temperature is within the specified operating temperature range See page C 2 Mechanical Loading Do not place any equipment on top of a rack moun
34. eee ss C 1 Switch Features rs na ID MEUM LA Mare oda ds C 3 Management Reatutes 22 2 ives han ans VP Ligue IUE ey C 3 STARAAIAS en uoc cde ipe OE Rata ES C 4 Compliancesy s ec ote By eed esa d i C 4 D Ordering Information D 1 Glossary Index xvii Table 1 1 Table 1 2 Table 1 3 Table 3 1 Table 3 2 Table 4 1 Table 4 2 Table 4 4 Table 4 5 Table 4 6 Table 4 3 Table A 1 Table B 1 Table B 2 Table B 3 Table B 4 Table B 5 Table B 6 Table B 7 Table D 1 xviii Optional SFP Transceivets 1 7 Port Status LEDS a 42 082 eme erum 1 9 System Status LEDs 3 a Eo eoa vss 1 9 Optional SFP Transceivers 3 8 Wiring Map for Serial Cable 3 10 Maximum 1000BASE T Gigabit Ethernet Cable Length 4 8 Maximum 1000BASE SX Gigabit Ethernet Cable Length 4 8 Maximum 1000BASE ZX Gigabit Ethernet Cable Length 4 9 Maximum Fast Ethernet Cable Length 4 9 Maximum Ethernet Cable Length 4 9 Maximum 1000BASE LX Gigabit Ethernet Cable Length 4 9 Diagnosing Switch Indicators A 1 10 100BASE TX MDI and MDI X Port Pinouts B 2 1000BASE T MDI and MDI X Port Pinouts B 5 RJ 21 Port Pin Assignments PBX MDF connector B 8 RJ 21 Port Pin Assignments VDSL Line connector B 8 DB 9 Port Pin Assignments B 9 C
35. em PC s 25 Pin DTE Port 2RXD lt 2TXD 3IXD Pee 3 RXD 5SGND 7SGND No other pins are used B 10 APPENDIX C SPECIFICATIONS Physical Characteristics VDSL Specifications Band Plan Up to 6 bands Signal Bandwidth 25 kHz to 30MHz Data Rate Up to 100 Mbps 100 Mbps Downstream Upstream Range Up to 200 meters 656 ft Optional Band USO from 4 25 kHz low end to 138 276 kHz high end Multi Carrier Modulation MCM DMT modulation Interleaving general convolution Tone Spacing 8 6 kHz Upstream Power Back off UPBO Compliance ETSI 101 270 ANSI T1E1 4 and ITU T G 993 2 Plan 998 Ports 16 VDSL lines RJ 21 Connector 16 POTS lines RJ 21 Connector 2 Gigabit Ethernet combination uplink ports RJ 45 SFP 1 Fast Ethernet management port RJ 45 Network Interface Ports 1 16 VDSL lines auto negotiation Ports 17 18 RJ 45 SFP combo pott auto negotiation auto MDI X Management Port RJ 45 connector auto MDI X RJ 45 ports 10BASE T RJ 45 100 ohm UTP cable Category 3 or better 100BASE TX RJ 45 100 ohm UTP cable Category 5 or better 1000BASE T RJ 45 100 ohm UTP or STP cable Category 5 5e or 6 Maximum Cable Length 100 m 328 ft C 1 PHYSICAL CHARACTERISTICS C 2 Buffer Architecture 16 Mbytes Aggregate Bandwidth 8 8 Gbps Switching Database 8K MAC address entries LEDs System Power Diag Fault Port Link Act Weight 2 92 kg 6 44 Ib Size
36. ent direct la terre masse Cordon lectrique Il doit tre agr dans le pays d utilisation Etats Unis et Le cordon doit avoir recu l homologation des UL et un certificat de Canada la CSA Les sp cifications minimales pour un cable flexible sont AWG No 18 ouAWG No 16 pour un cable de longueur inf rieure 2 m tres type SV ou SJ 3 conducteurs Le cordon doit tre en mesure d acheminer un courant nominal d au moins 10 A La prise femelle de branchement doit tre du type mise la terre mise la masse et respecter la configuration NEMA 5 15P 15 A 125 V ou NEMA 6 15P 15 A 250 V Danemark La prise m le d alimentation doit respecter la section 107 2 D1 de la norme DK2 1a ou DK2 5a Suisse La prise m le d alimentation doit respecter la norme SEV ASE 1011 Europe La prise secteur doit tre conforme aux normes CEE 7 7 SCHUKO LE cordon secteur doit porter la mention lt HAR gt ou lt BASEC gt et doit tre de type HO3VVF3GO 75 minimum Bitte unbedingt vor dem Einbauen des Switches die folgenden Sicherheitsanweisungen durchlesen WARNUNG Die Installation und der Ausbau des Ger ts darf nur durch Fachpersonal erfolgen Das Gerat sollte nicht an eine ungeerdete Wechselstromsteckdose angeschlossen werden Das Ger t mu an eine geerdete Steckdose angeschlossen werden welche die internationalen Sicherheitsnormen erfillt Der Ger testecker
37. entral Office j Pau u Li PSTN VDSL Switch en A ETT Fiber Optic Link to ISP ISP Internet Figure 2 3 Making VLAN Connections Note When connecting to a switch that does not support IEEE 802 1Q VLAN tags use untagged ports 2 4 APPLICATION NOTES Application Notes 1 25 Full duplex operation only applies to point to point access such as when a switch is attached to a workstation server or another switch When the switch is connected to a hub both devices must operate in half duplex mode To interconnect distinct VLANs or IP subnets you can attach the switch to a standard Layer 3 router For network applications that require routing between dissimilar network types you can attach the switch directly to a router As a general rule the length of fiber optic cable for a single switched link should not exceed e 1000BASE SX 550 m 1805 ft for multimode fiber e 1000BASE LX 5 km 3 2 miles for single mode fiber e 1000BASE ZX 70 km 43 miles for single mode fiber However power budget constraints must also be considered when calculating the maximum cable length for your specific environment 2 5 NETWORK PLANNING 2 6 CHAPTER 3 INSTALLING THE SWITCH Preparing the Site for VDSL POTS Connections In multi tenant buildings phone lines from the service provider enter the site and are terminated at a location referred to as the MPOE Minimum Point of Entry
38. fined in ITU T Recommendation G 993 2 is an enhancement to the first VDSL standard G 993 1 It supports transmission at a bi directional net data rate the sum of upstream and downstream rates of up to 200 Mbps on twisted pair cables using a bandwidth of up to 30 MHz VDSL2 includes many enhancements one of which is the addition of the USO band and methods to train echo cancellers and time domain equalizers Glossary 6 GLOSSARY Virtual LAN VLAN A Virtual LAN is a collection of network nodes that share the same collision domain regardless of their physical location or connection point in the network A VLAN serves as a logical workgroup with no physical barriers allowing users to share information and resources as though located on the same LAN Glossary 7 GLOSSARY Glossary 8 Numerics 10 Mbps connectivity rules 4 9 100 Mbps connectivity rules 4 9 1000 Mbps connectivity rules 4 8 1000BASE LX connections 4 6 fiber cable lengths 4 9 1000BASE SX connections 4 6 fiber cable lengths 4 8 1000BASE T cable lengths 4 8 1000BASE X connections 4 6 1000BASE ZX connections 4 6 fiber cable lengths 4 9 100BASE TX cable lengths 4 9 10BASE T cable lengths 4 9 A accessories ordering D 1 adhesive feet attaching 3 7 air flow requirements 3 3 applications Internet connections 2 2 remote connections 2 3 VLAN connections 2 3 B brackets attaching 3 6 buffer size C 2 C cable Ethernet cable compatibility 3 3
39. hm 0 4 mm or Type 2 24 AWG 100 ohm 0 5 mm cable may be installed to achieve the maximum distance However typically 24 AWG 100 ohm 0 5 mm wire provides better performance than 26 AWG 100 ohm 0 4 mm wire Note the distance may be limited by factors such as how the cable is bundled and the interference and noise on the link 1 1 ABOUT THE TIGERACCESS EE SWITCH 1 2 The VDSL switch is typically located in a wiring closet or other central location of a multi dwelling multi tenant unit campus or enterprise An Internet connection is provided from the ISP to the customer s building over fiber optic cable running Ethernet directly over a 1 Gbps connection Trunking both uplink ports together can provide a 2 Gbps connection This kind of WAN connection is referred to as fiber To The Building FTTB The data and phone signals for each user are combined in the switch and passed over VDSL lines to individual customers The CPE at the other end of the VDSL line connects to any PC or Macintosh equipped with a 10 100BASE TX network interface card Your existing telephone modem or fax machine simply plugs into the CPE s phone port There is no need for special terminators or filters In fact there is no need to modify your wiring at all Since the VDSL connection is based on Ethernet no further complex software configurations are required OVERVIEW VDSL Technology VDSL2 Very High Bit Rate Digital Subscriber Line is at the h
40. ifications for 1000BASE Gigabit Ethernet Now incorporated in IEEE 802 3 2005 LAN Segment Separate LAN or collision domain Layer 2 Data Link layer in the ISO 7 Layer Data Communications Protocol This is related directly to the hardware interface for network devices and passes on traffic based on MAC addtesses LED Light emitting diode used for monitoring a device or network condition Local Area Network LAN A group of interconnected computer and support devices Main Distribution Frame MDF The hardware at a facility where external and internal lines terminate and are cross connected Management Information Base MIB An acronym for Management Information Base It is a set of database objects that contains information about the device Glossary 4 GLOSSARY Media Access Control MAC A portion of the networking protocol that governs access to the transmission medium facilitating the exchange of data between network nodes Modal Bandwidth Bandwidth for multimode fiber is referred to as modal bandwidth because it varies with the modal field or core diameter of the fiber Modal bandwidth is specified in units of MHz per km which indicates the amount of bandwidth supported by the fiber for a one km distance MTU Multiple Tenant Units Plain Old Telephone Service POTS One of the services using voice band Sometimes used as a descriptor for all voice band services Private Branch Exchange PB
41. igh end of all the DSL technologies offering the best combination of fiber optic and copper to provide high speed broadband Internet access VDSL s primary application is in providing a broadband data service to multi tenant residential or commercial buildings In this implementation fiber optic cable carries data from an Internet Service Provider to the building then the installed telephone copper wires take the data and deliver it to individual units within that building Telephone V Rooms Clients A T d e VDSL CPE N Floor 2 S Telephone Fax a Ben N d Rooms Clients SS r Existing Phone Floor 1 gt Lines to Clients Punch Down Blocks Patch Panels VDSL CPE Local Servers Locally Hosted Services Video Servers Billing VDSL Lines MPOE Telephone Line from Central Office Central Office PSTN Fiber Optic Link to ISP ISP Multi dwelling Multi tenant Building Internet Figure 1 1 VDSL Application VDSL provides high speed Internet access over existing phone lines by making use of previously unused frequency bandwidth above the voice band i e up to 30 MHz with VDSL2 By placing VDSL signals above the frequency of the voice signal a VDSL service can coexist on the same line as other telephone services VDSL can operate symmetrically providing the same data rate in both directions or asymmetrical
42. interference to radio communications Operation of this equipment in a residential area is likely to cause harmful interference in which case the user will be required to correct the interference at his own expense You are cautioned that changes or modifications not expressly approved by the party responsible for compliance could void your authority to operate the equipment You may use unshielded twisted pair UTP for RJ 45 connections Category 3 or better for 10 Mbps connections Category 5 or better for 100 Mbps connections Category 5 5e or 6 for 1000 Mbps connections For fiber optic connections you may use 50 125 or 62 5 125 micron multimode fiber or 9 125 micron single mode fiber FCC Part 68 This equipment complies with Part 68 of FCC Rules On the base unit of this equipment is a label that contains among other information the FCC Registration Number and Ringer Equivalence Number REN for this equipment If requested this information must be given to the telephone company This equipment uses the following USOC jacks RJ 21 The REN is useful to determine the quantity of devices you may connect to your telephone line and still have those entire devices ring when your telephone number is called In most but not all areas the sum of the REN of all devices connected to one line should not exceed five 5 0 To be certain of the number of devices you may connect to you line as determined by the REN you should contact your
43. ions 3 1 Installing Additional Equipment 3 2 Verifying Site Requirement 3 2 Installing Ethernet Cabling 3 3 Equipment Checklist 22 cco Ves 3 4 Package Contents isis ae ADORA 3 4 Optional Rack Mounting Equipment 3 5 MOUn tee RATS A LET er 3 5 Rack Mounting ei 22 ee GY Dated ood er ee 3 5 Desktop or Shelf Mounting 3 7 XV T4BLE OF CONTENTS xvi Installing an Optional SFP Transceiver 3 8 Connecting to a Power Source 3 9 Connecting to the Console Port 3 10 Wiring Map for Serial Cable 3 10 Making Network Connections 4 1 Connecting RJ 21 Cables eot Reeve e a deco 4 1 Connecting to the Punch down Blocks 4 2 Using Patch Panels noirs ane Ae RAS 4 3 Connecting Twisted Pair Devices 4 4 Cabling Guidelines 4 4 Network Wiring Connections 4 4 Connecting to PCs Servers Hubs and Switches 4 5 Connecting Fiber Optic Devices 4 6 Connecuvity Rules s irsta 322 2 2a LEO Ree arts 4 7 1000BASE T Cable Requirements 4 8 1000 Mbps Gigabit Ethernet Cable Lengths
44. issions FCC Class A FCC Part 68 Industry Canada Class A EN 61000 3 2 3 EN55022 CISPR 22 Class A JATE Immunity EN 61000 4 2 3 4 5 6 8 11 SPECIFICATIONS Safety CSA CUS CSA 22 2 NO 60950 1 amp UL60950 1 CB IEC60950 1 C 5 COMPLLANCES C 6 APPENDIX D ORDERING INFORMATION Table D 1 TigerAccess EE Products and Accessories Product Number Description SMC7816M VSW 16 Port VDSL2 Switch with 2 combo Gigabit Ethernet uplink ports RJ 45 SFP and 1 dedicated Fast Ethernet management port RJ 45 SMC7800A VCP Ethernet over VDSL2 CPE with 1 VDSL line port 1 POTS phone port and 1 Fast Ethernet port SMCBGSLCX1 1 port 1000BASE SX Small Form Pluggable SFP mini GBIC transceiver SMCBGLLCX1 1 port 1000BASE LX Small Form Pluggable SFP mini GBIC transceiver SMCBGZLCX1 1 port 1000BASE ZX Small Form Pluggable SFP mini GBIC transceiver ORDERING INFORMATION D 2 SLOSSARY 10BASE T IEEE 802 3 specification for 10 Mbps Ethernet over two pairs of Category 3 4 or 5 UTP cable 100BASE TX IEEE 802 3u specification for 100 Mbps Fast Ethernet over two pairs of Category 5 UTP cable 1000BASE LX IEEE 802 3z specification for Gigabit Ethernet over two strands of 50 125 62 5 125 or 9 125 micron core fiber cable 1000BASE SX IEEE 802 3z specification for Gigabit Ethernet over two strands of 50 125 or 62 5 125 micron core fiber cable 1000BASE T IEEE 802 3ab specificatio
45. it data 3 TXD transmit data gt 2RXD receive data 5 SGND signal ground 5 SGND signal ground No other pins are used 3 10 CONNECTING TO THE CONSOLE PORT The serial port s configuration requirements are as follows Default Baud rate 9 600 bps Character Size 8 Characters Parity None Stop bit One Data bits 8 Flow control none See Console Port Pin Assignments on page B 9 for more detailed information on attaching various connector types to the console port 3 11 INSTALLING THE SWITCH 3 12 CHAPTER 4 MAKING NETWORK CONNECTIONS The TigerAccess EE Switch is designed to connect subscriber ports via VDSL lines and uplink to the service provider s network via twisted pair of fiber optic cabling The uplink ports can be connected to network cards in PCs and servers as well as to hubs switches or routers The dedicated management port is designed for local configuration access outside of the data network Connecting RJ 21 Cables For incoming phone lines a switch can connect directly to a PBX or can be connected via a punch down block or patch panel The particular connection method used will depend on the type of connectors and cables supported on the PBX and on the existing cabling in the building The RJ 21 cables from the switch are connected to the punch down block that connects the phone lines and r
46. ly providing a higher data rate in the downstream receive direction than in the upstream transmit direction 1 3 ABOUT THE TIGERACCESS EE SWITCH VDSL can deliver high performance online applications such as high quality video and other switched multimedia services This Ethernet over VDSL system provides robust performance with a maximum symmetric data rate of 100 Mbps for runs up to 200 meters 656 ft This system is based on advanced VDSL2 Multi Carrier Modulation MCM technology with adaptive channel equalization that overcomes bridge taps and other line distortions Reed Solomon Forward Error Correction and interleaving protect against errors due to impulse noise and enable recovery from signal interruptions Frequency Division Duplexing FDD separates downstream and upstream channels and allows VDSL signals to coexist with regular telephone services A power back off mechanism is also implemented to reduce noise from crosstalk in line bundles Switch Architecture The VDSL Switch employs a wire speed non blocking switching fabric This permits simultaneous wire speed transport of multiple packets at low latency on all ports This switch also features full duplex capability on all ports which effectively doubles the bandwidth of each connection For communications between different VLANs this switch uses IP routing For communications within the same VLAN the switch uses store and forward switching to ensure maximum data i
47. n for Gigabit Ethernet over 100 ohm Category 5 or 5e twisted pair cable using all four wire pairs 1000BASE ZX Gigabit Ethernet over two strands of 9 125 micron core fiber cable Auto Negotiation Signalling method allowing each node to select its optimum operational mode e g 10 Mbps or 100 Mbps and half or full duplex based on the capabilities of the node to which it is connected Glossary 1 GLOSSARY Bandwidth The difference between the highest and lowest frequencies available for network signals Also synonymous with wire speed the actual speed of the data transmission along the cable Collision A condition in which packets transmitted over the cable interfere with each other Their interference makes both signals unintelligible Collision Domain Single CSMA CD LAN segment Customer Premises Equipment CPE Terminating equipment such as terminals phones and routers supplied by the phone company installed at customer sites and connected to the phone company network CSMA CD CSMA CD Carrier Sense Multiple Access Collision Detect is the communication method employed by Ethernet Fast Ethernet or Gigabit Ethernet End Station A workstation server or other device that does not forward traffic Ethernet A network communication system developed and standardized by DEC Intel and Xerox using baseband transmission CSMA CD access logical bus topology and coaxial cable The successor IEEE 802
48. nd backbone in addition to the types listed above All optical fiber components and installation practices must meet applicable building and safety codes B 7 CABLES RJ 21 Port Pin Assignments The RJ 21 ports are designed to aggregate 24 POTS VDSL lines although only 16 lines are implemented for this switch Each wire pair must be attached to the RJ 21 connector in a specific orientation detailed below The following tables show the pin assignments Table B 3 25 1 x J Figure B 4 RJ 21 Port Pins female connector RJ 21 Port Pin Assignments PBX MDF connector Pins Circuit 48 49 1 Ring Tip Pins Circuit 42 43 5 Ring Tip Pins 36 37 Circuit 9 Ring Tip Pins 30 31 Circuit 13 Ring Tip 22 23 2 Ring Tip 16 17 6 Ring Tip 10 11 10 Ring Tip 4 5 14 Ring Tip 45 46 3 Ring Tip 39 40 7 Ring Tip 33 34 11 Ring Tip 27 28 15 Ring Tip 19 20 4 Ring Tip 13 14 8 Ring Tip 7 8 12 Ring Tip 1 2 16 Ring Tip The VDSL Line connector is designed to aggregate 16 VDSL ports The following table shows the pin assignments Table B 4 RJ 21 Port Pin Assignments VDSL Line connector Pins Circuit Pins Circuit Pins Circuit Pins Circuit 48 49 Port 1 42 43 Port 5 36 37 Port 9 30 31 Port 13 22 23
49. nloads World Wide Web http www smc com http www smc europe com FOR LITERATURE OR ADVERTISING RESPONSE CALL U S A and Canada Spain UK France Italy Benelux Central Europe Nordic Eastern Europe Sub Saharian Africa North West Africa CIS PRC Taiwan Asia Pacific Korea Japan Australia India 800 SMC 4 YOU 34 9 1 352 00 40 44 0 1932 866553 33 0 41 38 32 32 39 0 335 5708602 31 33 455 72 88 49 0 89 92861 0 46 0 868 70700 34 93 477 4920 216 712 36616 34 93 477 4920 7 095 7893573 86 10 6235 4958 886 2 8797 8006 65 6 238 6556 82 2 553 0860 81 45 224 2332 61 2 8875 7887 91 22 8204437 Fax 949 679 1481 Fax 34 93 477 3774 Fax 44 0 118 974 8701 Fax 33 0 41 38 01 58 Fax 39 02 739 14 17 Fax 31 33 455 73 30 Fax 49 0 89 92861 230 Fax 46 0 887 62 62 Fax 34 93 477 3774 Fax 216 71751415 Fax 34 93 477 3774 Fax 7 095 789 35 73 Fax 86 10 6235 4962 Fax 886 2 8797 6288 Fax 65 6 238 6466 Fax 82 2 553 7202 Fax 81 45 224 2331 Fax 61 2 8875 7777 Fax 91 22 8204443 If you are looking for further contact information please visit www smc com WWNW smc europe com or WWW smc asia com SMC Networks 20 Mason Irvine CA 92618 Phone 949 679 8000 Model Numbers SMC7800A VCP Pub Number 149100012100H E022007 ST RO1
50. ntegrity With store and forward switching the entire packet must be received into a buffer and checked for validity before being forwarded This prevents errors from being propagated throughout the network Network Management Options 1 4 This switch contains a comprehensive array of LEDs for at a glance monitoring of network and port status It also includes a management agent that allows you to configure or monitor the switch using its embedded management software or via SNMP applications To manage the switch you can make a direct connection to the console port out of band or you can manage the switch through a network DESCRIPTION OF HARDWARE connection in band using Telnet the on board web agent or SNMP based network management software The management port provides a dedicated management channel that operates outside of the data transport network This makes it possible to re configure or troubleshoot the switch over either a local or remote connection when access via the data channel is not possible or deemed insecure For a detailed description of the switch s advanced features refer to the Management Guide Description of Hardware This device is an intelligent Layer 2 VDSL2 switch with 16 VDSL ports for subscriber access to the data network and two Gigabit Ethernet combination ports for uplink traffic The uplink ports are implemented as 10 100 1000BASE T ports shared with SFP transceiver slots see
51. ommon problems you may encounter and possible solutions Table A 1 Diagnosing Switch Indicators after power on internal power supply may be defective Symptom Possible Cause Action Power indicator Power outlet Check the power outlet by does notlightup power cord or plugging in another device that is functioning properly Check the power cord with another device If these measures fail to resolve the problem have the unit s power supply replaced by a qualified distributor Diag LED is off Boot up diagnostic program has detected a problem Power cycle the switch to try and clear the condition If the condition does not clear contact your local dealer for assistance A 1 TROUBLESHOOTING Table A 1 Diagnosing Switch Indicators Symptom Possible Cause Action Ethernet port Network cable or Verify that the switch and Link indicator Ethernet device attached device are powered on does not light up attached to this port Bodies peter eble is after making a may be defective ENS i plugged into both the switch and connection attached device Verify that the proper cable type is used and its length does not exceed specified limits Check the network cable connections for possible defects Replace the defective cable if necessaty VDSL port VDSL switch Verify that the VDSL switch and LINK indicator cabling or VDSL attached CPE a
52. on is made check the Link LED on the switch corresponding to the port to be sure that the connection is valid The 1000BASE SX 1000BASE LX and 1000BASE ZX fiber optic ports operate at 1 Gbps full duplex All of these SFP modules also support auto negotiation of flow control The maximum length for fiber optic cable depends on the fiber type as listed under 1000 Mbps Gigabit Ethernet Cable Lengths on page 4 8 Connectivity Rules When adding hubs repeaters to your network please follow the connectivity rules listed in the manuals for these products However note that because switches break up the path for connected devices into separate collision domains you should not include the switch or connected cabling in your calculations for cascade length involving other devices 4 7 MAKING NETWORK CONNECTIONS 1000BASE T Cable Requirements All Category 5 UTP cables that are used for 100BASE TX connections should also work for 1000BASE T providing that all four wire pairs are connected However it is recommended that for all critical connections or any new cable installations Category 5e enhanced Category 5 or Category 6 cable should be used The Category 5e specification includes test parameters that are only recommendations for Category 5 Therefore the first step in preparing existing Category 5 cabling for running 1000BASE T is a simple test of the cable installation to be sure that it complies with the IEEE 802 3 200
53. ons The following publication gives specific information on how to operate and use the management functions of the switches The SMC7816M VSW Management Guide Also as part of both switches firmware there is an online web based help that describes all management related features TABLE OF CONTENTS About the TigerAccess EE Switch 1 1 Overview Lido Mesue Eo ee db us en HS Ls voL dot 1 1 VDSL Technology ua exc oy mim d epe eres 1 3 Switch Architecture 3s eres rV ERR de RYE 1 4 Network Management Options 1 4 Descttiption of Hardware ss ann anne na 1 5 RJ 21 Potts c sein ee i E EE 1 6 TODOBASBZ I Potts srs reami ea eRe 1 6 SEP Slots d VL menge ana PARS a YR 1 7 Manabetnent Port 23m Era Erinnern 1 7 Console Pott ccc uoce vea Ln IO LUE DG US 1 8 Ethernet over VDSL CPE Optional Equipment 1 8 Port and System Status LEDs 1 8 Powet Supply Socket 524 3 0 Br 1 10 Key Heat t s i net a a en 1 10 Network Planning 422 am en 2 1 Introduction to Switching 2 1 Application Examples 2 2 00 as d masse nase 2 1 Internet Connections vereor ee nee 2 2 Remote Connections with Fiber Cable 2 3 Making VLAN Connections 2 3 Application Notes iios pri E Pe cece sae d 2 5 Installing the Switch 3 1 Preparing the Site for VDSL POTS Connect
54. onsole Port to 9 Pin DTE Port on PC B 10 Console to 25 Pin DTE Port on PC B 10 TigerAccess EE Products and Accessories D 1 FIGURES Figure 1 1 VDSL Application 2 Rex nn 1 3 Figure 1 2 Front and Rear Panels 1 6 Figure 1 3 Port and System LEDs 1 8 Figure 1 4 Power Supply Socket 1 10 Figure 2 1 Internet Connections 2 2 Figure 2 2 Remote Connections with Fiber Cable 2 3 Figure 2 3 Making VLAN Connections 2 4 Figure 3 1 Wiring before VDSL Switch Installation 3 1 Figure 3 2 Wiring after Switch Installation 3 2 Figure 3 3 RJ 45 Connections 3 4 Figure 3 4 Attaching the Brackets 3 6 Figure 3 5 Installing the Switch ina Rack 3 6 Figure 3 6 Attaching the Adhesive Feet 3 7 Figure 3 7 Inserting an SFP Transceiver into a Slot 3 8 Figure 3 8 Power Socket ser endet bres 3 9 Figure 3 9 Serial Port RJ 45 Pin Out 3 10 Figure 4 1 Connecting to the Punch down Blocks 4 2 Figure 4 2 Using Patch Panels 4 3 Figure 4 3 Network Wiring Connections 4 4 Figure 4 4 Customer Premises Connections 4 5 Fig
55. orts on the back of the switch directly to the corresponding ports on the patch panel and then manually wire each pair up to 16 from the patch panel to the punch down blocks Twisted pair Connection to CPE Free RJ 21 Punch down Block Wiring Cable with RJ 21 Connector FE PBX MDF Connector Olea mi 4 2 Figure 4 1 Connecting to the Punch down Blocks CONNECTING RJ 21 CABLES Using Patch Panels Follow the steps below to connect a VDSL switch to a building s phone line system using a patch panel 1 Connect an RJ 21 cable from the patch panel to the RJ 21 connectors on the rear of the switch labeled VDSL If connecting to a pre wired patch panel with an RJ 21 connector use a cable with RJ 21 connectors on both ends otherwise a cable with free wires at one end will have to be punched down to the back of the patch panel 2 Connect each port on the front of the patch panel to one end user phone line connection This connection can be direct to the building s phone line punch down block or via another patch panel 3 Label the cables to simplify future troubleshooting Twisted pair Cables to End Users Lili Lun Patch Panel 3 VDSL Switch 8 iw FF on EA RJ 21 Cable PBX Figure 4 2 U
56. panel is not used the switch connects directly to the PBX for the incoming phone lines and the punch down block used for the VDSL lines running up to the end users In this case the punch down blocks must have an RJ 21 connector Existing Phone Lines to Clients Upper Floors Basement Punch Down Blocks Connecting to Clients i Switches feo Umen D MPOE Telephone Line from Central Office Figure 3 2 Wiring after Switch Installation Verifying Site Requirement 3 2 Before you start installing the switch make sure you can provide the right operating environment including power requirements sufficient physical space and proximity to other network devices that are to be connected Be sure to follow the guidelines below when choosing a location INSTALLING ETHERNET CABLING The site should be at the center of all the devices you want to link and near a power outlet be out of direct sunlight and away from heat sources or areas with a high amount of electromagnetic interference The temperature should be within 0 to 50 C 32 to 122 F and its humidity within 5 to 95 non condensing belocated in a cool dry place and have adequate space approximately ten centimeters or four inches on all sides for proper air flow be accessible for installing cabling and maintaining the devices allow the status LEDs to be clearly vi
57. phone and computer directly to a CPE similar to that shown below For detailed information on installing and operating the CPE refer to the relevant user guide VDSL Line Wall Jack RJ 11 Ports RJ 45 Port AC Power Outlet 4 E lt AC Power Adapter 3 Computer Y A Category 5 UTP cable to Telephone Fax or Modem Ethernet port on computer PHONE LAN Standard Telephone Cable Figure 4 4 Customer Premises Connections 1 Attach one end of a twisted pair cable segment to the CPE RJ 45 connector 2 Attach the other end of the cable segment to to your PC or other network equipment Make sure the twisted pair cable does not exceed 100 meters 328 ft in length 3 As each connection is made the corresponding Link LED on the CPE should light up to indicate that the connection is valid 45 MAKING NETWORK CONNECTIONS Connecting Fiber Optic Devices 4 6 An optional SFP transceiver 1000BASE SX 1000BASE LX or 1000BASE ZX can be used for a backbone connection to your Internet Service Provider or for connecting to a high speed server Each single mode fiber port requires 9 125 micron single mode fiber optic cable with an LC connector at both ends Each multimode fiber optic pott tequires 50 125 or 62 5 125 micron multimode fiber optic cabling with an LC connector at both ends 1000BASE SX LX
58. re powered on does not light up switch ports maybe Be sute the RJ 21 cables are after making a defective d BEE plugged into the VDSL switch connection and the VDSL punch down block patch panel Verify that the cable length does not exceed specified limits Check the cable connections on the VDSL switch punch down block patch panel and the VDSL CPE for possible defects Replace the defective cable if necessary Fault is on Fan failure Have the switch replaced amber temperature threshold exceeded or other hardware malfunction A 2 POWER AND COOLING PROBLEMS Power and Cooling Problems If the power indicator does not turn on when the power cord is plugged in you may have a problem with the power outlet power cord or internal power supply However if the unit powers off after running for a while check for loose power connections power losses or surges at the power outlet and verify that the fans on the unit are unobstructed and running prior to shutdown If you still cannot isolate the problem then the internal power supply may be defective Installation Verify that all system components have been properly installed If one or more components appear to be malfunctioning such as the power cord or network cabling test them in an alternate environment where you are sure that all the other components are functioning properly In Band Access You can access the management agent in the switch f
59. rical fast transient burst according to EN 61000 4 4 1995 AC DC power supply 1 kV Data Signal lines 0 5 kV COMPLIANCES Surge immunity test according to EN 61000 4 5 1995 AC DC Line to Line 1 kV AC DC Line to Earth 2 kV Immunity to conducted disturbances Induced by radio frequency fields EN 61000 4 6 1996 0 15 80 MHz with 1 kHz AM 80 Modulation 3 V m Power frequency magnetic field immunity test according to EN 61000 4 8 1993 1 A m at frequency 50 Hz Voltage dips short interruptions and voltage variations immunity test according to EN 61000 4 11 1994 gt 95 Reduction 10 ms 30 Reduction 500 ms gt 95 Reduction 5000 ms LVD EN 60950 1 2001 Warning Do not plug a phone jack connector in the RJ 45 port This may damage this device Attention Les raccordeurs ne sont pas utilis s pour le syst me t l phonique Safety Compliance Warning Fiber Optic Port Safety When using a fiber optic port never look at the transmit laser while CLASS I itis powered on Also never look directly at the fiber TX port and LASER DEVICE fiber cable ends when they are powered on Avertissment Ports pour fibres optiques s curit sur le plan optique Ne regardez jamais le laser tant qu il est sous tension Ne regardez 8 J q g ee jamais directement le port TX Transmission a fibres optiques et les embouts de cables a fibres optiques tant qu ils sont sous tension Warnhinweis Faseroptikanschl
60. rom anywhere within the attached network using Telnet Secure Shell a web browser or other network management software such as SMC EliteView However you must first configure the switch with a valid IP address subnet mask and default gateway If you have trouble establishing a link to the management agent check to see if you have a valid network connection Then verify that you entered the correct IP address Also be sure the port through which you are connecting to the switch has not been disabled If it has not been disabled then check the network cabling that runs between your remote location and the switch Also note that the switch may be configured to prevent management access from a connection through the data ports 1 16 Refer to the Management Guide for detailed information on this configuration option A 3 TROUBLESHOOTING Note The switch can accept up to four simultaneous Telnet sessions If the maximum number of sessions already exists an additional Telnet connection will not be able to log into the system A 4 APPENDIX B CABLES Twisted Pair Cable and Pin Assignments For 10BASE T 100BASE TX connections a twisted pair cable must have two pairs of wires For 1000BASE T connections the twisted pair cable must have four pairs of wires Each wire pair is identified by two different colors For example one wire might be green and the other green with white stripes Also an RJ 45 connector must be attached to bo
61. s Pin MDI Signal Name MDI X Signal Name 1 Bi directional Data One Plus BI_D1 Bi directional Data Two Plus BI_D2 2 Bi directional Data One Minus BI_D1 Bi directional Data Two Minus BI_D2 3 Bi directional Data Two Plus BI_D2 Bi directional Data One Plus BI_D1 4 Bi directional Data Three Plus BI_D3 Bi directional Data Four Plus BI_D4 5 Bi directional Data Three Minus BI_D3 Bi directional Data Four Minus BI_D4 6 Bi directional Data Two Minus BI_D2 Bi directional Data One Minus BI_D1 7 Bi directional Data Four Plus BI_D4 Bi directional Data Three Plus BI_D3 8 Bi directional Data Four Minus BI_D4 Bi directional Data Three Minus BI_D3 B 5 CABLES 1000BASE T Cable Requirements All Category 5 UTP cables that are used for 1OOBASE TX connections should also work for 1000BASE T providing that all four wire pairs are connected However it is recommended that for all critical connections or any new cable installations Category 5e enhanced Category 5 or Category 6 cable should be used The Category 5e specification includes test parameters that are only recommendations for Category 5 Therefore the first step in preparing existing Category 5 cabling for running 1000BASE T is a simple test of the cable installation to be sure that it complies with the IEEE 802 3ab standards Cable Testing for Existing Category 5 Cable Installed Category 5 cabling mus
62. sed interface CHAPTER 2 NETWORK PLANNING Introduction to Switching A network switch allows simultaneous transmission of multiple packets via non ctossbar switching This means that it can partition a network more efficiently than bridges or routers The switch has therefore been recognized as one of the most important building blocks for today s networking technology When performance bottlenecks are caused by congestion at the network access point such as the network card for a high volume file server the device experiencing congestion server ot power user can be attached directly to a switched port And by using full duplex mode the bandwidth to the end user can be doubled to maximize throughput A switch can be easily configured in any Ethernet network to significantly boost bandwidth while using conventional cabling and network cards Application Examples VDSL provides significant savings on network installation equipment and service fees Internet services operate over existing phone cabling and a minimal amount of network equipment The only changes require installing a VDSL CPE for each client and a VDSL switch in the basement or wiring closet Internet service can then be provided over a direct Ethernet connection from your ISP For non commercial environments you can run the switch through a broadband router at the customer s site This will allow you to use a single user account and ISP sharing to significantl
63. sert the plug on the other end of the power directly into the socket located on the front of the switch up 100 240V 50 60Hz 1A Figure 3 8 Power Socket 4 Check the front panel LEDs as the switch is powered on to be sure the Power LED is lit If not check that the power cable is correctly plugged in The switch will automatically select the setting that matches the connected input voltage Therefore no additional adjustments are necessary when connecting it to any input voltage within the range marked on the front panel Notes 1 The switch performs a self diagnostic test upon power on 2 The unit supports a hot remove feature which permits you to connect or disconnect network cables without powering off the unit 3 9 INSTALLING THE SWITCH and without disrupting the operation of the devices attached to the unit Connecting to the Console Port The RJ 45 serial port on the switch s front panel is used to connect to the switch for out of band console configuration The on board configuration program can be accessed from a terminal or a PC running a terminal emulation program The pin assignments used to connect to the serial port are provided in the following table Ws Ces 8 Figure 3 9 Serial Port RJ 45 Pin Out D Wiring Map for Serial Cable Table 3 2 Wiring Map for Serial Cable Switch s 8 Pin Null Modem PCs 9 Pin Serial Port DTE Port 6 RXD receive data ee 3 TXD transm
64. sible Make sure twisted pair cable is always routed away from power lines fluorescent lighting fixtures and other sources of electrical interference such as radios and transmitters Make sure that the unit is connected to a separate grounded power outlet that provides 100 to 240 VAC 10 50 to 60 Hz 3Hz is within 2 m 6 6 feet of each device and is powered from an independent circuit breaker As with any equipment using a filter or surge suppressor is recommended Installing Ethernet Cabling To ensure proper operation when installing switches into a network make sure that the current cables are suitable for 1OBASE T 100BASE TX or 1000BASE T operation Check the following criteria against the current installation of your network Cable type should be unshielded twisted pair UTP or shielded twisted pair STP cables with RJ 45 connectors Category 3 or better for 10BASE T Category 5 or better for 1OOBASE TX and Category 5 5e or 6 for 1000BASE T 3 3 INSTALLING THE SWITCH Protection from radio frequency interference emissions Electrical surge suppression Separation of electrical wires switch related or other and electromagnetic fields from data based network wiring Safe connections with no damaged cables connectors or shields Figure 3 3 RJ 45 Connections Equipment Checklist After unpacking the switch check the contents to be sure you have received all the components If any of the items at
65. sing Patch Panels 4 3 MAKING NETWORK CONNECTIONS Connecting Twisted Pair Devices Each device requires an unshielded twisted pair UTP cable with RJ 45 connectors at both ends Use Category 5 5e or 6 cable for 1000BASE T connections Category 5 or better for 100BASE TX connections and Category 3 or better for 1OBASE T connections Cabling Guidelines The RJ 45 ports on the switch support automatic MDI MDI X pinout configuration so you can use standard straight through twisted pair cables to connect to any other network device PCs servers switches routers or hubs See Appendix B for further information on cabling Caution Do not plug a phone jack connector into an RJ 45 port This will damage the switch Use only twisted pair cables with RJ 45 connectors that conform to FCC standards Network Wiring Connections 44 Attach one end of a twisted pair cable to an available uplink port on the switch in the wiring closet and the other end to the Internet Service Provider s network equipment Twisted pair Cables to End Users Patch Panel e RJ 21 Cable VDSL Switch igs ISP Internet RJ 21 Cable PBX Figure 4 3 Network Wiring Connections CONNECTING TWISTED PAIR DEVICES Connecting to PCs Servers Hubs and Switches Depending on the wiring configuration used at the customer s site separate wall jacks may be used for telephone and VDSL services Otherwise you will need to connect the tele
66. sse Optische Sicherheit Niemals ein Ubertragungslaser betrachten w hrend dieses LASERGERAT eingeschaltet ist Niemals direkt auf den Faser TX Anschlu und auf DER KLASSE nges SE s a se die Faserkabelenden schauen w hrend diese eingeschaltet sind PSE Alarm AR MICMAELCHY ET ER Fey kid AUMSATT KERMI Fey hik ARRUAO N mU ARTIRAR C e Hc Ie AmA RA NERI Rey ERAL thee DERI FEY KeEBALELCRSL ix COMPLLANCES Power Cord Safety Please read the following safety information carefully before installing the switch Warning Installation and removal of the unit must be carried out by qualified personnel only The unit must be connected to an earthed grounded outlet to comply with international safety standards Do not connect the unit to an A C outlet power supply without an earth ground connection The appliance coupler the connector to the unit and not the wall plug must have a configuration for mating with an EN 60320 IEC 320 appliance inlet The socket outlet must be near to the unit and easily accessible You can only remove power from the unit by disconnecting the power cord from the outlet This unit operates under SELV Safety Extra Low Voltage conditions according to IEC 60950 The conditions are only maintained if the equipment to which it is connected also operates under SELV conditions France and Peru only This unit cannot be powered from IT supplies If your supplies are of IT typ
67. t pass tests for Attenuation Near End Crosstalk NEXT and Far End Crosstalk FEXT This cable testing information is specified in the ANSI TIA EIA TSB 67 standatd Additionally cables must also pass test parameters for Return Loss and Equal Level Far End Crosstalk ELFEXT These tests are specified in the ANSI TIA EIA TSB 95 Bulletin The Additional Transmission Performance Guidelines for 100 Ohm 4 Pair Category 5 Cabling Note that when testing your cable installation be sure to include all patch cables between switches and end devices Adjusting Existing Category 5 Cabling to Run 1000BASE T B 6 If your existing Category 5 installation does not meet one of the test parameters for 1000BASE T there are basically three measures that can be applied to try and correct the problem 1 Replace any Category 5 patch cables with high performance Category 5e or Category 6 cables 2 Reduce the number of connectors used in the link 3 Reconnect some of the connectors in the link FIBER STANDARDS Fiber Standards The current TIA Telecommunications Industry Association 568 A specification on optical fiber cabling consists of one recognized cable type for horizontal subsystems and two cable types for backbone subsystems Horizontal 62 5 125 micron multimode two fibers per outlet Backbone 62 5 125 micton multimode or single mode TIA 568 B will allow the use of 50 125 micron multimode optical fiber in both the horizontal a
68. ted unit Circuit Overloading Be sure that the supply circuit to the rack assembly is not overloaded Grounding Rack mounted equipment should be properly grounded Particular attention should be given to supply connections other than direct connections to the mains 3 5 INSTALLING THE SWITCH To rack mount devices 1 Attach the brackets to the device using the screws provided in the Bracket Mounting Kit E Figure 3 4 Attaching the Brackets 2 Mount the device in the rack using four rack mounting screws not provided A 4 i a Pd N S P s un a ots 9A AS e S Figure 3 5 Installing the Switch in a Rack 3 6 MOUNTING 3 Ifinstalling a single switch only turn to Connecting to a Power Source on page 3 7 4 If installing multiple switches mount them in the rack one below the other in any order Desktop or Shelf Mounting 1 Attach the four adhesive feet to the bottom of the first switch Figure 3 6 Attaching the Adhesive Feet 2 Set the device on a flat surface near an AC power source making sure there are at least four inches of space on all sides for proper air flow 3 Ifinstalling a single switch only go to Connecting to a Power Source at the end of this chapter 4 Ifinstalling multiple switches attach four adhesive feet to each one Place each device squarely on top of the one below in any order 3 7 INSTALLING THE SWITCH Installing an Optional SFP Trans
69. th ends of the cable Caution Each wire pair must be attached to the RJ 45 connectors in a specific orientation Caution DO NOT plug an RJ 11 connector into any RJ 45 port Use only twisted pair cables with RJ 45 connectors that conform with FCC standards Figure B 1 illustrates how the pins on the RJ 45 connector are numbered Be sure to hold the connectors in the same orientation when attaching the wires to the pins qui 8 es 8 N Figure B 1 RJ 45 Connector Pin Numbers B 1 CABLES 10BASE T 100BASE TX Pin Assignments Use unshielded twisted pair UTP or shielded twisted pair STP cable for RJ 45 connections 100 ohm Category 3 or better cable for 10 Mbps connections or 100 ohm Category 5 or better cable for 100 Mbps connections Also be sure that the length of any twisted pair connection does not exceed 100 meters 328 feet All RJ 45 ports on this switch support automatic MDI MDI X operation so you can use straight through cables for all network connections to PCs or servers or to other switches or hubs In straight through cable pins 1 2 3 and 6 at one end of the cable are connected straight through to pins 1 2 3 and 6 at the other end of the cable When using any RJ 45 port on this switch you can use either straight through or crossover cable Table B 1 10 100BASE TX MDI and MDI X Port Pinouts Pin MDI Signal Name MDI X Signal Name 1 Transmit Data plus TD Receive Data plus
70. tions Cet appareil num rique respecte les limites de bruits radio lectriques applicables aux appareils num riques de Classe A prescrites dans la norme sur le mat riel brouilleur Appareils Num riques NMB 003 dict e par le minist re des Communications CE Mark Declaration of Conformance for EMI and Safety EEC SMC contact for these products in Europe is SMC Networks Europe Edificio Conata II Calle Fructu s Gelabert 6 8 2 43 08970 Sant Joan Desp Barcelona Spain This information technology equipment complies with the requirements of the Council Directive 89 336 EEC on the Approximation of the laws of the Member States relating to Electromagnetic Compatibility and 73 23 EEC for electrical equipment used within certain voltage limits and the Amendment Directive 93 68 EEC For the evaluation of the compliance with these Directives the following standards were applied RFI Emission Limit class A according to EN 55022 1998 Limit class A for harmonic current emission according to EN 61000 3 2 1995 Limitation of voltage fluctuation and flicker in low voltage supply system according to EN 61000 3 3 1995 Immunity Product family standard according to EN 55024 1998 Hlectrostatic Discharge according to EN 61000 4 2 1995 Contact Discharge 4 kV Air Discharge 8 kV Radio frequency electromagnetic field according to EN 61000 4 3 1996 80 1000 MHz with 1 kHz AM 80 Modulation 3 V m Elect
71. tors that simplify installation and network troubleshooting The LEDs which are located on the front panel for easy viewing are shown below and described in the following table pi Power Q 1 Q s Q Q o Q Fault Q 7002 m Te OOOO eO mm Figure 1 3 Port and System LEDs DESCRIPTION OF HARDWARE Table 1 2 Port Status LEDs LED Condition Status VDSL Ports Link Act On Green Port has a valid link Port 1 16 URGES ie Flashing Green Flashing indicates activity on the port Off The link is down or port is disabled Uplink Ports Link Act On Green Port has a valid link Port 17 18 ET m E RJ 45 Flashing Green Flashing indicates activity on the port O SFP Off The link is down or port is disabled Management Port Mgmt On Green Port has a valid link Port 19 PT 7 Flashing Green Flashing indicates activity on the port Off The link is down or port is disabled Table 1 3 System Status LEDs LED Condition Status Power On Green Switch is receiving power Off Switch is not receiving power Fault Amber A fan has failed the temperature threshold exceeded or other hardware malfunction Diag Flashing Green System diagnostic test in progress On Green System diagnostic test successfully completed Off System self diagnostic test has detected a fault 1 9 ABOUT THE TIGERACCESS EE SWITCH Power Supply Socket There is a power socket on th
72. un up to the end users For all connections to the switch cables with standard Telco RJ 21 connectors must be used Some punch down blocks and panels can be pre wired with an RJ 21 connector making the connection simple Otherwise a cable with an RJ 21 on one end and free wiring on the other end will be required Note RJ 21 Cable is Type 1 26 AWG 100 ohm 0 4 mm or Type 2 24 AWG 100 ohm 0 5 mm cable with male RJ 21 connectors at 41 MAKING NETWORK CONNECTIONS each end Typically 24 AWG 100 ohm 0 5 mm wire provides better performance than 26 AWG 100 ohm 0 5 mm wire Connecting to the Punch down Blocks Building s Phone line Punch down Block The switch connects directly to the PBX and building s phone line punch down block with RJ 21 connectors Follow the steps listed below to connect the switch 1 Connect one RJ 21 cable from the PBX MDF to the RJ 21 connector on the rear of the switch labeled POTS 2 Connect another RJ 21 cable from the punch down block to the RJ 21 connector on the rear of the switch labeled VDSL Note that the connection to the punch down block usually requires punching down the free wires from the RJ 21 cable The RJ 21 ports on punch down blocks must be wired to match the pin assignments of ports on the back of the switch To ensure that your cables are properly wired refer to RJ 21 Port Pin Assignments on page B 8 Note If you are using a patch panel connect the RJ 21 p
73. ure 4 5 Making LC Port Connections 4 7 Figure B 1 RJ 45 Connector Pin Numbers B 1 Figure B 2 Straight through Wiring B 3 Figure B 3 Crossover Wiring B 4 Figure B 4 RJ 21 Port Pins B 8 Figure B 5 DB 9 Console Port Pin Numbers B 9 FIGURES XX CHAPTER 1 ABOUT THE TIGERACCESS EE SWITCH Overview This Ethernet over VDSL system consists of end user CPEs Customer Premise Equipment connected to a VDSL switch by standard telephone cable The VDSL connection delivers an Ethernet data link while simultaneously supporting standard telephone services The system can be deployed in any multi dwelling multi tenant environment apartment blocks hotels or office complex to provide both high speed Internet access and telephone services without any need for re wiring The VDSL switch has a built in POTS splitter that combines both the data and phone signals coming from your Internet and telephone service providers and passes these signals directly over standard telephone wiring to multiple users in the same building A CPE is then used to separate these signals and pass them on to a customer s computer and telephone equipment Using the pre defined profiles in building connections can operate up to 100 Mbps upstream and downstream for runs up to 200 meters 656 ft Note Type 1 26 AWG 100 o
74. y reduce network access charges 2 1 NETWORK PLANNING This VDSL switch provides Internet connections of up to 100 Mbps symmetric or an asymmetric 100 Mbps downstream and 50 Mbps upstream over 200 meters Cable distances also can run up to 1 5 km at lower transmission rates Installation is extremely economical for multiple tenant dwellings such as apartment buildings hotels ot school dormitories as well as commercial buildings VDSL provides multiple user access to the Internet with benefits including Internet services such as e mail over faster connections than currently possible with other options such as cable modem or ADSL Multimedia applications such as video and virtual gaming made available to the broader public for the first time Access to corporate intranets at speeds close to that available in the office Both local network applications and Internet services are supported for commercial environments Internet Connections The figure below shows a VDSL switch providing a broadband data service to a multi tenant residential or commercial building In this implementation fiber optic cable carries data from a telephone company s central office to the building then the installed telephone copper wires take the data and deliver it to individual units within that building Existing Phone Lines to Clients Punch Down Blocks Patch Panels 2 2 VDSL Switch R 3 VDSL Lines

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