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Optical Network Unit Installation Manual for Indoor Applications

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1. 00090009 90000090 j z Low voltage disconnect LVD Fixing screws LVD n Fixing screw PRU Power rectifier unit PRU FA Thermal probe conn aT ONU Shelf empty IEC 60320 AC mains inlet 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 et Sey Q i Ing U pai Li a l l jfi o o o i i Q IH Aa ooo oo oD Te ANE L a Fixing screw PRU OO Oa O 33 XY CF GF J204 SS 9 Battery fixing bracket Batteries 1 to 4 Figure 8 1 ONU with LVD PRU RGU and empty ONU shelf 8 2 June 2002 AnyMed
2. A DSO communications path between a COT and an RT of a univer sal AnyMedia Access System The UCC is used as a LAN exten sion to allow a remote operations system to provision and monitor the RT via a COT that is connected to the data communications net work A remote terminal RT connected to a central office terminal COT capable of providing an analog interface to a local analog or digital switching system An ATM service category where traffic is allocated whatever band width is available at any given time UBR does not have a pre con nection negotiated bandwidth and there are no guarantees in terms of cell loss rate and delay One of the two AAL1 modes of data transfer When using it the cir cuit emulation service CES acts as a transparent pipe for the DS1 signal passing all its bits while trying to maintain bit sequence in tegrity and bit count Transmission direction from customer to ATM data network or tele phony switch In a daisy chain a VP that is passed through to a shelf that is closer to the ATM transport network than the shelf being addressed Up stream here does not refer to the direction of transmission Up stream VPs are not provisioned in an AFM but are recorded in it to help prevent errors in provisioning daisy chains Refers to different user groups each assigned with certain system access privileges See Privileged User General User and Re ports only User definitions The point at
3. Battery compartment Ring type thermal probe inserted between metallic case and battery Ambient fan AMP connector Batt 1 Batt 2 Batt 3 Batt 4 Thermostat Battery heater pad Figure 5 3 Internal ONU cabling inside the electronics compartment outdoor application 5 8 June 2002 AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 363 211 521 Connecting Signal Lines Installing the TAP B Cable Option Installing the TAP B Cable Option General This procedure consists of installing the external prefabricated TAP B cable ED7C818 36 Group 1x and connecting its 37 pin connector to C1 TAP on the connection panel at the top of the ONU shelf Afterward you will connect the other end of this cable to the MDF according to local conditions and requirements of the network provider Install the TAP B cable before installing the T R cables because installed T R cables restrict the ONU cable opening to the point that the TAP B cable connector cannot be inserted If the TAP B cable must be installed after the T R cables have been installed you must remove the TAP B cable connector housing temporarily or the cable must be installed with its open end from inside the ONU towards the MDF AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 June 2002 5 9 363 211 521 Installing the TAP B Cable Option Connecting Signal Lines Note shown is the contact side of connector C1 on the SCP identical to soldering side of cable
4. 7 2 June 2002 AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 363 211 521 Installing the Batteries Battery Option Battery Option Ordering batteries The standard configuration of the AnyMedia ONU for indoor applications does not include batteries However the housing is designed to accept four optional type IR 30EC batteries which are available from Tyco For ordering information see the AnyMedia Access System 24 Channel Ordering Guide 363 211 125 Battery description The batteries are equipped with a 14 AWG lead assembly with a keyed 2 pin connector The battery cable to the rectifier LVD is equipped with four matching connectors A battery is illustrated in Figure 7 1 The optional batteries will be delivered packed in a wooden box containing the following Table 7 1 Delivered battery set Comeode Type Consisting of ee IR a 12 volt valve regulated lead acid IR Series battery with 14 AWG lead assembly terminating with pre connected 2 pin plug 107078859 157 622 020 Product Manual IR Series Batteries Issue 7 or later A E Screws 2 per battery thread 10 32 x 0 50 Battery type label a Already assembled for the 14 AWG lead assembly Note These screws are not M5 screws b Sticker already attached to the battery Used for marking the installation date see Figure 7 4 AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 June 2002 7 3 363 211 521 Battery Option Installing the Batteries Hexhead
5. Alarm Eep Battery GE Temp Probe Step 3 For the IR 30EC batteries used in the indoor ONU application adjust the Margin switch to the position If other batteries are used the engineering work order will specify the required setting AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 363 211 521 System Power Up Installing the PRU o BE S Step 4 Slide the PRU into the lower position of the rectifier shelf as shown in Figure 8 1 Push the PRU into the shelf and tighten the two fixing screws on the top and bottom of the faceplate AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 June 2002 8 5 363 211 521 Installing the LVD System Power Up Installing the LVD LVD functions and The LVD is designed to connect the 4 IR 30EC batteries to the PRU and is features equipped with an automatic disconnect feature that disconnects the batteries when the battery voltage drops below 42 5 V Figure 8 3 illustrates the position of the controls and indicators on the LVD faceplate Lucent O LVD500 BATTERY BATTERY INPUT DISCONNECT J3 LVD D D Figure 8 3 LVD Faceplate The LVD is equipped with test jacks for the 48 V supply These jacks are connected to the path between the batteries and the battery fuse circuit breaker The output voltage of the PRU measured on these jacks will be decreased by the voltage drop caused by the inter
6. Ring Router S Sealing current Security management SET Shelf daisy chain Shelf overbooking factor Shelf PCR Shelf VP Simple network management protocol SNMP June 2002 363 211 521 Glossary ee User login that allows access to a limited set of TL1 messages for retrieving system information and autonomous messages Re ports only users do not have access to any TL1 messages that cre ate change or remove service to any security messages that affect other users ADSL frame synchronization has been lost at the ATU R for at least 1 5 seconds Permission to have access to specified local network and to use a specific portion of it A closed loop common bus network topology A LAN WAN device that operates at layers 1 physical 2 data link and 3 network of the OSIRM Distinguished from a bridge by its capability to switch and route data based upon network protocols such as IP 5 mA current used historically to prevent oxidation buildup on tip ring pairs Consists of a set of functions that protect telecommunications net works and systems from unauthorized access by persons acts or influences and to track and report access attempts The simple network management protocol SNMP operation used by the OS to change the value of specified information such as a MIB variable Connecting AnyMedia FAST shelves to daisy chain AFMs together for ADSL services only Overbooking means allocatin
7. The North American standard 1 544 Mbps digital channel The North American standard 44 736 Mbps digital channel Cells that are dropped to avoid exceeding a particular connection s traffic contract The cable from the field side of an FDI to the customer s ready ac cess case or distribution box but not including the drop formal def inition or inside wiring Transmission direction from ATM data network or telephony switch to customer In a daisy chain a VP that terminates on a shelf that is farther away from the ATM transport network than the shelf being addressed Downstream here does not refer to the direction of transmission Formal definition is the short cable from an aerial ready access case or buried plant distribution box to the customer s house not in cluding inside wiring Informally used especially when describing test configurations like splitting access to be equal to line or loop In this latter informal case loop it is all the copper cable to and in cluding the telephone set The number of cells that are dropped as a result of exceeding either a particular connection s traffic contract or the total allowable band width of the shelf AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 363 211 521 Glossary E S DS1 framing format The prescribed recurring pattern of bits transmitted that enables the receiver to identify the start of a frame and the frame number in a sequence of frames The
8. i 7 in i 7 in in 178 mm 178 mm mm Holes to drill K A diameter different for E wall mounting 2 09 oO X or rey plywood mounting S S a oO 09 v y mM N 127mm 127mm 74mm Yy fe Te 15 7 in a 399 mm Be Figure 4 2 Drilling template for wall mounting plywood mounting 4 4 June 2002 AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 363 211 521 Mounting and Grounding the ONU Grounding the ONU Grounding the ONU WARNING A Connect the ONU to the site grounding immediately after the ONU housing has been mounted to the wall The installation must have an independent ground connection to an approved ground electrode for indoor applications Grounding circuit continuity is vital for safe operation of the ONU The minimum size of the independent ground connection should be 26 mm or 9 AWG The framework must be correctly connected to the protective ground before the start of work Never operate the ONU with a disconnected ground Internal ground connections Figure 4 3 illustrates the grounding approach for powering ringing and grounding The ONU shelf backplane and the rectifier shelf backplane will support two ground signals a 48RTN Common analog digital ground signal and return path for both 48 V power feeders 48A and 48B e FRMGND Frameground Connect the ringing path to the 48 V return AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 Jun
9. 4 2 June 2002 AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 363 211 521 Mounting and Grounding the ONU LL Wall Mounting the ONU Step 8 Remove the template Front view Side view She Ve E E E E ce ee SSS 3 O oO oO El ae ae Kate i ae OOOO a mM ooo So a oo 4 O oO ae ae ae i ae ae ae ae ae OO ogc ee eee eel a Jf ke 1 5 in a es 38 mm ee S iy ae Sls wy ooo H eee ea S o oD oD OO OO oO oD OOO o SS owes oem jesocse S al NIE S a _l 11 4 in 290 mm 0 28 in 7 6 mm 13 6 in 345 5 mm f 17 2 in 437 mm a Top view 971 392 mm x Back view sig fore Mounting bracket J aAa St 5 in i 5in 2 9 in oo p O 127 mm 127mm 74 mm il 0 85 in 21 5 mm clE sE 178 mm Ke oE E Sls x D O yi S a co i 7 N j x 3 ee y i ae 2 9 in 19 4 in 492 mm door 90 deg open 32 9 in 836 mm door 180 deg open Figure 4 1 ONU mounting dimensions in mm and wall layout for mounting AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 June 2002 4 3 363 211 521 Wall Mounting the ONU Mounting and Grounding the ONU a 1 8 in 46 mm Mounting bracket 3 3 PE ie i o J a ME is ae a pi SE wo an
10. American National Standards Institute AnyMedia Access System operations software application pack applications planning and ordering guide access resource Manager 363 211 521 List of Acronyms American standard code for information interchange asynchronous transfer mode alarm test unit ADSL transceiver unit Central Office ADSL transceiver unit remote end American wire gauge bipolar with eight zeros substitution broadband access interface unit broadband battery cell fault battery distribution fuse bay bit error ratio built in self test building integrated timing supply basic rate interface basic rate interface transmission extension bridged tap bearer virtual channel bearer virtual path termination broadcast warning message AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 363 211 521 List of Acronyms C N CAC CALRS CASTL CBR CC CCITT CCN CCS CD ROM CDV CDVT CES CES IWF CEV CF CHAN MON CIT CL CLF CLP CMI CMIS CN CO COACH COMDAC COPM CORRCNT COT carrier to noise ratio connection admission control centralized automatic loop reporting system customer advocate system test lab constant bit rate clear channel international telephone and telegraph consultative committee customer change notice hundred call seconds compact disk read only memory cell delay variation cell delay variation tolerance circuit emulation service circuit emulation service
11. Battery Safety General precautions Use the following basic precautions when handling batteries m Use only properly insulated tools and test equipment Remove all metallic objects key chains glasses rings watches or any other jewelry Wear safety glasses acid resistant gloves rubber overshoes and apron a lest circuits before touching Lock out and tag any circuit breakers fuses when possible to prevent accidental turn on For the ONU these are the battery circuit breaker the GMT type fuse and the battery string cable connector on the low voltage disconnect unit LVD inside the rectifier shelf Be aware of potential hazards before servicing equipment A tool or other metallic object causing a short of the battery terminals may be thrown or vaporized due to the battery energy m Identify exposed hazardous electrical potentials on connectors wiring etc Note the condition of these circuits especially any wiring a Always verify the polarity before connecting cables to the batteries m Use care when removing or replacing any covers avoid contacting any circuits While unpacking and or installing the batteries never place metal objects including tools on top of a battery short out the battery s terminals tamper with or block the battery vent caps if equipped m use an open flame near batteries smoke near batteries stack batteries in or out of their shipping cartons Hydrogen gas All lea
12. Do not rub or wipe circuit packs containing ICs to clean them or their gold fingers unless both the individual and the circuit pack are the same ground potential Work areas must be kept clear of common plastics a major source of static electricity When rubbed or handled these plastics produce a static charge that will not readily dissipate when grounded These plastics must not make direct contact with ICs or circuit packs Common plastic materials in this classification include polystyrene packing containers clear plastic bags plastic drinking cups food wrappers notebooks and nonconductive plastic solder suckers The plastic insulation on small hand tools does not represent a static hazard All circuit packs should be stored and transported in original factory packing materials whenever possible Storage in frames or approved antistatic packaging is acceptable when factory packaging is unavailable An antistatic wrist strap must be used whenever a circuit pack with ICs is removed from or inserted into the frame or from its container Put the circuit pack into an antistatic bag or carton immediately after removing it from a frame Keep adhesive tape i e transparent or masking away from the circuit packs Never place circuit packs on ungrounded metal shelving or on ungrounded portable carts without insulated surfaces AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 June 2002 1 5 363 211 521 Battery Safety Safety E SS
13. Early packet discard The early packet discard function ensures that the ATM equipment discards entire AAL5 packets during periods of congestion This is especially important when a relatively large number of Transmis sion Control Protocol TCP sources contend for a particular bottle neck Effective bandwidth A measure of the amount of bandwidth a connection uses For CBR connections it equals PCR For VBR connections it is a function of PCR SCR MBS and CLR For VBR connections this measure is defined differently for different congestion points on the same con nection The CAC algorithm uses this measure at potential conges tion points when determining whether to admit a new connection Errored cells Cells having an invalid header field after HEC procedures are com pleted AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 June 2002 GL 7 363 211 521 Glossary E SS Errored cells received The number of cells that the shelf received from the CPE with de tected errors ES on upstream SDSL The corrected HEC error counter CORRCNT and the uncorrected line HEC error counter UNCCNT event counter data are accumulated and mapped to ES The total count in one second is the number of ESs The HEC error counter data is accumulated and the ES counts are reported on a 15 minute and 1 day basis The COR RCNT counter tracks the number of corrected HEC errors The UN CCNT counter tracks the number of uncorrected HEC errors Etherne
14. FLUSH EYES MM DIATELY Figure 7 4 Battery labels showing the battery serial number and installation date gt NOTE Depending on the manufacturing site the serial number may also be found on a sticker attached to the battery housing Step 9 Measure the open circuit voltage of Battery 1 and record it in the Installation and Maintenance Record AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 June 2002 7 11 363 211 521 Battery Handling and Preparation Installing the Batteries gt NOTE In a running system the IR 30EC battery may be discharged to 10 5 V gt NOTE If the battery voltage is 12 84 V or below the complete battery string must be charged by the internal power rectifier unit immediately after mechanical installation Otherwise the batteries must be charged externally gt NOTE If the measured battery voltage is below 12 V the battery should be considered defective cell short and may not be installed Step 10 Record the installation date on the sticker of each battery and also in the Installation and Maintenance Record in the field Date Installed Step 11 Repeat Steps 4 to 10 for the other 3 batteries marking them sequentially 2 though 4 in Step 5 7 12 June 2002 AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 363 211 521 Installing the Batteries Installing the Batteries a Installing the Batteries Battery Figure 7 5 illustrates the arrangement for the 4 IR 30EC batteries The battery arra
15. Installation and Maintenance Record Installation and Maintenance Record The following two pages are copies for the Installation and Maintenance Record from the Product Manual IR Series Batteries Issue 7 Comcode 107078859 AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 June 2002 A 1 363 211 521 Installation and Maintenance Record Installation and Maintenance Record Battery Type IR 30EC Capacity Test Start Time Test End Time Battery Capacity Measurements Test Current A Installation and Maintenance Record Page 2 End Voltage N D om a D w Gy pe D 3 D m o MN N w E D N S D fa o i D D p Site Address Start Voltage Vdc Battery Temperature Company Name Test Date COPY of the Tyco Product Manual IR 30EC and IR 40EC Batteries Issue 7 Comcode AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 June 2002 A 2 363 211 521 Installation and Maintenance Record Installation and Maintenance Record S S 7 O O S 2 ss a a E D S 3 g a S Voltage Measurements on Individual Batteries Installation and Maintenance Record Page 1 Voltage across charge and discharge buses d 424i wu Q v D SJES SO 3 5 Eo os g nO a gt If the voltage difference between the string and the charge discharge buses is less than 0 05V the system is ready Make individual battery voltage N 2 3S lt D A z oO T
16. ATM technology ATM traffic statistics ATM xDSL subsystem Attenuation of ADSL line Authentication Auto discovery Autonomous reports B Basic rate interface BRI B channel Bit error ratio Broadband services LL Asynchronous transfer mode is a data communications format in which transmission is synchronized at the start and end of each character allowing different types of services to be carried over one system For the AnyMedia Access System ATM traffic statistics refers to the performance monitoring function for ATM cell counts ATM traffic statistics can be collected either at the shelf level or for specific connections At the connection level the technician may choose to activate ATM traffic statistics for all connections on an AP for all connections on an end user port or for an individual connection The AnyMedia Access System components that are needed to pro vide ATM xDSL services i e the AFM OAP OCP ADSL AP SDSL AP and SHDSL AP Note that the OAP and OCP can carry both ATM xDSL and traditional DLC traffic and are included in both the ATM xDSL and traditional DLC subsystems Components that only carry traditional DLC services e g the TDM COMDAC are not in cluded in the ATM xDSL subsystem The ACE COMDAC is a com ponent of both the traditional DLC and ATM xDSL subsystems The difference in dB between the power received at the far end and the power transmitted by the near end Process
17. NMA is a registered trademark of Telcordia Technologies Inc PacketStar is a trademark of Lucent Technologies PairGain is a registered trademark of PairGain Technologies Inc SLC is a registered trademark of Lucent Technologies Solitare is a trademark of PairGain Technologies Inc SPOTS is a registered trademark of Lucent Technologies SPQ is a registered trademark of Lucent Technologies SWITCH is a registered trademark of Telcordia Technologies Inc Tau Tron is a registered trademark of General Signal Corporation Telcordia is a trademark of Telcordia Technologies Inc TIRKS is a registered trademark of Telcordia Technologies Inc Tollgrade is a registered trademark of Tollgrade Communications Inc Total Reach is a registered trademark of ADTRAN Inc UL is a registered trademark of Underwriters Laboratories Inc UNIX is a registered trademark in the United States and other countries licensed exclusively through X Open Company Limited US Sprint is a registered trademark of US Sprint Communications Company Limited Windows is a trademark of Microsoft Corporation Windows 95 Windows 98 and Windows 2000 are copyrights of Microsoft Corporation Windows NT is a registered trademark of Microsoft Corporation WordPad is a copyright of Microsoft Corporation Quality Management System The Quality Management System QMS for Lucent Technologies AnyMedia Access Systems R amp D organizations has been registered to ISO 9001 under the
18. transmit unusable seconds IMA universal asynchronous receiver transmitter unavailable seconds unavailable seconds IMA unavailable seconds line unavailable seconds line far end unavailable seconds path unspecified bit rate universal communication channel user datagram protocol unstructured data transfer U interface digital subscriber line user interface panel uncorrected HEC error counter user network interface usage parameter control universal serial bus urgent problem notification universal voice grade virtual bank variable bit rate virtual circuit traditional DLC services or virtual channel ATM xDSL services virtual channel connection virtual channel identifier virtual central office terminal volts direct current AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 363 211 521 List of Acronyms E VDSL VF VFDE VGA VoDSL VOM VP VPC VPI VPN VPT VRLA Vrms VRT VT WAN WATS WL WRR XTC ZBS ZCS very high speed digital subscriber line voice frequency voice frequency data enhancement video graphics array voice over digital subscriber line volt ohm meter virtual path virtual path connection virtual path identifier virtual private network virtual path termination valve regulated lead acid volts root mean square virtual remote terminal virtual tributary wide area network wide area telephone service working length weighted round robin extended test controller ze
19. BK BLY AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 W gt oO Nh oO N O1 gt oO Nh Orange _h _h NO h Z gt Z gt t N O N O1 gt oO Nh gt Z gt Oo Z Z Z Z E e gt D D D gt oO N Oo aN ee ne OD Ee OD l O1 gt ie NO oO N o1 gt ioe NO June 2002 5 23 363 211 521 Installing ADSL Services Connecting Signal Lines Connecting POTS The following figure illustrates how to route the subscriber lines carrying in the ADSL AP POTS only services to convert them to subscriber lines for carrying POTS and data services ADSL POTS only connection between sub scriber and switch side of the MDF AnyMedia Pr rimary protection POTS AP protector block GDT POTS Line Interface Subscriber line carrying POTS only services Original POTS only connection has to be removed for ADSL upgrade AnyMedia POTS AP Subscriber line carrying POTS and data services AnyMedia ADSL AP ADSL AP Transceiver Subscriber line carrying data ser MDF vices only Figure 5 10 Principle for rerouting POTS over ADSL 5 24 June 2002 AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 363 211 521 l Connecting Signal Lines ONU Addressing ONU Addressing The ONU shelf is equipped with an 8 fold DIP switch The DIP switch is located on the ONU backplane near the position wh
20. General precautions Hydrogen gas Battery terminals Taking voltage readings Acid spill Special Considerations for the Tyco IR 30EC Batteries GMT type fuse Boost charging IR 30EC batteries Sulfuric acid AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 June 2002 Page 1 3 1 3 1 3 1 6 1 6 1 6 1 7 1 7 1 7 1 8 1 8 1 8 1 8 1 1 363 211 521 Safety Overview i eer General Safety Admonishments 1 9 Important general safety instructions 1 9 Lightwave safety 1 9 Product safety 1 10 Electrical Wiring Admonishments 1 11 1 11 Important Installation Safety Instructions 1 2 June 2002 AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 363 211 521 Safety Electrostatic Discharge Electrostatic Discharge Electrostatic Semiconductor devices and circuit packs in general are sensitive to static Discharge ESD charges Most circuit pack integrated circuit IC damage can be attributed to a Consequences discharge of static electricity Tests have shown that ICs can be damaged by electrostatic discharges of less than 100 volts For a person to feel the discharge of static electricity a minimum level of 3500 volts must exist A person walking across a floor can generate electrostatic voltages in excess of 5000 volts gt NOTE Since ESDs contain little or no current there is no employee safety hazard In addition to ESD resulting from an ungrounded person touching a circuit pack static discharges may resul
21. Locate the 3 pin battery cable connector J3 and measure the battery string voltage on the outermost connector pins The outer pin with the black wire is the negative terminal of the battery string Record the string voltage in the installation record gt NOTE Between the middle pin MIDPOINT and the outer 48BAT pin black wire you will measure the string voltage of batteries 4 and 3 between the middle pin MIDPOINT and the outer RINBAT pin red wire you will measure the string voltage of batteries 1 and 2 AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 June 2002 8 13 363 211 521 Connecting and Charging the Batteries System Power Up Connecting and Charging the Batteries A CAUTION Before you connect the batteries switch the battery circuit breaker OFF If the batteries are connected to a working rectifier the charging current can be about 13 A which can cause arcing When connecting the batteries to a working rectifier the allowed difference between the battery and rectifier voltage must be below 0 05 V Procedure for Follow these procedures to connect and charge the batteries eet ate ta Step 1 Verify that the battery circuit breaker on the LVD is switched to OFF charging the se ts Step 2 Connect the battery cable to battery Input connector J3 of the LVD Step 3 Switch ON the battery circuit breaker on the LVD Response The LEDs indicate the following states Normal Operation Lights Batteries connected
22. ONU Product Description Principal ONU Components Component The ONU for indoor applications is wall mounted and includes all internal cabling descriptions The following components are used or can be used in the ONU The ONU housing for wall mounting with all internal cabling m The ONU shelf for inserting the optical controller pack OCP the eight application packs APs and the ringing generator unit RGU The rectifier shelf for inserting the power rectifier unit PRU and the low voltage disconnect unit LVD with the rectifier backplane and connectors m The 7A fan unit The four IR 30EC batteries in the battery compartment Figure 2 1 shows a partially equipped indoor ONU Figure 2 1 Partially equipped indoor ONU front view 2 2 June 2002 AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 Overview of the Installation Process Overview This chapter summarizes the ONU installation and cabling process and lists the tools and test instruments you will need to accomplish the installation Contents Page a Installation Sequence 3 2 Tools and Measurement Testing Instruments 3 4 AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 June 2002 3 1 363 211 521 Installation Sequence Overview of the Installation Process E SS Installation Sequence This manual covers the indoor ONU installation process that starts with the preparation of the wall space It is assumed that any cable runs to the ONU
23. Overview of the Installation Process E SS Table 3 1 List of tools and equipment Continued Test equipment DMM Digital Multimeter Tek DM254 or Fluke 8060A or equivalent the accu only if required racy of an equivalent meter should be 0 05 percent on the DC scale insulated test leads with a diameter of 0 08 in 2 mm for the probe tips are required for measurement via the battery connectors or via test jacks on LVD DC current converter or current probe 1 10 for multimeter used for up to 20A Only if Test load of 48 V 10 A additional onl required The reflecto Thermometer for ambient temperature measurement meter is Contact thermometer for battery temperature measurement mostly used for preparing Test equipment for drop test physical line testing in the U S e g ITE 6675 for accep Streak Mate ITE 7079 AIU Test Fixture additional only tance test of Fiber test equipment optical power meter 1310 1550 nm for example the complete Wavetek OLP 6 or OLP 15B optical power meter for fiber receiver fiber cabling Wavetek OLS 6 or OLS 15 optical light source for fiber transmission Reflectometer Wavetek MTS5100 optical time domain reflectometer 3 6 June 2002 AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 Mounting and Grounding the ONU Overview This chapter describes the procedures for mounting the ONU on a wall and connecting it to the building ground These mounting procedures must be
24. Step 6 Route the AC power cable from the ONU to the customer s power source Do not connect Use the appropriate power cord type for the IEC 60320 or IEC 320 AC receptacle according to the rectifier used Step 7 Strip the AC power cable to a length of 1 in 30 mm Strip each of the three wires to a length of 3 8 in 10 mm Step 8 If using a cable with flexible or stranded wire then press multicore cable ends onto each stripped end of the cable wire Step 9 Route the cable to the AC source terminals and attach the cable with cable ties as needed AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 June 2002 6 3 363 211 521 Connecting AC Power Connecting AC Power Front view looking onto the contacts of the IEC 60320 AC power receptacle input on the power rectifier unit L1 N L2 contact Front view of the IEC 60320 plug of the AC power cord 848506820 PE contact protective ground N L2 L1 contact Notch Input oe 10 it 3m cross section gt 1 mm Note The IEC320 plug is not equipped with the notch The rectifier can be equipped with an IEC 60320 or with an IEC320 receptac Use the appropriate power cord 848506820 for IEC 60320 or 848471181 for the IEC 320 receptacle Figure 6 1 IEC 60320 AC power connector and power cord Step 10 Insert the PE wire into the PE terminal and screw tight or connect fix Step 11 Insert the brown and the blue wire into the correct terminals for L1 and L2 N and scr
25. The maintenance routines for the IR 30EC batteries are classified into two routines categories m Required Table 9 3 m Suggested Table 9 4 Always follow the battery manufacturer s recommended maintenance schedules procedures which supersede the instructions provided in this chapter gt NOTE Failure to adhere to these maintenance schedules will void the warranty for IR 30EC batteries gt NOTE Battery maintenance procedures can interrupt the battery buffering for the ONU shelf and cause a shut down of the complete ONU Maintenance Use the manufacturer s installation and maintenance record forms or the copies of intervals for the Installation and Maintenance Record provided in Appendix A IR 30EC batteries The following maintenance intervals are mandatory for IR 30EC batteries Table 9 3 Required maintenance intervals for IR 30EC batteries Routine Action Interval Battery string voltage Measure record Quarterly Battery voltage Measure record Quarterly Inter battery connections Inspect Quarterly Clean if necessary As needed Inter battery connections Retorque if the 14 AWG As needed lead has been replaced Battery string current Measure record Optional or quarterly depending on the Maintenance Record External charging Charge only if required used record Battery temperature Measure record AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 June 2002 9 9 363 211 521 Battery Maintenance Proced
26. alarm cutoff rate adaptive digital subscriber line remote alarm indication random access memory receive clock recent change verify ring down remote defect indication reference clock ringing equivalence number remote failure indication ringing generator unit routing information protocol June 2002 AC 13 363 211 521 List of Acronyms ee RMC remote maintenance connection RMU remote measurement unit ROC remote operations channel R S Reed Solomon RSF receive signal failed RT remote terminal rt VBR real time variable bit rate RTAC regional technical assistance center RTLP receive transmission level point RTU remote test unit Rx UUS IMA receive unusable seconds IMA S SA service affecting SARTS Switched Access Remote Test System SAS P severely errored framing alarm indication signal seconds path SCEC second channel error correction SCR sustained cell rate SDSL symmetric digital subscriber line SEFS severely errored framing seconds SEFS P severely errored framing seconds path SEFS S severely errored framing seconds section SES severely errored seconds SES P severely errored second path SES S severely errored seconds section SES IMA severely errored seconds IMA SES L severely errored seconds line SES LFE severely errored seconds line far end SES P severely errored seconds path SES S severely errored seconds seconds SF superframe SHDSL single pair high speed digital subscriber line AC 14 Ju
27. buffering for the ONU shelf if the battery circuit breaker is switched OFF and J3 is disconnected A loss of AC power during these maintenance procedures will cause a shut down of the complete ONU A CAUTION Observe the following precautions to avoid short circuits during battery maintenance procedures m Use insulated probes for measuring Bevery careful when taking voltage readings to prevent accidental grounding or shorting of leads during measuring operations Connections at the meter must be secure and free of any possibility of touching or becoming grounded m Never remove connections at the meter end without first disconnecting the test leads from the battery Remove test lead connections at the battery immediately after each reading is taken Battery string Use the following procedure to measure the battery string voltage measurement Step 1 Locate in the Installation and Maintenance Record where the procedure battery readings the installation date and the first readings have been recorded Verify that the batteries have been on continuous uninterrupted float for at least 48 hours Step 2 Switch the battery circuit breaker to OFF Step 3 Locate and disconnect the 3 pin battery cable connector J3 The wiring for connector J3 is illustrated in Figure 9 2 9 12 June 2002 AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 363 211 521 Fan Unit and Battery Maintenance Battery String Float Voltage Front view
28. circuit termination equipment DCE AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 June 2002 GL 5 Data terminal equipment DTE DC alarm services D channel Degrowth Digital bypass pair Digital data services Digital signal 0 DSO Digital signal 1 DS1 Digital signal 3 DS3 Discarded cells Distribution cable Downstream direction Downstream VP Drop Dropped cells June 2002 363 211 521 Glossary ee Data processing equipment that interfaces to the communications network DCE Point to point metallic services that connect subscriber premises with fire police or security services monitoring locations These services are delivered by the MDS2 shelf using DC circuit emula tion technology provided by MCU CUs from Tollgrade Communica tions Inc The ISDN out of band 16 kbps in BRI signaling channel that car ries the ISDN user signals or can be used to carry packet mode data The removal of circuit packs or traffic from a system via a provision ing operation may be accompanied by the physical removal of as sociated equipment but this is not required A pair of MDS2 CUs such as the Tollgrade MCU 5405 CUs that provide the equivalent of a metallic bypass pair without requiring a physical copper pair Digital data services refer to 64 kbps clear channel digital service provided between the customer and the CO One 56 kbps framed channel out of the 24 contained in a DS1 channel
29. connector C1 a 1 20 n 21 s 3 22 239 24 25 o O 26 Oo 27 O 3 28 O 29 9 11 Metallic test path for Equipment 306 12 31 m NC 32 13 APB_ SEIZE from wired OR of ext test head TAPB_EQ T1 14 ROUTE GUM SGT ie EE EE Se ee Sie noe O K TAPB_ER_R1 from TAP100 POTS port 1 EQ W G ERA ii e ml TAPB_EQ_T 339 b 5 G W from TAP100 POTS port 1 EQ ADIA DATE AAFAA ee ae eee EEA Q TAPB EQ R Equipment side Ring wire from TAP100 POTS port 2 FAC ES i Facility side a TAPB_FAC_T 6 Le BRW from TAP100 POTS port 2 FAC Be eS a ee a a ae eS 35 aes TAPB_FAC_R Facility side Ring wire TAPB_FAC_T 1 Ta sa 2 9 oS SSS eS ee eS Se 36 17 TAPB_FAC_R1 TAPB_FAC_E 37 18 TAPB_FAC_M TAPB_EQ_E 19 TAPB_EQ_M Metallic test path for Facility Note AnyMedia specifies Equipment EQ as the subscriber side Facility FAC as the switching side AP port side Cable colors valid for the ED7C818 36 Gr1 1A 1B 1C cable Figure 5 4 Wiring of TAP connector C1 5 10 June 2002 AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 363 211 521 Connecting Signal Lines Installing the TAP B Cable Option ee nn ____ _ kewTTw _ _ FF ee Cable length The TAP B cable is available in varying lengths any excess may be cut off to relieve cable rack congestion Table 5 2 Length of TAP B cable ED 7C818 36 Group 1x Description Code Length TAP B
30. defines the shortest period between two cells Performance Consists of a set of functions to evaluate and report on the behavior management of telecommunication equipment and the effectiveness of the net work and or network elements NEs Permanent virtual A logical dedicated circuit between two user ports in a point to point circuit PVC configuration GL 14 June 2002 AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 363 211 521 Glossary E S Physical feeder port Corresponds to the physical termination of the optical feeder The physical feeder port concept allows the addressing of SONET phys ical medium section and line layer entities An AnyMedia shelf has two physical feeder ports when using one AFMO in simplex mode and four physical feeder ports when using two AFMOs in duplex mode Physical layer The IEEE 802 6 standard that defines the physical layer that adapts convergence protocol the actual capabilities of the underlying physical network to provide PLCP the services required by the ATM layer Private automatic A customer site telephone switch branch exchange PBX PABX Privileged user User login allows access to all TL1 commands and GSI capabilities Protected pack A circuit pack for which there is a backup Protection may be one to one or it may be one to more than one 1 n Protection switching A reliability feature that causes service to switch to the backup equipment during faults or testing PSD of AD
31. delivered by a CES IWF There is one framed path ter mination corresponding to each logical DS1 port on the ACE COM DAC Front and rear access The mounting of the bay with its back away from a wall etc which allows access to the rear of the shelves Front only access The mounting of the bay with its back next to a wall etc which pro hibits access to the rear of the shelves Full rate ADSL The version of asymmetric digital subscriber line ADSL defined by ANSI 11 413 GL 8 June 2002 AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 363 211 521 Glossary G General user Generic cell rate algorithm GCRA Generic signaling function GET Global ATM parameters Graphical system interface GSI Guaranteed bandwidth H Hi cap High BER on ADSL line User login that allows access to all messages except those for Se curity Management messages that affect other users such as login creation and deletion and password modification for all user classes For each cell arrival the GCRA determines whether the cell con forms to the traffic contract of the connection The GCRA is defined with two parameters the increment I and the limit L A parameter required for provisioning of subscriber service The ge neric signaling function is used to condition the AnyMedia FAST shelf loop interface circuit to provide the desired signaling protocol The values are based on Network Channel Interface NCI codes de
32. header that uniquely identifies the identifier VCI virtual channel link with which the cell is associated This identifier is of local significance only It provides the lower of two levels of multiplexing Virtual path identifier In ATM a field within the cell header that is used to switch virtual VPI paths defined as groups of virtual channels VCs Voice frequency data The feature of the AnyMedia FAST shelf that enhances the GR 303 enhancement VFDE interface to improve modem performance Also see ClearReach feature Voice over DSL An application requiring a gateway that converts the voice signal VoDSL from a digital switch to ATM format for transport toward the cus tomer premises Special CPE is required at the customer premises to provide the voice service Volatile data storage Data storage e g RAM that will lose information when power is lost Virtual path VP A virtual link defined at an ATM interface The higher of the two lev els of multiplexing defined for ATM Used to transport an aggrega tion of virtual channels VCs between network locations in a man ner somewhat analogous to a DS3 transporting multiple DS1s Virtual path identifier An eight bit field in the ATM cell header that uniquely identifies the VPI virtual path link with which the cell is associated This identifier is of local significance across an AIM interface It distinguishes the data of one virtual path from the data of another thus p
33. interworking function controlled environment vault current feed channel testing and monitoring switch side craft interface terminal center line carrier line failure cell loss priority control mode idle common management information service change notice central office customized online aid for customer help common data and control customer operations and program management corrected HEC error counter central office terminal AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 June 2002 AC 3 o BE AC 4 June 2002 CPE CPFT CPI CPS CR CRC CRV CS CSA CSMD CD CSS CSS P CSU CTS CTU CU CV CV L CV LFE CV P CV S CVC CVPT DACS dB dBm DC DCD DCE DCLU customer premises equipment customer premises facility terminal calling party identification cabinet power system Critical cyclic redundancy check call reference value current sink carrier serving area carrier sense multiple access collision detection controlled slip seconds controlled slip seconds path channel service unit customer technical support craft test unit channel unit coding violation coding violation line coding violations line far end coding violation path coding violations section control virtual channel control virtual path termination digital access cross connect system decibel decibel referenced to one milliwatt direct current received line signal detector data communication equipment digital carri
34. is provided by the ATM feeder multiplexer AFMDSS3 DS3 interface refers to a bit rate of 44 736 MBps and a framing according to ITU T recommendations G 804 1 432 and ANSI 11 107 without specifying the physical interface xviii June 2002 AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 363 211 520 About This Manual Conventions Used in This Document ee m The term DSX 3 interface refers in the AnyMedia FAST shelf only to everything that DSS refers to with the addition of a specific physical interface according to Telcordia standard GR 499 m ADSL line refers to the twisted copper pair carrying ATM xDSL services m xDSL service means any broadband service transmitted over twisted pairs Examples are ADSL SDSL and SHDSL ADSL modem means the ADSL data circuit terminating equipment at the customer s site m The AnyMedia graphical system interface software GSI provides one graphical user interface for narrowband and ATM xDSL services to one AnyMedia Access System TL1 system interface TL1SI means any interface for operations using TL1 commands A trademark is not treated as an acronym it is not spelled out or expanded Acronyms and In the text acronyms are expanded the first time they are used in the main text of abbreviations a chapter e g permanent leased line PLL See List of Acronyms at the end of this document Trademarked acronyms are not spelled out Trademarks The trademarks used in this docum
35. more than two battery shipping containers high Always store the shipping batteries container in the upright position as marked on the container Provide adequate ventilation during storage Storage time limit The IR 30EC batteries are shipped in a charged state The open circuit voltage for a fully charged battery is 12 84 to 12 96 V Batteries may suffer irreversible capacity loss if stored in the open circuit state for a long period without recharging The maximum time that a fully charged IR 30EC battery may remain on open circuit is 6 months at a temperature of 25 C or 3 months at temperatures exceeding 32 C The date by which the battery must be recharged is stamped on the cardboard shipping box see Figure 7 2 gt NOTE Depending on where the battery was manufactured the charging date may also be found on a sticker attached to the battery housing P KS 23815 LIST 1 ONESTARVEDLEADACIDBATTERY GROSS WEIGHT IN LBS 22 FF D 999 COMCODE amp DATE MANUFACTURED ATTENTION THIS BATTER CHARGE NOT LATER TH Figure 7 2 Example for a cardboard box with charge no later than date Initial charging If the batteries cannot be installed within the indicated time period they must be charged externally Follow the instructions in the chapter Initial Charging in the Product Manual for IR Series Batteries A copy of these instructions is included in Figure 7 3 7 8 June 2002
36. mounting area are complete The recommended installation sequence is as follows 1 Prepare the wall space 2 Unpack the ONU and check the completeness of delivery 3 Mount the Krone cross connect in the ONU and mount the ONU on the wall 4 Properly ground the ONU Check the internal wiring and cabling Route the cable between the feeder distribution interface MDF and the ONU starting at either end 7 Install the optional TAP B cable if necessary before installing the tip ring T R cables The cable opening of the ONU housing is too small for easy installation of the TAP B cable after the T R cables are inserted 8 Route all T R cables to the AP positions and connect them to the blank faceplates 9 Complete the connections at the MDF including the cross connections for the metallic test path if required These steps can be carried out later if it is more convenient 10 Reroute the POTS subscribers as necessary if ADSL APs are used 11 Adjust the ONU number inside the ONU shelf 12 Connect the power cord to the customer s AC power supply 13 Install the four IR 30EC batteries and connect them to the internal battery cable 14 Install the ringing generator unit RGU in the ONU shelf 15 Install the power rectifier unit PRU and low voltage disconnect unit LVD in the rectifier shelf 16 Apply AC power and check the rectifier voltage 17 Connect the battery cable to the PRU and charge the batteries for the fi
37. performed before you connect any external cables to the ONU or power up the system Contents a Wall Mounting the ONU Uncrating the ONU Pre installation Drilling the mounting holes a Grounding the ONU Internal ground connections Grounding points and ESD ground jacks Parts for grounding Grounding practices Grounding procedure Checking the ONU grounding AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 Page 4 2 4 2 4 2 4 2 4 5 4 5 4 7 4 7 4 8 4 8 4 9 June 2002 4 1 363 211 521 Wall Mounting the ONU Mounting and Grounding the ONU Wall Mounting the ONU Uncrating the ONU In its default configuration the AnyMedia ONU for indoor applications is equipped with the ONU shelf rectifier shelf and 7A fan assembly All internal cabling is included The internal cables are routed and dressed near the positions where they will be connected later and are pre connected in some cases Uncrate the ONU inspect it for physical damage and verify that the fan unit and the factory installed shelves inside the ONU are secured Remove the loose parts delivered with the ONU the packing list and the drilling template Use the packing list to verify that your shipment is complete including application packs and cables Pre installation Select the wall where the ONU will be mounted and verify that it will be able to bear the 165 Ibs 75 kg weight of the fully equipped ONU Use only anchors that are appropriate for the wall materi
38. system supports two different DS1 frame formats extended superframe ESF or superframe SF DS1 link The general term DS1 link can denote a physical DS1 link when us ing a TDM COMDAC or a circuit emulated link when using an ACE COMDAC DS1 logical feeder port These ports are associated with the VRT structure of the AnyMedia Access System The VRT structure allows the flexible assignment of APs and CUs to VRTs that are associated with specific functional needs of partitioning the AnyMedia Access System Three forms of VRTs are allowed GR 303 up to 3 allowed TR 08 up to 20 al lowed and INA up to 20 allowed The total number of VRTs and the DS1 content of each VRT are limited by the total number of DS1 physical feeder ports Any DS1 physical feeder port can be associ ated with any DS1 logical feeder port DS1 physical feeder These ports provide two twisted pair transmit receive DS1 inter port faces to the AnyMedia Access System Up to 20 DS1 physical feeder ports are available and are physically identified through the AID with the DS1 shelf number pack number 1 to 5 and the port number 1 to 4 Dying gasp A message the ATU R transmits to the ATU C when its electrical power is being shut off The message indicates to a service techni cian or an administrator that an interruption on an ADSL line was caused by a power interruption at the ATU R and not caused by a transmission failure or an AnyMedia FAST shelf failure E
39. termi nal cable lug M6 6 mm Washer 6 3 Green wire minimum 6 mm 9 AWG AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 June 2002 4 7 363 211 521 Grounding the ONU Mounting and Grounding the ONU Grounding The wire for grounding is not part of the delivery Crimp do not solder the practices delivered cable lug to the customer supplied grounding cable Terminate or crimp this rack ground wire to the approved ground wire or ground ring bonding wire in the building gt NOTE In all cases comply with local grounding practices The MDF must have primary protection if the subscribers are located outside the building or the cabling is very long Grounding The ONU grounding connection is illustrated Figure 4 5 Use the following procedure procedure to ground the ONU Step 1 Move the cable access cover forward about 5 mm and remove the cover Step 2 Crimp do not solder the lug for M6 to the grounding wire on the ONU side Step 3 Connect the ONU housing to the available protective ground using the shortest route possible The minimum cross section of the stranded copper grounding cable must be gt 6 mm lt 9 AWG Step 4 Open the ONU door and loosen the fixing screw for the cable access cover on the right side of the ONU housing For positions of the cable access cover see Figure 4 4 Step 5 Move the cable access cover forward about 1 2 in 12 mm and remove the cover Step 6 Fasten the M6 cable lug at t
40. 1 Ohm or less is recommended AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 June 2002 4 9 363 211 521 Grounding the ONU Mounting and Grounding the ONU ee 4 10 June 2002 AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 Connecting Signal Lines Overview This section describes the procedures for connecting signal lines to the ONU Contents Page a Cabling Inventory 5 3 Schematic drawing for indoor application cables 5 3 Internal pre connected cables 5 6 External cables 5 7 m Installing the TAP B Cable Option 5 9 General 5 9 Cable length 5 11 TAP B cable installation procedure 5 11 Testing the connections to the MDF 5 12 a Installing T R Cables 5 13 Cable length 5 13 Cable marking labeling 5 13 Installing and attaching the T R cables 5 13 Testing the MDF 5 16 Protector blocks 5 16 a Installing the TAP100 Cable 5 17 Marking the TAP100 cable option 5 17 AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 June 2002 5 1 363 211 521 Overview Connecting Signal Lines o BE S Page Primary protection 5 17 Interconnecting the test application paths option 5 17 TAP100 specific cabling on the MDF 5 19 a Installing ADSL Services 5 20 Rerouting the ADSL cables 5 20 Connecting POTS in the ADSL AP 5 24 ONU Addressing 5 25 5 2 June 2002 AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 363 211 521 Connecting Signal Lines Cabling Inventory Cabling Inventory This section describes the internal an
41. 1 Safety m Figure 1 1 ESD Strap 1 4 2 ONU Product Description m Figure 2 1 Partially equipped indoor ONU front view 2 2 3 Overview of the Installation Process 4 Mounting and Grounding the ONU m Figure 4 1 ONU mounting dimensions in mm and wall layout for mounting 4 3 m Figure 4 2 Drilling template for wall mounting plywood mounting 4 4 m Figure 4 3 Powering grounding and ringing for the indoor ONU 4 6 m Figure 4 4 ESD ground jack and grounding studs points 4 7 m Figure 4 5 ONU Grounding 4 9 5 Connecting Signal Lines m Figure 5 1 ONU cabling indoor application 5 4 m Figure 5 2 Empty ONU with pre installed cabling 5 7 m Figure 5 3 Internal ONU cabling inside the electronics compartment outdoor application 5 8 m Figure 5 4 Wiring of TAP connector C1 5 10 m Figure 5 5 ONU shelf cabling arrangement for external cables 5 12 m Figure 5 6 Insertion and removal of an application pack connector 5 14 m Figure 5 7 Cable routing below the ONU shelf 5 15 mw Figure 5 8 Plug In arrangement and connector arrangement of the ONU shelf 5 16 m Figure 5 9 Cabling for integrated testing with TAP100 inserted in slot position AP 8 5 18 mw Figure 5 10 Principle for rerouting POTS over ADSL 5 24 m Figure 5 11 DIP switch for ONU addressing on the OCP position 5 25 AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 June 2002 xi 363 211 521 List of Figures ee 6 Connecting AC Power m Figure 6 1 IEC 60320 AC power connector and power cord 6 4 7 Installin
42. 5 5 5 9 5 11 5 12 5 13 5 14 5 15 5 16 5 17 5 19 5 20 Mounting dimensions 4 3 O OAP xviii OCP xviii 3 3 ONU Addressing 5 25 All cables 5 5 Main components 2 2 Powering 4 6 ONU Subshelf identifier adjustment 5 25 Ordering Documents xxii Grounding set 4 7 Ordering Guide xx P PBX support xviii Powering principle 4 6 Product Safety 1 10 PRU 8 4 Installation 8 4 Installing 8 2 LEDs 8 10 l 2 June 2002 R Rectifier 8 12 Replacing the fan unit in indoor applications 9 6 Rerouting POTS over ADSL 5 24 RGU Installing 8 2 Ringing ONU 4 6 Ringing frequencies 8 8 Ringing frequency adjustment 8 9 S Safety Battery 7 5 SDSL xviii SHDSL xviii Static charges 1 3 T TAP100 cable installation and marking 5 17 TAP B cable 5 19 TAP B cable crossconnections 5 19 TAP B cable crosswiring 5 18 TAP B cabling 5 10 Terms used xviii Test equipment 3 6 Thermal probe 8 11 Tools and test equipment 3 4 Tools recommended for installation 3 4 Torque values Grounding connections 4 8 Trademarks xix W Wall mount 4 2 Wall requirements 4 3 Warnings Battery handling 1 6 7 5 Wrist strap 1 3 Wrist strap antistatic 1 3 AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1
43. ANSI is a registered trademark of American National Standards Institute Inc AnyMedia is a registered trademark of Lucent Technologies Business OfficeXchange and BOX are trademarks of VINA Technologies Inc CLASS is a service mark of Telcordia Technologies Inc ClearReach is a trademark of Lucent Technologies Common Language is a registered trademark and CLE CLLI CLCI and CLFI are trademarks of Telcordia Technologies Inc ConnectReach and ConnectReach Plus are trademarks of Lucent Technologies Datapath is a trademark of CAE Electronics DMS is a trademark of Nortel Networks EWSD is a registered trademark of Siemens FAST is a trademark of Lucent Technologies ForeRunner is a registered trademark of Fore Systems Inc HiGain is a registered trademark of PairGain Technologies Inc Internet Explorer is a copyright of Microsoft Corporation LGX is a registered trademark of Lucent Technologies LINEAGE is a registered trademark of Lucent Technologies Local Call Routing and LCR are trademarks of VINA Technologies Inc LoopCare is a trademark of Tollgrade Communications Inc MainStreetXpress is a trademark of Newbridge Networks Corporation MCU is a registered trademark of Tollgrade Communications Inc Micro Bank is a registered trademark of Tollgrade Communications Inc Navis is a trademark of Lucent Technologies Netscape Navigator is a trademark of Netscape Communications Corporation NGRTH is a trademark of General Signal Corporation
44. AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 363 211 521 Installing the Batteries Le Unpacking and completeness check Battery Handling and Preparation The purpose of the initial charge is to compensate for self discharge that occurs in the interval between manufacture and installation Under normal circumstances the battery will regain most of its capacity after several hours on float charge 90 capacity should be obtained within 24 hours of float charge All batteries have similar date codes and storage histories and none are more than 6 months old or they have been maintained according to the Battery Storage section of this product manual The batteries have dissimilar date codes more than one month apart and they are within the required recharge period charge by date The batteries are older than 6 months or have not been maintained according to the Battery Storage section of this product manual Make voltage and polarity checks and connect string s to plant Charge at the float voltage of 13 5 0 06 volts per battery Using an external charger charge the string at 13 98 0 06 volts per 12V bat tery for 24 hours Continue the charge for another 24 hours at the plant float voltage 13 5 0 06 volts Make voltage and polarity checks and connect the string s to the plant Do not install Replace batteries If the storage temperature exceeds 90 F 32 C the open circuit time should not exceed 3 m
45. Cable ED7C818 36 Group 1 50 ft 15 m ED7C818 36 Group 1A 100 ft 30 5 m ED7C818 36 Group 1B 200 ft 61 m ED7C818 36 Group 1C 300 ft 91 5 m TAP B cable Use the following procedure to install the TAP B cable installation d Step 1 Verify that the T R cables are not installed procedure Step 2 Pull the TAP B cable assembly with its connector end through the right hand side of the ONU opening Route it along the bottom of the rectifier shelf to the gap between the rectifier shelf and the ONU shelf Step 3 Lead the cable in the gap upwards through the right opening of the ONU shelf to the 37 pin male connector C1 For cable routing of the ONU shelf see Figure 5 5 Step 4 Add cable ties to the rectifier shelf as needed to dress the TAP B cable Step 5 Mate the TAP B connector with connector C1 of the ONU shelf Step 6 Check the labeling on the cable connector make any required correction Mark the MDF cable end with the same label designation Step 7 Connect the TAP B cable to the MDF according to local regulations or according to the instructions furnished by the network provider gt NOTE The TAP B cable is a 13 wire cable of which only 5 wires are used Four of them are for the circuit pair and the drop pair of the metallic test path The fifth one is for future use For the cabling interconnections of the metallic test path see Figure 5 9 on page 5 18 AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 Jun
46. ESD considerations handling batteries connecting to AC utility and other built in equipment m ONU Product Description This chapter describes principal components that comprise the indoor AnyMedia ONU ms Overview of the Installation Process This chapter summarizes the ONU installation and cabling process and lists the tools and test instruments you will need to accomplish the installation Mounting the ONU This chapter describes the procedures for mounting the cross connects in the ONU termination compartment for mounting installing the ONU and for connecting it to the site ground These mounting procedures must be performed before you connect any external cables to the ONU or power up the system a Installing and Grounding External Cables This section describes the procedures for installing and grounding the signal and power cables required by the ONU m Connecting the Signal Lines This chapter provides the procedures for installing the ONU copper and fiber signal cables m Connecting AC Power This chapter describes the requirements and procedures for connecting the ONU to the local electric utility Installing the Batteries This section provides the procedures for unpacking inspecting and mounting the batteries in the ONU battery compartment xvi June 2002 AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 363 211 520 About This Manual Introduction i eer m System Power Up This chapter provides th
47. F Connector Part 1 LPA300 POTS xDSL a Wire Colors LPA350 L Number A432LPA LPA404 BPS e oc a z s we ew mo OF pas or of as SR E 5 20 June 2002 AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 363 211 521 Connecting Signal Lines Installing ADSL Services Table 5 5 Circuit Assignment for VF Connector Part 1 Continued LPA300 POTS xDSL LPA350 L PA380 LP A432LPA Circuit Number 24 G R BK G G BK co BLY AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 June 2002 5 21 363 211 521 Installing ADSL Services Connecting Signal Lines Table 5 6 Circuit Assignment for VF Connector Part 2 POTS xDSL HDSL2 SoS Circuit Wire Colors Number LPA810 LPU116 Lpsi04 LPS7160 O o ae am Lee BL R EOE RE BR R AE BL BK O BK G BK BR BK S BK BLY BL W O W W O BR D Ee waja WBR KIR BL R CRG o Ra Ecce ie BL BK BLY BR W Orange BR R 5 22 June 2002 AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 363 211 521 Connecting Signal Lines Table 5 7 Circuit Number Installing ADSL Services Circuit Assignment for VF Connector Part 3 Wire Colors LPA41 LPA416 amp LPA419 amp LPA419 LPA605 e ae e a oe a waa gt wo ow e we ew 5 S W e met Bur e ma o rer m 12 BK O O BK 15 BK S S BK e a v m e wo w W G G W 21 W S S W a f wmf 24 R G a m 26 S R 31 BK S S
48. G W BL TAP_EQ T Tip a wire Equipment a wire port1 34 TAPB_FAC Td W BR W O TAP_FAC T Tip a wire Facility a wire port2 connected but not used s mesen ws ee E s mere ro ame a Cable colors valid for the ED7C818 36 Gr1 1C cable b For future use if the TAP100 is used for malile h NE ee seizing multi TAPs or for multiple testing with the remote test unit via wired OR currently not used c Used for crossconnecting to the test application path for Equipment corresponds to R1 T1 of TAP100 1st POTS port d Used for cross connecting to the test application path for Facility corresponds to R2 T2 of TAP100 2nd POTS port required for ISDN testing for example AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 June 2002 5 19 363 211 521 Installing ADSL Services Connecting Signal Lines Installing ADSL Services Rerouting the lf ADSL APs are used the engineering work order or the network provider will ADSL cables specify which POTS subscribers are to be provided ADSL service These subscriber lines must be disconnected from the subscriber side of the MDF and routed to the POTS port input terminals for the ADSL AP on the switch side of the MDF The ADSL output terminals must be routed to the terminals on the subscriber side where the original POTS subscriber line was connected The ADSL AP connector wiring is illustrated inTable 5 5 Table 5 5 Circuit Assignment for V
49. Lucent Technologies Bell Labs Innovations AnyMedia Access System 24 Channel Optical Network Unit Installation Manual for Indoor Applications Issue 1 June 2002 363 211 521 Copyright 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 Lucent Technologies All Rights Reserved This material is protected by the copyright laws of the United States and other countries It may not be reproduced distributed or altered in any fashion by any entity including other Lucent Technologies Inc Business Units or Divisions without the permission of Lucent Technologies Inc For permission to reproduce or distribute contact your local Lucent Technologies Inc Account Executive Notice Every effort was made to ensure that the information in this document was complete and accurate at the time of printing However information is subject to change Federal Communications Commission FCC Notification and Repair Information NOTE This equipment has been tested 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 instructions manual may cause interference to radio communications Operation of this equipment in a residence is likely to cause harmful interferen
50. Mitel Llesscaall Uecessmll Miscssml Lleacsaall esusasil Llescsanil Litas rientation ma Plastic strap Q EX CS CX of FR CIOTOLRS OOO OOOO Fan connector J204 Fan mounting screws Handles for pull out Figure 9 1 Position of the fan unit with the fan filter and the mounting elements Step 2 Insert the new filter into position with the two arrows on the metalwork pointing up The arrows are pointed upwards when the filter designation for example FF X5 is right side up Step 3 Push the filter firmly to the back until it no longer protrudes AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 June 2002 9 5 363 211 521 Replacing the Fan Unit Fan Unit and Battery Maintenance Replacing the Fan Unit Fan unit ordering The ONU fan filter ordering codes are listed in Table 9 2 codes Table 9 2 Fan unit for replacement Designation Comcode Apparatus Code 7A fan unit C 1669 No 848403754 A 108583428 N A Fan filter FF X55 Class 2 324A 848456943 N A Replacing the fan Use the following procedure to replace the fan unit unit Step 1 Referring to Figure 9 1 locate the filter cable connector J204 on the right side of the fan unit and disconnect Step 2 Remove the fan filter and dispose of it properly Step 3 Loosen the two captive mounting screws about 7 turns Step 4 Pull out the fan unit using the two handles Take care that the fan cable is not crushed Push the
51. Norwegian Scheme by Det Norske Veritas DNV since June 1993 ISO 9001 is an international quality standard recognized by more than 90 countries worldwide It is a model for quality assurance in design development production installation and servicing How Are We Doing Document Title AnyMedia Access System 24 Channel Optical Network Unit Installation Manual for Indoor Applications Document No 363 211 521 Issue No 1 Date June 2002 Lucent Technologies welcomes your feedback on this document Your comments can be of great value in helping us to improve our documentation 1 Please rate the effectiveness of this document in the following areas EaseofUse d o fax E E E Completeness o SY Accuracy re Organizaion S Appearance Examples Sid mson Sd Overall Sansen 2 Please check the ways you feel we could improve this document O Improve the overview introduction O Make it more concise brief O Improve the table of contents O Add more step by step procedures tutorials O Improve the organization O Add more troubleshooting information O Include more figures O Make it less technical O Add more examples O Add more betier quick reference aids O Add more detail O Improve the index Please provide details for the suggested improvement If we may contact you concerning your comments please complete the following Name Telephone Number Company Organization Date Address When y
52. O 2 E 2 A g O D v D N a 5 5 8 v 8 Zz we 5 gt gt 2 ne S Z am D T E E g Pes 52 Z ENIN D S 5 AZ COPY of the Tyco Product Manual IR 30EC and IR 40EC Batteries Issue 7 Comcode A 3 June 2002 AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 363 211 521 Installation and Maintenance Record Installation and Maintenance Record B S AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 June 2002 A 4 List of Acronyms o A D AAL ABN ABSBH AC ACD ACE ACF ACO ADPCM ADSL ADSL R AFM AID AIP AIS AIS L AIU ALC AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 analog digital ATM adaptation layer active balance network average busy season busy hour alternating current automatic call distributor ATM circuit emulation AC fault alarm cutoff adaptive differential PCM asymmetric digital subscriber line ADSL transceiver unit remote end ATM feeder multiplexer access identifier access interface platform or alarm interface panel not used as ac alarm indication signal alarm indication signal line access interface unit automatic loss control automatic level loss compensation June 2002 AC 1 Le AC 2 June 2002 ALC5 ALIT AMI ANSI AOS AP APOG ARM ASCII ATM ATU ATU C ATU R AWG B8ZS BAIU BB BCF BDFB BER BIST BITS BRI BRITE BT BVC BVPT BWM automatic loss compensation 5 automatic line insulation test alternate mark inversion
53. Option 5 9 m Installing T R Cables 5 13 m Installing the TAP100 Cable 5 17 m Installing ADSL Services 5 20 m ONU Addressing 5 25 6 Connecting AC Power m Overview 6 1 m Installing the AC power cable 6 2 m Connecting AC Power 6 3 7 Installing the Batteries m Overview 7 1 m Battery Option 7 3 m Battery Safety 7 5 m Battery Handling and Preparation 7 7 m Installing the Batteries 7 13 8 System Power Up m Overview 8 1 m Modules and Ordering Codes 8 2 m Installing the PRU 8 4 m Installing the LVD 8 6 m Installing the Optional RGU 8 8 m Applying AC Power 8 10 m Checking the Rectifier and Batteries 8 12 m Connecting and Charging the Batteries 8 14 viii June 2002 AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 363 211 521 Table of Contents ee 9 Fan Unit and Battery Maintenance m Overview 9 1 m Maintenance Actions 9 3 mw Cleaning the Fan Filter 9 4 m Replacing the Fan Unit 9 6 m Battery Maintenance Practice 9 7 m Battery Maintenance Procedures 9 9 m Battery String Float Voltage 9 11 m External Charging 9 16 m Battery Compartment Maintenance 9 18 m Battery Replacement 9 20 A Installation and Maintenance Record m Installation and Maintenance Record A 1 List of Acronyms Glossary Index AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 June 2002 IX 363 211 521 Table of Contents B SeS x June 2002 AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 363 211 521 List of Figures E SS List of Figures
54. P that is cross connected at the VP level on the AFM LOF on ADSL line ADSL frame synchronization has been lost at the ADSL for at least 2 5 seconds AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 June 2002 GL 11 363 211 521 Glossary o BE LOF on upstream SDSL The SDSL signal from the CPE is considered to be in a LOF condi line tion after 2 5 0 5 seconds of contiguous lof defect The LOF condi tion is cleared when 10 0 5 seconds have occurred that do not have the lof defect The loss of cell delineation LOCD event counter data is mapped to lof The firmware collects this 0 5 second interval data If there are 2 5 seconds of contiguous lof it is consid ered to be LOF This LOCD event counter data is accumulated and reported on a 15 minute and 1 day basis Logical feeder port An entity used to address a SONET path or a protection group The logical feeder port concept allows addressing of attributes or enti ties that are common to all physical feeder ports associated with the logical feeder port and that are independent of simplex or duplex mode The AFMO has two logical feeder ports Logical ports Port assignments made through software as opposed to actual physical ports Loop Formally represents the connection from the customer s telephone to the switch Has been recently used to represent the copper cable from the DLC channel unit s or application pack s tip ring output to the customer s telephone Used equivalent to li
55. SL The actual ADSL transmit power level This value may be lower transmission than the provisioned PSDM PSDM of ADSL A provisionable value representing the maximum allowed ADSL transmission transmit power level The ADSL transceiver may choose a lower power level based on line conditions Pulse code modulation Modulation in which an analog signal is sampled and the sample is PCM quantized and coded Standard North American sampling is 8 000 times per second with 8 bits representing each sample pulse giving a transmission rate of 64 kbps Q Quality of service QoS An indicator of the performance of a transmission system on the In ternet and other networks QoS is measured in transmission rate error rates latency and other characteristics R Real time variable bit A service category with strict cell transfer and delay variation de rate rt VBR mands and cell loss requirements Remote login Login into the AnyMedia Access System via IAO LAN ROC or Ex ternal System LAN over TCP IP DCN from OSs EM or GSI Reports only user User login that allows access to GET messages for retrieving sys broadband tem information and autonomous reports Reports only users do not have access to any SNMP messages that create change or re move service or to any security messages that affect other users AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 June 2002 GL 15 Reports only user narrowband RFI on ADSL line Right of way
56. Warning Extinguished Thermal probe connected Alarm Red Lights Battery balance failure or or extinguished batteries and rectifier o k Thermal Shutdown Red Extinguished Rectifier o k a Flashes at overload b If batteries are charged for the first time this failure can be ignored for the first 48 hours Step 4 Record the charging date in the installation record Step 5 Charge the batteries for at least 48 hours without interruption Step 6 After 48 hours switch OFF the battery circuit breaker on the LVD and locate the battery cable connector J3 inserted in J3 of the LVD Step 7 Disconnect J3 to measure the open circuit battery string voltage Step 8 Measure the string voltage on the outermost pins of the battery cable connector J3 and record in the installation record See Figure 8 5 on page 8 13 for the wiring of J3 gt NOTE The measured voltage must be at least 51 2 Volts Due to the inner voltage drop in the LVD the battery voltage measured on the test terminals will be 1 V lower than the actual battery string voltage 8 14 June 2002 AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 363 211 521 System Power Up Connecting and Charging the Batteries gt NOTE Do not interrupt the first charging and the batteries should be charged fully before discharging them on a working ONU Step 9 Connect the battery cable connector J3 to the LVD Step 10 Switch the battery circuit breaker to ON gt NOTE It
57. a Access System this parameter is used to choose whether or not interleaving is used on an ADSL circuit If the latency parameter is set to Interleaved then interleaving is used If the La tency parameter is set to Fast then interleaving is not used This parameter is called Latency because the amount of transmission delay through an ADSL transmission span is affected by interleav ing Legacy services A large set of service types traditionally supported by the DLC net work element NE Lightguide build out An attenuation network for optical signals between ATM circuit LBO packs in an ATM switch or multiplexer and the AFMOs in an Any Media shelf or between separate AMFOs in multiple AnyMedia shelves in a daisy chain LBO guarantees the proper signal level Line Formally represents the connection from the customer s telephone to the switch Has been recently used to represent the copper cable from the DLC channel unit s or application pack s tip ring output to the customer s telephone Used equivalent to loop but usually does not include the telephone set Local login Login into the AnyMedia Access System via the CIT or External System LAN 10BaseT interface from the collocated GSI or dumb terminal Local test desk LTD is a test position located in a local end office that is capable of accessing and making metallic tests on subscriber loops served out of that office including those on digital loop carrier systems Local VP A V
58. able ED 70818 36 Gr 1x ONU shelf C1 to MDF example for TAP100 using AP8 5 19 m Table 5 5 Circuit Assignment for VF Connector Part 1 5 20 m Table 5 6 Circuit Assignment for VF Connector Part 2 5 22 m Table 5 7 Circuit Assignment for VF Connector Part 3 5 23 6 Connecting AC Power m Table 6 1 Fusing values for AC power 6 2 7 Installing the Batteries m Table 7 1 Delivered battery set 7 3 8 System Power Up m Table 8 1 Module Codes 8 3 9 Fan Unit and Battery Maintenance m lable 9 1 Fan filter for replacement 9 4 m Table 9 2 Fan unit for replacement 9 6 m lable 9 3 Required maintenance intervals for IR 30EC batteries 9 9 m lable 9 4 Suggested maintenance routines additional 9 10 AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 June 2002 xiii 363 211 521 List of Tables ee xiv June 2002 AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 err About This Manual Introduction Purpose This Installation Manual IM provides installation instructions for Lucent Technologies AnyMedia Optical Network Unit ONU for indoor applications Another model of the ONU is available for outdoor applications but is not discussed in this manual If you are interested in obtaining more information on the ONU for outdoor applications contact your Lucent Technologies representative Scope The ONU IM is intended to enable installation personnel to install the AnyMedia ONU In principal the ONU will be delivered with all passive system compon
59. adings the installation date and the first readings have been recorded See Appendix A Installation and Maintenance Record Verify that the batteries have been on continuous uninterrupted float for at least 48 hours Step 2 Switch the battery circuit breaker to OFF Step 3 Locate and disconnect 2 pin battery connectors Batt1 through Batt4 in the battery compartment The wiring for the 2 pin battery connector is illustrated in Figure 9 3 9 14 June 2002 AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 363 211 521 Fan Unit and Battery Maintenance Battery String Float Voltage View looking onto the Side view of battery contacts of battery assembly assembly connector connector front view f BATTERY 48 RTN R BATTERY 48 V BK a Figure 9 3 Wiring of the 14 AWG lead battery assembly connectors A WARNING The battery cabling is not fuse protected for the battery interconnections up to the battery circuit breaker When taking voltage readings a short in this area can cause an arc that will destroy batteries and cables leading to malfunctioning of the complete ONU Step 4 Measure the battery voltage for each battery on the 2 pin 14 AWG lead assembly connector and record the battery voltage in the Installation and Maintenance Record Because float readings are affected by discharges and recharges these readings must be taken when the batteries have been on continuous uninterrupted
60. al and its condition For mounting to plywood verify that the board is at least 1 in 25 mm thick and fastened securely to the wall The wood screws furnished with the ONU are for plywood mounting Drilling the Use the following procedure to drill the mounting holes mounting holes Step 1 If you will be mounting more than one ONU on the same wall or plywood board mark the ONU name and number on the wall plywood in the space where each ONU is to be located Step 2 Ensure that there is at least 32 in 800 mm free space in front of the ONU you are mounting as measured from the wall or plywood board Refer to Figure 4 1 for ONU dimensions Step 3 Use Figure 4 2 to make a drilling template for the nine mounting holes Level and attach the drilling template to the wall plywood using tape or thumbtacks and mark the positions of the mounting holes Step 4 If you are mounting the ONU on a plywood board drill the pilot holes for wood screws using a drill bit with a diameter of about 1 5 to 1 6 mm Skip the next step and proceed to Step 8 Step 5 If you are mounting the ONU directly to a masonry wall verify that the wall is able to bear the weight of the ONU Step 6 Using the drilling template drill mounting holes for wall anchors using a percussion drill having an appropriate diameter for the anchors you will use Use only anchors appropriate to the wall material condition Step 7 Clean the anchor mounting holes and install the anchors
61. allation and Maintenance Record Step 2 Verify that the battery cable is not connected to battery Input connector J3 of the LVD Step 3 Switch the battery circuit breaker on the LVD to ON Step 4 Measure the rectifier voltage on the test terminals on the faceplate of the LVD Add 1 V due to the voltage drop caused by the protective resistors and record in the installation record gt NOTE Due to the internal voltage drop in the LVD the voltage measured on the test terminals will be 1 V lower than the voltage that is applied to the ONU shelf Alternatively you can measure the rectifier voltage at the terminals of battery input connector J3 on the faceplate of the LVD without voltage drop but you must take care to avoid short circuiting the rectifier Figure 8 5 illustrates the wiring of J3 8 12 June 2002 AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 363 211 521 System Power Up Checking the Rectifier and Batteries Front view looking onto the LVD connector J3 Front view looking onto the Side view of contacts of cable connector J3 cable connector J3 48RTN rectifier RTNBAT R of battery string MIDPOINT R MIDPOINT for battery 48V rectifier 48BAT Bk of battery string BATTERY INPUT Figure 8 5 Wiring of connector J3 for the LVD and wiring of battery cable connector J3 Step 5 Switch the battery circuit breaker to OFF Step 6
62. am Nonvolatile memory on the COMDAC and the AFM used to store storage NVPS the load image O OLIU An optical line interface unit OLIU circuit pack interfaces with a SONET multiplexer s optical line in the transmit and receive direc tions Open systems A seven layer model that defines the protocol standards for data interconnection communications reference model OSIRM Operations system A centralized system of software and or hardware for remotely test OS ing or administering telecommunications equipment e g SARTS LoopCare formerly MLT OPS INE etc Optical carrier level N The optical carrier level signal in SONET that results from an OC N STS N signal conversion In SONET the basic transmission speed unit is 58 34 Mbps Overlay solutions Additional infrastructure to carry new services P Packet switch public A public data network that utilizes packet switching technology data network PSPDN X 25 SMDS ATM Partial packet discard In severe ATM traffic congestion the traffic manager discards pack PPD ets arriving from any connection regardless of whether or not the traffic on the connection is exceeding its bandwidth The traffic manager discards all remaining cells in the packet even if the se vere congestion clears in the meantime Peak cell rate PCR A tratfic parameter measured in cells per second that specifies the maximum number of cells that can be transmitted on an ATM net work PCR
63. as follows Step 1 Use the ITE 6675 Streak Mate and ITE 7079 AIU Test Fixture to test the installed cables Step 2 Repeat step 1 for each T R cable Protector blocks AnyMedia Access System installations require a protected wire system which consists of gas tube arrestors gas discharge tube GDT on all outside plant telecommunication circuits primary protection Follow local regulations or regulations specified by the network provider to install protector blocks 5 16 June 2002 AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 363 211 521 Connecting Signal Lines Installing the TAP100 Cable Installing the TAP100 Cable Marking the The TAP 100 cable is only required if the test application pack TAP100 is installed TAP100 cable option One of the previously installed T R cables is used for the TAP100 cable option Use the following procedure to mark the TAP100 cable Step 1 If the slot for the TAP100 plug in is known mark the appropriate T R cable on the MDF Step 2 Locate the 4 wires for circuit numbers 1 and 2 tip and ring wire of subscribers 1 and 2 and mark them gt NOTE Only these 2 ports are used by the TAP100 for the test application path B Instructions for interconnection of test application paths are provided later in this section Primary protection If the MDF is located outside the building the T R cable coming from the TAP100 should have primary protection Follow local regulations or regulations speci
64. b d G ug g u H diie i o a cae 9 29 oO gt o YER 29 cS a N a E AC power supply cord 23 HNZ GFZ Z a Il i SOOO SOOO i To Battery1 Batti G 6 e om probe Banz ill Batt3 0000 0000 i To Battery 4 Batta ll i Note If the ONU is delivered with the LVD already installed the battery cable connector J3 is connected see upper right corner of the figure Figure 5 2 Empty ONU with pre installed cabling External cables The right side of Figure 5 3 illustrates the wires and cables that you must insert into the ONU shelf and connect Instructions are provided in the next section AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 June 2002 5 7 363 211 521 Cabling Inventory Connecting Signal Lines B f amet fan Tubing to Cabinet fan unit pressure sensor 848545364 848456984 2 Door S switches gt To AC circuit breaker panel oo c z ur Sams Q z e S i O fm Ka S x lt ar 4 L 848545349 ONU shelf Option serial cable for PC GSI R Rectifier backplane Fiber pigtail SC type OP ITNE F e Se IN Ye O ja lila lila lia la llia lila Iia O le Heo He ILILILILIL a O 408415909 st 8 x 848573341 O O E 848569 for future parallel operation Batt Temp Probe PRU To termination compartment 848444469 848545356 848456968 848545380 Tubing for pressure sensor only one tube connected
65. batteries with 40 10 inch pounds about 4 4 Nm for IR 30EC batteries A CAUTION Overtightening of the inter battery connectors could strip the bolt and or nut threads resulting in loose connections Ensure that all battery connections are tight with the exception of the connection that is being opened For retorquing use an insulated torque wrench Use the torque values specified by the battery manufacturer 9 18 June 2002 AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 363 211 521 Fan Unit and Battery Maintenance Battery Compartment Maintenance A CAUTION An explosion could occur if sparks are created near the battery string Check that the batteries are not charging or discharging before loosening or removing battery connections as sparks may occur Switch the battery circuit breaker to OFF Use insulated tools and discharge all static electricity from your body before performing any work As always adequate ventilation must be provided AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 June 2002 9 19 363 211 521 Battery Replacement Fan Unit and Battery Maintenance Battery Replacement Any fully charged IR 30EC battery at float that reads less than 13 V at 77 F 25 C is considered shorted and must be replaced For IR 30EC batteries it is recommended that all 4 batteries be replaced if they are older than about 1 to 2 years 9 20 June 2002 AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1
66. bel designation Step 4 Snap in the cable connector to the blank faceplate If APs are already installed lift the ejector of the AP before connecting Figure 5 6 illustrates how to remove and insert an AP connector La TO PES zw _ lt Connector insertion Connector removal 1 Lift ejector slider 1 Push down on ejector slider 2 Insert connector 2 Remove connector Figure 5 6 Insertion and removal of an application pack connector Step 5 Arrange the T R cable so that the T R cable reaches the grounding bracket fingers of the ONU shelf directly below the application pack gt NOTE The T R cable is partly shielded An additional braided shield is provided from the application pack connector upward to a length of about 2 ft 0 6 m Use shrink tubing or cable ties to install T R cables Step 6 Place the T R cable flush against the grounding bracket finger so that the braided shield is in good metallic contact with the bracket gt NOTE If the shrink tubing covers the braided shield in the grounding finger area shorten the shrink tubing 5 14 June 2002 AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 363 211 521 Connecting Signal Lines Installing T R Cables E SS Step 7 Snap a cable tie over the cable and grounding bracket and fasten them together to ensure good strain relief Step 8 Carefully place the cables into the bottom of the ONU shelf so that eight cables will fit in this area and allow the applicati
67. ble in varying lengths however any excess may be cut off to relieve cable rack congestion Table 5 3 Length of T R cables ED7C818 30 Group 1x Description Length T R cable 50 ft x 15 m 200 61 Cable marking If the T R cable connectors have not been labeled previously mark them in labeling accordance with the route system numbering scheme The MDF circuit labeling should follow this numbering pattern Installing and Install the T R cables in the following order attaching the T R bl Step 1 Pull the first T R cable with its connector end through the right hand cables side of the ONU opening and route the cable along the bottom of the ONU shelf to the AP 1 position Step 2 Orient the mating cable connector so that the T R cable exits upwards towards the application pack For cable routing of the ONU shelf see Figure 5 5 on page 5 12 gt NOTE the quantity of T R cables that must be installed and to which AP position they must be routed is stated in the engineering work order for the ONU shelf Alternatively it must be given by the network provider A maximum of 96 subscribers can be connected to the ONU For positions of the APs see Figure 5 8 on page 5 16 AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 June 2002 5 13 363 211 521 Installing T R Cables Connecting Signal Lines o BE ee Step 3 Stamp or mark the cable connector before mating it to its associated AP connector Mark the MDF cable end with the same la
68. cable to the right side Step 5 Remove the fan unit and dispose of it properly Step 6 Insert the new fan unit Move the fan cable down and to the right so that it is not squeezed Step 7 Tighten the two captive mounting screws Step 8 Insert the new filter into position with the two arrows on the metalwork pointing up The arrows are pointed upwards when the filter designation for example FF X5 is right side up Step 9 Push the filter firmly to the back until it no longer protrudes Step 10 Connect the fan cable to connector J204 Step 11 Check by listening or by observing the red Fan Alarm LED to ensure that all fans in the fan unit work properly Check the air current above the ONU and above the rectifier shelf 9 6 June 2002 AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 363 211 521 Fan Unit and Battery Maintenance Battery Maintenance Practice Battery Maintenance Practice Battery safety For safe battery handling always take the following basic precautions m Use only properly insulated tools and test equipment Remove all metallic objects key chains glasses rings watches or any other jewelry Wear safety glasses a lest circuits before touching Lock out and tag any circuit breakers fuses when possible to prevent accidental turn on Be aware of potential hazards before servicing equipment m Identify exposed hazardous electrical voltages on connectors wiring etc Note the cond
69. ce in which case the user will be required to correct the interference at his own expense Security In rare instances unauthorized individuals make connections to the telecommunications network In such event applicable tariffs require that the customer pay all network charges for traffic Lucent Technologies Inc cannot be responsible for such charges and will not make any allowance or give any credit for charges that result from unauthorized access Document Ordering Information The ordering number for this document is 363 211 521 To order this document call 1 888 LUCENT8 RBOC BOC customers should process document orders or standing document orders through their Company Documentation Coordinator For more ordering information refer to How to Order Documents in the section About This Document How to Comment on This Document A feedback form is located immediately after the trademarks page of this document Please send or fax your comments and suggestions to ATTENTION Lucent Technologies Attn Customer Documentation Coordinator Room 14D 311 PO Box 903 67 Whippany Road Whippany NJ 07981 0903 Fax 973 581 6646 1 Language of Statute Trademarks 4TEL is a registered trademark of Teradyne Inc 5ESS is a registered trademark of Lucent Technologies ACCUNET is a service mark of AT amp T Acrobat is a registered trademark of Adobe Systems Incorporated Adobe is a registered trademark of Adobe Systems Incorporated
70. ctifier shelf backplane ONU shelf female D1 848457008 Alarm cable female J202 E2 E3 plug Rectifier shelf backplane Inside ONU housing upper M6 848467189 Interconnection wire E1 plug grounding stud FRMGND 48VRTN Internal cables delivered which have to be connected during installation LVD female J3 Battery dangler cable connectors 848456968 Battery set cable female for battery 1 to 4 Rectifier shelf backplane 7A fan unit male J204 848456950 Fan cable male J203 Rectifier shelf backplane Door switch the two lower plugs 848456992 Intrusion door switch cable E2 E3 Rectifier unit male Customer s power supply open 848471181 AC power supply cord IEC 320 AC power sup end for fixed interconnection Issue 1 3 m 10 feet ply inlet Input Must fit to the appropriate recti Rectifier unit male fier see footnotes IEC 60320 AC power sup ply inlet Input 848506820 AC power supply cord 3 m 10 feet Rectifier unit male battery Ring type thermal probe inserted temp probe connector between the metallic case and 84844446 Thermal probe plastic housing of battery 3 External cables prefabricated which have to be routed and to be connected during installation ONU shelf AP 1 to AP 8 MDF ED 7C818 30Gr1x T R wires Lucent standard also for optional TAP100 cable 50 ft to 300 ft x 15 mto 91 5 m ONU shelf male C1 MDF ED 7C818 36Gr1x TAP B cable for ONU shelf option 50 ft to 300
71. ction and converting ATM signals to the original format in the receive direc tion The capability for a given pack to relinquish its functionality to an other instance of the same circuit pack The circuit pack that pro vides system functionality is called the active pack while the circuit pack that protects the active pack is called the standby pack When a switch occurs the roles of the active and standby circuit packs are reversed A switch occurs for example when the active pack fails or when an administrator issues an OAM amp P command AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 363 211 521 Glossary o BE SS ClearReach feature The ClearReach feature for the ConnectReach and ConnectReach Plus terminals that improves modem performance The ClearReach feature requires voice frequency data enhancement VFDE in the AnyMedia FAST shelf Collocation Grouping entities in the same physical location Common unit A unit or application pack that performs the main bandwidth man agement and control for the AnyMedia FAST shelf Competitive access The ability for nonincumbent carriers to provide local access Configuration Consists of a set of functions to exercise control over elements in management the network including initialization parameter setting starting and stopping and collection of information about the configuration Connection admission CAC is a set of actions taken by the network during the call set up con
72. d acid batteries generate hydrogen gas even under open circuit conditions If not permitted to escape this gas can build up to explosive concentrations An explosion could occur when sparks are created near the battery string Therefore do not install batteries in totally sealed enclosures During maintenance actions check the battery fan and that the ventilation opening in the battery compartment are free 1 6 June 2002 AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 363 211 521 Safety Battery Safety Le Battery terminals Overtightening of the inter battery connectors could strip the bolt and or nut threads resulting in loose connections Always consider the maximum torque specified by the battery manufacturer Taking voltage Be very careful when taking voltage readings to prevent accidental grounding or readings shorting of leads during measuring operations Connections at the meter must be secure and free of any possibility of touching or becoming grounded Never remove connections at the meter end without first disconnecting the test leads from the battery Remove test lead connections at the battery immediately after each reading is taken Review the safety precautions Acid spill lf a large acid spill occurs use agricultural or industrial lime instead of soda for neutralization before clean up If lime is not available you may use baking soda Wear eye protection devices and rubber gloves when using lime on electrolyte spills Spr
73. d external cables of the ONU for wall mounted indoor applications Schematic drawing Figure 5 1 illustrates the wiring and cabling of the indoor ONU The external for indoor cables that are inserted and connected during installation appear on the right side application cables of the drawing These cables are described in Table 5 1 AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 June 2002 5 3 363 211 521 Cabling Inventory Connecting Signal Lines 848457008 2 848456984 9 848457008 FRMGND ONU shelf 848456968 Rectifier backplane 848456950 for future parallel operation Batt Temp Probe 848471181 ED 7C818 36 Gr1x ea el Serial Cable for PC GSI 4 Battery Compartment Ring type thermal probe inserted between metallic case and battery Note For the first deliveries there are rectifiers with an IEC 320 AC inlet For this rectifiers the appropriate power cord 848471181 must be used Figure 5 1 ONU cabling indoor application 5 4 June 2002 AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 363 211 521 Connecting Signal Lines Cabling Inventory o MMMM NMMN_ HHN yyTN T T T TRST ST _ Table 5 1 ONU cable connections Cable used for Destination 1 Destination 2 Equipment Code or Comcode Internal cables connected at factory ONU shelf male A1 848456984 Power cable for internal 48 V DC Rectifier shelf backplane male J201 Re
74. dering Guide 363 211 125 Jumpers can be used to adjust the RGU ringing frequency as described in the following installation procedure The factory setting is 20 Hz RGU installation Use the following procedure to install the RGU procedure Step 1 Unpack the RGU and verify that the jumpers are set to 20 Hz Figure 8 4 illustrates the jumper positions that correspond to the available ringing frequencies Step 2 Verify that the latch on the RGU is swung out OPEN position If it is not swing the latch upwards about 90 degrees Step 3 Slide the RGU into the upper position of the ONU shelf with the printed board to the right and push the RGU into the shelf See Figure 8 1 for the RGU shelf position Step 4 Lock the RGU in position by pressing firmly on the rounded indentation on the top latch until it clicks into place 8 8 June 2002 AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 363 211 521 System Power Up Installing the Optional RGU Fuse 2 A time lag ED m7 B G a a o B l P l l l Ringing Jumper Jumper l bite frequency MP1 a Je BE o me ps l l a Begs I l l l PE Figure 8 4 Location and settings of the jumpers MP1 MP2 on the RGU AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 June 2002 8 9 363 211 521 Applying AC Power System Power Up Applying AC Power The AC power supply should be connected to the customer s AC power source as described in Connecting AC Pow
75. dia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 System Power Up Overview This chapter provides the procedures for installing power related modules applying AC power and activating the batteries Contents Modules and Ordering Codes a Installing the PRU PRU features PRU installation procedure Installing the LVD LVD functions and features LVD installation procedures a Installing the Optional RGU RGU functions RGU installation procedure a Applying AC Power a Checking the Rectifier and Batteries Verifying the batteries and rectifier Connecting and Charging the Batteries Procedure for connecting and charging the batteries AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 Page 8 2 8 4 8 4 8 6 8 6 8 6 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 10 8 12 8 12 8 14 8 14 June 2002 8 1 363 211 521 Modules and Ordering Codes System Power Up Modules and Ordering Codes The next three sections explain how to install the power rectifier unit PRU low voltage disconnect LVD and ringing generator unit RGU modules in their assigned shelf positions as illustrated in Figure 8 1 The ordering codes for these modules are listed in Table 8 1 Ringing generator unit RGU z Test jackets w 100 kQ Battery GMT type fuse 15 A Battery circuit breaker 15 A Battery connector J3 o0000
76. different types of services to be carried over one system ATM adaptation layer A set of internationally standardized protocols and formats that de AAL fine support for circuit emulation packet video and audio and con nection oriented and connectionless data services There are four standard protocols defined for AAL AAL1 AAL2 AAL3 4 and AALS AAL5 is used for bursty LAN traffic and uses the conventional five byte ATM header AAL5 does not support cell multiplexing ATM feeder The connection from the AFM to the ATM transport network This connection may be either DS3 DS1 or OC 3c The ATM feeder may connect directly to an ATM switch or access concentrator de vice In addition the connection between the AFM and the switch or access concentrator may incorporate a multiplexer In daisy chained configurations the ATM feeder for each AFM except the one closest to the switch or access concentrator connects to the previous AFM in the chain This connection may be direct or through a multiplexer Note that daisy chaining is available only with DS3 and OC 3c AFMs ATM RSF on ADSL line Ten consecutive seconds with each second having one or more of the following anomalies At least 18 ADSL superframes with ATM HEC anomalies At least one ADSL superframe with ATM cell delineation anomalies GL 2 June 2002 AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 363 211 521 Glossary AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1
77. e 2002 4 5 363 211 521 Grounding the ONU Mounting and Grounding the ONU ey peii XK To approved ground electrode via green wire TRGO RRGE TRGO ONU shelf 7A Fan Unit Battery compartment 2 48AE 9201 J203 E 2 pin conn for gi z parallel operation E Margin Svlit oc ed Se a Temp Probe 6 pin 7 ae Internal fuses 7 ee eee Lt E IEC 60320 PRU INPUT E e a ee M l L HHH Rectifier shelf T Via mounting screws 1 Test jacks Bo 7a 48 V 48 RTN GMT type e breaker 15 A Paga Internal l LVD MOSFET ee see eer a E1 48 RTN 54 5 0 2 V Margin 54 9 0 2 V Margin 0 Margin 54 1 0 2 V Note 93 to 264 V Internal fuse 48V R 48 RTN BK RTN BAT MIDPOINT 48 V BAT BK Battery assembly connectors marked during installation Battery 1 Battery 2 Battery 3 Battery 4 grounding stud Note Power and fan cable are not 1 1 cables gt 6 mm lt 9 AWG recommended fan alarming not shown 4 6 June 2002 Figure 4 3 Powering grounding and ringing for the indoor ONU AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 363 211 521 Mounting and Grounding the ONU Grounding the ONU Grounding points One ESD ground jackis mounted on the right side of the ONU shelf as illustrated and ESD ground in Figure 4 4 An ESD warning label
78. e 2002 5 11 363 211 521 Installing the TAP B Cable Option Connecting Signal Lines Step 8 Terminate the tip ring pairs at the MDF and check the labeling Note the wire color coding sequence of the factory prepared cable assemblies to facilitate the terminations ONU shelf connection panel SCP Internal power and alarm in cable to the rectifier shelf backplane Rectifier shelf ESD socket RGU External TAP B cable SC type fiber connector OCP External a b cables to the MDF 8 application packs AP connectors Fiber to the a b cables to the termination box right cable outlet Figure 5 5 ONU shelf cabling arrangement for external cables Testing the Test the TAP B cable according to local regulations A recommended practice for connections to the the Lucent MDF is to use ITE 6675 Streak Mate and ITE 7079 AIU Test Fixture to MDF test the installed TAP B cable 5 12 June 2002 AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 363 211 521 Connecting Signal Lines Installing T R Cables Installing T R Cables The procedures below consist of installing the external prefabricated T R cables ED7C818 30 Group 1x used for POTS ISDN and ATM xDSL and connecting them to the ONU shelf blank faceplates C 847773389 furnished with the ONU shelf The other end of each T R cable must be connected to the MDF according to local conditions or requirements of the network provider Cable length The T R cable is availa
79. e circuit pack ground Use the equipment bay or shelf ESD ground jack AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 June 2002 1 3 363 211 521 Electrostatic Discharge Safety E SS In an emergency when a properly functioning wrist strap is not available at the job site use the following touch ground procedure for handling circuit packs containing electronic components Always touch ground exposed or bare metal before handling a circuit pack in any way i e inserting removing or storing This must be done just prior to touching the circuit pack Moving around will necessitate repeating this procedure Note that painted surfaces are not good ground points m Handle circuit packs only by the faceplate or latch and by the top and bottom outermost edges Never touch the components leads or connector pins m Put the circuit pack into an antistatic bag or carton immediately upon removing it from a frame To Ground Connection e12_21610_fig_20 Figure 1 1 ESD Strap A CAUTION A grounded person must never hand an unprotected circuit pack to a person who is ungrounded A static discharge from the ungrounded person through the circuit pack to the grounded person could cause an ESD induced failure All persons and equipment at a work location must be at common ground potential to be static safe 1 4 June 2002 AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 363 211 521 Safety Electrostatic Discharge ee
80. e high BER condition when ten consecutive SESs have occurred The high BER condition is cleared when ten consecutive seconds have occurred that are not SESs The system tracks SESs for the SDSL signal received from the CPE An SES for upstream SDSL transmission is observed when either of the following conditions ex ists during a given clock second If the number of HEC errors corrected and uncorrected divided by the number of cells received is greater than or equal to 0 3 then SES occurs If at least one los or lof occurs then SES occurs If an auto change in bit rate occurs start over in both cases High bit rate digital A method of transmitting T1 over twisted pair copper lines Unlike subscriber line HDSL other DSL types HDSL uses four wires two pairs HDSL supports 1 544 Mbps full duplex transmission I IATO1 IATO1 indicates an IAT type supported by a proprietary modified D4 interface such as ConnectReach and ConnectReach Plus ter minals IATO2 IATO2 indicates an IAT type supported by a D4 open interface IATSI view A window available on the GSI that is launched by executing the ACT IAT TL1 command IMA group An operational collection of IMA links that functions to multiplex and de multiplex ATM cells in a cyclical fashion among the links to form a higher bandwidth logical path between a pair of IMA terminals separated by multiple feeders The AFMDS1 pack uses one group and up to eight links with a direct one to one ma
81. e intact before connecting the external cables 5 6 June 2002 AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 363 211 521 Connecting Signal Lines Cabling Inventory ee 48V power cable Connectors not connected Alarm cable ee Interconnection cable X wb N 48RTN FRMGND installed Door switch I Door switch 4 cable i GL n Ac JB J202 eth D T E E2 E3 T Fan cable l z moarn eee Battery cable l I I TE oR oe eo re j L vi Thermal probe cable sl Ltt Vite 5 2 WA A al je 0 i kisal H 4 4 4 4 4 a suppi E Input e
82. e procedures for installing power related modules applying AC power and activating the batteries Fan Unit and Battery Maintenance This chapter covers the recommended maintenance procedures for the AnyMedia ONU fan units and batteries m Appendix A Installation and Maintenance Record This appendix contains a copy of the installation and maintenance record m List of Acronyms Lists the abbreviations and acronyms used to replace longer expressions Glossary Defines terms that may be unfamiliar to the user m Index Lists in alphabetical order the specific subject information in the document AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 June 2002 xvii 363 211 520 Conventions Used in This Document About This Manual Conventions Used in This Document Terms used The following terms used in this manual may have different meanings than the general or common usages of the term The term AnyMedia Access System is used here for both the AnyMedia FAST shelf and for the AnyMedia ONU subshelf he term system configuration when used here refers to an AnyMedia Access System system equipped with certain packs or units for a certain application a Mixed configuration means a configuration of the AnyMedia Access System that includes packs for narrowband and ATM xDSL services a The term AnyMedia FAST shelf is used when the text refers to the shelf which houses the COMDAC CTU OAP and AFM pack The term ONU shelf is us
83. ed arrival time and its actual arrival time Also called jitter A parameter which in CBR transmissions determines the level of jitter i e cell delay variation The upper bound on the jitter mea surement is the CDVT A 5 octet header that defines control information used in process ing multiplexing and switching cells A field in the ATM cell header showing two levels of priority for ATM cells CLP 0 cells are a higher priority than CLP 1 cells and may be discarded if there is a congestion to preserve the cell loss ratio of CLP 0 cells The value the network agrees to offer as an objective over the life time of the connection This value is specified per service class at the turn up The transit delay of an ATM cell successfully passed between two designated boundaries on the AnyMedia Access System when the system is loaded conservatively The total number of cells that the shelf received from the CPE The electronics portion of a digital loop carrier line typically from the tip ring output of the channel unit or application pack toward the central office Includes up to the switch interface if integrated DLC Includes the transmit and receive DSOs codecs and hybrids An ATM configuration that allows the ATM network to act as a trans parent transport pipe for constant bit rate circuits That part of a CES system that interfaces the signal to be emulated converting such signals to ATM format in the transmit dire
84. ed when the text refers to the shelf in the ONU housing the OCP that provides the interface for the optical link to the AnyMedia FAST shelf m Ihe term AnyMedia shelves is used whenever the text does not need to distinguish between both types of shelves a Narrowband services typically include POTS services coin special services such as foreign exchange and PBX support In the current release of the AnyMedia Access System narrowband services comprise POTS COIN PBX support and ISDN services ATM xDSL services are supported in the AnyMedia Access System using ATM cell transfer In the current release of the AnyMedia Access System ATM xDSL services include ADSL SDSL and SHDSL m Ihe term pack is generally used for circuit packs in the AnyMedia FAST shelf COMDAC OAP and AFM or in the ONU shelf OCP RGU PRU PFU and LVD and also for all application packs he term application pack is generally used for the packs in the AnyMedia FAST shelf and also in the ONU shelf that are located in any of the AP slots of the AnyMedia Access System APs for POTS ISDN and ATM xDSL m inthis manual the subscriber interface for analog POTS is tip ring T R interface DS1 interface refers to the 1 544 kbps digital feeder interfaces of the narrowband system on the network side of the AnyMedia FAST shelf DS3 interface refers to the digital feeder interface of the broadband system that carries the ATM payload cells The DS3 interface
85. em properly Step 3 Locate the loose parts delivered with the batteries including the Product Manual IR Series Batteries Issue 7 or later Comcode 107078859 gt NOTE If there are any problems with the delivered equipment or if any items are missing refer to the job specification or equipment order for the name and telephone number of the local manager to contact and to rectify the problem Step 4 Locate the Installation and Maintenance Record in the Product Manual IR Series Batteries and reproduce it or use the copies in Appendix A Installation and Maintenance Record Use the installation and maintenance record to record the parameters measured during installation and at quarterly maintenance procedures The completed forms will be required for warranty validation Battery inspection Use the following procedure to inspect the battery and prepare it for installation and initial charging Step 1 The packing list includes the order number Record this order number in the Installation and Maintenance Record Step 2 Take out the first battery and place the battery on a level surface Step 3 Inspect the battery for shipping damage obvious damage and for any sign of acid spillage Step 4 Check the battery for fractured housings Batteries with fractured housings are defective and must not be used Return damaged batteries to the manufacturer in their original packing Step 5 Mark the first battery the 2 pin connector and the cardb
86. ent are identified after the title page Trademarks are in italics and modify a noun Lucent Technologies trademarks are identified with the registered mark or trademark symbol the first time they are used in a chapter e g Lucent Technologies AnyMedia Access System The trademarks of other companies are in italics AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 June 2002 xix Related Documentation Related Documentation Document list packaging and formats XX June 2002 363 211 520 About This Manual The following documentation is available for the AnyMedia Access System Available on the Web m AnyMedia Access System Documents 363 211 125 AnyMedia Access System Ordering Guide http www lucent8 com library AnyMediaOrderingGuide pdf Other AnyMedia Access System documents including System Release Descriptions SRDs and the Navis AnyMedia Element Management system EMS can be found by going to http Awww lucent8 com selecting Documents then selecting Product Line AnyMedia under Enter 1 or more search items below and Search Now An SRD is issued per release and describes the functionality of the sys tem at the time of release Available on CD ROM 363 211 103 AnyMedia Access System Documentation This is a CD ROM that contains the following documents in various formats AnyMedia Access System Documents 363 211 101 AnyMedia Access System Applicatio
87. ents and with all internal cabling pre installed including the cabling from the APs of the ONU shelf to the feeder side of the internal main distributing frame MDF The installer will be required to perform the connections from and to the ONU AC fiber and distribution side of the MDF Installation of the application packs and turn up are performed after the installation procedures described in this manual are complete Intended audience This installation manual is for technical support personnel and for customers who maintain their own installation organizations Reason for issue This is Issue 1 of the Installation Manual How to use this This manual is organized as follows manual AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 June 2002 xv 363 211 520 Introduction About This Manual E SS m How are we doing A comment form so readers can give feedback to improve the next revision of the document m Table of contents list of figures list of tables About This Manual This chapter defines the purpose of the document and the intended audience Also included are topics about the conventions used in the document related documentation how to order documents and how to comment on this document a Safety This chapter defines the types of safety labels and precautions associated with the AnyMedia Access System Also included are general circuit pack handling precautions and specific warnings relating to lightwave safety
88. ep 5 Position the first battery No 1 with its terminals facing to the front in the rear left corner of the battery compartment as shown in Figure 7 5 Move the 2 pin battery assembly to the right Step 6 Repeat with the second battery No 2 and position it in the rear right corner of the ONU Move the 2 pin battery assembly to the left Step 7 Repeat with batteries No 3 and No 4 as shown in Figure 7 5 Step 8 Move the batteries 1 and 3 and also batteries 2 and 4 close together and move them to the side walls of the housing Step 9 Verify that the connector J3 on the rectifier side is not connected For location of the LVD and the other parts see Figure 8 1 on page 8 2 Step 10 Connect the keyed 2 pin plugs of the batteries to the appropriate connectors of the battery cable and arrange the battery cabling in the empty space between the batteries Step 11 Measure the battery string voltage on the outermost pins of the battery cable connector J3 and record in the Installation and Maintenance Record Verify that the batteries are connected properly and that the polarity is correct Step 12 Locate the thermal probe and insert between the metallic case and the battery housing of battery 3 as shown in Figure 7 6 Battery thermal probe inserted between metallic case and plastic battery housing of battery No 3 Figure 7 6 Position of the thermal probe Step 13 Locate and mount the battery hold down bracket 7 14 June 2002 AnyMe
89. er line unit 363 211 521 List of Acronyms AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 363 211 521 List of Acronyms TC BESS DCN DCS DCTP DDL DDM DDS DFI DHCP DID DIP DLC DLCI DM DMT DMU DNIS DNS DNUS DOD DP DPFU DPO DPT DRAM DSO DS1 DS3 DSL DSP DSR DSU AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 data communication network digital cross connect system direct current test pair delivered data link digital data multiplexer digital data services digital facilities interface dynamic host configuration protocol direct inward dialing dual in line package digital loop carrier data link connection identifier degraded minute discrete multitone digital measurement unit dialed number identification service domain name service digital network unit subscriber direct outward dialing data port or dial pulse dual power feed unit dial pulse originate dial pulse terminate dynamic random access memory digital signal level 0 digital signal level 1 digital signal level 3 digital subscriber line digital signal processor DCE ready data service unit June 2002 AC 5 o BE AC 6 June 2002 DSX DSX 1 DSX 3 DTC DTE DTMF DU DX EBS EC ECI E amp M EM EMC EMF EMI EMS EOC EPD ERL ES ES L ESD ESF ES L ES LFE ES P ES S ETO digital signal cross connect digital signal cross connect level 1 digital signal cross connect level 3 digital trunk c
90. er on page 6 3 To apply AC power proceed as follows Step 1 Be sure that the ONU housing is correctly connected to an approved ground Otherwise check the grounding continuity see Checking the ONU grounding on page 4 9 Step 2 For the first power up be sure that no packs are inserted in the ONU shelf except the RGU Temporarily remove any packs that have been inserted Step 3 Verify that the battery cable is not connected to connector J3 of the LVD Step 4 Locate the AC plug and connect to the to the IEC60320 receptacle near the AC breaker panel Step 5 Inside the electronics compartment locate the AC plug and connect it to the IEC60320 AC power supply receptacle of the PRU Step 6 If the customers AC power source is equipped with a circuit breaker switch the AC circuit breaker to ON Response All fan units will turn on though all LEDs on the cabinet fan unit may not light The LEDs on the PRU should ex hibit the following states Normal Operation Batteries not connected Warning Thermal probe not connected Alarm Red Lights Batteries not connected Thermal Shutdown Red Extinguished Rectifier o k Step 7 Check visually or by listening that all fans in the fan units work properly Check the air current above the ONU and above the rectifier shelf 8 10 June 2002 AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 363 211 521 System Power Up Applying AC Power Step 8 Connect the thermal probe cable con
91. er to facilitate maintenance The permissible fuse circuit breaker values are listed in Table 6 1 Table 6 1 Fusing values for AC power Nominal AG Fuse Value for 16 AWG or Larger Convenvonel Voltage Tripping Current 120 V AC 13 Ato 16A No more than 1 4 x 220 240 VAC 10Ato16A nominal fusing value gt NOTE The 540 W power rectifier unit for the indoor ONU is classified in over voltage category 2 according to IEC 60664 1 locations only Power transients should never exceed 2 5 kV Additional surge arrestors may be required depending on the site conditions 6 2 June 2002 AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 363 211 521 Connecting AC Power Connecting AC Power Connecting AC Power Connect the AC cables as follows Step 1 Verify that the customer s AC power source is switched to OFF and ensure that no one else will be able to turn it ON Mark the OFF state if required Step 2 Measure the voltage on the customer s power line and verify that it is de energized If required short the deactivated lines to ground Follow local regulations Step 3 Verify that the fuse circuit breaker is consistent with Table 6 1 page 6 2 Step 4 If the ONU shelf has been equipped with the PRU verify that the AC connector is not inserted in the PRU s AC receptacle Step 5 Be sure that the grounding connections have been checked If not check the ground according to Checking the ONU grounding on page 4 9
92. ere the OCP will be inserted The DIP switch is front accessible if the OCP is not installed The switches are ON in the upper position To adjust the DIP switch proceed as follows Step 1 If required disconnect the T R cables and the blank faceplates of the slots AP 1 to AP 4 Step 2 Locate the DIP switch on the left side of the ONU shelf backplane Adjust the 8 switches to ON OFF as stated in the engineering work order using a very small screwdriver The switches are inverse binary coded The address adjustments for the ONU number 1 to 8 can be found in Figure 5 11 Viewed from front looking at the position where the OCP has to be inserted 19 Backplane connector for the OCP DIP sw ONU naaber 7 shown ONU NUMBER ON position oy OFF position 123 45 6 7 8 1 O O0 O0 0 0 OD Dd O0 ONU number adjustments ONU identifier Figure 5 11 DIP switch for ONU addressing on the OCP position gt NOTE When adjusting the DIP switches take care not to bend or break any backplane connectors on the backplane AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 June 2002 5 25 363 211 521 ONU Addressing Connecting Signal Lines o BE SS Step 3 Check the adjusted ONU address carefully a later correction is difficult due to the reduced space caused by the installed and cabled application packs Step 4 Insert the blank faceplates and attach the T R cables
93. et packet exchange in service integrated subscriber digital line integrated services digital network international organization for standards Internet service providers International Telecommunications Union ICP cell violation IPC violations count of errored invalid or missing IPC cells interexchange carrier kilobits per second kilobytes per second kilohertz kilowatt local area network link access protocol D channel lightguide build out loss of cell delineation local digital switch light emitting diode loop facilities assignment and control system logical feeder port logical line number local management interface loss of cell delineation June 2002 AC 9 AC 10 June 2002 LOF lof LOFA LOP LOS los LOST LSAS LTD LTF LTS LULT LUNT LVD M mA MAT Mbps MBps MBS MDF MDS2 MDSU MEA MHz MIB MJ MLTS MMSU MN MR ms MSC loss of frame loss of frame alignment loss of pointer loss of signal loss of signal timeout line side answer supervision local test desk loop test frame loop test system line unit network termination line unit network termination low voltage disconnect milliampere Metropolitan Area T carrier megabits per second Megabytes per second maximum burst size main distributing frame metallic distribution shelf 2 metallic distribution server unit mismatch of equipment and attributes mega hertz management information base major multiline
94. ew tight or connect fix For connecting follow local regulations Step 12 Check that the wires are fixed Step 13 If you shorted the deactivated power lines in Step 2 remove the short Observe local regulations Step 14 If you are planning to continue the ONU installation process without interruption switch the AC power ON 6 4 June 2002 AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 Installing the Batteries Overview This section provides the procedures for unpacking inspecting and mounting the batteries in the ONU battery compartment gt NOTE If you are familiar with the battery installation and with the storage charging procedures and warranty considerations you can skip to page 7 9 and begin by unpacking the batteries Contents Page m Battery Option 7 3 Ordering batteries 7 3 Battery description 7 3 m Battery Safety 7 5 General safety precautions 7 5 Gas discharge 7 5 Sparks 7 6 Short circuits 7 6 Conductive surface 7 6 Contact with electrolyte 7 6 Acid spills 7 6 AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 June 2002 7 1 363 211 521 Overview Installing the Batteries Le Page Battery Handling and Preparation 7 7 Required tools supplies and equipment 7 7 Battery handling 7 7 Shipping and storing IR 30EC batteries 7 8 Unpacking and completeness check 7 9 Battery inspection and initial charging 7 10 Installing the Batteries 7 13 Battery arrangement 7 13 Installation procedure 7 13
95. f Spark gaps Short circuits Be very careful when taking voltage readings to prevent accidental grounding or shorting of leads during measurements Connections at the meter must be secure and free of any possibility of touching or becoming grounded Never remove connections at the meter end without first disconnecting the test leads from the battery Remove test lead connections at the battery immediately after each reading is taken A WARNING Exercise extreme care to avoid any short circuit across the battery terminals Even a single battery poses a potentially high energy hazard if shorted Shorting a battery may result in explosion of the battery injury to the installer and damage to equipment A tool or other metallic object causing the short may be thrown or vaporized due to the battery energy Conductive surface If the battery is to be installed on an electrically conductive surface a non conductive mat or surface should be placed between the battery and the conductive surface Contact with In the event of electrolyte contact with the skin remove the electrolyte electrolyte immediately by rinsing the affected area with large amounts of plain tap water In the event of electrolyte in the eye pour water into the inner corner of the eye and allow at least one liter of water to run over the eye and under the eyelid Eye injuries should be treated by a physician immediately Acid spills lf large acid spillage occurs use agricultural o
96. fied by the network provider to install protector blocks Interconnecting the The optional Test Application Pack TAP100 is the internal test head that test application executes drop measurements paths option Each AP can switch any of its subscribers to the General Purpose Bus GPB The subscriber can be switched either bridged connection between port and subscriber line is kept or split connection between port and subscriber line is opened to the GPB he TAP B cable is a 13 wire cable of which only 5 wires are used Four wires are used for the circuit pair and the drop pair the fifth is for future use m he TAP100 cable is a normal 64 wire T R cable of which only 4 wires are used circuit numbers 1 and 2 Figure 5 9 on page 5 18 illustrates the cabling of the test bus Table 5 4 page 5 19 lists the internal connections between the active 4 wires AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 June 2002 5 17 Installing the TAP100 Cable 5 18 June 2002 363 211 521 Connecting Signal Lines Switch side Switch side T1 O d O 2 TAPB_EQR LRT C d 0 x Fa ge 0 TAPB_FACT P T2 M TAPB_FACR Een 0 Kel lt Primary protection 64_ 13 GDT if required Oo Bian se Sr ee BEh es Soy et ote ee a eet ee eS Q S eb PAS D 20 D1 E1 E w o A z ef X lt amp z ze 26 gt eo Cable routing area Figure 5 9 Cabling for integrated testing with TAP100 inserted in slot po
97. float for at least one week Any fully charged IR 30EC battery at float that reads less than 13 V at 77 F 25 C is considered to be shorted and must be replaced For battery replacement procedures see Battery Replacement on page 9 20 Step 5 Connect the battery connectors Batt1 to Batt4 Step 6 Switch the battery circuit breaker on the LVD to ON For the IR 30EC batteries it is recommended to replace all 4 batteries if the batteries are older than about 1 to 2 years AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 June 2002 9 15 363 211 521 External Charging Fan Unit and Battery Maintenance External Charging The Tyco IR 30EC batteries may be charged either by constant potential or constant current chargers A CAUTION Boost charging the IR 30EC batteries is not recommended without the concurrence of Tyco Refer to the Product Manual for IR 30EC and IR 40EC Batteries Section Operations Charging voltage Constant potential charger for IR 30EC batteries A potential of 13 5 for IR 30EC 0 06 V per battery is recommended for an ambient temperature of 77 F batteries 25 C for constant potential charging gt NOTE For constant voltage application failure to reduce the float voltage in systems without temperature compensation may result in premature failure or thermal runaway Constant current charger for IR 30EC batteries The battery manufacturer specifies that when batteries are used in plants with a c
98. for all later reissues of any document The standing order list for each document provides automatic distribution for all reissues of the document xxii June 2002 AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 363 211 520 About This Manual How to comment on this document How to comment on this document Document comment The first sheet in this manual after the title page is the feedback form How Are procedure We Doing Please use this form to fax your comments and suggestions concerning the of the AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual for Indoor Applications Release R1 363 211 520 to Lucent Technologies Fax no 973 581 6646 AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 June 2002 xxiii 363 211 520 How to comment on this document About This Manual ee xxiv June 2002 AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 Safety Overview The AnyMedia Optical Network Unit ONU for indoor applications is based on state of the art technology and fulfills current national and international safety requirements It supports a high degree of operational safety resulting from many years of development experience and continuous stringent quality control This chapter lists the safety information applicable to the installation and cabling of the ONU for indoor applications Contents Electrostatic Discharge Electrostatic Discharge ESD Consequences Electrostatic Discharge Protection Requirements Battery Safety
99. ft x 15 mto 91 5 m AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 June 2002 5 5 363 211 521 Cabling Inventory Connecting Signal Lines o BE ee Table 5 1 ONU cable connections Continued Destination 1 Destination 2 Equipment Code or Comcode Cable used for Fiber cable prefabricated which have to be routed and to be connected during installation ONU shelf OCP SC con Fiber termination box SC connec 408267532 Fiber jumper cable with SC nector tor SC connector External cable customer made not delivered which has to be make and has to be routed and to be con nected during installation M6 stud on the right side Ground approved ground termi external cable lug for Grounding panel of the ONU under nal green wire 6 mm M6 is required the cable access cover via cable lug a Not connected batteries and LVD will be mounted during installation b Can only be used with the S1 1 rectifier with the IEC60320 receptacle The cable is not connected the S1 1 rectifier will be mounted during installation Connection to customer s power supply after installation c Not used d Most of the ED Grx cables are orderable with the following length from 50 ft up to 300 ft from 15 m up to 91 5 m e The fiber cable is equipped with an SC type connector at each end Internal pre The internal cables for the indoor application are shown in Figure 5 2 Verify that connected cables these cable ar
100. g bandwidth to connections on a port where their total bandwidth allocation is greater than bandwidth mi nus CAC Reserve Booking can exceed bandwidth and also the bandwidth of the port but traffic throughput can never exceed band width The amount of bandwidth allocated by provisioning to a shelf A feeder VP for which the ATM xDSL subsystem supports VC cross connects Used by the OS and the GCT for the AnyMedia FAST shelf broad band product for accessing the MIB objects AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 363 211 521 Glossary E SS Single pair high speed A physical layer technology used to transport digital bit stream over digital subscriber line one pair of nonloaded existing copper distribution cable SHDSL SHDSL provides equal transmission bit rates for both the upstream and downstream directions ranging from 192 to 2304 kbps SHDSL is based on use of the TC PAM line coding scheme TC PAM is a baseband line coding scheme that does not allow the option to share the copper loop from a baseband POTS signal Single point grounding The circuit and frame earth grounds are tied together at a single specific point of the central office This does not allow the battery re turn to use the building ground as a path Single point grounding is also called floating point isolated ground plane or isolated bonding network See multi point grounding Site ID A unique provisioned name given to an AnyMedia shelf Thi
101. g the Batteries m Figure 7 1 IR 30EC battery 7 4 m Figure 7 2 Example for a cardboard box with charge no later than date 7 8 m Figure 7 3 Copy of the initial charging recommendation of IR 30EC batteries 7 9 m Figure 7 4 Battery labels showing the battery serial number and installation date 7 11 m Figure 7 5 Battery arrangement top view 7 13 m Figure 7 6 Position of the thermal probe 7 14 8 System Power Up m Figure 8 1 ONU with LVD PRU RGU and empty ONU shelf 8 2 m Figure 8 2 Position of the Margin switch 8 4 m Figure 8 3 LVD Faceplate 8 6 m Figure 8 4 Location and settings of the jumpers MP1 MP2 on the RGU 8 9 m Figure 8 5 Wiring of connector J3 for the LVD and wiring of battery cable connector J3 8 13 9 Fan Unit and Battery Maintenance m Figure 9 1 Position of the fan unit with the fan filter and the mounting elements 9 5 m Figure 9 2 Wiring of battery cable connector J3 9 13 m Figure 9 3 Wiring of the 14 AWG lead battery assembly connectors 9 15 xii June 2002 AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 363 211 521 List of Tables Le List of Tables 3 Overview of the Installation Process m lable 3 1 List of tools and equipment 3 4 4 Mounting and Grounding the ONU m lable 4 1 Recommended parts for grounding 4 7 5 Connecting Signal Lines m Table 5 1 ONU cable connections 5 9 m Table 5 2 Length of TAP B cable ED7C818 36 Group 1x 5 11 m Table 5 3 Length of T R cables ED7C818 30 Group 1x 5 13 m Table 5 4 TAP B c
102. he grounding stud using the external toothed lock washer and the M6 hexagonal nut with torque of approximately 2 5 Nm see Figure 4 5 Step 7 Provide the grounding wire on the approved ground side with the connecting material matching to the grounding terminal and connect to the approved grounding point Step 8 The two shelves in the ONU are connected to the ONU framework potential FRMGND via mounting screws If required tighten securely all mounting screws M4 with torque of approximately 1 5 Nm 4 8 June 2002 AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 363 211 521 Mounting and Grounding the ONU Grounding the ONU Grounding to approved bonding ring conductor or to the next approved main grounding terminal Potential equalization to the neighboring ONUs only if required ONU housing metalwork T Customer s cable grounding min gt 6mm lt 9 AWG Cable lug for 6mm gas proof crimped Grounding stud M6 on the right side of the ONU housing Cheese head screw with captive washer or only hexagonal nut torque about 2 5 Nm DAVA B2AALRA N ADALAAADAASA SASAS Tooth lock washer Unpainted metallic area factory prepared for good ground connection Figure 4 5 ONU Grounding Checking the ONU After grounding the ONU check the connection from the framework to the grounding bonding ring conductor and to neighboring racks Measure the resistance to ground according to local regulations A resistance of
103. ia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 System Power Up Modules and Ordering Codes AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 Table 8 1 Module Codes Module Designation Apparatus Code Power rectifier unit 540 W PRU RS0540 S1 1 Low voltage disconnect unit LVD LVD500 2 2 Ringing generator unit RGU RGU500 a Can be installed already Only LVDs with Issue S2 2 or later may be used Any LVD marked 1 1 for series and vintage should be replaced with the new version marked S2 2 or later June 2002 8 3 Installing the PRU Installing the PRU PRU features PRU installation procedure 8 4 June 2002 363 211 521 System Power Up The PRU is powered by the AC power supply 93 to 264 V 47 to 63 Hz through the IEC 60320 AC power receptacle The PRU is buffered by four IR 30EC batteries which are connected to the PRU through the LVD gt NOTE The PRU must be Issue 1 1 or later as indicated on the label attached to the PRU The PRU issue can also determined by the IEC 60320 receptacle on the PRU faceplate hot type receptacle To install the PRU proceed as follows Step 1 Move the AC power supply cord aside so that the empty rectifier shelf inside the ONU is freely accessible Step 2 Unpack the PRU and locate the 3 position Margin switch on top as illustrated in Figure 8 2 Margin switch Figure 8 2 Position of the Margin switch Normal Operation Warning
104. igital T1 hierarchy used in North America and Japan with 24 voice channels constituting a single 1 544 Mbps T1 trunk AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 June 2002 GL 17 363 211 521 Glossary E SS Tagged cell A lower priority cell i e a cell whose CLP bit is set to 1 A cell may be tagged by the system because it violates the traffic contract on its connection or by its source TDR testing A type of wideband metallic drop test in which a test head sends a narrow width pulse over a subscriber loop and looks for any re turned pulses that were reflected back from the loop Test operations system Any of a number of testing systems used to perform channel and drop testing such as the Tollgrade LoopCare formerly MLT sys tem and PGTC compatible test systems for channel testing Threshold crossing A threshold is a value assigned by the system user to a certain de alert sired level e g errored seconds when the level is exceeded a threshold crossing alert is issued Tier 2 NMS A generic term for a network management system that can manage multiple kinds of network elements as a connected network Tier 3 refers to element managers and Tier 1 refers to customer service support systems Time domain A type of wideband metallic drop test in which a test head sends a reflectometry TDR narrow width pulse over a subscriber loop and looks for any re testing turned pulses that were reflected back from the loop TL1 s
105. inkle the lime on the spillage allow it to absorb the electrolyte and then sweep it up and dispose of it in the proper manner Wash hands and face thoroughly after clean up AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 June 2002 1 7 363 211 521 Special Considerations for the Tyco IR 30EC Batteries Safety Special Considerations for the Tyco IR 30EC Batteries Tyco IR batteries are valve regulated rechargeable stationary lead acid batteries which are conditioned at delivery The IR 30EC battery has recessed bolt type terminals and a hinged lifting handle which aids the battery installation and prevents shorting terminals when the lifting handle is not used for lifting GMT type fuse The GMT type fuse in the low voltage disconnect unit LVD can produce sparks during interruption or clearing of a fault on a high energy circuit Use only GMT type fuses delivered by Lucent Technologies The IR 30EC batteries are provided with a 14AWG assembly terminating with 2 position AMP polarized connector The standard cable assembly mounted to the IR 30EC batteries is designed for charging currents below 15 A Charging currents exceeding 18 A will destroy the cable lf the battery is charged externally the charging current of the external charger must not exceed 18 A under any circumstances if the delivered cable assembly is used Boost charging During boost charging water loss is increased and can result in premature failures IR 30EC batterie
106. is affixed directly below the socket jacks Grounding point for inter connection of 48RTN to FRMGND ESD warning label hes ESD ground jack 00900090Q 2Ee 90e00 AGRERAIE Fixing screw for the vo cable access cover 7 inside the ONU lo oe a a a T i at AN FX a eN eo os M6 ae W ji under the cable lt E gt s SZ WZ SZ access cover Cable access cover Figure 4 4 ESD ground jack and grounding studs points Parts for grounding Table 4 1 lists the recommended parts for grounding the ONU Table 4 1 Recommended parts for grounding 1 External toothed lock washer J6 4 Delivered mounted Hexagonal nut M6 Cable lug M6 6 mm for example Thomas amp Betts C71 lug
107. is recommended that you leave the batteries connected to the rectifier AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 June 2002 8 15 363 211 521 Connecting and Charging the Batteries System Power Up a 8 16 June 2002 AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 Fan Unit and Battery Maintenance Overview This chapter covers the recommended maintenance procedures for the AnyMedia ONU fan units and batteries Contents Maintenance Actions Fan units Batteries a Cleaning the Fan Filter Cleaning methods Filter replacement criteria Replacing the fan filter Battery Maintenance Practice Battery safety Gas explosion GMT fuses Battery connections Electrolyte contact Acid spills Battery Maintenance Procedures Maintenance routines AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 Page 9 3 9 3 9 3 9 4 9 4 9 4 9 7 9 7 9 8 9 8 9 8 9 8 9 8 9 9 9 9 June 2002 9 1 363 211 521 Overview Fan Unit and Battery Maintenance o BE ee Page Maintenance intervals for IR 30EC batteries 9 9 a Battery String Float Voltage 9 11 Required tools 9 11 Determining the float voltage 9 11 Measuring the voltage of the battery string 9 11 Battery string measurement procedure 9 12 Measuring the voltage of a single battery 9 13 Individual battery measurement procedure 9 14 External Charging 9 16 Charging voltage for IR 30EC batteries 9 16 Voltage ripple for external charging 9 17 Battery Compartme
108. ition of these circuits especially any wiring m lake care when removing or replacing any covers Avoid contacting any circuits For cleaning batteries use a damp soft cloth only Do not use solvents paraffin abrasive or proprietary cleaning fluids DANGER A battery short circuit will cause destruction by arcing of batteries and cables and thus malfunctioning of the complete system Be aware of potential hazards before servicing battery equipment You must always use properly insulated tools and test equipment for installing and connecting batteries When working on batteries always wear splash proof safety goggles acid resistant gloves rubber overshoes and an apron While maintaining the batteries you must Never place metal objects including tools on top of a battery Never short out the battery terminals m Never use an open flame near batteries AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 June 2002 9 7 363 211 521 Battery Maintenance Practice Fan Unit and Battery Maintenance Gas explosion GMT fuses Battery connections Electrolyte contact Acid spills 9 8 June 2002 All lead acid batteries generate hydrogen gas even under open circuit conditions If not permitted to escape this gas can build up to explosive concentrations gt NOTE Mechanical power switches and electrostatic voltages are sources of spark gaps An explosion can occur when sparks are created near the batte
109. l 14 in or 350 mm and back square string tape measure folding rule 8 ft or approx 2 4 m etc Large tool kit hammers claw bar etc 8 inch 20 cm long flathead screwdrivers slotted 4 mm and Phillips No 1 Waterproof fine line marker Floor drilling equipment roto hammer or percussion drill with sintered carbide stone drills only if required Batteries Splash proof safety goggles Only if Cleaning cloth required Protective gloves Sandpaper or abrasive cloth Insulated slip joint pliers 6 1 2 inch 16 cm Insulated socket driver or nut driver set 1 4 inch through 3 4 inch sockets Insulated combination wrench set 1 4 inch through 3 4 inch Insulated screwdrivers 3 4 June 2002 AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 363 211 521 Overview of the Installation Process Tools and Measurement Testing Instruments ee Table 3 1 List of tools and equipment Continued Special fiber cab Lifting and transport equipment hoists dolly trucks straps etc eles only if Pinch bar claw type hammer and plate shears required Crimp tool for various connectors of ID type D sub Cable crimpers for 0 025 in 16 mm for example for Molex connectors No 11 01 197 Heat shrink gun Soldering iron 70 W and 20 W or soldering station with temperature control solder tin and holder for soldering iron Wire replacement insertion tool for Molex Faston connector pins Fuse puller for GMT fuses for examp
110. le from Hendry Telephone Products or from Lucent WP90247 Comcode 406420273 Splice equipment with accessories for example from Fujikura For example Lucent 1040A Rotary Splice Tool kit to assemble mechanical splices and only if Lucent D181617 Rotary Splice Kit with consumable materials to complete 12 required splices depending on Lucent D181755 PVC Buffer Tubing Kit for blocking cables and protecting up to fibers used 100 fibers if required Lucent AT 8955 Index Matching Gel 2 part mix prepacked isopropyl alcohol without additives may be obtained locally Multi layer tissues made from non recycled cellulose or optical quality tissue Only if lens cleaning paper for example 9300 0761 from Hewlett Packard required and cotton swabs Q tips for example 9300 1351 from Hewlett Packard depending on adhesive cleaning tape for example 15475 68701 from Hewlett Packard iso fiber and propyl alcohol without additives may be obtained locally fiber test pipe cleaner with soft bristles for coupling cleaning equipment or used fiber cleaning kit for example kit 15475A from Hewlett Packard Purified compressed air for example spray can Optical microscope enlargement greater than 40 up to 200 for example type For fiber M10 from Wild or the FIND R SCOPE from FJW Optical Systems Inc checking only AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 June 2002 3 5 363 211 521 Tools and Measurement Testing Instruments
111. lectric shock and or injury to untrained personnel during servicing maintenance and installation of this system 1 10 June 2002 AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 363 211 521 Safety Electrical Wiring Admonishments Electrical Wiring Admonishments Important Read and understand all instructions and warning labels Installation Safety Installation and maintenance procedures must be followed and performed Instructions by trained personnel only Do not allow non service personnel to access electrical wiring m Voice frequency connections should be connected to telecommunication devices providing primary or secondary protection as applicable Never install telecommunication wiring during a lightning storm Never install telecommunication connections in wet locations Never touch uninsulated telecommunication wires or terminals unless the telecommunication line has been disconnected at the VF DS1 DS3 test or alarm interface m Never touch uninsulated wiring or terminals carrying direct current or ringing current or leave this wiring exposed Protect and tape those wires and terminals to avoid risk of fire electrical shock and injury to service personnel Use caution when installing or modifying telecommunication lines This product should be operated only from the type of power source indicated on the marking label For information on proper electrical distribution and power requirements refer
112. lexing The technique of combining multiple single channels onto a single aggregate channel for sharing facilities and bandwidth Multi point grounding The circuit and frame earth grounds are tied together at each piece of equipment This allows battery return to use the building ground as a path Multi point grounding is also called mesh inte grated ground plane or common bonding network See single point grounding N Narrowband services Services include voice and voice frequency data transmission NE name The network element NE name is a unique provisioned name given to an AnyMedia shelf This name is identified by the GSI as the site ID Network Maintenance The Network Maintenance Manager is part of the Management In Manager terface package of software that is used to monitor alarms over multiple NEs The Network Maintenance Manager allows a user to choose which NEs to monitor to filter viewed alarms and to man age the display of these alarms AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 June 2002 GL 13 363 211 521 Glossary E SS Non real time variable A service category for data traffic that has no fixed timing relation bit rate nrt VBR ships but has a guaranteed QoS Statistical multiplexing is provided to make optimum use of network resources Nonvolatile data That part of the database which is retained even after a power fail storage NVDS ure for example provisioning parameters Nonvolatile progr
113. looking onto the Side view of contacts of cable connector J3 cable connector J3 front view RTNBAT R of battery string MIDPOINT R 48BAT BK of battery string Figure 9 2 Wiring of battery cable connector J3 Step 4 Measure the battery string voltage on the outermost connector pins The outer pin with the black wire is the negative terminal of the battery string e Measure the string voltage of batteries 4 and 3 between the middle pin and the outer pin black wire e Measure the string voltage of batteries 1 and 2 between the middle pin and the outer pin red wire Requirement The string voltage must be at least 51 2 V Step 5 Record the string voltage in the Installation and Maintenance Record You can also measure the string voltage without interrupting the buffering by measuring on the wiring side of the battery cable connector J3 plugged in the LVD by inserting the probes into the opening for the wires using small test probes Measuring the Measure the individual battery voltages periodically to ensure that they are voltage of a single floating properly Readings for each battery must be within 0 18 V of the string battery average calculated by dividing the string voltage by the number of batteries in the string Additionally the power rectifier unit is equipped with a supervision component that compares the voltage of batteries 1 and 2 1st partial string
114. ment NE for a given interface protocol For example there is a MIB defined for access using the simple network manage ment protocol SNMP and a different MIB defined for access using the protocol of the GR 303 Embedded Operations Channel EOC Maximum burst size Specifies the largest burst of data above the insured rate that will be MBS allowed temporarily on an ATM PVC but will not be dropped at the edge by the traffic policing function even if it exceeds the maximum rate In the signaling message the burst tolerance is conveyed through the MBS which is coded as a number of cells The burst tolerance together with the sustainable cell rate and the generic cell rate algo rithm determine the MBS that may be transmitted at the peak rate and still be in conformance with the generic cell rate algorithm Metallic bypass pair A physical copper pair running between the CO and the RT site that allows a test head located at the CO to perform metallic tests on RT subscriber drops Minimum bit rate The minimum rate at which the ADSL and SDSL and SHDSL link will train upstream and downstream This rate is used to in deter mining whether a new connection can be admitted to the shelf Mismatch of equipment This alarm signals that the equipped pack and its provisioning do and attributes MEA not match The alarm is cleared either by deleting the cross connect alarm or by replacing the pack with one that supports the service category Multip
115. nal protection resistors and the internal resistance of the rectifier equipment The voltage drop depends on the input resistance of the multimeter used LVD installation To install the LVD proceed as follows procedures Step 1 If the LVD is already installed switch the battery circuit breaker to OFF disconnect the battery cable J3 on the LVD and proceed to Step 3 If the LVD is not installed continue with Step 2 Step 2 Unpack the LVD and verify that the battery circuit breaker is switched to OFF If not switch to OFF Step 3 Verify that the GMT type fuse is 15 A If not locate the spare 15A GMT type fuses Comcode 408026243 which have been separately packed and replace the fuse 8 6 June 2002 AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 363 211 521 System Power Up Installing the LVD Step 4 Slide the LVD into the upper position of the rectifier shelf as shown in Figure 8 1 Push the LVD into the shelf and tighten the left and right fixing screws on the bottom of the faceplate A WARNING Do not connect the battery cable to LVD connector J3 If required disconnect this cable AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 June 2002 8 7 363 211 521 Installing the Optional RGU System Power Up Installing the Optional RGU RGU functions To support POTS applications the ONU shelf must be equipped with the RGU which is delivered separately For ordering see the AnyMedia Access System 24 Channel Or
116. ne but may in clude the telephone set also LoopCare LoopCare formerly called MLT is a Tollgrade testing operations system capable of making both narrowband and broadband tests on subscriber lines and of analyzing and reporting the results of these tests LOS on ADSL line Received power has dropped to 6 dB below the reference power The timing threshold is as follows Downstream 1 5 seconds Upstream 2 5 seconds LOS on upstream SDSL The loss of signal interrupts are timed accumulated and stored line and are mapped to los The loss of signal timeout LOST is used to time the los If the LOST bit is set then it is a LOS condition The firmware collects this data accumulates it and reports the number of los occurrences on a 15 minute and 1 day basis The LOS failure parameter is the accumulated los M Management Interface The Management Interface is a package of software that is used for managing traditional DLC services and ATM xDSL services The Management Interface allows the user to provision a single NE ata time through its GSI while simultaneously monitoring alarms of multiple NEs through its Network Maintenance Manager It is in stalled on a personal computer running under the Windows operat ing system GL 12 June 2002 AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 363 211 521 Glossary E SS Management Declaration of a collection of objects that defines the network or net information base MIB work ele
117. ne 2002 AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 363 211 521 List of Acronyms wooo TTTNT7TTNN VmTNmVWVNMuMmMuoON uo T T T1 1 S _ gt ee AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 shelf PCR shelf peak cell rate SID source identifier SL selecting slope SNMP simple network management protocol SNR signal to noise ratio SONET synchronous optical network SWDL software download T TAP test access path TAP100 test application pack TBCU test bus control unit TC TAP connected TCA threshold crossing alert TCP IP transmission control protocol Internet protocol TDM time division multiplexing TDR time domain reflectometry TL1 transaction language 1 TL1Sl TL1 system interface TLP transmission level point or test level point TMC timeslot management channel TMS transmission test measuring set TO transmission only TOS test operations system TR technical reference TR 08 Telcordia Technologies Inc Standard TR 008 TSA timeslot assignment TSC test system controller TSG timing signal generator TSI time slot interchange TTF transmission test facility June 2002 AC 15 AC 16 June 2002 TTLP Tx UUS IMA U UART UAS UAS IMA UAS L UAS LFE UAS P UBR UCC UDP UDT U DSL UIP UNCCNT UNI UPC USB UPN UVG V VB VBR VC VCC VCI VCOT VDC 363 211 521 List of Acronyms transmit transmission level point
118. nector to the connector Battery Temp Probe of the PRU Response The LEDs should exhibit the following states LED on the PRU Cause Normal Operation Batteries not connected Warning Thermal probe connected Alarm Red On Batteries not connected Thermal Shutdown Red Off Rectifier o k AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 June 2002 8 11 363 211 521 Checking the Rectifier and Batteries System Power Up Checking the Rectifier and Batteries For the first charging the batteries and the rectifier should be checked for the correct polarity and charging voltage gt NOTE If the delivered thermal probe is used and connected thermistor 10kQ 0 1 the PRU voltage is temperature compensated with 72 mV C in the temperature range from 5 C to 53 C If the thermal probe is not connected the rectifier voltage is fixed to about 52 5 V 453 C The maximum voltage is limited to about 57 to 58 V gt NOTE Due to the two protective 100 kQ resistors of the test terminals in the LVD the measured voltage will be about 1 V lower than expected For the Fluke 8060A multimeter the voltage drop will be exactly 1 V at 25 C ambient temperature Verifying the Use the following procedures to check the batteries and rectifier batteries and Step 1 Locate in the Installation and Maintenance Record where the rectifier battery readings the installation date and the first readings have been recorded See Appendix A Inst
119. ngement compartment is located in the lower part of the ONU housing o gL q 8 Sie a oe ee a A PNG FNE H ISA SZ O 0000 00 oo Oo000 oo A oo aE Te P e e v 7 e m c tah _ c fo ie Battery fixing bracket Figure 7 5 Battery arrangement top view Installation Place the batteries in the battery compartment and secure them as follows procedure Step 1 If an LVD is installed ensure that the battery circuit breaker is switched OFF Refer to Figure 8 1 on page 8 2 for the location of the LVD Step 2 Ifa PRU is installed ensure that the AC power cord is not connected Refer to Figure 8 1 on page 8 2 for the location of the PRU Step 3 Remove the locking screws that secure the battery hold down bracket and remove this bracket AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 June 2002 7 13 363 211 521 Installing the Batteries Installing the Batteries E SS Step 4 Locate the battery cable and thermal probe cable and move them out of the way St
120. ns Planning and Ordering Guide APOG in PDF format 363 211 125 AnyMedia Access System Ordering Guide in PDF format 363 211 106 AnyMedia Access System Feature Supplement MDS2 Shelf Configurations in PDF format 363 211 127 AnyMedia Access System Feature Supplement Integrated Access Terminal in PDF format 363 211 128 AnyMedia Access System Feature Supplement Central Office Terminal in PDF format 363 211 102 AnyMedia Access System Installation Manual in PDF format 363 211 100 AnyMedia Access System Commands and Procedures in HTML format also includes PDFs of selected procedures 363 211 129 AnyMedia Access System ConnectReach Terminal User s Guide in PDF format 363 211 130 AnyMedia Access System ConnectReach Plus Terminal User s Guide in PDF format 363 211 521 AnyMedia Access System Optical Network Unit Installation Manual for Indoor Application in PDF format 363 211 520 AnyMedia Access System Optical Network Unit Installation Manual for Outdoor Application in PDF format AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 363 211 520 About This Manual Related Documentation m SLC Documents 363 205 121 SLC Series 5 Carrier System J1C182BC 1 Remote Terminal Ring Shelf User Manual in PDF format gt NOTE An Adobe Acrobat Reader is provided to view all PDF files For documents in HTML format users need and must supply their own Web browse
121. nt Maintenance 9 18 Cleaning and inspecting 9 18 Acid spills and corrosion 9 18 Retorquing inter battery connections 9 18 Battery Replacement 9 20 9 2 June 2002 AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 363 211 521 Fan Unit and Battery Maintenance Maintenance Actions Maintenance Actions Fan units Check the fan filter for cleaning or replacement 2 months after the initial installation Subsequently check the fan filter at a maximum interval of 6 months Depending on the working conditions the fan should be replaced after 40 000 working hours about 4 years and 7 months if working 24 hours a day Replace defective fan units immediately Batteries IR 30EC batteries have a guaranteed lifetime of 5 years Replace the batteries after 5 years to ensure performance Depending on the working conditions the batteries should be replaced at a shorter interval if the ambient temperature remains permanently in the range above 77 F 25 C Operating the IR 30EC battery for any length of time above 77 F 25 C will result in reduced performance and premature failure Operation or storage for a significant interval of time above 122 F 50 C may reduce or void the product warranty AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 June 2002 9 3 363 211 521 Cleaning the Fan Filter Fan Unit and Battery Maintenance Cleaning the Fan Filter The ONU fan filter ordering codes are listed inTable 9 1 Table 9 1 Fan fil
122. oard box with the numeral 1 This number is required for the installation record Step 6 Verify that the battery has not reached the open circuit time limit see Figure 7 2 on page 7 8 Step 7 Follow the instructions for nitial Charging in the Product Manual IR Series Batteries See Figure 7 3 Observe the battery 7 10 June 2002 AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 363 211 521 Installing the Batteries Battery Handling and Preparation manufacturer s charging requirements Charging procedures are vendor specific and can vary for different battery types gt NOTE Return damaged batteries to the manufacturer Record any indications of acid spillage on the bill of lading before signing it Acid spillage is a valid criterion for rejecting a battery If it is determined that the battery should be returned to the manufacturer it will be easier to return at this point than if the battery has been installed Step 8 Note this battery number and the battery serial number which can be found on the battery sticker in the Installation and Maintenance Record Refer to Figure 7 4 for the location of the serial number IR Series 7 Model Number 1R30EC Lucent K 23815 L11 Valye Regulated Lead Acid Battery Non Spiliable Nomina Ni Capacity 26 5 rial Number L990200634 Date Installed Serial number Installation date which the installe has to record BATTERY MUST BE RECYCLED JANGE
123. on 7 7 Installation and maintenance record A 1 C Cable ED 7C818 36 Gr 1x 5 19 Power cord 6 4 Cabling ADSL 5 24 AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 o ADSL cables 5 24 Arrangement 5 12 TAP100 cable 5 17 Checking the batteries 8 13 COIN xviii Comments on document xxiii Connections Grounding 4 7 Protective ground 4 8 Crossover TAP cabling 5 17 D Document comment procedure xxiii Document conventions xviii Drawing for the ONU cabling 5 4 5 8 Drilling template 4 4 DSX 3 interface xix E electrical shock 1 9 Electrolyte Contact with 7 6 Electrostatic Discharge Protection Requirements 1 3 electrostatic discharges 1 3 Equipment test path 5 10 ESD 1 3 Socket 4 7 ESD Consequences 1 3 ESD Strap 1 4 F Facility test path 5 10 Fan Life expectancy 9 3 Maintenance 9 1 Fans 8 10 FDI 5 12 Fiber tools for installing 3 5 Fuses 8 6 Fusing for AC mains 6 2 G General Precautions 1 3 General Safety Admonishments 1 9 Grounding Cross section 4 8 Frameground 4 5 ONU 4 6 4 8 Procedure 4 8 June 2002 l 1 Index I Installation Batteries 7 7 LVD 8 6 PRU 8 4 RGU 8 8 Installation and Maintenance Record A 1 IR 30EC batteries external charging 9 16 voltage ripple for external charging 9 17 L LVD Installing 8 2 8 6 M Maintenance intervals 9 9 Maintenance routines 9 10 Margin switch 8 4 MDF xv 4 8
124. on packs to be removed Step 9 Repeat Step 1 through Step 7 for each T R cable Step 10 Carefully push each T R cable to the bottom and add cable ties as needed see Figure 5 7 Fiber KAS ENIN 2 A WZ J Figure 5 7 Cable routing below the ONU shelf Step 11 Terminate the tip ring pairs at the MDF for all installed T R cables and check the labeling of the cables connectors and conductors in accordance with the figures for connectors AP1 to AP8 Step 12 Note the wire color coding sequence of the factory prepared cable assemblies to facilitate the terminations gt NOTE If the AP cables are connected via the MDF to subscribers outside the building the MDF must be equipped with protector blocks and the MDF must be connected to an approved grounding terminal via a separate wire of at least 6 mm 9 AWG AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 June 2002 5 15 363 211 521 Installing T R Cables Connecting Signal Lines PARE T ET ES IG a ee a es Se S 7 l Space for air outlet ooo RING ofeoe o m m ALARM IN 48A o eme o z gt 48B ofene o z w TAP o beenen O 2S oO IA AIAI AIAJIAIQ L L L L L LII ILJ L OCP ap t ap 2 aps ape aps aps AP 7 AP Cable routing area Figure 5 8 Plug In arrangement and connector arrangement of the ONU shelf Testing the MDF Test the MDF according to local regulations A recommended practice for the Lucent MDF is
125. onstant current charger such as Lucent Technologies 337A1 a constant current that results in 13 38 to 14 4 V per battery at ambient temperature of 77 F 25 C is recommended for float standby applications The IR 30EC batteries are equipped with cable assemblies and a keyed 2 pin connector The cable is designed for 15 A current at maximum A WARNING The standard cable assembly mounted on the IR 30EC batteries is designed for charging currents below 15 A Charging currents exceeding 18 A will destroy the cable If the battery is charged externally in no case should the charging current of the external charger be allowed to exceed 18 A if the delivered cable assembly is used gt NOTE For battery replacement the battery manufacturer specifies the following Any fully charged IR 30EC battery at float that reads less than 13 V at 77 F 25 C is considered shorted and must be replaced 9 16 June 2002 AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 363 211 521 Fan Unit and Battery Maintenance External Charging E ee Voltage ripple for The amount of AC voltage ripple present on the charging voltage for the battery external charging can seriously affect battery performance Excessive ripple could result in sharply reduced battery life and increased gassing rates Both the amplitude and frequency of the ripple affect the degree of battery degradation As a guideline for IR 30EC batteries the charging voltage ripple for the batte
126. onths The charger must have overcurrent protection in its output must be able to re main across the batteries in case of an AC power failure and should not have crowbar protection Crowbar protection is an option used on some commercial portable power supplies that clamps a short across the output lead of the rectifier when the rectifier senses a higher voltage at the load than it is generating This feature should not be used with batteries Issue 7 November 1998 Installation 6 7 COPY of the Tyco Product Manual IR 30EC and IR 40EC Batteries Issue 7 Comcode 107078859 Figure 7 3 Copy of the initial charging recommendation of IR 30EC batteries gt NOTE If batteries are older than the allowed open circuit time and have not been maintained in this period they must not be installed and should be replaced Use the following procedure to unpack the battery and check the shipment for completeness AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 June 2002 7 9 363 211 521 Battery Handling and Preparation Installing the Batteries Step 1 Move the pallet with the wooden box containing the batteries and the battery accessories in close proximity to the ONU gt NOTE Use appropriate material handling equipment to move the battery pallet An IR 30EC battery weighs about 22 Ibs 10 kg Step 2 Using slip joint pliers remove all the staples nails from the wooden battery shipping container and dispose of th
127. ontroller data terminal equipment dual tone multifrequency data unit duplex enhanced business service error correction equipment catalog item ear and mouth element manager electromagnetic compatibility electromotive force electromagnetic interference element management system embedded operations channel echo path delay echo return loss errored seconds errored second line electrostatic discharge extended superframe errored seconds line errored seconds line far end errored seconds path errored seconds section equalized transmission only 363 211 521 List of Acronyms AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 363 211 521 List of Acronyms AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 F 4TDM FC FC L FC LFE FCC FCM FDI FE FEAC FELP FITL FITs fom FPT FSA FSAN FTP FX FXO FXS FRMGND G GA GCRA GOS GPB GPC GR 303 GSFN four wire tandem failure count failure counts line failure counts line far end Federal Communications Commission fuse circuit module feeder distribution interface far end far end alarm and control far end loopback fiber in the loop failure in 10 hours flashes per minute framed path termination first site application full service access network file transfer protocol foreign exchange foreign exchange office foreign exchange station frameground general availability generic cell rate algorithm grade of service general purp
128. ose bus general purpose communications Telcordia Technologies Inc Standard GR 303 generic signaling function June 2002 Le AC 7 AC 8 June 2002 GSI GTL GTSIP HBER HCS HDBH HDLC HDSL HDSL2 HDT HEC HTTP Hz I O IAD IAT IATSI IBERT ICLE ICP IDCU IDLC IDT IEEE IETF IMA IMLT 363 211 521 List of Acronyms graphical system interface Gunning transceiver logic global technical support information platform high BER header check sequence high day busy hour high level data link control high bit rate digital subscriber line high bit rate digital subscriber line second generation host digital terminal header error code hypertext transfer protocol hertz input output integrated access device integrated access terminal IAT system interface integrated bit error test initial customer laboratory evaluation IMA control protocol identifier integrated digital carrier unit integrated digital loop carrier integrated digital terminal Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Internet Engineering Task Force inverse multiplexing for ATM integrated mechanized loop testing AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 363 211 521 List of Acronyms AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 kbps kBps kHz kW LAN LAPD LBO LCD LDS LED LFACS LFP LLN LMI LOCD LL integrated network access initialization diagnostic Internet protocol Intern
129. ou have completed this form please fold tape and return it to the address on the back or Fax it to 973 581 6646 IN THE UNITED STATES NO POSTAGE NECESSARY IF MAILED Lucent Technologies Bell Labs Innovations BUSINESS REPLY MAIL FIRST CLASS PERMIT NO 5 NEW PROVIDENCE NJ POSTAGE WILL BE PAID BY ADDRESSEE BELL LABORATORIES LUCENT TECHNOLOGIES ATTN Customer Documentation Coordinator Room 14D 311 POST OFFICE BOX 903 67 WHIPPANY ROAD WHIPPANY NJ 07981 0903 363 211 521 Table of Contents Table of Contents About This Manual m Introduction XV m Conventions Used in This Document xviii m Related Documentation XX m How to Order this Document xxii m How to comment on this document xxiii 1 Safety m Overview 1 1 m Electrostatic Discharge 1 3 m Battery Safety 1 6 m Special Considerations for the Tyco IR 30EC Batteries 1 8 m General Safety Admonishments 1 9 m Electrical Wiring Admonishments 1 11 2 ONU Product Description m Overview 2 1 m Principal ONU Components 2 2 3 Overview of the Installation Process m Overview 3 1 m Installation Sequence 3 2 m Tools and Measurement Testing Instruments 3 4 4 Mounting and Grounding the ONU m Overview 4 1 m Wall Mounting the ONU 4 2 m Grounding the ONU 4 5 AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 June 2002 vii 363 211 521 Table of Contents Le 5 Connecting Signal Lines m Overview 5 1 m Cabling Inventory 5 3 m Installing the TAP B Cable
130. pping between the links and feeders IMA link A circuit path within the AFMDS1 that connects its feeder interface with a circuit that combines the link s broadband payload ATM cells with the payload of other links in the downstream direction and distributes the composite ATM payload cells among the links in the upstream direction Integrated access A device on the customer premises that consolidates traffic from device IAD several subscriber interfaces into a single pipe Often the pipe con nects to a host terminal that consolidates traffic from several ADs into a larger pipe Integrated A remote terminal RT connected to a local digital switch LDS dig configuration ital interface without a central office terminal COT GL 10 June 2002 AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 363 211 521 Glossary o BE ee Integrated Mechanized IMLT is a feature of the 5ESS switch that allows LoopCare formerly Loop Testing IMLT MLT to use the directly connected test unit DCTU of the 5ESS switch to make metallic tests on subscriber loops including those on digital loop carrier systems Integrated services CCITT l series recommendation that defines the digital network digital network ISDN standard for integrated voice and data network access and services and user network messages Inventory management Consists of a set of functions to track report and ensure adequate supplies of equipment L Latency In the AnyMedi
131. prietary cleaning fluids While unpacking and or installing the batteries Never place metal objects including tools on top of a battery m Never short out the battery terminals m Never use an open flame near batteries Never stack batteries in or out of their shipping cardboard boxes Never transport or move batteries so that their weight is supported by the terminal connections Never charge batteries that are visibly damaged or frozen typically at temperatures below 40 C if the battery is fully charged Gas discharge All lead acid batteries generate hydrogen gas even under open circuit conditions If not permitted to escape this gas can build up to explosive concentrations An explosion could occur when sparks are created near the battery string Do not place batteries in a sealed enclosure Freshly charged batteries are especially prone to discharging explosive gases for about 24 hours after charging AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 June 2002 7 5 363 211 521 Battery Safety Installing the Batteries ee Sparks To avoid sparks ensure that batteries are not charging or discharging before loosening or removing battery connections Sparks can trigger an explosion and short circuit other battery modules causing a fire The GMT type fuse in the LVD can produce sparks during interruption or clearing of a fault on a high energy circuit Any mechanical power switches and also static electricity are sources o
132. r cleaning the battery compartment only a DMM Digital Multimeter for example Tek DM254 or Fluke 8060A or equivalent The accuracy of an equivalent meter should be 0 05 percent on the DC scale Current converter or current probe 1 10 for multimeter used for up to 20 A Ihermometers for measuring the ambient temperature and the battery temperature contact type Waterproof fine line marker for marking batteries and the connectors also required to write the installation date onto the batteries A Class C fire extinguisher kept within reach Battery handling Before handling batteries read and understand the sections of the Product Manual IR Series Batteries that apply to IR 30EC batteries When removing containers from the shipping van place them on a dolly truck in their horizontal shipping positions Verify that the containers have not been damaged It is important that all containers be handled with care and not dropped The weight of the packed batteries in their shipping container is about 132 lbs 60 kg for four batteries of type IR 30EC AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 June 2002 7 7 363 211 521 Battery Handling and Preparation Installing the Batteries ee Do not apply silicone grease to IR 30EC batteries as this can interfere with the battery housing and other electronic components Shipping and When transporting crates or storing IR 30EC batteries in a warehouse do not storing IR 30EC stack
133. r industrial lime instead of soda for neutralization before cleanup If lime is not available you may use baking soda Wear eye protection devices and rubber gloves when using lime on electrolyte spills Sprinkle the lime on the spillage allow it to absorb the electrolyte and then sweep it up and dispose of it in the proper manner Wash hands and face thoroughly after cleanup 7 6 June 2002 AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 363 211 521 Installing the Batteries Battery Handling and Preparation Battery Handling and Preparation This section describes how to install the Tyco IR 30EC battery string and provides test procedures for verifying the integrity of the installation gt NOTE Install the batteries after all cables have been installed The requirements for storage handling external charging and maintenance are different for each battery manufacturer For IR 30EC batteries follow the procedures provided in the Product Manual for IR Series Batteries Required tools You will need the following tools and materials to install and test the battery string supplies and Splash proof safety goggles acid resistant gloves rubber overshoes and equipment apron m Cleaning cloth Lime and or soda sodium bicarbonate m Insulated socket driver or nut driver set 1 4 inch through 3 4 inch sockets and torque wrench 0 to 60 in lbs 6 Nm for maintenance replacement only m Sandpaper or abrasive cloth fo
134. r to view them The documentation has been verified using the following Web browsers Netscape Navigator 4 0 and Internet Explorer 5 0 or later The AnyMedia Access System Management Interface which includes the graphical system interface GSI and the Network Maintenance Manager is available on CD ROM To order see the AnyMedia Access System Ordering Guide 363 211 125 AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 June 2002 xxi 363 211 520 How to Order this Document About This Manual How to Order this Document Order number The ordering number for the AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual for Indoor Applications Release 1 is 363 211 520 Order procedure To order additional hard copies of this document and or to request placement on the standing order list send or call in an order as follows Telephone order Mail order Monday through Friday Lucent Technologies Within USA 1 888 LUCENT8 Customer Information Center 7 30 a m to 6 30 p m EST 2855 N Franklin Road P O Box 19901 FAX from USA Indianapolis IN 46219 1 800 566 9568 FAX worldwide 1 317 322 6699 a For ordering a purchase order number or charge card number is required with all orders Make checks payable to Lucent Technologies b Letter dialling LUCENT 582368 One time order One time orders include the contents for the current document issue in effect at the time of order Standing order You may request an update on the standing order list
135. removed disconnected temporarily in Step 1 5 26 June 2002 AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 Connecting AC Power Overview This chapter provides instructions for preparing the AC power cord and connecting it from the ONU shelf to the customer s external 120 240 V AC power source Contents Page a Installing the AC power cable 6 2 Recommended fusing 6 2 a Connecting AC Power 6 3 AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 June 2002 6 1 363 211 521 Installing the AC power cable Connecting AC Power Installing the AC power cable This procedure consists of preparing the AC power cord and connecting it between the ONU shelf and the customer s external power source of nominal 120 240 VAC The ONU is delivered with an AC power cord of about 10 feet 3 m stored in the ONU housing The cable is rolled up and attached on the outer right side of the housing The cable is equipped with the IEC 60320 plug on the ONU side and has open ends on the customer side Use AC power cord 848506820 for the IEC 60320 receptacle Make a permanent connection on the customer s side of the AC power cord Connect the PE green wire of the customer s AC source wire to the central approved grounding point according to local regulations Recommended Ensure that the customer s power source is fuse protected There are no field fusing replaceable fuses for the AC power inside the ONU Use a circuit breaker or main break
136. ro byte substitution zero code suppression AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 June 2002 AC 17 363 211 521 List of Acronyms o ESS AC 18 June 2002 AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 rr Glossary Numerics 10BaseT IEEE 802 3 standard for Ethernet transmission over unshielded twisted pair A Access interface A family of equipment that provides cost effective and flexible ac platform cess for different services e g voice and data using a common platform ACE COMDAC An ATM COMDAC which implements circuit emulation service CES for the DS1 links to the backbone network using unstructured data transfer mode UDT Admissible bandwidth The amount of bandwidth allocated to a service category in the up stream and downstream directions not applicable to UBR The sum of the effective bandwidths allocated to a Il connections sup ported by a service category divided by the overbooking factor of that service category must no exceed the admissible bandwidth of this service category The admissible bandwidth of a service cate gory may not exceed the shelf PCR ADSL lite A version of asymmetric digital subscriber line ADSL that is less expensive than full rate ADSL and that operates at a lower bit rate than full rate ADSL This version of ADSL is specified in ITU T G 992 2 AFMO logical feeder An entity used to address a SONET path or a protection group The port logical feeder port concep
137. roviding the higher of two levels of multiplexing W Wide area network A network that operates over a large region and commonly uses WAN carrier facilities and services Wire center Grouping a number of central offices into one center consolidation GL 20 June 2002 AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 363 211 521 Glossary xDSL Refers to a variety of DSL services such as HDSL HDSL2 SDSL SHDSL and ADSL AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 June 2002 GL 21 363 211 521 Glossary E S GL 22 June 2002 AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 Index A a b cable installation 5 13 AC mains cable installation 6 2 AC mains connector 6 2 AC power supply 8 10 Acid spill 1 7 7 6 ADSL xviii Antistatic wrist strap 1 5 AnyMedia Access System Documents xx AnyMedia FAST shelf xviii AP connector Removal and insertion 5 14 APOG xx ATM xDSL xviii B Batteries 1 8 7 3 8 12 Acid spills 9 18 boost charging 1 8 Cable assembly warning 1 8 charging 8 14 Cleaning 7 5 Cleaning and inspecting 9 18 Corrosion 9 18 Damaged 7 11 Handling 7 7 Initial charging 7 8 Installing 7 13 Maintenance 9 1 Marking 7 10 Mounting 7 13 Retorquing inter battery connections 9 18 Storage conditions 7 8 Storage time 7 8 string voltage 8 13 tools required for installation of 3 4 Unpacking 7 9 Voltage for a single battery 9 13 Battery Installati
138. rst time 18 Install and check the fiber cable 19 Switch off the low voltage disconnect unit connect the battery cable and the thermal probe cable to the PRU and turn on the LVD 20 Charge the batteries for at least for 48 hours 3 2 June 2002 AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 363 211 521 Overview of the Installation Process Installation Sequence a 21 Equip the ONU shelf with the OCP and with APs as instructed in AnyMedia Access System Commands and Procedures on line documentation 863 211 103 AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 June 2002 3 3 363 211 521 Tools and Measurement Testing Instruments Overview of the Installation Process Tools and Measurement Testing Instruments The following is a list of suggested tools and test equipment needed to unpack the ONU and to complete its installation gt NOTE The equipment and or materials required depends on the particular installation Table 3 1 List of tools and equipment Use for Tools Remark Wire cutters up to 6 mm7 and strippers diagonal cutting pliers coated wire Basic ESD wrist strap stripping tweezer multi purpose knife extension cable 5 m Torque wrench up to 70 inch lbs up to 7 Nm Hand tool kit screwdriver sets for standard slotted Pozidrive and Phillips wrench sets open end double hex hexagon socket head balend universal and pointed pliers flat and round file with handle nut drivers leve
139. ry should not exceed 60 mV peak to peak per battery or last longer in duration than 8 ms AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 June 2002 9 17 363 211 521 Battery Compartment Maintenance Fan Unit and Battery Maintenance Battery Compartment Maintenance Cleaning and Inspect the batteries and the battery compartment visually at least twice a year or inspecting more often if warranted If necessary clean the batteries and the battery compartment using a soft cloth dampened in water Inspect the delivered battery cable assemblies for corrosion Report any sign of acid or corrosion to Lucent Technologies Acid spills and If acid spills occur clean the battery compartment properly A wire brush may be corrosion used to clean acid spills in the battery compartment Any damaged areas must be re varnished A WARNING When cleaning the metal battery compartment with a wire brush do not let it come in contact with the battery terminals or inter battery connectors which can short circuit the batteries and cause considerable damage Retorquing inter The inter battery connections for the battery cable assemblies are factory battery connections delivered You will only need to retorque these connections when you are replacing the batteries or the cable assembly gt NOTE The battery is equipped with 10 32 x 0 50 screws Do not use M5 screws as replacements for the original screws If retorquing is required retorque IR 30EC
140. ry string To avoid sparks check that the batteries are not charging or discharging before loosening or removing battery connections Provide adequate ventilation The GMT type fuses in the low voltage disconnect unit LVD can produce sparks during interruption or clearing of a fault on a high energy circuit Use only GMT fuses specified by Lucent Technologies To avoid loose connections take care to avoid stripping the bolt and or nut threads by overtightening the inter battery connectors In the event of electrolyte contact with the skin remove the electrolyte immediately by rinsing the affected area with large amounts of plain tap water In the event of electrolyte contact with an eye allow at least one liter of water to run over the eye and under the eyelid Eye injuries should be treated by a physician immediately lf large acid spill occurs use agricultural or industrial lime instead of soda to neutralize the acid before cleanup If lime is not available you may use baking soda Wear eye protection devices and rubber gloves when using lime on electrolyte spills Sprinkle the lime on the spillage allow it to absorb the electrolyte and then sweep it up and dispose of it safely according to local regulations Wash hands and face thoroughly after cleanup AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 363 211 521 Fan Unit and Battery Maintenance Battery Maintenance Procedures Battery Maintenance Procedures Maintenance
141. s caused by cell dry out Boost charging the IR 30EC batteries is not recommended without the concurrence of Tyco Refer to the Product Manual for IR 30EC and IR 40EC Batteries Section Operations Sulfuric acid The batteries contain sulfuric acid gel which may cause corrosion to skin In the event of electrolytic contact with the skin remove the electrolyte immediately by rinsing the affected area with large amounts of plain tap water In the event of electrolyte in the eye pour water into the eye and allow at least one liter of water to run over the eye and under the eyelid Eye injuries should be treated by a physician immediately 1 8 June 2002 AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 363 211 521 Safety General Safety Admonishments General Safety Admonishments Important general Read and understand all instructions For information on proper mounting safety instructions instructions consult the appropriate section in this installation manual Follow all warnings and instructions marked on the product Do not place the shelves on an unstable cart a stand or a table The product may fall causing serious damage to the equipment Slots and openings in these shelves are provided for ventilation To protect the shelves from overheating these openings must not be blocked or covered This equipment should not be placed in a built in installation unless proper ventilation is provided Never push objects of an
142. s name is identified by the Navis AnyMedia EMS as the NE name SNR margin of ADSL The increase in noise relative to the current received noise power line that can occur with a BER of 10 still being met Software upgrade Installing newer system software Standby A backup circuit pack or system entity that may be activated during a equipment failure or testing Sustainable cell rate The average cell transmission rate in ATM measured in cells per SCR second and converted internally to bits per second Usually SCR is a fraction of the peak cell rate Switch consolidation Grouping telecommunications lines increasing density for better efficiency ease of maintenance reduced cost space etc Symmetric digital A physical layer technology used to transport digital bit stream over subscriber line SDSL one pair of nonloaded existing copper distribution cable SDSL pro vides equal transmission bit rates for both the upstream and down stream directions ranging from 144 to 2320 kbps SDSL is based on use of the 2B1Q line coding scheme 2B1Q SDSL is a baseband line coding scheme that does not allow the option to share the cop per loop from a baseband POTS signal Synchronous optical A United States high speed fiber optic transport standard for a fi network SONET ber optic digital hierarchy speeds range from 51 84 Mbps to 2 4 Gbps T T1 A four wire repeater system commonly used to refer to a DS1 sig nal T1 carrier The TDM d
143. screw for 5 16 inch socket If required retorque with 40 in lbs approx 4 4 Nm 0 1 Nm Battery lifting handle also protects the terminals 7 00 17 78 cm We 14 AWG lead assembly with keyed 2 pin connector never exceed 15 A load ae ye Oo 7 m ONAR 0155 n Battery weight 24 Ibs 10 9 kg Qo S a7 Figure 7 1 IR 30EC battery 7 4 June 2002 AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 363 211 521 Installing the Batteries Battery Safety a Battery Safety General safety For safe battery handling always observe the following basic precautions precautions m Use only properly insulated tools and test equipment Remove all metallic objects key chains glasses rings watches or any other jewelry Wear safety glasses acid resistant gloves rubber overshoes and apron a Test circuits before touching Lock out and tag any circuit breakers or fuses whenever possible to prevent accidental turn on Be aware of potential hazards before servicing equipment Do not short the battery m Identify exposed hazardous electrical potentials on connectors wiring etc Note the condition of these circuits especially any wiring m Take care when removing or replacing any covers or brackets Avoid contacting terminals a Always verify the polarity before connecting cables to the batteries Use a damp soft cloth for cleaning batteries Do not use solvents paraffin abrasive or pro
144. scribed in Telcordia Technologies Inc TR TSY 000335 The simple network management protocol SNMP operation used by the OS to retrieve specified information such as the values of MIB variables Includes the FAST shelf VPIs and the ATM operations channel VPI and VCI also known as ATM OAM amp P PVC The GSI is part of the Management Interface package of software that is an interface to control and maintain the AnyMedia FAST shelf telephony and data services and subshelves The portion of the feeder throughput feeder bandwidth made available to a service category to be used during periods of sus tained congestion Guaranteed bandwidth is explicitly specified for CBR rt VBR and nrt VBR by means of provisioning the weights for the Weighted Round Robin WRR Scheduler The sum of all guar anteed bandwidths may not exceed the feeder bandwidth High capacity hi cap subscriber services direct DS1 paths from subscriber equipment to the serving CO Ten consecutive seconds with each second having one or more of the following anomalies At least 18 ADSL superframes with ADSL CRC anomalies At least 0 1 seconds in which the received power has dropped to 6 dB below the reference power At least one ADSL superframe with synchronization anomalies AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 June 2002 GL 9 363 211 521 Glossary E SS High BER on upstream The SDSL signal received from the CPE is considered to be in a SDSL lin
145. sition AP 8 The subscriber lines of the application packs are numbered from 1 to 256 AP8 therefore would use terminals 225 to 256 and the TAP B cable would use terminals 257 to 271 for example Nevertheless only 96 narrowband subscribers can be served by the ONU AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 363 211 521 Connecting Signal Lines Installing the TAP100 Cable ee TAP100 specific cabling on the MDF Referring to Table 5 4 page 5 19 make the 4 connections shown in boldface via the MDF if a TAP100 is used in the ONU shelf slot position AP 8 Table 5 4 TAP B cable ED 7C818 36 Gr 1x ONU shelf C1 to MDF example for TAP100 using AP8 TAP B Cable ED7C818 36 Gr1x from ONU shelf T R cable ED7C818 30 Grlx from the TAP100 to the connection panel to the MDF MDF Female MDF MDF Female TAP100 conn C1 AnyMedia signal Wire TA P B TA P100 Wire connector AnyMedia signal from male for TAP B side side from male AP8 for TAP100 C1 on ONU example example connector 1 12 not notused notused notused connected z 13 TAPB eee fae W 257b OUENOLUSEG not used multiple testing 14 TAPB_EQ R1 258b er 15 TAPB_EQ R G W TAP_EQ R Ring b wire Equipment b wire port 16 TAPB_FAC R BR W O W TAP_FAC_R Ring b wire Facility b wire port2 connected but not used v meren Sw ae E an em e meram OR oem __ nef wat are oe ee eee 33 TAPB EQ Te W
146. t A LAN that uses the CSAM CD media access method and operates at 10 Mbps usually over coax medium F Facility protection The capability for a system to choose which signal from two facili ties to pass along to the internal unprotected transmission paths A system switches from one facility to the other for example when the facility being used fails or when an administrator issues an OAM amp P command Fault management Consists of a set of functions such as testing that enable the de tection isolation and correction of abnormal operation of the tele communications network and its environment Feeder cable The portion of a customer loop from the central office switch inte grated or from the main distribution frame MDF to the office side of the feeder distribution interface FDI In the case of DLC it in cludes the DLC line plus any copper cable from the RT to the FDI Fixed wireless network A digital loop carrier DLC system that uses wireless radio trans mission through the air as the distribution medium to the home re placing the traditional copper wire outside plant A radio unit is mounted on the outside of the home network interface unit and is connected to standard twisted pair wiring within the home FLASH memory device A nonvolatile memory device that may be reprogrammed in the field through software download Framed path The physical framer device on the ACE COMDAC which terminates termination a DS1 signal
147. t allows addressing of attributes or enti ties that are common to all physical feeder ports associated with the logical feeder port and that are independent of simplex or duplex mode The AFMO and the AFMDS3 have two logical feeder ports AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 June 2002 GL 1 363 211 521 Glossary ee AFMO physical feeder Corresponds to the physical termination of the optical feeder The port physical feeder port concept allows the addressing of SONET phys ical medium selection and line layer entities An AnyMedia shelf has two physical feeder ports when using one AFMO in simplex mode and four physical feeder ports when using two AFMOs in du plex mode AnyMedia operations Operations access for up to 20 RTs via universal communication gateway channels UCCs Application layer OSI A layer of OSIRM Provides the management of communications between user applications Examples include e mail and file trans fer Asymmetric digital A method of data transmission over unloaded copper loops The subscriber line ADSL data rate transmitted toward the end user is typically much higher e g 6 Mbps than the data rate transmitted by the end user e g 640 Kbps Asynchronous transfer A high speed connection oriented mulitplexing and switching mode ATM method that utilizes fixed length cells to support multiple types of traffic Transmission is synchronized at the start and end of each character allowing
148. t from other sources If a piece of plastic is placed near one end of a circuit pack lying on an insulated table top the plastic can direct its charge into the circuit pack Identifying ESD damage can be difficult because in most cases physical damage cannot be seen A circuit pack which has been exposed to an ESD may Not be affected i e work perfectly with normal life expectancy Function normally but with reduced life expectancy Function erratically at times m Stop functioning altogether Electrostatic To reduce the possibility of ESD damage use the following guidelines Discharge Assemblies are usually equipped with grounding jacks to enable personnel to Protection ground themselves using wrist straps while handling circuit packs or working on Requirements an assembly The jacks for connection of wrist straps are located at each assembly and are labeled When grounding jacks are not provided an alligator clip adapter enables connection to bay frame ground Inspect the antistatic wrist strap once a day for damage or when it is suspected that the wrist strap has been stressed See Figure 1 1 on page 1 4 for a typical antistatic wrist strap Before using the antistatic wrist strap verify with a volt ohmmeter that approximately 1 megohm resistance is present between the wrist strap frame connector and the wrist harness m The clip or plug connector of the wrist strap must be connected to a ground which is common with th
149. telecommunications system modular metallic service unit minor modification request millisecond metallic shelf controller 363 211 521 List of Acronyms LL AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 363 211 521 List of Acronyms AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 MSG MTBF MTU MVEC NB NCTE NE NEBS NEC NI NIC NMP NMS nrt VBR NSA NT 1 NTP NTT NTR NVDS NVPS O OAM amp P OAP OC OCD OCP OCU OE message switch mean time between failures maximum transfer unit majority vote error correction narrowband network channel terminating equipment near end or network element network equipment building systems national electric code network interface network interface card network management protocol network management station nonreal time variable bit rate nonservice affecting network termination 1 network time protocol no test trunk network timing reference nonvolatile data storage nonvolatile program storage operations administration maintenance and provisioning optical application pack optical carrier out of cell optical controller pack office channel unit originating equipment June 2002 AC 11 363 211 521 List of Acronyms Le OHT on hook transmission OLIU optical line interface unit ONU optical network unit OOS out of service OPS INE operations system for intelligent network OS operations system OSMINE operations systems modifica
150. ter for replacement Designation Apparatus Code Fan filter FF X55 Class 2 324A 848456943 NA Cleaning methods Clean the fan filter using low pressure warm water or a vacuum cleaner For washing the filter use low pressure warm water and mild detergents no chlorine or bleach Rinse from the exhaust side and push dirt out For vacuum cleaning the direction of the cleaning airflow must be the reverse of the operational airflow Vacuum the intake side only Filter replacement Replace the fan filter when criteria You first notice restricted air movement over the electronics At the first signs of overheating a Ifthe filter is destroyed partly or completely It has reached the allowed number of cleaning cycles as stated in the filter manufacturer s data sheet Replacing the fan You can safely replace the fan filter while the fan is running Do not de energize filter the fan f a spare filter is available replace the fan filter and the remove it for cleaning as described previously Use the following steps to replace the filter Step 1 Locate the fan filter directly above the fan unit Pull the filter out using the two plastic loops illustrated in Figure 9 1 below 9 4 June 2002 AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 363 211 521 Fan Unit and Battery Maintenance Cleaning the Fan Filter Fan filter asan Lacco Leacan locosam lecosaml leoosm Thessa O Comcode 848456943 saci
151. tion of intelligent network elements OSP outside plant OTGR operations technology generic requirements P P AIS path alarm indication signal P AR peak to average ratio PAM pulse amplitude modulation PBX private branch exchange PC personal computer PCI peripheral component interconnect PCM pulse code modulation PCR peak cell rate PDF portable document format PDU protocol data unit PFP physical feeder port PGTC pair gain test controller PIDB processor interface data bus PLAR private line automatic ring PLCP physical layer convergence protocol PLN physical line number PLR pulse line repeater POTS plain old telephone service ppm parts per million PPP point to point protocol PRC Access Product Realization Center Access AC 12 June 2002 AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 363 211 521 List of Acronyms AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 PRF PRI PRS PRU PSAP PSC PSD PSDM PSES PSTN PTU PVC PVP QMON Qos RACO RADSL RAI RAM RCLK RC V RD RDI REFCLK REN RFI RGU RIP power rectifier fault primary rate interface primary reference source power rectifier unit public safety answering point protection switching counts power spectral density power spectral density mask p bit severely errored seconds public switched telecommunications network power and test unit permanent virtual circuit permanent virtual path quality monitoring quality of service remote
152. to the Application Schematic drawings that are mentioned in the Appendix A of this manual m lo reduce the risk of electrical shock do not reach into touch anything inside or disassemble this product Service should be performed by trained personnel only Opening or removing covers and or circuit packs may expose you to dangerous voltages or other risks Incorrect reassembly can cause electrical shock when the unit is subsequently used a Use only Lucent Technologies manufactured UL recognized circuit packs in this system t Registered trademark of Underwriters Laboratories Inc AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 June 2002 1 11 363 211 521 Electrical Wiring Admonishments Safety OO E SS 1 12 June 2002 AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 ONU Product Description Overview The indoor ONU is an extension of the AnyMedia FAST shelf It enables telephony and AIM xDSL applications to be provided efficiently to remote business and residential communities The ONU is designed to be mounted on an inside wall It can be equipped with the same type of application packs APs as the AnyMedia FAST shelf and can provide the same narrowband and broadband services This chapter briefly describes the principal ONU components Contents Page a Principal ONU Components 2 2 Component descriptions 2 2 AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 June 2002 2 1 363 211 521 Principal ONU Components
153. to the voltage of batteries 3 and 4 2nd partial string AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 June 2002 9 13 363 211 521 Battery String Float Voltage Fan Unit and Battery Maintenance A CAUTION The maximum difference between these voltages is 1 7 V Values greater than 1 7 V will generate a rectifier balance failure A CAUTION Be aware that maintenance actions will interrupt the battery buffering for the ONU shelf if the battery circuit breaker is switched OFF and J3 is disconnected A loss of AC power during these maintenance procedures will cause a shut down of the complete ONU To measure battery voltage the battery string must be disconnected from the rectifier Observe the following precautions to avoid short circuits during battery maintenance procedures m Use insulated probes for measuring Bevery careful when taking voltage readings to prevent accidental grounding or shorting of leads during measuring operations Connections at the meter must be secure and free of any possibility of touching or becoming grounded m Never remove connections at the meter end without first disconnecting the test leads from the battery Remove test lead connections at the battery immediately after each reading is taken Individual battery Use the following procedure to measure the voltage of an individual battery measurement Step 1 Locate in the Installation and Maintenance Record where the procedure battery re
154. trol CAC phase to determine whether a connection request can be accepted should be rejected or may be re allocated based on QoS defini tions COSET The header error co setting 55 hex by ATM standards is used to maintain a value other than zero in the header error code HEC field If the first four bytes in the header are zero the HEC derived from these bytes is also zero When this occurs and there are a string of zeros in the data the receiver cannot determine the cell boundaries Therefore it is recommended that the value 55 hex be added to the HEC before transmission Craft interface terminal The port on the craft test unit CTU where the graphical system in CIT port terface GSI or a TL1 system interface TL1SI is connected Customer premises Equipment that resides and is operated at a customer site equipment CPE Cyclic redundancy An algorithm that detects bit errors causes in data transmission check CRC D D4 A framing and synchronization format for T1 transmission facilities Dangler cable Cable that effectively brings a backplane connector to the front of the shelf Database evolution When AFM software is upgraded to provide new features it is usu ally necessary to adapt or extend the database structure to accom modate these features This is done automatically as part of soft ware activation and is termed database evolution Data communications A modem or network communications interface device or
155. uired is ambient temperature dependent The PRU will adapt this charging voltage with 72 mV C The recommended float voltage per IR 30EC battery is 13 5 V 0 06 V at a battery temperature of 77 F 25 C For example a 4 battery string of IR 30EC batteries should be floated at Battery string voltage 13 5 V x 4 batteries 54 0 V 0 24 V gt NOTE The required charging voltage is different for other battery types Always use the values provided by the battery manufacturer Measuring the Read battery string voltages periodically to ensure that they are floating properly voltage of the A Fluke 8060A DMM digital multimeter is suitable for battery voltage readings battery string AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 June 2002 9 11 363 211 521 Battery String Float Voltage Fan Unit and Battery Maintenance E SS The accuracy of an equivalent meter should be 0 05 percent on the DC scale Check the meter periodically for accuracy and calibration You may use either of the following methods to measure the string voltage on the battery cable connector J3 Measure on the wiring side of the battery cable connector J3 plugged in the LVD by inserting the probes into the opening for the wires using small test probes Measure on the contact side of the battery cable connector J3 disconnected from the LVD by inserting the probes into the contacts A CAUTION Be aware that maintenance actions will interrupt the battery
156. ures Fan Unit and Battery Maintenance Table 9 4 Suggested maintenance routines additional Routine Action Interval Discharge test Measure record Optional 9 10 June 2002 AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 363 211 521 Fan Unit and Battery Maintenance Battery String Float Voltage Battery String Float Voltage Required tools You will need the following tools and materials to install or test the battery string Splash proof safety goggles acid resistant gloves rubber overshoes and apron m Cleaning cloth m Lime and or soda sodium bicarbonate m Insulated socket drive or nut driver set 1 4 inch through 3 4 inch sockets and torque wrench 0 to 60 in lbs 6 Nm for maintenance replacement m Sandpaper or abrasive cloth for cleaning the battery compartment only DMM Digital Multimeter Tek DM254 or Fluke 8060A or equivalent The accuracy of an equivalent meter should be 0 05 percent on the DC scale Current converter transformer or current probe 1 10 for multimeter usable up to 20 A Thermometers for measuring the ambient and battery temperature contact type A Class C fire extinguisher should be reachable Determining the To ensure safe and efficient battery operation always maintain the battery at the float voltage proper float voltage which is determined as follows Battery string voltage recommended float voltage per battery x number of batteries The float voltage req
157. used to verify that only those users or operating systems authorized to access the system are permitted to do so and to en sure that the user or operating system is only allowed to alter or ex tract its authorized data Automatically updates and maintains an inventory of the AnyMedia FAST shelf Messages sent by the AnyMedia Access System to operations sys tems or element managers EMs to report conditions such as er rors faults and threshold crossings The AnyMedia Access Sys tem s processors decide when or what messages are sent they are not externally requested An ISDN access interface type made up of two B channels each at 64 kbps and one D channel at 16 kbps 2B D An ISDN bearer service channel that can carry either voice or data at a speed of 64 kbps The quality of transmission is measured in the number of errored bits per number of bits received High speed data and asynchronous transfer mode services June 2002 GL 3 GL 4 C Cell Cell delay variation CDV Cell delay variation tolerance CDVT Cell header Cell loss priority Cell loss ratio CLR Cell transfer delay CTD Cells received Channel Circuit emulation service CES CES interworking function CES IWF Circuit pack protection June 2002 363 211 521 Glossary A fixed length 53 octet packet used in ATM The AM cell has a 5 octet header and a 48 octet payload The amount of difference between a cell s expect
158. which the user accesses the network A service category that supports variable bit rate data traffic with av erage and peak traffic parameters A virtual link defined at an ATM interface The lower of the two lev els of cell multiplexing defined for ATM The sum of all the unidirectional virtual channel links traveled by an ATM payload from its originating point to its user destination A voice communications link that appears to the user to be a dedi cated point to point circuit AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 June 2002 GL 19 363 211 521 Glossary E SS Virtual connection A connection between end users in which data may be passed over various circuit configurations during a single period of communica tion Virtual circuits are generally set up on a per call basis and are disconnected when the call is terminated VF cables Refers generically to the tip ring pair cables that attach to the face plates of all APs including the telephony and ATM xDSL APs VF growth Increased demand for voice frequency capacity Virtual DS1 feeder Refers to a DS1 feeder link provided by ATM circuit emulation The term virtual is used to emphasize that a physical feeder i e a feeder provided when the IODS1 circuit pack is used is not being used A virtual DS1 feeder connection is represented by the fpt AID as opposed to the ds1 AID used for the IODS1 physical feeder Virtual channel A sixteen bit field in the ATM cell
159. y kind into this product through cabinet slots as they may touch dangerous voltage points or short out parts that could result in a risk of fire or electrical shock Never spill liquid of any kind on the product Lightwave safety A Lucent Technologies lightwave digital transmission system and associated optical test sets use semiconductor laser transmitters The lasers emit lightwaves at or near infrared wavelengths into lightguide cables This light is at the red end of the visible spectrum Although at present the transmitter power levels are below those known to cause injury to the eye for example from a direct inadvertent exposure to the end of an energized fiber direct exposure at close distances should be avoided A CAUTION Never view any unterminated optical connector with optical instruments other than indirect image converting devices such as the FIND R SCOPE since viewing optics tend to collimate the energy from an optical connector and hence increase the potential risk for injury Personnel performing these procedures must be trained in laser safety Registered trademark of FJW Optical Systems Inc AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 June 2002 1 9 363 211 521 General Safety Admonishments Safety Product safety A CAUTION Only trained service personnel should perform the procedures in this document These procedures involve exposure to high electrical energy and or current that may result in e
160. ystem interface Any ASCII terminal connected to a port via an EIA 232E 574 format TL1SI that uses TL1 commands to turn up a system and perform mainte nance provisioning and other system operations TL1SI view A window available in the GSI by launching a TL1SI view window though the GSI of the AnyMedia Management Interface Token A marker that indicates the station s right to transmit that can be held by a station on a token ring or bus Traditional DLC That part of the AnyMedia Access System which supports tradi subsystem tional DLC services Transmission control The combination of a network and transport protocol developed by protocol Internet ARPANET for internetworking IP based networks protocol TCP IP TRAP The simple network management protocol SNMP operation used by a network element NE to send an autonomous report Twisted pair TP The basic transmission medium consisting of 22 to 26 American wire gauge AWG insulated copper wire TP can be either shielded STP or unshielded UTP GL 18 June 2002 AnyMedia ONU Installation Manual Indoor Issue 1 363 211 521 Glossary U Universal communication channel UCC Universal configuration Unspecified bit rate UBR Unstructured data transfer mode UDT Upstream direction Upstream VP User security classes User to network interface UNI V Variable bit rate VBR Virtual channel VC Virtual channel connection VCC Virtual circuit VC

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