Jun 17, 2014

Technology Used Primarily for Next Generation Network/FTTH

With the progress in the Technology, larger bandwidths are required with the increasing complexities. Corporate Units, homes offices, ATM has forced FSAN group to look for better technologies. FSAN initiated the Gigabite Passive Optical Network (GPON) Standardization work in the Year 2001, for designing networks offering high data transmission with a transmission capacity as high as 1Gbps.. Another specialized feature of GPON is that it offers coverage data and voice service upto 2.5 Gbps, and so gives a big advantage over the other available schemes.

GPON:


EPON:


Ethernet equipment vendors formed Ethernet in the First Mile Alliance (EFMA) to work on a architecture for FTTH as Ethernet is a dominant protocol in Local Area Network. EPON based FTTH was adopted by IEEE standard IEEE802.3ah in September 2004. Adopting Ethernet technology in the access network would make uniform protocol at the customer end simplifying the network management. Single protocol in Local Area Network, Access Network and Backbone network enables easy rollout of FTTH.

EPON standards networking community renamed the term ‘last mile’ to ‘first mile’ to symbolize its importance and significance access part of the network. EFM introduced the concept of Ethernet Passive Optical Networks (EPONs), in which a point to multipoint (P2MP) network topology is implemented with passive optical splitters.

EPON, is largely vendor-driven standard and it is fundamentally similar to ATM-PON but transports Ethernet frames/packets instead of ATM cells. It specified minimum standardization and product differentiation, also it has decided not to standardize the Bandwidth allocation algorithm (DBA), TDM and ATM support, Security, Authentication, WDM Overlay Plan, support for Analog Video Protection, Diagnostics, Monitoring,, Compliance with existing OSS leaving these to the vendors to choose the best.

Multiple Ports / Flexible 100Base-FX Fiber Optical connective for Distance Extension Solution

Functional re-evolution! Enhanced Management Features PLANET FGSW-2624SF Managed Fiber Switch has excellent reputation from FTTx Service Providers by offering multiple high-speed fiber ports and high flexibility in network deployment. To bring users better and better performed Ethernet networking, PLANET introduces FGSW-2624SF update version with minor changes in hardware but greatly promoted management functions in firmware. The FGSW-2624SF features highly secure SSL function, Telnet command line management mode, and SNMP 4 RMON Groups (Statistics, History, Alarm and Event) besides the existing user-friendly WEB management interface.For L2 / L4 switching management, Q-in-Q (Double Tag) VLAN is included to fit the increasing demand in Metro Access application; IP DSCP QoS priority is also featured to enhance the VoIP streaming in the fiber-optic network. With these advanced networking features, the FGSW-2624F is most suitable for long-distance fiber-optic network deployment like IP surveillance system, campus, distance learning, FTTx, MDU (Multi-Dwelling Unit), MTU (Multi-Tenant Unit) and Metro markets.

Key Features:
  • WEB / SSL / Telnet / SNMP Management
  • IEEE 802.1Q / Q-in-Q VLAN
  • IEEE 802.1w RSTP protocol / IEEE 802.3ad Link Aggregation
  • IGMP Snooping v1, v2 and Query mode
  • IP DSCP QoS and Bandwidth Control
  • Layer 2 / 3 / 4 ACL and Port Security
  • SNMP v1 / v2c and 4 RMON Groups
Application:
With 24 100Base-FX SFP ports and 2 Gigabit TP/SFP combo ports, the switch provides a cost-effective, high-performance for FTTx solutions. To build a network solution of FTTH (Fiber to the Home) or FTTC (Fiber to the Curb) for ISPs and FTTB (Fiber to the Building) for enterprise, the various distances of SFP (small-form factor) and Bidi (WDM) transceivers are optional for customers. Compared with traditional fiber switch that equipped fixed distance (2Km) and connection mode (SC only), the 24 SFP ports provides flexible solution for ISPs and enterprises. In addition, the two Gigabit TP/SFP combo ports can be used as uplink port which connects to the data centers and backbones.

Small Form-factor Pluggable (SFP)

Small form-factor pluggable (SFP) is a specification for a new generation of optical modular transceivers. The devices are designed for use with small form factor (SFF) connectors, and offer high speed and physical compactness. They are hot-swappable.


SFP transceivers are expected to perform at data speeds of up to five gigabits per second (5 Gbps), and possibly higher. Because SFP modules can be easily interchanged, electro-optical or fiber optic networks can be upgraded and maintained more conveniently than has been the case with traditional soldered-in modules. Rather than replacing an entire circuit board containing several soldered-in modules, a single module can be removed and replaced for repair or upgrading. This can result in a substantial cost savings, both in maintenance and in upgrading efforts.

Several companies have formed a consortium supporting the use of SFP transceivers to meet their common objectives of broad bandwidth, small physical size and mass, and ease of removal and replacement.

Jun 14, 2014

Passive Optical LAN (POL) : The Future LAN

Technology has began a transformation into the new age with passive optical lan. Take your business into the green zone by taking advantage of this modern updated way of replacing the old copper wires with modern fiber optics. Among the industry of upgrades.


As things move so fast that the world cannot keep up with the changing technology, POL makes a progressive attempt at reducing power consumption. First you need to understand this is the most green initiative around. POLwill save in your energy costs providing a very important money saving method for any business. While the cost of power is saved on a day to day basis, there will be a longer lasting effect for the longevity of your equipment. In respect to fiber optics the POL will bring about nearly five times more life that once existed with the old standby copper.

The benefits of the new fiber optic systems will not only be in the longer life they provide but in the speed they are able to add to any older system. In an economy that seems to flounder in an attempt to survive saving money in Capital expense ( CapEX ) and operating costs (OpeX ) are some of the top rated needs for all businesses. One source of money saving potential will come with the amount of heat and power that are eliminated using the POL deployment as opposed to copper wires.


With the technology you are provided the efficient fiber optic connectivity to any and all Ethernet end points. Bringing about a simplified LAN as this system replaces copper infrastructures with its POL. The new installation not only saves on the amount of heat generated and power needed but can save a business in space due to the compact design of the new POL, which in turn will save more money.


Installation of the passive optical lan will simplify your operations to a much easier manageable rate of working by the elimination of the necessary fees charged annually for licensing and service of the traditional system. With this form of passive optical network you receive the simplest, safest and most secure series of possibilities that the market offers at this time.


Passive Optical Lan is tested and a proven technology, more than 1 Million ONT has been shipped and Joint Interoperability Test Command (JITC) approval lays groundwork for U.S. Department of Defense to immediately begin deployments of Motorola’s proven all optical LAN solution.

Jun 5, 2014

Understanding Fiber optic cables

Transcript I find this a fascinating object: Its a fiber optic cable for a stereo. If I shine this laser pointer down the cable, it guides the light out the other end. These cables are used to connect our world today, and are capable of transmitting information across countries and oceans, but first, let me show you how it works.


I have a bucket that I modified with a window in front. And on the other side, I put a stopper in this hole right here. I have a bottle of propylene glycol with a just a little bit of creamer in it. A ring stand. And, of course, a laser pointer. Now keep your eye on this plug when I turn out the lights.

That's wonderful! The light follows the liquid's flow all the way to the bucket! Amazing. It does this because of total internal reflection.

As the light enters the stream it is reflected as soon as it hits the interface between air and liquid. You can see here the first reflection, and then the second and the third. This occurs because there's a difference between the index of refraction of the guide material - here propylene glycol - and the outside - air in this case.

Recall that any time light strikes a surface it can either be absorbed by the material, reflected from it or pass into and through it - the latter we call refraction. Its easier to see from a top view. Reflection and refraction can happen at the same time, but if a light ray hits the surface at an angle greater than the critical angle it will be completely reflected and not refracted. For this propylene glycol and air system as long as a beam hits the surface at an angle greater than 44.35 degrees measured from the normal it will propagate down the stream via total internal reflection.

To create this same effect in an optical fiber engineers create a core of glass - usually pure silicon dioxide - and an outside layer called "cladding" which they also typically make from silicon dioxide, but with bits of boron or germanium to decrease its index of refraction. A one percent difference is enough to make a fiber work.

To make such a long, thin piece of glass engineers heat a large glass preform. Its center is the pure core glass and the outside the cladding. They then draw or ΄pull‘ a fiber by winding the melt onto a wheel at speeds up to 1600 meters per second. Typically these drawing towers are several stories tall: The height allows the fiber to cool before being wound onto a drum.

One of the greatest engineering achievements was the first ocean-spanning fiber optic cable. Called TAT-8 it extended from Tuckerton, New Jersey following the ocean floor over 3,500 miles until branching out to Widemouth, England and Penmarch, France. Engineers designed the cable carefully to survive on the ocean floor. At its center lies the core. Less that a tenth of an inch in diameter it contained six optical fibers wrapped around a central steel wire. They embedded this in an elastomer to cushion the fibers; surround it with steel strands, and then seal it inside a copper cylinder to protect it from water. The final cable was less than an inch in diameter, yet it could handle some 40,000 simultaneous phone calls.

The essence of how they send information through a fiber optical cable is very simple. I could have a pre-arranged code with someone at the end - perhaps we'll use Morse code - and I just block the laser so that the person at that end sees flashes that communicate a message. To transmit an analog signal like voice from a phone call along the cable engineers use pulse code modulation.

We take an analog signal and cut it up into sections and then approximate the wave's loudness or amplitude as best we can. We want to make this a digital signal, which means discrete values of loudness and not just any value.

For example, I'll use four bits, which means I have sixteen possible values for the loudness. So the first four sections of the signal could be approximated by about 10, 12, 14 and 15. We then take each section and convert its amplitude to a series of ones and zeros. The first bar of value ten when encoded becomes 1-0-1-0. We can do this for each section of the curve. Now, instead of looking at the green waveform, or even the blue bars, we can think of the signal as a series of ones and zeros organized by time. And it is that sequence that we send through a fiber optic cable: A flash for a one and nothing for a zero. Of course, the exact method of encoding is known at the receiving end, so it is a trivial matter to decipher the message.

Now, you may be wondering how a laser pulses can travel nearly 4000 miles across the ocean: It doesn't without some help because the light will escape from the sides of the fibers.

Look back at our propylene stream. Here's how the light attenuates as it travels. You can see here a narrow beam in the bucket, that broadens a bit when it enters the stream. And then after the first bounce the beam leaves even broader then it entered: That's because the interface with the air is uneven and the rays that make up the beam strike at slightly different angles. When that beam makes its second reflection those individual rays diverge even more, until by the time it reaches the third bounce many of the rays are no longer at the critical angle and can exit from the sides of the stream. Here it happens in a few inches, but in a cable like TAT-8 the signal travels a stunning 50 kilometers before it needs to be amplified.

Absolutely amazing! I'm Bill Hammack, via the engineer guy.