BS ISO/IEC 11801-4:2017:2018 Edition
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Information technology. Generic cabling for customer premises – Single-tenant homes
Published By | Publication Date | Number of Pages |
BSI | 2018 | 38 |
This part of ISO/IEC 11801 specifies generic cabling for single-tenant homes. A home can contain one or more buildings or can be within a building that contains more than one home. It covers balanced cabling, optical fibre cabling and coaxial cabling.
This document specifies a generic cabling for two groups of applications:
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information and communications technologies (ICT),
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broadcast and communications technologies (BCT).
This document specifies directly or via reference to ISO/IEC 11801‑1
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the structure and minimum configuration for generic cabling within homes,
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the interfaces at the telecommunications outlet (TO) and broadcast outlet (BO),
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the performance requirements for cabling links and channels,
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the implementation requirements and options,
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the performance requirements for cabling components,
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the conformance requirements and verification procedures.
Safety and electromagnetic compatibility (EMC) requirements are outside the scope of this document, and are covered by other standards and by regulations. However, information given by this document can be of assistance.
PDF Catalog
PDF Pages | PDF Title |
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2 | undefined |
4 | CONTENTS |
7 | FOREWORD |
9 | INTRODUCTION Figures Figure 1 – Relationships between the generic cabling documents produced by ISO/IEC JTC 1/SC 25 |
11 | 1 Scope 2 Normative references 3 Terms, definitions and abbreviated terms 3.1 Terms and definitions |
12 | 3.2 Abbreviated terms |
13 | 4 Conformance 5 Structure of the generic cabling system 5.1 General |
14 | 5.2 Functional elements 5.3 Cabling subsystems for ICT and BCT 5.3.1 General Figure 2 – Structure of the generic cabling system |
15 | Figure 3 – Interconnect and cross-connect models Figure 4 – Interconnect and cross-connects at the PHD |
16 | 5.3.2 Primary home cabling subsystem 5.3.3 Secondary home cabling subsystem 5.4 Cabling structure Figure 5 – Hierarchical structure of a generic cabling system in support of ICT and BCT applications |
17 | 5.5 Interfaces 5.5.1 Equipment interfaces and test interfaces |
18 | 5.5.2 Channel and permanent link Figure 6 – Equipment and test interfaces in support of ICT and BCT applications |
19 | 5.5.3 Network access cabling Figure 7 – Channels and permanent links within the home |
20 | 5.5.4 External network interface 5.6 Accommodation of functional elements 5.6.1 General Figure 8 – Examples of interconnection of home and network access cabling |
21 | 5.6.2 Coverage areas Figure 9 – Overview of a generic cabling for home |
22 | 5.6.3 Dimensioning and configuring Figure 10 – Interconnection of home cabling subsystems |
23 | 5.6.4 Connecting hardware 5.6.5 Application outlets 5.6.6 Equipment cords Tables Table 1 – Maximum channel lengths for reference implementations of ICT/BCT channels |
24 | 6 Channel performance requirements 6.1 General 6.2 Environmental performance 6.3 Transmission performance 6.3.1 Channel construction 6.3.2 Balanced cabling |
25 | 6.3.3 Coaxial cabling 6.3.4 Optical fibre cabling 7 Link performance requirements 7.1 General 7.2 Balanced cabling 7.3 Coaxial cabling 7.4 Optical fibre cabling 8 Reference implementations 8.1 General |
26 | 8.2 Channel construction 8.3 Balanced cabling 8.3.1 General Figure 11 – Reference implementations for ICT and BCT channels (PHD/SHD to TO/BO) |
27 | 8.3.2 ICT channels 8.3.3 BCT channels Table 2 – Link length equations |
28 | 8.4 Coaxial cabling 8.5 Optical fibre cabling 8.5.1 General 8.5.2 Component selection 8.5.3 Dimensions 9 Cable requirements 9.1 General |
29 | 9.2 Balanced cables 9.2.1 ICT cabling 9.2.2 BCT cabling 9.3 Coaxial cables 9.4 Optical fibre cables 10 Connecting hardware requirements 10.1 General requirements 10.2 Connecting hardware for balanced cabling 10.2.1 General requirements 10.2.2 Electrical, mechanical and environmental performance |
30 | 10.3 Connecting hardware for coaxial cabling 10.3.1 General requirements 10.3.2 Electrical, mechanical and environmental performance 10.4 Connecting hardware for optical fibre cabling 10.4.1 General requirements 10.4.2 Optical, mechanical and environmental performance 11 Cords 11.1 Jumpers 11.2 Balanced cords 11.3 Coaxial cords 11.4 Optical fibre cords |
31 | Annex A (informative) Reference implementation of TV and radio applications – use of baluns A.1 Types and locations of baluns A.1.1 General A.1.2 Baluns at the ENI and baluns at the equipment interface toward the PHD Figure A.1 – Balun at the ENI |
32 | A.1.3 Baluns near or in the BO Figure A.2 – Baluns in the PHD Figure A.3 – Balun built into the system outlet |
33 | A.1.4 Baluns in the cord between BO and the terminal equipment A.2 Home network interface Figure A.4 – Balun in the cord between BO and the TE |
34 | Figure A.5 – Types of HNI Table A.1 – Insertion loss and total sectional slope |
35 | Bibliography |