{"id":4775,"date":"2022-01-28T23:10:21","date_gmt":"2022-01-29T04:10:21","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/iesmartsystems.com\/?p=4775"},"modified":"2022-02-24T23:10:37","modified_gmt":"2022-02-25T04:10:37","slug":"basics-of-structured-cabling","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/iesmartsystems.com\/basics-of-structured-cabling\/","title":{"rendered":"A Beginner’s Guide To Structured Cabling"},"content":{"rendered":"
Structured cabling is a family of wires designed to transmit information over distances spanning a few feet all the way up to hundreds of meters or even kilometers. The cables sometimes use low voltage<\/a> electrical signals, other times using high-frequency pulses of light. Structured cables come in a wide variety of application-specific configurations, including different cores (copper or fiber optic being the most common), shielding layers, insulation layers, and termination styles (a.k.a. \u201cPlug types\u201d).<\/p>\n<\/div> Every modern network for connecting computers uses structured cable and structured cable equipment such as patch panels, servers, switches, and repeaters to deliver high-speed data connections to every computer or \u201cnode\u201d in the network. A structured cable system is the combination of equipment and infrastructure that comprises a LAN or local area network. LANs can span a single floor of a building or a sprawling campus.<\/p>\n<\/div> This is the first point of interest in the technological nervous system that is a structured cable network. The vast majority of businesses and organizations rely on an internet service provider (ISP) to connect them to the worldwide web. The entrance facility is where that primary cable enters the building and branches out to the various equipment rooms.<\/p>\n<\/div> Equipment rooms serve as hubs within the structured cable system. They house servers, switches, patch panels, and other pieces of technology infrastructure. Structured cable enters the equipment room where it usually terminates into a switch or patch panel. Then, a new section of structured cable continues to the next destination, which is most often backbone cabling or horizontal cabling.<\/p>\n<\/div>What Are The Components Of A Structured Cabling System?<\/h2><\/div>
Entrance Facility<\/h3><\/div>
Equipment Rooms<\/h3><\/div>