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-Mark Mullins
At the same time, many enterprise businesses will strive to make the most of their installed
base to support newer technologies. Approved in September of this year, the new IEEE 802.3bz
standard for 2.5/5GBASE-T is targeted for operation over Category 5e and 6 cable, which still accounts
for more than 80% of the installed base. Primarily targeted to support the latest 802.11ac Wi-Fi
applications, these new standards will pave the way next year for more 2.5g/5GBASE-T products and
adoption.
From a testing standpoint, these trends drive the need for both DC loop resistance and DC
resistance unbalance testing to ensure proper Ethernet transmission amidst four-pair Type 3 and Type 4
PoE--especially for gigabit Ethernet and beyond. And for those wanting to deploy the latest 802.11ac
Wi-Fi over their installed base of Category 5 and 6, there will be the need for testing to the new
2.5/5GBASE-T standard in existing facilities since not all Category 5e and 6 cables will necessarily
support these speeds.
Thankfully the DSX-5000 CableAnalyzer (with the latest firmware) is ready make all these tests.
To support the need to access, transmit and store more information than ever before, many
enterprise data centers are turning to cloud and colocation facilities with the capacity and services to
help them expand with reduced capital expenditure, while others are upgrading their own fiber links.
Regardless of the data center type, both copper and fiber technology are advancing to support the
need.
With TIA approving the ANSI/TIA-568-C.2-1 standard for Category 8 cabling systems, you can be
guaranteed that 2017 will bring the availability of Category 8 solutions for use in shorter switch-to-
server data center connections of 30 meters or less. When those product hit the market, look for Fluke
Network to announce support for these new standards and a way to upgrade your existing DSX-5000
to support them.
And fiber too will see some changes. Wide band multimode fiber (WBMMF), now referred to as
OM5, will feature bandwidth characteristics at the 953 nm wavelength to support wavelength division
multiplexing, which open the door for running 100 Gig over a duplex fiber connection and future 400
Gig applications over the current 8-fiber MPO interface.
The good news is that testing of new OM5 fiber (when available) won't be complicated. It has
all the same specifications as previous multimode fiber with the exception of attenuation parameters
specified for the 953 nm wavelength. And if you're testing at both the 850 nm and 1300 nm wavelength
per the preferred method, you can continue to do so for OM5.
So while we are confident that we've got testing covered for what's coming in 2017, the testers
themselves are geared up to offer all the benefits the world is starting to experience with IoT and cloud
computing.
As more Fluke Network's Versiv cabling tester users become familiar and comfortable
with LinkWare Live (nearly three million results uploaded so far), 2017 will see an upsurge of test results
being uploaded from any location rather than driving results back to the office. This will mean overall
improved team productivity and rapid troubleshooting as results can be shared amongst all the right
people -- engineers, installers, project managers and consultants -- from any place at any time and on
any device.
And with remote setup by those most familiar with the project and asset tracking to see the
geographical location of the testers, accuracy is improved and time is saved--something that has always
been, and will remain, a trend.