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  #1 (permalink)  
Old 08-15-2007, 11:10 PM
Cloy
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Posts: n/a
Default Suggestions for a short building-to-building hop

I'm helping a downtown non-profit that operates a daycare center in
the building next door to its main offices. They would like to bridge
the Internet connection from the main building to the daycare so staff
can check e-mail, web, etc. -- general purpose communication, nothing
mission critical. [The daycare staff will have wifi cards on their
desktops and laptops.]

The two buildings are brick/stucco/steel and the distance between them
is 10 or 15 feet of open space. There is also a furnace/plumbing room
in the daycare building that seems to cause some attenuation.

I've tried a couple Linksys WRE54g network extenders (one in each
building) to bridge the distance, but the connection is weak and
unstable at best. (Not sure if this is a problem with the extenders,
or limits imposed by the architecture.)

Any suggestions on an inexpensive way to connect between the buildings
would be appreciated.

Thanks, in advance!

-Cloy


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  #2 (permalink)  
Old 08-15-2007, 11:35 PM
Jeff Liebermann
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Default Re: Suggestions for a short building-to-building hop

Cloy <cloy@tobola.com> hath wroth:

>I'm helping a downtown non-profit that operates a daycare center in
>the building next door to its main offices.


I use to service a few non-profits. I don't any more. I now sleep 8
hours per day and don't cringe when the phone rings.

>They would like to bridge
>the Internet connection from the main building to the daycare so staff
>can check e-mail, web, etc. -- general purpose communication, nothing
>mission critical. [The daycare staff will have wifi cards on their
>desktops and laptops.]
>
>The two buildings are brick/stucco/steel and the distance between them
>is 10 or 15 feet of open space. There is also a furnace/plumbing room
>in the daycare building that seems to cause some attenuation.


All the material you've listed are impervious to RF. Even at 10-15
ft, the chicken wire under the stucco will block the signal. Do you
have any opposing windows? If you put the wireless in the window, and
there's no metal screen, it will pass nicely.

>I've tried a couple Linksys WRE54g network extenders (one in each
>building) to bridge the distance, but the connection is weak and
>unstable at best. (Not sure if this is a problem with the extenders,
>or limits imposed by the architecture.)


Two repeaters are two hops and probably won't work even if you had a
strong signal. One repeater maximum please.

>Any suggestions on an inexpensive way to connect between the buildings
>would be appreciated.


Over a distance of 10-15ft, you should be able to run CAT5 between the
buildings somehow, even if you have to do some underground horizontal
drilling, trenching, digging, or overhead building to building wiring.
There's also a possibility that they're both on the same power
xformer, in which case Power Line Networking (HomePlug) will work.

However, if the wired alternative is impossible, then I suggest a
simple dedicated wireless bridge between buildings. Get two identical
wireless bridges, one for each building. At 10-15ft, you won't need
any fancy antennas. Connect one bridge into the main office network.

The other bridge you have to make a decision. If you want to connect
via wireless, get a wireless access point and plug it into the
wireless bridge. Use a different RF channel (1, 6, 11) for these
radios to prevent mutual interference. Also, different SSID. Note
that this is now a total of 3 radios. You can install an ethernet
switch between the wireless bridge radio and the wireless access point
for nearby desktops. Everyone else connects wireless to the wireless
access point. Since they're on different channels, there's no speed
loss as you would get with a store an forward repeater.

Also, note that you don't have to buy an access point. A wireless
router will suffice if you disable the DHCP server, and don't connect
anything to the WAN (internet) port.

--
Jeff Liebermann jeffl@cruzio.com
150 Felker St #D http://www.LearnByDestroying.com
Santa Cruz CA 95060 http://802.11junk.com
Skype: JeffLiebermann AE6KS 831-336-2558

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  #3 (permalink)  
Old 08-16-2007, 06:36 PM
Cloy
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Posts: n/a
Default Re: Suggestions for a short building-to-building hop

Thanks for the reply, Jeff!

My understanding is that running ethernet lines outside (even well
insulated ones) can risk equipment damage from lightening / stray
voltage. Is that true?

Thanks! -Cloy



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  #4 (permalink)  
Old 08-16-2007, 06:54 PM
Lloyd E. Sponenburgh
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Posts: n/a
Default Re: Suggestions for a short building-to-building hop

Cloy <cloy@tobola.com> fired this volley in news:1187285779.787138.277590
@q4g2000prc.googlegroups.com:

> Thanks for the reply, Jeff!
>
> My understanding is that running ethernet lines outside (even well
> insulated ones) can risk equipment damage from lightening / stray
> voltage. Is that true?


Twisted-pair without insulation would be a trick. I think they call that
stuff "wire rope".

"Stray voltage" in the form of ground potential differences between
buildings on different supplies is a problem, yes.

But there's no particular potential for a buried connection between
buildings to invite lightning hits.

Fiber eliminates both problems.

LLoyd


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  #5 (permalink)  
Old 08-16-2007, 10:06 PM
stephen
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Posts: n/a
Default Re: Suggestions for a short building-to-building hop

"Lloyd E. Sponenburgh" <lloydspinsidemindspring.com> wrote in message
news:Xns998E8D7B9252Blloydspmindspringcom@216.168. 3.70...
> Cloy <cloy@tobola.com> fired this volley in news:1187285779.787138.277590
> @q4g2000prc.googlegroups.com:
>
> > Thanks for the reply, Jeff!
> >
> > My understanding is that running ethernet lines outside (even well
> > insulated ones) can risk equipment damage from lightening / stray
> > voltage. Is that true?

>
> Twisted-pair without insulation would be a trick. I think they call that
> stuff "wire rope".
>
> "Stray voltage" in the form of ground potential differences between
> buildings on different supplies is a problem, yes.
>
> But there's no particular potential for a buried connection between
> buildings to invite lightning hits.


i have had parts of a multiuser Unix box vaporised by a lightning strike
over a copper cable (this was high speed twisted pair for a distributed
terminal mux system - no fibre option then).

the hit was on a tarmac road (someone there during the storm described the
hit area, and we found the melt pool after the storm) - the duct was buried
about a meter under the surface........
>
> Fiber eliminates both problems.


only if the strike doesnt induce a big pulse via ground or power supply into
the electrics and get into equipment that way....
>
> LLoyd
>

--
Regards

stephen_hope@xyzworld.com - replace xyz with ntl



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  #6 (permalink)  
Old 08-17-2007, 12:27 AM
Jeff Liebermann
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Posts: n/a
Default Re: Suggestions for a short building-to-building hop

On Thu, 16 Aug 2007 10:36:19 -0700, Cloy <cloy@tobola.com> wrote:

>My understanding is that running ethernet lines outside (even well
>insulated ones) can risk equipment damage from lightening / stray
>voltage. Is that true?


Generally true. Any conductor can attract lightning, act as an
inductive pickup, or become part of the lightning's path to ground.
Let's take them one at a time.

If you run the CAT5 in the air between buildings, you've increased the
effective area of the "ground" that is seen by the charge cloud.
However, lightning is more likely to hit the buildings than the wire
because of their larger surface areas. If the CAT5 is buried, it's
not an issue.

Inductive pickup is a problem with any conductor. If there's a nearby
lightning strike, the CAT5 can become part of a transformer. The "one
turn" primary is the lightning strike itself between the clouds and
the ground at 20,000 amps. The secondary is the CAT5 where the
current varies with just about everything, but can still be
substantial. The primary effect is to destroy electronics or fuse the
copper wires. If the CAT5 is buried, it's less of a problem because
the earth absorbs much of the charge. The induced voltage can also be
substantial. EIA-568A/B specifies 2500volt isolation, which is a huge
help. The twisted pairs also allow considerable induced current in
the wires, but since they're the same in each pair of wires, they
cancel at the transformers at each end.

You can obtain better isolation using an ethernet isolator:
<http://www.perfcomcat.com/b50255.html>
<http://www.pepperl-fuchs.com/pa/news/produkte/09765/index3_e.html>
(lots more). Note that this is NOT a "surge protector", which is
un-necessary. The idea is to isolate the ends of the cable so that if
one building gets a lightning strike which temporarily raises the
ground potential a few thousand volts, the current will not go through
the CAT5 and into the circuitry in the other building. It will also
protect users in the unlikely even that one building AC power ground
goes away (which happened here after the 1989 earthquake). You only
need one ethernet isolator.

Ground current is what fries most electronics. What happens is that
the CAT5 and its associated electronics is grounded at both ends. A
lightning hit to the ground will dissipate the charge over a wide
area. If one building is closer to the lightning ground hit than the
other, there will be a differential voltage produced between buildings
as the charge dissipates through the ground. The induced voltage (and
current) can be substantial. After having a few expensive ethernet
switches vaporized by this effect, I've take to installing cheap
sacrificial ethernet hubs or switches at each end. If they blow up,
they get replaced by another sacrificial switch or hub.

I suggest you do NOT use shielded CAT5 cable. If you do decide to use
shielded CAT5 (because buriable waterproof gel filled CAT5 is most
commonly offered as shielded cable), ground only one end of the
shield, not both. If you're seriously worried about lightning, you
might invest in two (one for each end) CAT5 lightning protectors:
<http://www.hyperlinktech.com/web/data_line_lightning_protectors.php>
<http://www.polyphaser.com/productdata.aspx?class=nx>

--
# Jeff Liebermann 150 Felker St #D Santa Cruz CA 95060
# 831-336-2558 jeffl@comix.santa-cruz.ca.us
# http://802.11junk.com jeffl@cruzio.com
# http://www.LearnByDestroying.com AE6KS

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  #7 (permalink)  
Old 08-17-2007, 12:51 AM
Jeff Liebermann
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Posts: n/a
Default Re: Suggestions for a short building-to-building hop

On Thu, 16 Aug 2007 23:27:40 GMT, Jeff Liebermann
<jeffl@comix.santa-cruz.ca.us> wrote:

>On Thu, 16 Aug 2007 10:36:19 -0700, Cloy <cloy@tobola.com> wrote:
>
>>My understanding is that running ethernet lines outside (even well
>>insulated ones) can risk equipment damage from lightening / stray
>>voltage. Is that true?

>
>Generally true. Any conductor can attract lightning, act as an
>inductive pickup, or become part of the lightning's path to ground.


I must be slipping in my old age. My previous rant is all about
copper wire (CAT5). Fiber optic cable has none of the problems
mentioned and is completely lightning proof. Depending on sheathing,
you can bury it, or run it between buildings (with a messenger wire
for support). No worries about lightning or ground faults with fiber.

You'll need two 100baseTX(copper) to 100baseFX (fiber) "media
converters", one at each end. Over the <50ft distance you're working
with, almost any fiber technology will work. Note that there are
different types of fiber and many different types of connectors. I
would go with cheap dual mode fiber, with either ST or SC connectors.
<http://www.alliedtelesyn.com/products/line.aspx?pid=3>
<http://www.milan.com/TransitionNetworks/Products2/Family.aspx?Name=SSETF101x-205>

If you feel ambitious, you might even go with 1000SX gigabit fiber
links (which costs more):
<http://www.alliedtelesyn.com/products/line.aspx?pid=2>
<http://www.milan.com/TransitionNetworks/Products2/Intersection.aspx?Definition=Stand-Alone+Converter&Topology=10%2F100%2F1000+Ethernet>

Plenty more vendors can be found by googling for:
"ethernet fiber media converter"

Also, look on eBay. This looks close. However you'll need a pair of
them plus buriable fiber cable:
<http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=9727679747>

Pricewise, I suspect you want to do this cheaply. Brand new buriable
fiber is not cheap. However, if you can bury waterproof conduit
(sprinkler pipe?), you can use any flavor fiber cable inside. If you
settle for slow 10baseT transceivers, you can probably find a used
pair for about $25/ea. 100baseT will be about $100/ea. No clue on
gigabit.


--
# Jeff Liebermann 150 Felker St #D Santa Cruz CA 95060
# 831-336-2558 jeffl@comix.santa-cruz.ca.us
# http://802.11junk.com jeffl@cruzio.com
# http://www.LearnByDestroying.com AE6KS

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  #8 (permalink)  
Old 08-17-2007, 07:10 AM
Bob Smith
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Posts: n/a
Default Re: Suggestions for a short building-to-building hop

On Wed, 15 Aug 2007 15:10:33 -0700, Cloy <cloy@tobola.com> wrote:

>I'm helping a downtown non-profit that operates a daycare center in
>the building next door to its main offices. They would like to bridge
>the Internet connection from the main building to the daycare so staff
>can check e-mail, web, etc. -- general purpose communication, nothing
>mission critical. [The daycare staff will have wifi cards on their
>desktops and laptops.]
>
>The two buildings are brick/stucco/steel and the distance between them
>is 10 or 15 feet of open space. There is also a furnace/plumbing room
>in the daycare building that seems to cause some attenuation.
>
>I've tried a couple Linksys WRE54g network extenders (one in each
>building) to bridge the distance, but the connection is weak and
>unstable at best. (Not sure if this is a problem with the extenders,
>or limits imposed by the architecture.)
>
>Any suggestions on an inexpensive way to connect between the buildings
>would be appreciated.
>
>Thanks, in advance!
>
>-Cloy



I agree with Jeff, First choice, run a piece of outdoor cat5 betwen
the buildings.. Short and sweet

Second, the wireless bridges are ok, but you now how the problem of
waterproofing them, or at least the antenna and coax that 'might' be
outside. You could also purchase two wireless bridges in waterproof
boxes with antennas built inside the box. But you have to waterproof
the entry into the building (the hole where the coax goes into the
building.)..

here's a place you can get a decently priced wireless bridge like I
described using above:

http://www.highgainantennas.com/category_s/90.htm

Yes I know they say CPE, but they are all able to be configured as a
CPE, a Bridge, or an AP/CPE, just with the firmware. I've used alot
of them for building to building bridges because of asphalt parking
lots between the building, ec.


take your choice, if lightning is a big factor in your area, the the
buildings are probably a bigger target with the AC overhead, the pipes
out the top of the building, etc. I really don't think lightning is
going to find the CAT5 before the building.. And since you have to
run cat5 to the wireless bridges on each side of the building, another
15' of cat5 ain't no big thing.

Bob Smith

Robert Smith Consulting
"Wireless Installations -- Government, Businesses & ISP's"
F.C.C. Licensed-Commercial & Amateur Services
A.R.S NA6T
ARRL Life Member
1-707-964-4931 w/answering machine
Fort Bragg, California 95437

"On The Air-Conditioned Mendocino Coast, In REAL Northern California"
No trees were destroyed in the sending of this message.
However, a large number of electrons were terribly inconvenienced.

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  #9 (permalink)  
Old 08-17-2007, 08:40 AM
stephen
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Posts: n/a
Default Re: Suggestions for a short building-to-building hop

"Jeff Liebermann" <jeffl@comix.santa-cruz.ca.us> wrote in message
news:0fn9c31ta5qq469k95g8cge31ksdt35s05@4ax.com...
> On Thu, 16 Aug 2007 23:27:40 GMT, Jeff Liebermann
> <jeffl@comix.santa-cruz.ca.us> wrote:
>
> >On Thu, 16 Aug 2007 10:36:19 -0700, Cloy <cloy@tobola.com> wrote:
> >
> >>My understanding is that running ethernet lines outside (even well
> >>insulated ones) can risk equipment damage from lightening / stray
> >>voltage. Is that true?

> >
> >Generally true. Any conductor can attract lightning, act as an
> >inductive pickup, or become part of the lightning's path to ground.

>
> I must be slipping in my old age. My previous rant is all about
> copper wire (CAT5). Fiber optic cable has none of the problems
> mentioned and is completely lightning proof. Depending on sheathing,
> you can bury it, or run it between buildings (with a messenger wire
> for support). No worries about lightning or ground faults with fiber.
>
> You'll need two 100baseTX(copper) to 100baseFX (fiber) "media
> converters", one at each end. Over the <50ft distance you're working
> with, almost any fiber technology will work. Note that there are
> different types of fiber and many different types of connectors. I
> would go with cheap dual mode fiber, with either ST or SC connectors.
> <http://www.alliedtelesyn.com/products/line.aspx?pid=3>
>

<http://www.milan.com/TransitionNetwo...?Name=SSETF101
x-205>
>
> If you feel ambitious, you might even go with 1000SX gigabit fiber
> links (which costs more):
> <http://www.alliedtelesyn.com/products/line.aspx?pid=2>
>

<http://www.milan.com/TransitionNetwo...n.aspx?Definit
ion=Stand-Alone+Converter&Topology=10%2F100%2F1000+Ethernet>
>
> Plenty more vendors can be found by googling for:
> "ethernet fiber media converter"
>
> Also, look on eBay. This looks close. However you'll need a pair of
> them plus buriable fiber cable:
> <http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=9727679747>
>
> Pricewise, I suspect you want to do this cheaply. Brand new buriable
> fiber is not cheap. However, if you can bury waterproof conduit
> (sprinkler pipe?), you can use any flavor fiber cable inside.


2 issues.

1. - you have to pull it thru the pipe. Some kinds of fibre will not take
lots of mechanical stress, so a good choice, plenty of grease, and bit of
care....
2. around here at least the pipe will spend a lof of time full of water.
Ideally, you actually need fibre cable with waterproofing built in, as over
time hydrogen ions can degrade the glass (may not be an issue in practice
with a short run, but replacing it will be a pain, and 1st you would need to
figure out what is happening).

Finally - you can get fibre cables with no metal inside, which removes the
issue of grounding and lightning pulse induction from that route into the
buildings......

If you
> settle for slow 10baseT transceivers, you can probably find a used
> pair for about $25/ea. 100baseT will be about $100/ea. No clue on
> gigabit.


i hate media convertors - had lots of hassle getting them to work, making
them work again when they stop, or the power gets cycled.....

A fair few switches now have SFP connectors which take modular optics -
mainly GigE these days, but some 100 Mbps ones around as well.
>
>
> --
> # Jeff Liebermann 150 Felker St #D Santa Cruz CA 95060
> # 831-336-2558 jeffl@comix.santa-cruz.ca.us
> # http://802.11junk.com jeffl@cruzio.com
> # http://www.LearnByDestroying.com AE6KS

--
Regards

stephen_hope@xyzworld.com - replace xyz with ntl



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  #10 (permalink)  
Old 08-17-2007, 04:33 PM
Jeff Liebermann
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: Suggestions for a short building-to-building hop

"stephen" <stephen_hope@xyzworld.com> hath wroth:

>"Jeff Liebermann" <jeffl@comix.santa-cruz.ca.us> wrote in message


>1. - you have to pull it thru the pipe. Some kinds of fibre will not take
>lots of mechanical stress, so a good choice, plenty of grease, and bit of
>care....


Nobody uses grease. They use some kind of soapy goo that washes off
with water. For example:
<http://www.polywater.com/polyf.html>
<http://www.idealindustries.com/products/wire_installation/lubricants/>
Lots of fun when someone spills a gallon of the stuff on the concrete
floor.

Pull strength on buriable fiber is about 600-1000 lbs per cable.
<http://www.timbercon.com/Pull-Strength.html>
<http://ecmweb.com/mag/electric_setting_fiberoptic_cable/>
That's a problem when pulling a bundle, where the totally pull stress
for the bundle may be transfered to a single cable. However, a spring
scale can usually be employed to avoid getting near the tension limit.
For an estimated 15ft pull, lube and tension are not even an issue.

>2. around here at least the pipe will spend a lof of time full of water.


Then, you're doing it wrong. For a 15ft run, almost any type of
conduit will work. Properly sealed and terminated with end points
forming an inverted siphon, the system is essentially waterproof. If
there is a danger of flooding, install a drain at an intentional low
point. It would be tempting to use flexible water pipe to avoid
cracking caused by asphalt movement, but I'm not familiar with the
code requirements.

>Ideally, you actually need fibre cable with waterproofing built in, as over
>time hydrogen ions can degrade the glass (may not be an issue in practice
>with a short run, but replacing it will be a pain, and 1st you would need to
>figure out what is happening).


What water damage I've seen has been either in the connector area,
where the water pressure has displaced the optical gel outer coating
on the fiber. The gel is necessary to fill in micro-cracks in the
fiber and to act as refractive boundary layer to enhance internal
reflections. When displaced by water, the cable losses increase
dramatically. It takes substantial heat and water pressure to do
this, but flooding will do. The best defense is to simply keep the
end points, splices, and terminations elevated and dry.

Again, for a 15ft run, the cable losses are so minimal, that even if
water incursion causes additional losses, they would not affect
performance much.

>Finally - you can get fibre cables with no metal inside, which removes the
>issue of grounding and lightning pulse induction from that route into the
>buildings......


>i hate media convertors - had lots of hassle getting them to work, making
>them work again when they stop, or the power gets cycled.....


Well, I only have about 10 pairs of Milan and Allied Telesyn media
converters in service. Mostly at radio sites, where RF pickup in the
networking cable is a problem. I've lost a few to lightning hits and
mechanical damage. Several are in outdoor NEMA boxes and have
suffered corrosion damage. I don't recall any of them hanging or
having power problems. For me, they're all plug-config-n-play. Any
particular type, brand, or model that you were having problems with?

If I had anything to complain about, it's the tendency for all the
media converter manufacturers to use power supplies with odd voltages.
I often have to connect these to -48VDC telecom power buses or
12/24/48VDC solar power systems using DC-DC converters.

Duh. I almost forgot. My ability to properly attach a connector to
fiber (using 3M hot melt method) is rather marginal. I did have some
reliability problems with what I thought was a media converter issue,
but turned out to be my sloppy termination job.

>A fair few switches now have SFP connectors which take modular optics -
>mainly GigE these days, but some 100 Mbps ones around as well.


Yep. You can buy modules to plug into the "backbone" port on most
managed ethernet switches. These make a very nice media converter.
However, for the single wireless device that needs to be bridged in
this case, methinks a modular fiber switch might be a bit overkill.

--
Jeff Liebermann jeffl@cruzio.com
150 Felker St #D http://www.LearnByDestroying.com
Santa Cruz CA 95060 http://802.11junk.com
Skype: JeffLiebermann AE6KS 831-336-2558

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  #11 (permalink)  
Old 08-17-2007, 04:33 PM
Cloy
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: Suggestions for a short building-to-building hop

Thanks to everyone for the replies... I appreciate the time you took
to respond.

Given the location of the offices and connections -- and the
construction of the buildings -- I'm thinking a cabled/fiber solution
is going to involve a hell of a lot of cable pulling and jerry-built
surface mounting.

I'm actually wondering if the "power line networking" option might be
the best way to go, given our budget. It looks like the Homeplug AV
system might do the trick.

A couple questions on PLN solutions:

1. I understand that both buildings need to be on the same
transformer. Am I correct in assuming an electrician or the power
company can tell us that?
2. Are there other obvious compatibility issues that can be
identified (before we get too far down the road with this solution)?
3. Is there some sort of testing process/equipment to check if PLN
will work for us?
4. I understand that the Homeplug AV standard supposedly provides
200 Mbit/s half-duplex. What can I actually expect?

Any other comments on a Homeplug solution would be appreciated.

Excelsior! -Cloy


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  #12 (permalink)  
Old 08-17-2007, 05:11 PM
Jeff Liebermann
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: Suggestions for a short building-to-building hop

Cloy <cloy@tobola.com> hath wroth:

> 1. I understand that both buildings need to be on the same
>transformer. Am I correct in assuming an electrician or the power
>company can tell us that?


Yes. They have to be on the same transfomer and the same phase. If
the building are adjacent, there's an excellent chance that's the
case. If you can see the transformers on the power pole, you can
trace the wires visually. If not, you can borrow a circuit tracer and
check for yourself.
<http://www.contractor-books.com/Circuit_Tracers.htm>
It puts a tone on the power line that does not go through the
transformer. If you can hear the tone on a power plug in the other
building, you win.

You might ask the electrician how much it would cost to run
communications conduit between buildings.

> 2. Are there other obvious compatibility issues that can be
>identified (before we get too far down the road with this solution)?


Speed and performance has not been discussed. In general, the power
line networking is make for running in a single building, where the
wire runs are relatively short. Even though your two buildings are
fairly close together, the AC power run to the transfomer may be a
substantial length of wire. HomePlug will go to 1000ft, but is rather
slow at that distance. You need to specify a minumum throughput
specification.

> 3. Is there some sort of testing process/equipment to check if PLN
>will work for us?


Yep. Buy a pair of HomePlug bridges. Try it. If it doesn't work,
return it to the store where you bought it in sellable condition. It's
called fly before you buy.

> 4. I understand that the Homeplug AV standard supposedly provides
>200 Mbit/s half-duplex. What can I actually expect?


There should be some test benchmarks on various review sites (CNet,
SmallNetBuilder, etc). Here's a random performance test of one
200Mbit/sec HomePlug AV box:
<http://www.smallnetbuilder.com/content/view/29853/51/1/3/>
Note the huge drop in thruput depending on "location" (wire length).

>Any other comments on a Homeplug solution would be appreciated.


HomePlug is worth a try. However, if these are large office
buildings, and someone else has a similar system using the same
frequencies, you're going to have a problem. I would still make an
effort to try fiber optic cable, because of the performance benifits.



--
Jeff Liebermann jeffl@cruzio.com
150 Felker St #D http://www.LearnByDestroying.com
Santa Cruz CA 95060 http://802.11junk.com
Skype: JeffLiebermann AE6KS 831-336-2558

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  #13 (permalink)  
Old 08-17-2007, 09:26 PM
stephen
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: Suggestions for a short building-to-building hop

"Jeff Liebermann" <jeffl@cruzio.com> wrote in message
news:6qdbc31hrs7fjrsoirdg4qealhfp3otajc@4ax.com...
> "stephen" <stephen_hope@xyzworld.com> hath wroth:
>
> >"Jeff Liebermann" <jeffl@comix.santa-cruz.ca.us> wrote in message

>
> >1. - you have to pull it thru the pipe. Some kinds of fibre will not take
> >lots of mechanical stress, so a good choice, plenty of grease, and bit

of
> >care....

>
> Nobody uses grease. They use some kind of soapy goo that washes off
> with water. For example:
> <http://www.polywater.com/polyf.html>
> <http://www.idealindustries.com/products/wire_installation/lubricants/>
> Lots of fun when someone spills a gallon of the stuff on the concrete
> floor.


OK - bad terminology....
>
> Pull strength on buriable fiber is about 600-1000 lbs per cable.
> <http://www.timbercon.com/Pull-Strength.html>
> <http://ecmweb.com/mag/electric_setting_fiberoptic_cable/>
> That's a problem when pulling a bundle, where the totally pull stress
> for the bundle may be transfered to a single cable. However, a spring
> scale can usually be employed to avoid getting near the tension limit.
> For an estimated 15ft pull, lube and tension are not even an issue.


Agreed - but you said "any fibre" - indoor patch leads?
>
> >2. around here at least the pipe will spend a lof of time full of water.

>
> Then, you're doing it wrong. For a 15ft run, almost any type of
> conduit will work. Properly sealed and terminated with end points
> forming an inverted siphon, the system is essentially waterproof. If
> there is a danger of flooding, install a drain at an intentional low
> point. It would be tempting to use flexible water pipe to avoid
> cracking caused by asphalt movement, but I'm not familiar with the
> code requirements.


great theory - but this Manchester UK. Famous for rain, and when it isnt
raining, mist, drizzle.

anyhow - good engineering paranoia to assume the water will get in - and if
you seal it well it stays there....
>
> >Ideally, you actually need fibre cable with waterproofing built in, as

over
> >time hydrogen ions can degrade the glass (may not be an issue in practice
> >with a short run, but replacing it will be a pain, and 1st you would need

to
> >figure out what is happening).

>
> What water damage I've seen has been either in the connector area,
> where the water pressure has displaced the optical gel outer coating
> on the fiber. The gel is necessary to fill in micro-cracks in the
> fiber and to act as refractive boundary layer to enhance internal
> reflections. When displaced by water, the cable losses increase
> dramatically. It takes substantial heat and water pressure to do
> this, but flooding will do. The best defense is to simply keep the
> end points, splices, and terminations elevated and dry.
>
> Again, for a 15ft run, the cable losses are so minimal, that even if
> water incursion causes additional losses, they would not affect
> performance much.
>
> >Finally - you can get fibre cables with no metal inside, which removes

the
> >issue of grounding and lightning pulse induction from that route into the
> >buildings......

>
> >i hate media convertors - had lots of hassle getting them to work, making
> >them work again when they stop, or the power gets cycled.....

>
> Well, I only have about 10 pairs of Milan and Allied Telesyn media
> converters in service. Mostly at radio sites, where RF pickup in the
> networking cable is a problem. I've lost a few to lightning hits and
> mechanical damage. Several are in outdoor NEMA boxes and have
> suffered corrosion damage. I don't recall any of them hanging or
> having power problems. For me, they're all plug-config-n-play. Any
> particular type, brand, or model that you were having problems with?
>
> If I had anything to complain about, it's the tendency for all the
> media converter manufacturers to use power supplies with odd voltages.
> I often have to connect these to -48VDC telecom power buses or
> 12/24/48VDC solar power systems using DC-DC converters.
>
> Duh. I almost forgot. My ability to properly attach a connector to
> fiber (using 3M hot melt method) is rather marginal. I did have some
> reliability problems with what I thought was a media converter issue,
> but turned out to be my sloppy termination job.
>
> >A fair few switches now have SFP connectors which take modular optics -
> >mainly GigE these days, but some 100 Mbps ones around as well.

>
> Yep. You can buy modules to plug into the "backbone" port on most
> managed ethernet switches. These make a very nice media converter.
> However, for the single wireless device that needs to be bridged in
> this case, methinks a modular fiber switch might be a bit overkill.
>
> --
> Jeff Liebermann jeffl@cruzio.com
> 150 Felker St #D http://www.LearnByDestroying.com
> Santa Cruz CA 95060 http://802.11junk.com
> Skype: JeffLiebermann AE6KS 831-336-2558

--
Regards

stephen_hope@xyzworld.com - replace xyz with ntl



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  #14 (permalink)  
Old 08-17-2007, 09:26 PM
Mark McIntyre
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: Suggestions for a short building-to-building hop

On Thu, 16 Aug 2007 23:27:40 GMT, in alt.internet.wireless , Jeff
Liebermann <jeffl@comix.santa-cruz.ca.us> wrote:

>On Thu, 16 Aug 2007 10:36:19 -0700, Cloy <cloy@tobola.com> wrote:
>
>>My understanding is that running ethernet lines outside (even well
>>insulated ones) can risk equipment damage from lightening / stray
>>voltage. Is that true?

>
>Generally true. Any conductor can attract lightning, act as an
>inductive pickup, or become part of the lightning's path to ground.


As a reference point I've had 30mtrs of CAT5e clipped to the top of my
garden fence for the last year, with no ill effects. This is common
CAT5e, not any sort of external-grade stuff. According to ipef I get
75-80Mbps which seems ok to me. At some point I'll upgrade to
powerline networking, if I can be bothered.
--
Mark McIntyre

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  #15 (permalink)  
Old 08-17-2007, 09:29 PM
Mark McIntyre
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: Suggestions for a short building-to-building hop

On Fri, 17 Aug 2007 09:11:24 -0700, in alt.internet.wireless , Jeff
Liebermann <jeffl@cruzio.com> wrote:

>Cloy <cloy@tobola.com> hath wroth:
>
>> 1. I understand that both buildings need to be on the same
>>transformer. Am I correct in assuming an electrician or the power
>>company can tell us that?

>
>Yes. They have to be on the same transfomer and the same phase. If
>the building are adjacent, there's an excellent chance that's the
>case.


Not necessarily in the UK,

> If you can see the transformers on the power pole, you can
>trace the wires visually.


but watch out for different phases. The pole near my Dad's house has
all three (we get 'em all for my Dad's circular saw..., the neighbours
get one each)
--
Mark McIntyre

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  #16 (permalink)  
Old 08-18-2007, 05:01 PM
Jeff Liebermann
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: Suggestions for a short building-to-building hop

"stephen" <stephen_hope@xyzworld.com> hath wroth:

>> Nobody uses grease. They use some kind of soapy goo that washes off
>> with water. For example:
>> <http://www.polywater.com/polyf.html>
>> <http://www.idealindustries.com/products/wire_installation/lubricants/>
>> Lots of fun when someone spills a gallon of the stuff on the concrete
>> floor.


>OK - bad terminology....


I'm not sure what it's called in the fiber biz, but in the land mobile
radio biz, it was called "slime".

In the early 1970's, some company invented a product called "instant
banana peel" (Riotril) that was used for riot control. It was
positively amazing stuff and worked far better than the soapy products
available at the time. It came as a white powder which was mixed with
water. What we forgot about was that the soapy products would
eventually evaporate, while this stuff would slowly ooze out of the
pipe, puddle on the floor, and create a serious footing hazard. Slip,
slide, and swear became a serious and almost permanent problem. At
one point, the radio shop had to have the concrete floor steam
cleaned. No amount of washing would get rid of the stuff.

>Agreed - but you said "any fibre" - indoor patch leads?


Maybe. For a 15ft run, patch cable would probably be strong enough.
However, the pull tension increases with the cable length. My guess
is 15ft would be about the maximum that could be used. Anything
longer would require buriable fiber or reinforced fiber.

>great theory - but this Manchester UK. Famous for rain, and when it isnt
>raining, mist, drizzle.


Ok, that's different. I guess you have to be more careful in dealing
with water problems. We get about 80 inches of rain per year on the
California central coast, but no flooding.

>anyhow - good engineering paranoia to assume the water will get in - and if
>you seal it well it stays there....


Yep. I'm not BISCI certified, but I try to follow their guidelines:
<http://www.bicsi.org/content/index.aspx?file=tcipubs.htm>
Unfortunately, my printed book was three revisions out of date, and I
loaned it to someone, and forgot whom.

[media converters]
>> For me, they're all plug-config-n-play. Any
>> particular type, brand, or model that you were having problems with?


You didn't answer my question. Which media converters were you having
problems with? They're fairly simple inside and I can't imagine any
form of reliability problem that isn't externally induced (i.e. my
crappy fiber terminations).

--
Jeff Liebermann jeffl@cruzio.com
150 Felker St #D http://www.LearnByDestroying.com
Santa Cruz CA 95060 http://802.11junk.com
Skype: JeffLiebermann AE6KS 831-336-2558

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  #17 (permalink)  
Old 08-18-2007, 05:16 PM
Jeff Liebermann
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: Suggestions for a short building-to-building hop

Mark McIntyre <markmcintyre@spamcop.net> hath wroth:

>>Yes. They have to be on the same transfomer and the same phase. If
>>the building are adjacent, there's an excellent chance that's the
>>case.


>Not necessarily in the UK,


You mean like this?
<http://www.travel-images.com/view.shtml?india128.jpg>
I wonder if power line networking will work there?

>but watch out for different phases. The pole near my Dad's house has
>all three (we get 'em all for my Dad's circular saw..., the neighbours
>get one each)


Locally, the residential areas usually get 2 phase power, while the
business and industrial districts get 3 phase. Most office buildings
get 3 phase (mostly to run the HVAC motors).

I'm still wondering why I can't find any "phase couplers" for HomePlug
frequencies. The various FAQ's imply that there's enough coupling
between parallel wires to couple between phases.

--
Jeff Liebermann jeffl@cruzio.com
150 Felker St #D http://www.LearnByDestroying.com
Santa Cruz CA 95060 http://802.11junk.com
Skype: JeffLiebermann AE6KS 831-336-2558

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  #18 (permalink)  
Old 08-18-2007, 05:16 PM
stephen
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: Suggestions for a short building-to-building hop

"Jeff Liebermann" <jeffl@cruzio.com> wrote in message
news:5j4ec3p4pd4jgkv0phofifpnn5a8eo95uv@4ax.com...
>
> [media converters]
> You didn't answer my question. Which media converters were you having
> problems with? They're fairly simple inside and I can't imagine any
> form of reliability problem that isn't externally induced (i.e. my
> crappy fiber terminations).


missed that. Over 5 years i used to help look after several campus networks
that were in love with the things for 100 Mbps Ethernet links, so i dont
have the part numbers any longer.

there were a few different flavours - allied telsyn was common, and several
that i think were rebadged via RS and Black Box.
They were plugged into Cisco, 3Com, Bay networks and Allied Telesyn switches
in different places, but the problems didnt seem to be switch specific, the
common factor was the media convertors.

we had endless trouble with intermittent auto negotiation going wrong on the
UTP side - usually triggered by a switch reboot, or a power fail. The things
were hidden all over the networks and not always documented, so these faults
were difficult to find sometimes.

the biggest site had around 200 wiring locations and hundreds of the things.
They finally did a "LAN refresh" to migrate most backbone links to GigE,
with 100M to small satellite switches on built in ports - nearly all of our
intermittent issues & spanning tree instability evaporated after that.
>
> --
> Jeff Liebermann jeffl@cruzio.com
> 150 Felker St #D http://www.LearnByDestroying.com
> Santa Cruz CA 95060 http://802.11junk.com
> Skype: JeffLiebermann AE6KS 831-336-2558

--
Regards

stephen_hope@xyzworld.com - replace xyz with ntl



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  #19 (permalink)  
Old 08-18-2007, 05:30 PM
Jeff Liebermann
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: Suggestions for a short building-to-building hop

"stephen" <stephen_hope@xyzworld.com> hath wroth:

>"Jeff Liebermann" <jeffl@cruzio.com> wrote in message
>news:5j4ec3p4pd4jgkv0phofifpnn5a8eo95uv@4ax.com.. .
>>
>> [media converters]
>> You didn't answer my question. Which media converters were you having
>> problems with? They're fairly simple inside and I can't imagine any
>> form of reliability problem that isn't externally induced (i.e. my
>> crappy fiber terminations).


>missed that. Over 5 years i used to help look after several campus networks
>that were in love with the things for 100 Mbps Ethernet links, so i dont
>have the part numbers any longer.
>
>there were a few different flavours - allied telsyn was common, and several
>that i think were rebadged via RS and Black Box.
>They were plugged into Cisco, 3Com, Bay networks and Allied Telesyn switches
>in different places, but the problems didnt seem to be switch specific, the
>common factor was the media convertors.


Ok, there's the difference. The few that I deal with were all 1:1
connections with no switches involved. The few that are plugged into
something usually go to a hub or EtherTap, which are convenient for
traffic monitoring. Since hubs don't do NWAY, the media converter is
manually configured for the correct speed and never gets lost.

>we had endless trouble with intermittent auto negotiation going wrong on the
>UTP side - usually triggered by a switch reboot, or a power fail. The things
>were hidden all over the networks and not always documented, so these faults
>were difficult to find sometimes.


I haven't had any NWAY negotiation failures that I know about.
However, I make it habit of nailing down the connected speeds and
protocols on my managed switches as I've had problems with some
ethernet cards (3c509b) doing NWAY all wrong and requiring a power
cycle to recover. Yeah, I can see where there might be a problem. As
none of these systems have media converters in the line, I've
apparently missed that adventure.

>the biggest site had around 200 wiring locations and hundreds of the things.
>They finally did a "LAN refresh" to migrate most backbone links to GigE,
>with 100M to small satellite switches on built in ports - nearly all of our
>intermittent issues & spanning tree instability evaporated after that.


OK, got it. I guess if you're relying on NWAY, there may be a
problem. However, for a 1:1 connection, where the installer can lock
down the rate and protocol, I don't see a problem with using a media
converter.

--
Jeff Liebermann jeffl@cruzio.com
150 Felker St #D http://www.LearnByDestroying.com
Santa Cruz CA 95060 http://802.11junk.com
Skype: JeffLiebermann AE6KS 831-336-2558

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  #20 (permalink)  
Old 08-19-2007, 12:09 AM
Richard Johnson
Guest
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: Suggestions for a short building-to-building hop


"stephen" <stephen_hope@xyzworld.com> wrote in message
news:Fhcxi.9982$mZ5.4273@newsfe6-win.ntli.net...
> "Jeff Liebermann" <jeffl@comix.santa-cruz.ca.us> wrote in message
> news:0fn9c31ta5qq469k95g8cge31ksdt35s05@4ax.com...
>> On Thu, 16 Aug 2007 23:27:40 GMT, Jeff Liebermann
>> <jeffl@comix.santa-cruz.ca.us> wrote:
>>
>> >On Thu, 16 Aug 2007 10:36:19 -0700, Cloy <cloy@tobola.com> wrote:
>> >
>> >>My understanding is that running ethernet lines outside (even well
>> >>insulated ones) can risk equipment damage from lightening / stray
>> >>voltage. Is that true?
>> >
>> >Generally true. Any conductor can attract lightning, act as an
>> >inductive pickup, or become part of the lightning's path to ground.

>>
>> I must be slipping in my old age. My previous rant is all about
>> copper wire (CAT5). Fiber optic cable has none of the problems
>> mentioned and is completely lightning proof. Depending on sheathing,
>> you can bury it, or run it between buildings (with a messenger wire
>> for support). No worries about lightning or ground faults with fiber.
>>
>> You'll need two 100baseTX(copper) to 100baseFX (fiber) "media
>> converters", one at each end. Over the <50ft distance you're working
>> with, almost any fiber technology will work. Note that there are
>> different types of fiber and many different types of connectors. I
>> would go with cheap dual mode fiber, with either ST or SC connectors.
>> <http://www.alliedtelesyn.com/products/line.aspx?pid=3>
>>

> <http://www.milan.com/TransitionNetwo...?Name=SSETF101
> x-205>
>>
>> If you feel ambitious, you might even go with 1000SX gigabit fiber
>> links (which costs more):
>> <http://www.alliedtelesyn.com/products/line.aspx?pid=2>
>>

> <http://www.milan.com/TransitionNetwo...n.aspx?Definit
> ion=Stand-Alone+Converter&Topology=10%2F100%2F1000+Ethernet>
>>
>> Plenty more vendors can be found by googling for:
>> "ethernet fiber media converter"
>>
>> Also, look on eBay. This looks close. However you'll need a pair of
>> them plus buriable fiber cable:
>> <http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=9727679747>
>>
>> Pricewise, I suspect you want to do this cheaply. Brand new buriable
>> fiber is not cheap. However, if you can bury waterproof conduit
>> (sprinkler pipe?), you can use any flavor fiber cable inside.

>
> 2 issues.
>
> 1. - you have to pull it thru the pipe. Some kinds of fibre will not take
> lots of mechanical stress, so a good choice, plenty of grease, and bit of
> care....
> 2. around here at least the pipe will spend a lof of time full of water.
> Ideally, you actually need fibre cable with waterproofing built in, as
> over
> time hydrogen ions can degrade the glass (may not be an issue in practice
> with a short run, but replacing it will be a pain, and 1st you would need
> to
> figure out what is happening).
>
> Finally - you can get fibre cables with no metal inside, which removes the
> issue of grounding and lightning pulse induction from that route into the
> buildings......
>
> If you
>> settle for slow 10baseT transceivers, you can probably find a used
>> pair for about $25/ea. 100baseT will be about $100/ea. No clue on
>> gigabit.

>
> i hate media convertors - had lots of hassle getting them to work, making
> them work again when they stop, or the power gets cycled.....
>
> A fair few switches now have SFP connectors which take modular optics -
> mainly GigE these days, but some 100 Mbps ones around as well.


In answer to #1, get the right type of fiber and it pulls just fine. Also,
NEVER use grease. There is a water based lube that you use, and only in
instances where you go through 2 90 degree turns. (Grease will break down
the jacket coating and eventually damage the fiber.)




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