Structured Cabling Structured Cabling is a set of standards that determine how to wire a data center, office or building for data or voice communications, using Fiber Optic Cabling, Category 5 or Category 6 cable and RJ45 sockets.
CABLING & INSTALL
At InSystinc, we pride ourselves in keeping our technicians up to date with the most current specifications and technologies in the cabling infrastructure. Our BICSI trained and certified cable technicians have an average of 10 years of field experience, Which insures a timely. Professional, on budget cabling project.
Your Telecommunications and network cabling needs.
The conveyance media you choose for your structured cabling implementation is determined by many factors. The most important of witch are your current bandwidth needs, your future bandwidth needs, and your budget.
Why do I need bandwidth of category 6?
Bandwidth precedes data rates just as highways come before traffic. Doubling the bandwidth is like adding twice the number of lanes on a highway. The trends of the past are that data rates double every !8 months. Current applications running at 1GBs are already at the limits of cat 5e cabling.. Category 6 will accept the higher bandwidth as streaming video and multi-media become commonplace.
The difference between cat 5 and cat 6.
The general difference between cat 5 and cat 6 is in the transmission performance, and extension of the available bandwidth from 100 MHz for cat 5e to 200 MHz for cat 6. This includes better insertion loss, near end crosstalk, return loss, and equal level far end crosstalk. These improvements provide a higher signal to noise ratio, allowing higher reliability for current applications and higher data rates for future applications.. Analyst predict that 80 to 90 percent of all new installations will be cat 6 cabling. Applications that work over cat 5e will also work over cat 6.
Why would I skip category 6 and go straight to optical fiber? You can certainly do that but will find that a fiber system is still very expensive. Today optical fiber is about twice as expensive as an equivalent system built using cat 6. Additionally, copper cabling supports the emerging Data Terminal Equipment power standard under development by IEEE.
Fiber Optic Cabling Services
We install terminate and test multi-mode and single-mode fiber. This includes indoor and outside plant fiber.
Fiber Optic Cabling provides a far greater bandwidth than copper and is typically used for backbone connection between localized networking equipment and is increasingly becoming the preferred choice for high quality and reliable analog and digital communications.
We Carry out the design, installation, and testing & maintenance of Fiber Optic systems including fusion splicing & termination of multi-mode & single-mode fiber cables, both internal & external work including repair work.
Coaxial Cabling
Knowing how to install and terminate coax cable properly is critical to achieving impedance matching. Knowledge and selection of the best available materials greatly increases efficiency. Coax cables carry a nominal impedance of between 35 and 185 ohms. The three most common coax cables are 50 ohms, 75 ohms (the cable you most likely using at home for your TV) and 93 ohms.
Arizona's Premier Telecom, Security and Service Provider
Areas include all of the Phoenix valley; Tempe, Scottsdale, Chandler, Gilbert, Mesa, Glendale, Queen Creek, Apache Junction, Sun Valley, Avondale, Casa Grand. We also service clients in all of Arizona from Flagstaff to Tucson.