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What Is T1 and E1
What Is T1 and E1
.544 megabits / second. It contains twenty four digital channels and hence requires a device that has digital connection. This digital connection is called as the CSU / DSU Customer Switching Unit or Digital Switching Unit. The scalability of the T1 is up to 200 and above users. It also provides some services similar to the internet provider. Most of the computer uses a T1 connection. This technology makes your modem to have higher speeds and it is an affordable technology. E1 is similar to the T1. T1 is the North American term whereas the E1 is the European term for the transmission (digital). The data rate of E1 is about 2 mega bits per second. It has 32 channels at the speed of 64 Kbps. It is important to know that 2 channels among the 32 are already reserved. One channel is used for signaling while the other channel is used for controlling. The difference between T1 and E1 lies in the number of channels here. The speed remains the same. There may be inter connection between the E1 and T1 lines. This is interconnected because it is used for international purpose. Differences in the physical delivery: Here are we are going to discuss the differences in the physical delivery. Data Rate: The main difference is the data rate. T1 has a data rate of 1.544 mbps and E1 has a data rate of 2.048 mbps. Copper Delivery: In the T1 signal there is a copper delivery among 4 wires. It is grouped into two pairs. One pair is the RX (1+2) and another is TX (4+5). The RX is the data that is from the network and the TX is to the network. In the E1, there are two types of physical delivery; balanced physical delivery and unbalance physical delivery. The unbalance physical delivery has 4 copper wires. It is similar to that of T1. Whereas in the balance physical delivery there is a coax connector which has one cable for RX and one cable for TX. Services: T1 has a specific type of service. It has repeaters for every six thousand feet, a pulse or waveform shape and a jitter. The E1 has 32 timeslots. This can be said as DS. Each DS is about 8 bits wide. Differences in the Framing Format: Let us discuss the differences in the framing format. Framing: In T1, there are two types of framing formats. One is D4 (twelve bits group) used in aligning the equipment which is used for framing and another is ESF (twenty four bits group) used in aligning the frames as well as in the maintenance of the channel which is facilitated by the data link. In E1, there are two framing formats. One is a called the double frame it uses the DS0 and another is the multiframe which is the independent form.
What is T1?
A T1 is a term for a digital carrier facility used to transmit a DS-1 formatted digital signals at 1.544 megabits per second. This is made up of 24 digital channels. This requires a digital connection device (CSU/DSU {customer switching unit/digital switching unit}) to connect to four wires to carry the information. Most small Internet providers have a T1 (or a fractional T1) line as their connection to the Internet. A Full T1 should accommodate from one to over 200+ users and other services from an Internet provider. Unlike the modem that is in most computers a T1 line requires a CSU/DSU and the connection. The modem that is in your computer is analog. The newer 56K modems are a transition from analog to user affordable digital technology. The newer ISDN modems are digital to allow for the higher speeds.
How it works:
The T1 is like a large water main that serves a city, a large amount of water or traffic flows through it. Unlike the water hose in your front yard (your modem) the T1 is the major carrier of the Internet traffic. The T1 connects the backbone provider to the ISP provider via the telco (telecommunications provider) The signal comes into the CSU/DSU and then goes to the router. From there it goes into the master name server and may be routed to other servers. One of these severs may be a modem or terminal server that allows you to connect to the Internet. You log in and are verified as a user on the local network and then are allowed to proceed to the larger network (Internet).
What is a CSU/DSU?
A CSU/DSU [Channel Service Unit / Data Service Unit] is a piece of equipment that connects a leased line from the telephone company to the customer's equipment (such as a router). It performs line encoding and conditioning functions and often has a loopback function for testing. Although CSU/DSU's look similar to modems, they are not modems, and they don't modulate or demodulate between analog and digital. All they really do is
interface between a 56K, T1, or T3 line and serial interface (typically a V.35 connector) that connects to the router. Many newer routers have 56K or T1 CSU/DSUs built into them. CSU/DSU's for 56K, T1, and T3 lines are NOT the same and are not interchangable as a general rule. In the case of a T1 CSU/DSU, it passes the data in 64K chunks (time slots) on the 24 different channels (64K x 24 = 1.54MB).