Access Networks: Bader Al-Mugren ID: 201067 Naser Al-Dossary ID: 216867 Nezar Al-Ubaiyed ID: 981526
Access Networks: Bader Al-Mugren ID: 201067 Naser Al-Dossary ID: 216867 Nezar Al-Ubaiyed ID: 981526
Access Networks: Bader Al-Mugren ID: 201067 Naser Al-Dossary ID: 216867 Nezar Al-Ubaiyed ID: 981526
Done by
Bader Al-Mugren
Naser Al-Dossary
Nezar Al-Ubaiyed
ID: 201067
ID: 216867
ID: 981526
Agenda
1.
1. INTRODUCTION
INTRODUCTION
2.
2.OPTICAL
OPTICALNETWORKS
NETWORKS
3.
3. Hybrid
HybridFiber
Fiber Coax
Coax(HFC)
(HFC)
4.
4. Fiber-To-The-Curb
Fiber-To-The-Curb(FTTC)
(FTTC)
5.
5. Fiber-To-The-Home
Fiber-To-The-Home(FTTH)
(FTTH)
4.
4. CONCLUSION
CONCLUSION
INTRODUCTION
Access Networks are just the last step that will
provide the service from the service provider up to
the end user. As the network application is varied,
ranging from transferring files, video files, video
conferencing, and so on, this will require huge
bandwidth which is available using fibre based access
technologies.
OPTICAL NETWORKS
An optical network is a network in which the physical layer
technology is fiber-optic cable. Cable trunks are
interconnected with optical cross-connects (OXCs), and
signals are added and dropped at optical add/drop multiplexers
(OADMs).
In addition, most optical networks have implemented OEO
(optical-electrical-optical) switches, which convert optical
signals to electrical signals for processing, and then back again
to optical signals.
Introduction
Overview of HFC
Historical Background
HFC Network Structure
HFC Network Features
Network Management System
Conclusion
Introduction
Hybrid Fiber Coax (HFC) is a combination of optical
fiber and coaxial cable.
HFC offers reliability, availability, power, and
potentially disruptive upgrades, as well as scalability,
cost and data rate symmetry.
Overview of HFC
An HFC network is a cable network that includes a combination of fiberoptic and coaxial cable, with fiber-optic cable running from the cable
company's facility to a location near a home and coaxial cable running
from there into the home.
Continue
The fiber cable provides high bandwidth to multiple
users in a single neighbourhood.
It forms what is called the "trunk line" that stretches
from cable office to neighbourhoods.
The coaxial cable is called the "feeder circuit."
An upgrade to an HFC system usually requires
replacement of existing coaxial trunk lines with fiber
trunk lines.
In addition, equipment is needed at the neighbourhood junction to join the coaxial and fiber cables.
Historical Background
During the late 1980s, cable television
operators in the United States reached a
critical point where bandwidth demands to
their coaxial-based stressed the technical limits
for signal quality and platform reliability.
In response to the cable operators demand for
a solution that addressed both signal quality
and reliability.
The result was development of The HFC
network.
Conclusion
Consumer needs for interactive residential services.
The convergence of cable TV, computers and
telecommunications.
Resulted in the migration from unidirectional coax
Cable TV infrastructure to HFC networks.
The data throughput required for two directional
interactivity and digital video downstream, required a
fiber and coax architecture.
Hybrid Fiber Coax networks have proven to be
successful and low cost.
END OF PART I
Q&A
Fiber-to-the-curb (FTTC)
What is FTTC?
Fiber to the Curb (FTTC) Network: An access network in
which fiber is used for part, but not the entire link from the
OLT to the end-user. An optical to electrical (O/E) conversion
takes place somewhere near the end-user. The terminal
network segment of a FTTC network is usually twisted copper
pairs or coaxial cable. The final optical receiver in a FTTC
network typically serves several customers.
Contd
Bus-connected architecture:
In this architecture the coax line will be shared among different
homes.
In House wiring
HFC (fiber-to-the-neighborhood):
Hybrid Fiber Coax" (HFC) refers to installing the fiber up to
mid node between the network provider and the consumer.
You can refer to the figure below to see clearly the difference.
Contd
Fiber-to-the-Home (FTTH)
Objectives:
Introduction.
What is FTTH?
The Uses of FTTH.
The Advantages of FTTH.
The Future of FTTH.
FTTH and FTTC.
Conclusion.
Introduction
Need: high-speed data, dependable voice and
high-quality video.
Problems: how to get lines out to each
customer? How to future-proof the
architecture put into the ground today?
Solution: FTTH
What is FTTH?
Fiber-to-the-home (FTTH) is the installation of
optical fiber from a telephone switch directly
into the subscribers home.
It is one of the latest access technologies.
FTTH is also referred to as fiber-to-thebuilding (FTTB).
Conclusion