Thursday, August 12, 2010

Is a TIA Cat 7 standard on the horizon?

A source with connections to the Telecommunications Industry Association's TR-42 Engineering Committee says that sometime next year, the group may take up an issue it has long tabled - the development of specifications for Category 7 twisted-pair cabling systems.

Category 7 and Category 7A specs have been part of the ISO 11801 cabling specs, which are recognized as an international cabling standard whereas the TIA-568 series of standards serves North America. Apparently an effort by some members of TIA TR-42 would - and maybe will - have that organization adopt the ISO Cat 7 specs just about verbatim.

There are a few practical reasons why supporters of the effort would want the TIA to take on a Cat 7 standard. Several cabling manufacturers have been vocal in their support of using shielded twisted-pair cabling systems for high-speed applications such as 10GBase-T. Some of those same companies have begun to drum up interest in a "Base-T" version of 40-Gbit Ethernet. A Cat 7 spec would help that cause.

But also, a TIA Cat 7 spec will indicate to North American users of structured cabling systems that Category 6A is not the end of the line for twisted-pair cabling capabilities. That may increase users' willingness to purchase Cat 6A, knowing that twisted-pair cabling has a future beyond it. When the Cat 6A spec was finalized, cable suppliers saw a boost in their Cat 6 sales. The aforementioned suggestion that users were more willing to buy Cat 6 knowing their migration path could eventually continue to Cat 6A is one point to consider. Another is that with Cat 6A ratified and therefore viewed as a real standard by many, there likely was some hesitancy on the part of consultants to specify Cat 5e cable, which was then two generations behind the best-available twisted-pair technology. Likewise, if a Cat 7 spec comes to fruition, then Cat 6 cabling will be two steps rather than one step behind the best-available twisted-pair technology. With that in mind, I wouldn't be surprised if there's a decent level of support for Cat 7 within TIA sometime soon.

In terms of how or when such a proposal is made to TIA TR-42, I have to confess I could use a refresher on the procedural maneuvers. But from what I understand, if a proposal is made before there's adequate support and it gets squashed, supporters will have blown their one shot at the project. So right now, much like we hear about in Congress with bills under debate, there's some campaigning going on within TIA TR-42 to build support for a set of Category 7 specifications.

When anything official happens we'll be sure to let you know. And hopefully, we'll also be able to keep you up to date on what's unofficially happening, like we have here.

2 comments:

Unknown said...

In a forward looking industry such as ours, the challenge is how to prepare for what’s next. We know that category 6A, and specifically UTP constructions, have stressed out the noise cancellation capabilities of LAN and data center equipment to the max. Kudos to TIA for looking at the increased North American adoption of category 7A systems and investigating the media as a ready solution for today’s 10GBASE-T, video, and cable sharing applications as well as future data center and backbone transmission high speed throughput needs.

Unknown said...

It is time to get a reliable cabling system for our datacenetrs running 10GbaseT. The Cat 7A is approved at international standard also used in USA so it is good to be armonized with ISO