renosis
Computer
- Apr 2, 2012
- 2
I work in fiber-optic networking and was tasked (a few months ago) with mapping the existing fiber network of a local waste-water plant in my area. The network was about 10 years old and it was a complete mess and nightmare (none of the strands were in standard color order). It took me a few weeks to get it all mapped.
The PLC network consists of 11 PLC's in 11 different buildings, running on a product called "Data Highway" by Allen Bradley on mostly PLC-5's. These 11 PLC's connect to a PLC in the main building with 5 x 2 channel network "cards". Each card has a channel A Transmit(Tx) and Receive(Rx) and a channel B Transmit(Tx) and Receive(Rx).
My question is, for some reason, each of the connections coming in is split between each channel on each card. For example, PLC-1 fiber comes in to the main building and is patched to CH A Tx and CH B Rx. I can't understand why they (whoever designed this originally) would split the connections like that?
I was thinking maybe they are daisy chained or are on some kind of funky ring topology, but this doesn't make sense judging by the way it is connected, because there would be "breaks" in the ring.
I was going to recommend to the plant operators to redo most of the fiber infrastructure to establish some kind of standards and I would like to get away from the split channel thing they have going on.
So I was wondering if anyone here knows of a reason why they might have it configured like this?
Thanks!
The PLC network consists of 11 PLC's in 11 different buildings, running on a product called "Data Highway" by Allen Bradley on mostly PLC-5's. These 11 PLC's connect to a PLC in the main building with 5 x 2 channel network "cards". Each card has a channel A Transmit(Tx) and Receive(Rx) and a channel B Transmit(Tx) and Receive(Rx).
My question is, for some reason, each of the connections coming in is split between each channel on each card. For example, PLC-1 fiber comes in to the main building and is patched to CH A Tx and CH B Rx. I can't understand why they (whoever designed this originally) would split the connections like that?
I was thinking maybe they are daisy chained or are on some kind of funky ring topology, but this doesn't make sense judging by the way it is connected, because there would be "breaks" in the ring.
I was going to recommend to the plant operators to redo most of the fiber infrastructure to establish some kind of standards and I would like to get away from the split channel thing they have going on.
So I was wondering if anyone here knows of a reason why they might have it configured like this?
Thanks!