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Enterprise Telecommunications Network

The document outlines the design of an enterprise telecommunications network for Rizal Technological University, focusing on the implementation of a Passive Optical LAN (POL) to replace outdated copper cabling. It includes the company's vision and mission, design objectives, procedures, and considerations for the network's infrastructure. The design aims to enhance connectivity and support quadruple-play services across the university's campus.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
59 views62 pages

Enterprise Telecommunications Network

The document outlines the design of an enterprise telecommunications network for Rizal Technological University, focusing on the implementation of a Passive Optical LAN (POL) to replace outdated copper cabling. It includes the company's vision and mission, design objectives, procedures, and considerations for the network's infrastructure. The design aims to enhance connectivity and support quadruple-play services across the university's campus.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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RIZAL TECHNOLOGICAL UNIVERSITY

College of Engineering and Industrial Technology

Boni Avenue, Mandaluyong City

ENTERPRISE TELECOMMUNICATIONS NETWORK FOR

RIZAL TECHNOLOGICAL UNIVERSITY – BONI CAMPUS

In Partial Fulfilment of the Requirements for the Degree of

Bachelor of Science in Electronics Engineering

Presented by:

ILAGA, ANDREA MAE N.

ILIGAN, KATHLEEN CATE S.

LEGO, JAMES S.

MATEO, RAYMART D.V.

Presented to:

ENGR. JULIUS F. MABANGLO

March 2019
COMPANY PROFILE

Iris Communications is dedicated on improving own company’s skills and

practical strategies to provide a good, reliable and responsible services to our

customers and subscribers. Iris Communications looks forward to the future of

modernized and ease of communications through optic fibers.

VISION

To be the leading communications service provider that can offer high quality

grade of amenities through fiber optics communications.


MISSION

To provide innovative best communications grade solutions that enables

operators and management to adapt to the evolving communication technologies

TABLE OF CONTENTS
CHAPTER I

OVERVIEW OF THE DESIGN

I. INTRODUCTION

In the past years, copper-based cable has been the standard for network
connectivity. However, the types of cables used to connect the costumer’s
network will affect key elements of their connectivity including the speed of data
transfer, latency and overall security and the existing copper cabling cannot keep
pace to the growing bandwidth needs.

Passive Optical LAN provides an abundance of advantages over


traditional copper cabling. It eliminates the networking limitations and addresses
the evolving demands of enterprises
with fiber optic cabling that delivers
all services on one efficient, high-
capacity network.

PASSIVE OPTICAL LAN

The strength of PON


architectures is the ability to share
bandwidth over a common fiber and
deliver data to the end points using
passive splitters.

The network consists of a


core switch known as an optical line

terminal (OLT) connected to an end


Figure 1.1 Passive Optical LAN Network
device or optical network terminal
(ONT) by up to 20 km (or more) of passive single mode fiber-optic cabling. The
fiber and passive equipment between the OLT and ONUs are often simply
referred to as the optical distribution network (ODN). ODN provides the optical

1
transmission medium for the physical connection of the ONUs to the OLTs. The
main function of OLT is to control the information float across the ODN, going
both directions, while being located in a central office. The ONU converts optical
signals transmitted via fiber to electrical signals. These electrical signals are then
sent to individual subscribers. In general, there is a distance or other access
network between ONU and end user’s premises.

Because of this setup, passive optical LAN can decrease the amount of
cable and equipment required to deploy a network.

II. DESIGN OBJECTIVES

The designers setup the following objectives for the entire design of
Passive Optical LAN for Rizal Technological University – Boni Campus. These
intentions are classified as general and specific objectives:

GENERAL OBJECTIVES
 To be able to apply best practices in the design of a standards-based
enterprise network capable of delivering quadruple-play services for RTU
Campus/es.
SPECIFIC OBJECTIVES
 Migration of RTU’s traditional copper-based LAN into a PON-based LAN
Use applicable standards in the design for the following:
o Structured Cabling: TIA 568C
o PON: G.984
o Voice Codec: G.711, G.729, etc.
o Recommend an appropriate WAN connection for the enterprise
III. DESIGN PROCEDURES

The following are the procedures taken for the design:

1. Try to find for a potential enterprise that has at least 100 possible users of
quadruple services.

2
2. Conduct a survey in the selected enterprise to be able to know existing
telecommunication devices.
3. If possible and available, get a copy of the floor plan layout of the enterprise.
4. For the identified parameters of the network, select appropriate equipment
suitable for the design. Note important specifications that can be used for
calculations.
5. Summary the gathered data which it can be used for succeeding
computations of bandwidth allocation, subnetting as well as the losses for the
entire network.
6. Design a Passive Optical Local Area Network suitable for the chosen
enterprise. Make sure it would follow the required standards.

IV. SCOPE AND DELIMITATIONS


The following are the scopes of the design:

1. There is no existing telecommunication service within the area under


consideration.
2. The equipment showed by the designers are for identifying the required
devices in installing a Passive Optical LAN (POL) Technology.
3. The design focuses on the application of standard structure cabling.
4. The bandwidth requirements of the proposed network are computed.
5. The floor layout and network diagram is included.

The following are the constraints of the design:

1. The technicality of the transmission is not considered.


2. Return of investment is not included.
3. The setup and configuration of equipment for the design is delimited.
4. Licenses and permits were not acquired.

3
CHAPTER II

OVERVIEW OF THE SITE

I. BRIEF HISTORY OF THE SITE

Figure 2.1 Rizal Technological University – Boni Campus Quadrangle

The Rizal Technological University was established on July 11, 1969 upon
the approval by the Secretary of Education in response to the utmost request of
the Provincial Board of Rizal, headed by the Governor Isidro S. Rodriguez, to put
up a higher education institution in the Province of Rizal. It was first known as the
College of Rizal.

The University is tasked to provide highly professional, scientific,


technological and special instructions in the fields of engineering and technology,
education, business and entrepreneurial technology, and the programs; and
promote research, extension and advance studies in its areas of specialization.

The functions and services of RTU are not confined to instruction alone as
it is has shifted to full gear towards the enhancement of its research and
development programs and continued to pursue the policy of sharing its
expertise and resources with the community through its non-formal education
programs and extension services.

4
At present, RTU rises as a state university that will unceasingly fulfil its
mission, vision, goals and objectives.

II. SITE LOCATION

Figure 2.1 Google Map view of Rizal Technological University – Boni Campus

Address: 704 Boni Ave Cor Sacrepante, Mandaluyong, 1550 Metro Manila

Figure 2.2 Rizal Technological University Vicinity Map

5
CHAPTER III

DESIGN CONSIDERATIONS

The six subsystem of a Structured Cabling System are as follows:

1. Building Entrance

The entrance of facilities provide the point at which outside cabling


interfaces with the intrabuilding backbone cabling. EIA/TIA-569B Standard
defines the physical requirements for a network.

Considerations:

 The entrance facility should be provisioned as the telecommunications room.


 The public network interface equipment and telecommunications equipment
may be in the entrance facility.
 A service entrance pathway shall be provided via one of the following
entrance types: Underground, Buried, Aerial, Tunnel.

2. Equipment Room

EIA/TIA 569 defines the standards for the equipment room. Equipment
rooms keeps equipment for the system that can be the same as a
telecommunications closet may have.

Considerations:

 The main equipment room should be located at the ground floor of the
building.
 New equipment should be expected, meaning at least one free rack is
provided and should be securely bolted to the floor and braised to the wall.
 Equipment room should be located in the room below no water level. Any
water infiltration must be taken into account.
 Equipment room should be well ventilated.

6
3. Backbone Cabling

 Based on TIA/EIA 568-C.3, the maximum length allowed for single fiber mode
is 3000 meters.
 Star topology is the type of connection to be used.
 Single mode 9/125um fiber optic cable was used for the backbone (based on
the ANSI/EIA C.3)
 Cable pathways are installed in location where indoor cabling can be
protected from humidity levels and condensation and are separated with
power cables.

4. Telecommunication Room

The telecommunication room is the transition area of the backbone and


the horizontal cabling. It is the central area that contains the terminations for
cables.

Considerations:

 Minimum one closet per floor to house telecommunications equipment/cable


terminations and associated cross-connect cable and wire.
 Located near the center of the area being served.
 Horizontal pathways shall terminate in the telecommunications room on the
same floor as the area served.

5. Horizontal Cabling

The horizontal cabling system of the network extends from the work area’s
telecommunication outlet to the telecommunications room.

 The cable distance must not exceed 100 meters.


 Floor-based distance (maximum of 90 meters) is the reflected distance of the
cable when looking at the floor plan.

7
 Auxiliary distance of 10 meters is added to the floor-based distance to provide
allowance for the length to be consumed on switch connection, host
connection, and LAN outlet connection.
 Total cable distance is the sum of floor-based distance and auxiliary distance.
 Approach to building communications cabling necessary for complete
connectivity solution:
- RJ-45 Jack and Outlet Installation
- Cable Installation
- Patch Panel
- Raceway

6. Backbone Cabling

A. Inter-building backbone distribution system

a. Inter-building backbone distribution of the buildings follows the star


topology.
b. For main inter-building backbone distribution, Cat6 UTP Cables were
used.
c. Main Equipment Room must be located on the first floor of each building.

B. Intra-building backbone distribution system

a. Intra-building backbone distribution follows the star topology.


b. Cable pathways are located in areas where indoor cabling is protected
from humidity levels and condensation and are separated from the power
cables.
c. For main intra-building backbone distribution, Category 6 UTP cables
(23AWG UTP) were used.
d. From the main cross connect up to the horizontal cross-connect, a
maximum length of Cat6 cable is applied.

8
CHAPTER IV

DESIGN CALCULATIONS

I. SUMMARY OF TELECOMMUNICATIONS FACILITIES

The table shows the number of proposed equipment for voice, video and
data per building of Rizal Technological University.
Table 4.1 Summary of Telecommunications Requirements for Rizal
Technological University - Boni Campus per Building
PROPOSED EQUIPMENT PER BUILDING WITH EXISTING
VOICE VIDEO DATA
BUILDING NAME Analog IP IP PC
WAP
Phone Phone Camera Desktop
DR. JOSEFINA V. ESTOLAS
21 4 51 199 7
BUILDING (ITC)
DR. LYDIA M. PROFETA
31 24 33 169 3
BUILDING (ITB)
MAIN ACADEMIC BUILDING
25 8 25 23 3
(MAB)
OLD BUILDING (OB) 15 3 28 35 4
RESEARCH AND
DEVELOPMENT CENTER 32 9 43 62 4
(RND)
SEN. NEPTALI A. GONZALES
17 4 48 112 7
ACADEMIC HALL (TED)
TOTAL 141 52 228 600 28

II. SUMMARY OF NUMBER AND DURATION OF CALLS


The following are the number of incoming and outgoing calls held per
week based on the conducted survey.
Table 4.2 Summary of Incoming and Outgoing Calls of Rizal
Technological University – Boni Campus per week

RIZAL TECHNOLOGICAL UNIVERSITY - BONI CAMPUS


INCOMING AND OUTGOING CALLS
NUMBER OF CALLS PER DAY
TIMESLOTS
MON TUE WED THU FRI SAT
07:01 AM - 08:00 AM 2 4 3 1 5 1

9
08:01 AM - 09:00 AM 35 18 17 18 29 0
09:01 AM - 10:00 AM 31 20 23 24 32 0
10:01 AM - 11:00 AM 37 23 19 23 26 1
11:01 AM - 12:00 PM 16 16 12 21 22 0
12:01 PM - 01:00 PM 10 7 11 6 10 0
01:01 PM - 02:00 PM 15 13 12 19 18 0
02:01 PM - 03:00 PM 26 18 19 11 22 1
03:01 PM - 04:00 PM 21 15 17 18 25 1
04:01 PM - 05:00 PM 26 16 10 14 30 0
05:01 PM - 06:00 PM 12 6 4 9 19 0
06:01 PM - 07:00 PM 4 2 2 1 1 0
07:01 PM - 08:00 PM 3 3 3 4 2 0
08:01 PM - 09:00 PM 2 4 1 1 3 0
09:01 PM - 10:00 PM 2 1 2 2 3 0
TOTAL 242 166 155 172 247 4
The table shows that the busy hour call happens on Monday at 10:01 AM
to 11:00 AM with 37 calls held.

DURATION OF CALLS
The following data are the calculated duration of calls per hour based on 3
minute estimation per call according to the interview.

Table 4.3 Summary of Duration of Incoming and Outgoing Calls of Rizal


Technological University – Boni Campus per week

RIZAL TECHNOLOGICAL UNIVERSITY - BONI CAMPUS


INCOMING AND OUTGOING CALLS
DURATION OF CALLS PER DAY
TIMESLOTS
MON TUE WED THU FRI SAT
07:01 AM - 08:00 AM 6 12 9 3 15 3
08:01 AM - 09:00 AM 105 54 51 54 87 0
09:01 AM - 10:00 AM 93 60 69 72 96 0
10:01 AM - 11:00 AM 111 69 57 69 78 3
11:01 AM - 12:00 PM 48 48 36 63 66 0
12:01 PM - 01:00 PM 30 21 33 18 30 0
01:01 PM - 02:00 PM 45 39 36 57 54 0
02:01 PM - 03:00 PM 78 54 57 33 66 3
03:01 PM - 04:00 PM 63 45 51 54 75 3

10
04:01 PM - 05:00 PM 78 48 30 42 90 0
05:01 PM - 06:00 PM 36 18 12 27 57 0
06:01 PM - 07:00 PM 12 6 6 3 3 0
07:01 PM - 08:00 PM 9 9 9 12 6 0
08:01 PM - 09:00 PM 6 12 3 3 9 0
09:01 PM - 10:00 PM 6 3 6 6 9 0
TOTAL 726 498 465 516 741 12

III. Bandwidth Calculations

A. Voice Bandwidth Computation

This is subdivided into two categories the VoIP and analog phone.

 Voice over IP Bandwidth Calculation

Number of VoIP Lines proposed = 52 lines (see page 9)

Table 4.4 Different Types of CODECs

CODEC INFORMATION
BIT RATE SAMPLING Mean Opinion
CODEC DESCRIPTION
(kbps) RATE (kHz) Score (MOS)
Pulse Code
G.711 64 8 4.1
Modulation (PCM)
G.729 CS-ACELP 8 8 3.92
G.728 CS-ACELP 16 8 3.61
Dual Rate Speech
G.723 5.6/6.3 8 3.8/3.9
Coder
The table shows that G.711 is the best CODEC because of the high MOS
that will give the best voice quality for VoIP. G.711 has also a 20 millisecond
default packet duration.

11
Figure 4.1 Lines to VoIP Bandwidth Calculator
(https://www.erlang.com/calculator/lipb/)
The figure shows the computed voice bandwidth needed considering the
simultaneous usage of all IP phones using the online calculator. The VoIP
bandwidth is 4,160 kbps or 4.160 Mbps.

 Trunkline Computation

Erlang B is a modeling formula that is widely used in call center scheduling.


The formula can be used to calculate one of the following three factors if you
know or predict the other two.

1. Busy Hour Traffic (BHT) – the number of hours of call traffic during the
busiest hour of operation.
2. Blocking – the percentage of call that are blocked because not enough lines
are available.
3. Lines – the number of lines in a trunk group.

Table 4.5 Teletraffic Data Summary (see page 10)

Highest number of calls in a week 247 calls


Highest number of calls in an hour 37 calls
Call Duration 111 minutes

12
1. BUSY HOUR TRAFFIC

( )

( )

( )

2. BLOCKING PROBABILITY

It describes the probability of the call losses for a group of identical parallel
resources (telephone lines, circuits, traffic channels, or equivalent). A figure of
0.010 means that 1% of calls would be blocked; this is normal figure to use in
traffic engineering.

BHT = 1.85 Erlangs (see page 13)

Blocking Probability = 0.01

Figure 4.2 Erlang B Calculator (https://www.erlang.com/calculator/erlb/)

The figure shows that in a 1.85 Erlangs busy hour traffic there should be 6
trunk lines.

13
3. DIMENSIONING TRUNKS

It is for analog phones only; its equivalent in IP phones is computed using


an online Erlangs and VoIP Bandwidth Calculator.

BHT = 1.85 Erlangs (see page 13)

Blocking Probabity = 0.01

Figure 4.3 Erlangs and VoIP Bandwidth Calculator


(https://www.erlang.com/calculator/eipb/)

Voice Bandwidth for BHT of 1.85 Erlang is 480 kbps or 0.48 Mbps and
requires six voice paths or trunkline.

Table 4.6 Summary of Voice Bandwidth

SERVICE BANDWIDTH (Mbps)


Voice Bandwidth for IP Phones 4.16
Voice Bandwidth for BHT 0.48
Total 4.64
The table shows that the total bandwidth for the IP Phones and BHT is
4.64 Mbps.

14
B. VIDEO BANDWIDTH CALCULATION

The proponents determined the video bandwidth for IP cameras using an


online calculator that is provided by the manufacturer of IP camera which is
GeoVision. The results are presented below.

Number of IP cameras: 228 (see page 9)

Model: GV-ADR4701

Figure 4.4 GV-IP Camera Bandwidth and Recording Size Calculator


(http://classic.geovision.com.tw/english/Bandwidth.asp)

The settings for IP cameras were chosen to record and store through NVR
for a week with a recommended specification by the manufacturer.

15
In relation to the calculated video storage, the specifications for NVR were
chosen to handle the overall recording size. The NVR can support up to 20 hard
disks that are capable for 6 Tb each with a total of 120 Tb.

C. DATA BANDWIDTH CALCULATION

Number of users/desktop = 600

Bandwidth per desktop = 1 Mbps (256 kbps in the interview)

D. WIRELESS ACCESS POINT BANDWIDTH

Number of Access Point = 28

Bandwidth per Access Point = 1.5 Mbps (512 kbps in the interview)

E. SUMMARY OF OVERALL BANDWIDTH

Overall Bandwidth = Voice + Data + Access Point

Table 4.7: Summary of Network Bandwidth

SERVICES BANDWIDTH (Mbps)


Voice 4.64
Video 471.96
Data 600.00
Access Point 42.00
TOTAL 1118.60

16
The table shows that the overall bandwidth is 1118.60 Mbps, but Video is
internal access and does not need to be added to the overall bandwidth
computation. The bandwidth must be use is capable to handle the largest
telecommunications equipment. Therefore, the bandwidth for data which is 600
Mbps is the one must be considered.

For this proposal, we’ve selected PLDT Fibr Power Plus Plan 6000. The
reason for this is that it has a wide bandwidth of up to 200 Mbps, which suits our
calculated bandwidth of 172.576 Mbps.

IV. IP ADDRESSING (SUBNETTING)

A. Public IP Address

The enterprise will have a single public IP address even though it is has
two Internet Service Providers (ISPs). A single public IP address will be given to
the enterprise and this address will be advertised to our ISPs.

B. Private IP Address

Virtual Local Area Networks (VLANs) were employed to provide network


segmentation, designation of VLANs were based on per floor and functional
basis. For hosts, IP addresses will be obtained using Dynamic Host

17
Configuration Protocol (DHCP). For Servers and Network devices, it will be
Static.

In finding the number of hosts per subnet, the proponents use the formula:

Number of hosts = 232-N – 2 ; where: N = subnet mask

The following subnet masks are used in private IP address

Table 4.8 Subnet Mask Determination


SUBNET MASK
REQUIRED ALLOWABLE
VLAN NAME NUMBER OF CIDR SUBNET MASK NUMBER OF
HOSTS HOSTS
PC_VLAN 600 /22 255.255.252.0 1022
IPCAM_VLAN 228 /24 255.255.255.0 254
VOICE_VLAN 50 /26 255.255.255.192 62
WAP_VLAN 28 /27 255.255.255.224 30

Table 4.9 IP Addressing Deployment


IP ADDRESSING
HOST
VLAN NETWORK BROADCAST
VLAN NAME ADDRESS
ID ADDRESS ADDRESS
RANGE
192.168.8.1 –
8 PC_VLAN 192.168.8.0/22 192.168.13.255
192.168.13.254
192.168.20.1 –
20 IPCAM_VLAN 192.168.20.0/24 192.168.20.255
192.168.20.254
192.168.30.1 -
30 VOICE_VLAN 192.168.30.0/26 192.168.30.63
192.168.30.62
192.168.40.1 –
40 WAP_VLAN 192.168.40.0/27 192.168.40.32
192.168.40.30

V. LINK POWER BUDGET CALCULATIONS

The diagram below represents the optical connections and cable runs

from OLT to ONU. The proponents used this diagram to compute for the losses

and system margin.

18
Figure 4.5 Link Power Budget Diagram

The table below presents the following classes of PON based on ITU-T
G.984.2. The proponents used Class B+ system budget loss for the design.

Table 4.10 Classes of Power Budget based on ITU-T G.984.2


CLASS A CLASS B CLASS B+ CLASS C CLASS C+
Minimum
5 dB 10 dB 13 dB 15 dB 18 dB
Loss
Maximum
20 dB 25 dB 28 dB 30 dB 33 dB
Loss

The proponents calculated the link power budget for the nearest and

farthest ONU only to identify if the data can reach.

For 1310 nm:

System Margin = ONT Laser Diode Output – OLT Detector Sensitivity – OLT
Received Power Penalty – Losses

For 1490 nm and 1550 nm:

System Margin = OLT Laser Diode Output – ONT Detector Sensitivity – OLT
Received Power Penalty – Losses

19
The following are the parameters relevant for calculation. The attenuation
and losses are based on equipment specifications.

Table 4.11 Length of Fiber Optic Cables for Nearest and Farthest ONU
FIBER OPTIC CABLE LENGTH
CABLE LENGTH
PARAMETER LOCATION
OLT to Splitter Splitter to ONU
st
ITB 1 Floor
Nearest ONU 0.5 m 0.5 m
Information
MAB 5th Floor
Farthest ONU 220 m 15 m
Dean’s Office

Table 4.12 Fiber Optic Cable’s Attenuation with respect to operating Wavelength
FIBER OPTIC CABLE LOSSES
WAVELENGTH ATTENUATION
1310 nm 0.39 dB/km
1490 nm 0.39 dB/km
1550 nm 0.25 dB/km

Table 4.13 Parameters for Passive Equipment used based on specification sheet
PASSIVE EQUIPMENT PARAMETERS
PARAMETER LOSS
Connector Loss 0.2 dB
Splitter Loss 10.3 dB

NEAREST ONU/ONT

Location: ITB First Floor - Information

1310 nm
Cable Attenuation = 0.39 dB/km * (0.0005 km + 0.0005 km) = 0.000195 dB
Connector Loss = 0.2 dB * 4 = 0.8 dB
Splitter Loss = 10.3 dB * 1 = 10.3 dB
Losses = 0.000195 dB + 0.8 dB + 10.3 dB = 11.100195 dB
System Margin = 5 dB – (-28 dBm) – 3 dB – 11.100195 dB = 18.899805 dB

20
1490 nm
Cable Attenuation = 0.39 dB/km * (0.0005 km + 0.0005 km) = 0.000195 dB
Connector Loss = 0.2 dB * 4 = 0.8 dB
Splitter Loss = 10.3 dB * 1 = 10.3 dB
Losses = 0.000195 dB + 0.8 dB + 10.3 dB = 11.100195 dB
System Margin = 5 dB – (-27 dBm) – 3 dB – 11.100195 dB = 17.899805 dB

1550 nm
Cable Attenuation = 0.25 dB/km * (0.0005 km + 0.0005 km) = 0.000025 dB
Connector Loss = 0.2 dB * 4 = 0.8 dB
Splitter Loss = 10.3 dB * 1 = 10.3 dB
Losses = 0.000025 dB + 0.8 dB + 10.3 dB = 11.100025 dB
System Margin = 5 dB – (-27dBm) – 3 dB – 11.100025 dB = 17.899975 dB

FARTHEST ONU/ONT

Location: MAB Fifth Floor – Dean’s Office

1310 nm
Cable Attenuation = 0.39 dB/km * (0.22 km + 0.015 km) = 0.09165 dB
Connector Loss = 0.2 dB * 4 = 0.8 dB
Splitter Loss = 10.3 dB * 1 = 10.3 dB
Losses = 0.09165 dB + 0.8 dB + 10.3 dB = 11.19165 dB
System Margin = 5 dB – (-28 dBm) – 3 dB – 11.19165 dB = 18.80835 dB

1490 nm
Cable Attenuation = 0.39 dB/km * (0.22km + 0.015 km) = 0.09165 dB
Connector Loss = 0.2 dB * 4 = 0.8 dB
Splitter Loss = 10.3 dB * 1 = 10.3 dB

21
Losses = 0.09165 dB + 0.8 dB + 10.3 dB = 11.19165 dB
System Margin = 5 dB – (-27 dBm) – 3 dB – 11.19165 dB = 17.80835 dB

1550 nm
Cable Attenuation = 0.25 dB/km * (0.22 km + 0.015 km) = 0.05875 dB
Connector Loss = 0.2 dB * 4 = 0.8 dB
Splitter Loss = 10.3 dB * 1 = 10.3 dB
Losses = 0.05875 dB + 0.8 dB + 10.3 dB = 11.15875 dB
System Margin = 5 dB – (-27dBm) – 3 dB – 11.15875 dB = 17.84125 dB

SUMMARY OF OPTICAL PATH LOSSES


Table 4.14 Losses Computation
NEAREST ONU/ONT
LOCATION ITB FIRST FLOOR (INFORMATION)
PARAMETERS 1310 nm 1490 nm 1550 nm
Cable Attenuation 0.000195 dB 0.000195 dB 0.000025 dB
Connector Loss 0.8 dB 0.8 dB 0.8 dB
Splitter Loss 10.3 dB 10.3 dB 10.3 dB
TOTAL LOSSES 11.100195 dB 11.100195 dB 11.10025 dB
FARTHEST ONU/ONT
LOCATION MAB FIFTH FLOOR (DEAN’S OFFICE)
PARAMETERS 1310 nm 1490 nm 1550 nm
Cable Attenuation 0.09165 dB 0.09165 dB 0.05875 dB
Connector Loss 0.8 dB 0.8 dB 0.8 dB
Splitter Loss 10.3 dB 10.3 dB 10.3 dB
TOTAL LOSSES 11.19165 dB 11.19165 dB 11.15875 dB

SUMMARY OF SYSTEM MARGIN


Table 4.15 System Margin
NEAREST ONU/ONT
LOCATION ITB FIRST FLOOR (INFORMATION)
PARAMETERS 1310 nm 1490 nm 1550 nm
OLT Laser Diode Output 5 dB
OLT Detector Sensitivity -28 dBm
ONT Laser Diode Output 5 dB
ONT Detector Sensitivity -27 dBm
Optical Power Penalty 3 dB

22
Losses 11.19165 dB 11.19165 dB 11.15875 dB
SYSTEM MARGIN 18.899805 dB 17.899805 dB 17.899975 dB
FARTHEST ONU/ONT
LOCATION MAB FIFTH FLOOR (DEAN’S OFFICE)
PARAMETERS 1310 nm 1490 nm 1550 nm
OLT Laser Diode Output 5 dB
OLT Detector Sensitivity -28 dBm
ONT Laser Diode Output 5 dB
ONT Detector Sensitivity -27 dBm
Optical Power Penalty 3 dB
Losses 11.19165 dB 11.19165 dB 11.15875 dB
SYSTEM MARGIN 18.80835 dB 17.80835 dB 17.84125 dB

The table shows the difference in their system margin is clearly defined by

the passive components and length of fiber optic cables used along the network

since both use the same active equipment. Therefore, both system margins are

acceptable and sufficient based on the type of GPON class used and both

distance can be supported by the network.

23
APPENDICES

EQUIPMENT AND LAYOUTS

24
APPENDIX A

EQUIPMENT

EQUIPMENT RACK
RK4P45-29A

Dimensions

Channel Width 3.0 in

Depth 1041.40 mm | 41.00 in

Dimensional Standards EIA-310-E

Height 2133.60 mm | 84.00 in

Weight 35.83 kg | 79.00 lb

Width 518.16 mm | 20.40 in

25
FIREWALL
CISCO ASA 5520

Specifications

Features Description
Firewall Throughput Up to 450 Mbps
Up to 225 Mbps with AIP-SSM-10
Maximum Firewall and IPS Throughput
Up to 375 Mbps with AIP-SSM-20
VPN Throughput Up to 225 Mbps
Concurrent Sessions 280,000
Virtual Interfaces (VLANs) 150
4 Gigabit Ethernet
Interfaces
1 Fast Ethernet

26
OPTICAL LINE TERMINAL

HUAWEI MA5608T - Mini OLT

The MA5608T Mini OLT is designed to address Fiber to the premise


(FTTP) or deep fiber deployment scenarios where a large OLT chassis may not
be the best fit for a variety of reasons. Huawei’s mini OLT MA5608T offers the
same carrier grade features and performance.

Features

 Maximum Optical Power: 5.00 dBm


 Maximum Receiver Sensitivity: -28.00 dBm
 16 ports per card or 8 ports per card
 Robust compliance to G. 984 Series standards with 2.5/1.2 Gbps downstream
and 1.2 Gbps line speed performance
 Support for B+ or C+ optical modules (SFPs) with max 40km differential
distance
 Up to 1:128 split ratio per GPON port
 Optical Power Monitoring, Real Time Rogue ONT detection/isolation
 Maximum logical distance between devices: 60km
 Dimension: 442mm x 244.5mm x 88.1mm
 DC Power Supply -38.4V to -72V
 AC Power Supply 100V to 240V

27
General Specifications in Compliance with

ITU-T G.984.1 Recommendation Series

PARAMETERS UNIT B+ C+
Downstream
Nominal Bit Rate Mbps 2488.32 2488.32
Optical Wavelength nm 1480-1500 1480-1500
Line code -- Scrambled NRZ Scrambled NRZ
Minimum ORL dB >32 >32
Mean launched power MIN dBm 1.5 3
Mean launched power MAX dBm 5 7
Extinction ratio dB >8.2 >8.2
Tolerance to the transmitter incident
dB >-15 >-15
light power
SLM Laser – MAX – 20 dB nm 1 1
SLM Laser – MIN SMSR dB 30 30
Upstream
Nominal Bit Rate Mbps 1244 1244
Optical Wavelength nm 1260-1360 1260-1360
Maximum reflectance of equipment,
dB <-20 <-20
measured at Rx wavelength
Bit Error Rate (BER) - <-10 <-10
Minimum Sensitivity dBm -28 -32
Minimum Overload dBm -8 -12
Downstream Optical Penalty dB 0.5 1
Consecutive Identical Digit Immunity Bit >72 >72
Tolerance to Reflected Optical Power dB <10 <10

28
SFP-SC CONNECTOR

1490/1310nm Wavelength Fiber Sfp-SC Connector Fiber Transceiver OLT

The HDV Small Form-Factor Pluggable (SFP) Gigabit Interface Converter


is a hot-swappable input/output device that plugs into a Gigabit Ethernet port or
slot, linking the port with the network. SFPs can be used and interchanged on a
wide variety of switches and routers, can be intermixed in combinations of
1000BASE-T, 1000BASE-SX, 1000BASE-LX/LH, 1000BASE-EX, 1000BASE-ZX,
or 1000BASE-BX10-D/U on a port-by-port basis.

Quick Details

Model Number: H1GEPON+SFP


Application: Telecommunication
Wavelength: 1550mm/1490nm/1310nm
Distance: 20km
Data Rate: 1.25G
Connector: Duplex SC
Fiber Type: SMF
Power supply: 3.3V
Compatible with: Cisco, Huawei, HP, etc.

29
Network Video Recorder

GV-Hot Swap NVR System V5 RevE-4U,20-Bay

 Powered by Intel Core i7 Processor


 64-bit Windows 10 IoT Enterprise
 Support H.265 CPU and GPU decoding
 Support 32-channel GV-NVR (pure IP surveillance)
 Three-monitor display
 Maximum storage capacity up to 120 TB (4U 20-Bay) / 96 TB (3U 16-Bay)
/ 48 TB (3U 8-Bay)
 Hot-swap status LED panel
 Dual Gigabit LAN ports
 4U (20-bay) or 3U (16 / 8-bay) hot-swap SATA HDDs for data storage
 Built-in 4 inputs and 4 outputs
 Extreme performance for GV-NVR operation
 Pre-installed SSD for recovery
 Supported RAID type:0,1,3,5,6,10,00,30,50,60,100 Single Disk or JBOD
(optional)
 Redundant power supply (optional)
 Compatible with full selections of GeoVision accessories

30
IP PBX
Analog Gateway / IP PBX NC-MG232

Analog Gateway / IP PBX: it can not only work as analog gateway that
makes connection between FXO/FXS and VoIP SIP, but also can work as IP
PBX that allows other SIP terminals to register into themselves.

 VoIP Protocol: SIP;

 Codec: G.711 U-Law and A-Law, G.711 Appendix 1, G.723.1 and G.723.1
Annex A, G.729 Annex A and Annex B, G.726-16,G.726-32,GSM,GSM-
EFR,ARM,ARM-WB, ILBC;

 Fax Protocol: T30, T38, pass through;

 Network Protocol: IP, NAT, ICMP, ARP, HTTP, BOOTP, FTP, TFTP, DHCP,
PPPOE, SNMP, Diff-Serv;

 Advanced Voice Processing Technology: Voice Activity Detection (VAD),


Comfort Noise Generation (CNG), Echo Cancellation, DTMF, Caller ID, and
Flexible input/output Gain Control.

31
32
Call Manager

AP2650CM

Microprocessor Microprocessor High Performance RISC Processor

Flash Memory 16Mbyte


SDRAM
Memory 128Mbyte
Memory
Boot Memory 512Kbyte Flash Memory
Fixed LAN0
One(1) 10/100Mbps Fast Ethernet
Port
Network Interface Fixed LAN1
One(1) 10/100Mbps Fast Ethernet
Port
Console Port One(1) RS-232C Interface
8-Port FXS Voice Interface Module (8 x
AP-FXS8
RJ11)
Voice Interface Module AP-FXO8 8-Port FXO Voice Interface Module (8 x
RJ11)
AP-E&M8 8-Port E&M Voice Interface Module (8 x

33
RJ11)

8-Port FXSH Voice Processing Module (8 x


AP-FXS8H
RJ11)
4-FXO & 4-FXS Voice Interface Module (8 x
AP-FXO4S4
RJ11)
APVI-1E1 1-Port PBX Digital E1 Module (1 x RJ45)

APVI-1T1 1-Port PBX Digital T1 Module (1 x RJ45)

APVI-2E1 2-Port VoIP Digital E1 Module (2 x RJ45)

Power Requirement VAC 110~220V, 50/60Hz, 100Watt, Optional dual power

Operating Temperature 0°C to + 50°C (32° to 122°F)

Storage Temperature -40°C to + 85°C (-40° to 176°F)

Relative Humidity 5% to 95% (Non-condensing)

Dimension(H x W x D) 80 x 440 x 395(mm) - 19" Rack Mountable Chassis

Weight(kg) 6.9Kg

Basic Call
Blind Transfer
Call Pickup
Group Call Pickup
Consult Call
Telephony and Service Switching Call
& Features Consult Transfer
Call Waiting
Call Waiting Notify
Call Park
Call Pickup Remote
Hunt Group
Call Manager Signaling Uplink : SIP, H.323
Protocols Internal : SIP
IPv4/IPv6 Dual Stack
Telnet, FTP, TFTP, SSH, SNMP, Syslog
Basic Routing support
Management
Routing Packet filtering (Access-list)
Static, RIP, RIPng, OSPFv2/v3, BGP4
Network Management Standard SNMP Agent (MIB v2) Support

34
Traffic Queuing
Remote Management using Console, Rlogin, Telnet
Web based Managements using HTTP Server Interface
Standard & Extended IP Access List
Access Control and Data Protections
Enable/Disable for Specific Protocols
Security Functions Multi-Level User Account Management
Auto-disconnect for Telnet/Console Sessions
PPP User Authentication Supports
→ Password Authentication Protocol(PAP)
→ Challenge Handshake Authentication Protocol (CHAP)
System Performance Analysis for Process, CPU, Connection
I/F
Configuration Backup & Restore for APOS Managements
Operation & Debugging, System Auditing, and Diagnostics Support
Management
System Booting and Auto-rebooting with Watchdog Feature
System Managements with Data Logging
IP Traffic Statistics with Accounting
DHCP Server & Relay Functions
Network Address Translation (NAT) Function
Port Address Translation (PAT) Function
Other Scalability Transparent Bridging (IEEE Standard) Function
Features → Spanning Tree Bridging Protocol Support
→ Remote Bridging Support
→ Concurrent Routing and Bridging Support
Cisco Style Command Line Interface(CLI)
Network time Protocol(NTP) Support

35
WLAN CONTROLLER

CISCO 3504 WIRELESS CONTROLLER

Features and Benefits


The Cisco 3504 Wireless Controller with Cisco Multigigabit Ethernet technology is
optimized for 802.11ac Wave 2 performance, high scale, and enhanced system uptime.
It offers:
● Intent-driven programmability and streaming telemetry.
● Quiet operation, with a small form factor and compact design ideal for space-
constrained deployments, providing flexibility without compromising on features.
● Cisco Multigigabit Ethernet technology to support next-generation 802.11ac Wave 2
deployments using existing cabling infrastructure.
● Subsecond access point and client failover for uninterrupted application availability.
● Extraordinary visibility into application traffic, using Cisco Application Visibility and
Control (AVC), the technology that includes the Network-Based Application Recognition
2 (NBAR2) engine, with Cisco's Deep Packet Inspection (DPI) capability. This allows the
3504 to mark, prioritize, and block to conserve network bandwidth and enhance security.
Customers can optionally export the flows to Cisco Prime Infrastructure or a third-party
NetFlow collector.
● An embedded wireless Bring-Your-Own-Device (BYOD) policy classification engine
that allows classification of client devices and application of user group policies.
● Guest access and Bonjour and Chromecast services in centralized deployments.
● Software-defined segmentation with Cisco TrustSec® technology, reducing Access
Control List (ACL) maintenance, complexity, and overhead.
● Integrated Cisco CleanAir® technology, providing the industry’s only self-healing and
self-optimizing wireless network.
● A simplified GUI wizard for quick setup and intuitive dashboards for monitoring and
troubleshooting.
● Cisco DNA and SD-Access Wireless, as well as Cisco DNA Assurance.

Feature Benefits

SD-Access Wireless is Cisco’s next-generation architecture for enterprise


Cisco DNA SD-
networks. It is the industry’s first policy-based automation from the edge to
Access Wireless
the cloud. It enables network access in minutes for any user or device to

36
Feature Benefits

any application without compromising on security.


SD-Access Wireless enables policy-based automation for wired and
wireless, automated provisioning of wired and wireless networks, group-
based policy for users and connected devices, and a distributed wireless
data plane for campus deployments. In addition, all client roams are treated
as Layer 2 roams across the network for distributed traffic.
Learn more at https://www.cisco.com/c/en/us/solutions/enterprise-
networks/software-defined-access/index.html

Cisco DNA Analytics and Assurance offer comprehensive network visibility.


It collects data from users, devices, and applications to proactively identify
Cisco DNA
problems. Network analytics and automation help IT quickly resolve issues,
Analytics and
so you can increase availability and deliver a better user experience.
Assurance
Learn more at https://www.cisco.com/c/en/us/solutions/enterprise-
networks/dna-analytics-assurance.html

Optimized to enable 802.11ac Wave 2 next-generation networks,


supporting:
● 4-Gbps throughput
Scalability and ● 150 access points
performance ● 3000 clients
● 1x Multigigabit Ethernet interface (up to 5 Gigabit Ethernet), + 4x 1 Gigabit
Ethernet
● 4096 VLANs

● Only 10-in. (25-cm) depth to fit nicely in reduced-depth cabinet or desktop


deployments
Flexibility and ● Quiet and fanless operation for cabinet or desktop (up to 86°F [30°C]
ease of ambient) deployment. The fans are used by the controller only under certain
deployment conditions
● For quick and easy deployment, access points can be connected directly
to the controller via two Power Over Ethernet (PoE) ports

● Proactively identifies and mitigates signal interference for better


performance
RF management ● Provides both real-time and historical information about RF interference
affecting network performance across controllers, through system wide
integration with Cisco Clean Air technology

● Versatile controller with support for centralized, distributed, and mesh


deployments to be used at different places in the network, offering maximum
flexibility for medium-sized campus, enterprise, and branch networks
Multimode with ● Centralized control, management, and client troubleshooting
indoor/ outdoor ● Seamless client access in the event of a WAN link failure (local data
mesh access switching)
points
● Highly secure guest access
● Efficient access point upgrade that optimizes WAN link utilization for
downloading access point images

37
Feature Benefits

● Cisco Office Extend technology that supports corporate wireless service


for mobile and remote workers with secure wired tunnels to indoor Cisco
Aironet access points supporting Office Extend mode

● Offers Control and Provisioning of Wireless Access Points (CAPWAP)-


compliant Datagram Transport Layer Security (DTLS) encryption on the
control plane between access points and controllers across remote WAN
Comprehensive links
end-to- end ● Management frame protection detects malicious users and alerts network
security administrators
● Rogue detection for Payment Card Industry (PCI) compliance
● Rogue access point detection and detection of denial-of-service attacks

● Supports Cisco Unified Communications for improved collaboration


End-to-end through messaging, presence, and conferencing
voice ● Supports all Cisco Unified IP Phones for cost-effective, real-time voice
services

● Subsecond access point and client failover for uninterrupted application


availability
Fault tolerance ● Redundant 1 Gigabit Ethernet or Cisco Multigigabit Ethernet (up to 5
and high Gigabit Ethernet) connectivity
availability
● Solid-state device-based storage—no moving parts
● Enhanced system uptime with fast system restarts

● Allows access points to dynamically establish wireless connections without


the need for a physical connection to the wired network
Cisco Enterprise ● Available on select Cisco Aironet access points, Enterprise Wireless Mesh
Wireless Mesh is ideal for warehouses, manufacturing floors, shopping centers, and any
other location where extending a wired connection may prove difficult or
aesthetically unappealing

WLAN express ● Simplified GUI wizard for quick setup, and intuitive dashboards for
setup monitoring and troubleshooting

High- ● Cisco VideoStream technology optimizes the delivery of video applications


performance across the WLAN
video

Mobility, ● Highly secure, reliable wireless connectivity and consistent end-user


security, and experience
management for ● Increased network availability through proactive blocking of known threats
IPv6 and dual- ● Equips administrators for IPv6 planning, troubleshooting, and client
stack clients traceability from Cisco Prime Infrastructure

Energy ● Organizations may choose to turn off access point radios to reduce power
efficiency consumption during off-peak hours

PATCH PANEL

38
Product Description
Rack Mounted Fiber Optic Patch Panel, Fiber Distribution Box, Fiber ODF,
12 Ports,24 ports,36 ports,48 ports,72 ports can be with Fiber Optical Adapter&
Pigtail, Fiber patch panel box China factory, with OEM price.

Features:
Rack mounted, excellent for ber protection
Adapter output: 12 to 24 ports
Suitable for installation of SC, ST, FC, LC ber adapter
Convenient for operation and maintenance

NO.: 1U-PP
Type: Fiber Patch Panel 24 Ports
Certication: RoHS, ISO9001, UL
Metal Color Can Be Chose: 6-72 Ports Can Be Chose
Metal Thickness Can Be Customized: OEM Fiber Pigtail and Adapter
Application: Communication
Connection Structure: FC
Material Shape: Round Wire
Allowed Lateral Pressure: 100(N/100mm)<1000(N/100mm)
Allowed Tensile Strength: 100N<1000N
Core: 2-144 Fiber Cores
Brand: OEM
Sheath Material: PVC or Lszh or Ofnp
Trademark: TTI Fiber
Transport Package: Customed
Spefication: ROHS CE
Origin: China
HS Code: 851770900
FILE DATA SERVER

39
IBM BLADECENTER HX5

Form Factor  Blade

Brand  IBM

Model  HX5

MPN  7873-H2U
Processor Type  Xeon E7-4870

Processor Speed  2.4 GHz


Number of Processors  2
Memory Type  DDR3 SDRAM
Memory (RAM) Capacity  512 GB
Modified Item  No
Processor Manufacturer  Intel
Product Line  BladeCenter

SINGLE MODE FIBER (FEEDER CABLE/INTER BUILDING)

40
Loose Tube Single Jacket Armored Self-Supporting (Figure-8) Cable

Maximum Attenuation (dB/km)

1330 nm = 0.4

1490 nm = 0.3

1550 nm = 0.3

41
SINGLE MODE FIBER CABLE (INTRA BUILDING)

Tight Buffer Distribution Plenum Cable

Maximum Attenuation (dB/km)

1330 nm = 0.4

1490 nm = 0.3

1550 nm = 0.3

42
SPLITTER

1x8 Fiber Optic PLC Splitter with SC Connector

Feature
 Ultra-end insertion loss and associated loss of polarization
 Good spectral uniformity
 Wide wavelength bandwidth
 Wide range of working environment
 High reliability
 Small
Application
 FTTX Systems
 GEPON Networks
 CATV
 Optical Signal Distribution
Specifications
Item 1x8
Operating wavelength (nm) 1260~1650
Insertion Loss (dB)  10.3
Uniformity (dB)  0.8
Polarization Dependent Loss (dB)  0.2
Return Loss (dB)  50
Directivity (dB)  55
Working Temperature (C) -40 to +85

43
SPLITTER BOX

HIGH QUALITY 8 12 16 24 CORE FTTH BOX FIBER ACCESS TERMINAL OR


OPTICAL FIBER CABLE DISTRIBUTION BOX

Quick Details

Brand Name: OEM

Model Number: Fiber Optic Terminal Box

Color: White

Name: Splitter box for FTTH

Type: FC/SC/LC

Application: FTTH FTTB FTTX

Network Material: PC ABS

Product name: cable terminal box price

44
OPTICAL NETWORK UNIT

SMARTAX MA5626 ONU

Optical Network Units (ONUs) with Power-over-Ethernet (PoE) support,


comprehensive QoS features including Dynamic Bandwidth Allocation (DBA),
and up to 8, 16, or 24 downstream FE ports. Ideal for IPTV, video monitoring,
and wireless broadband services in small and medium-sized offices.

Ruggedized for high reliability indoors or outdoors, MA5626 ONU is


connected with GPON uplink to an Optical Line Terminal (OLT). Units can be
managed and upgraded remotely, and configured in advance through batch pre-
deployment.
Specifications MA5626
16 FE/24 FE: 43.6 mm x 442 mm x 220 mm
Dimensions (H x W x D)
8 FE: 43.6 mm x 250 mm x 180 mm
–40°C to 65°C
Operating Environment
5% RH to 95% RH
Power AC: 110V or 220V
Network-side Ports 1 x GPON, 1 x EPON
8/16/24 x FE
8/16/24 x FE (PoE)
User-side Ports
4 x GE + 4 x FE (PoE)
8 x FE (reverse PoE)
Surge Protection LAN: 4 kV

45
OPTICAL NETWORK TERMINAL
EchoLife EG8240P

The Echolife EG8240P is a routing ONU. It provides 4 GE Ethernet ports


and 2 POTS ports on the user side, and provides PoE power supply with a
maximum power of 30W per port and total output power of 60W. The Echolife
EG8240P meets the LAN + POTS service access requirements of hotels and
offices, and can be installed on a desk or on a wall.

Model Echolife EG8240P

Dimensions
42 mm x 254 mm x 140 mm
(H x W x D)

Weight About 0.57 kg

Operating
-40°C to +55°C
Temperature

Operating
5% RH to 95% RH (non-condensing)
Humidity

46
Model Echolife EG8240P

Power
Adapter 90V to 264V AC, 50 Hz/60 Hz
Input

System
Power 56V DC, 1.42A
Supply

UNI 4 x GE(PoE) + 2 x POTS

NNI GPON

Static Power
6W
Consumption

Typical
Power 8W (PoE port without PD)
Consumption

Maximum 10W (PoE port without PD)


Power 73W (PoE port with PD having the maximum power
Consumption consumption)

47
SWITCH

D-Link DES 1226G - switch - 24 ports

GENERAL

Subtype Fast Ethernet

Ports 24 x 10/100 + 2 x SFP + 2 x 10/100/1000

RAM 512 KB

MAC Address Table Size 6K entries

Status Indicators Port transmission speed, power, link/activity

Manufacturer D-Link

NETWORKING

Cabling Type Ethernet 100Base-TX, Ethernet 10Base-T

Subcategory network hubs and switches

Features flow control, full duplex capability, layer 2 switching,


packet filtering, store and forward

48
Compliant Standards IEEE 802.1p, IEEE 802.3, IEEE 802.3ab, IEEE
802.3u, IEEE 802.3x, IEEE 802.3z

Ports Qty 24

IP CAMERA
GV-ADR4701

Terminal Network Ethernet (10Base-


Interface T/100Base-Tx)/PoE

Video BNC, Video composit


Interface (NTSC/PAL)
External DI/DO
Port
SD Card SD Card (Recording
trigger for schedule,
Motion Detection, IP
check, Network wire
break down, DI)

Features
 1/3” progressive scan low lux CMOS sensor
 Min. illumination at 0.02 lux
 Triple streams from H.265, H.264 or MPJPEG
 Up to 20 fps at 2592 x 1520, 25 fps at 2560 x 1440, 30 fps at 2048 x 1520
 Intelligent IR
 IR distance up to 30 m (98.4 ft)
 Day and Night function (with removable IR-cut filter)
 Ingress protection (IP66)
 Vandal resistance (IK10)
 DC 12 V / PoE (IEEE 802.3af)
 Wide Dynamic Range (WDR)
 Defog
 3D noise reduction
 Motion detection
 Text overlay
 Privacy mask

49
 ONVIF (Profile S) conformant
 CE, FCC, RoHS, UL compliant

INTERMEDIATE DISTRIBUTION FRAME

 Outside dimensions Height : 63.5cm x Width : 60 cm x Length : 45 cm


 Painted steel ensures durability
 Clear swing door lockable front panel with key.
 Includes 2x 12cm220v blower fans

CAT5E PATCH CORD

NK5EPC10MBUY

Features:
Category 5e/Class D patch cords are
constructed of UTP 24 AWG stranded
copper cable and a modular plug at each
end. Patch cords are used in all work area
outlets and patch panels. Patch cords are
wired to be compatible with both T568A and
T568B wiring schemes.

50
CAT 6

CONSTRUCTION

Conductor 23 AWG Solid bare Copper ( 4 pair)

Insulation High Density Polyethylene

Pairs 2 Insulated conductors twisted together

Sheath FR-PVC

Insulation thickness 0.2mm nominal

Cable Diameter 6.1 mm nominal

ELECTRICAL

Characteristic Impedance 100 +/- 6 ohm

Insulation Resistance 100M ohm

Operating Voltage 72V

51
IP PHONE
CISCO SPA504G 4-Line IP Phone

Features
 For business or home use
 Full-featured 4-line business-class IP phone supporting Power over
Ethernet (PoE)
 Monochrome backlit display for ease of use, aesthetics, and on-screen
applications
 Connects directly to an Internet Service Provider (ISP) or to an IP private
branch exchange (PBX)
 Dual switched Ethernet ports for connecting a computer behind the phone,
reducing cabling costs.
 Wideband audio for unsurpassed voice clarity and enhanced speaker
quality.
Telephony features
 4 voice lines
 Line status: active line indication, with name and number
 Menu-driven user interface
 Speakerphone
 Call hold

52
 Call waiting
 Caller ID and number
 Outbound caller ID blocking
 Three-way call conferencing with local mixing
Specifications
Data Networking  MAC address (IEEE 802.3)
 IPv4 (RFC 791)
 Address Resolution Protocol (ARP)
 DNS: A record (RFC 1706), SRV
record (RFC 2782)
 Dynamic Host Configuration
Protocol (DHCP) client (RFC 2131)
 Internet Control Message Protocol
(ICMP) (RFC 792)
 TCP (RFC793)
 User Datagram Protocol (UDP)
(RFC 768)
 Real-Time Transport Protocol (RTP)
(RFC 1889, 1890)
 Real-Time Control Protocol (RTCP)
(RFC 1889)
 Differentiated Services (DiServ)
(RFC 2475)
 Type of service (ToS) (RFC 791,
1349)
 VLAN tagging 802.1p/Q: Layer 2
quality of service (QoS)
 Simple Network Time Protocol
(SNTP) (RFC 2030)
Voice gateway  SIP version 2 (RFC 3261, 3262,
3263, 3264)
 SPCP with the Cisco Unied
Communications 500 Series
 SIP proxy redundancy: dynamic via
DNS SRV, A records
 Reregistration with primary SIP
proxy server
 SIP support in NAT networks
(including STUN)
 SIPFrag (RFC 3420)
 Secure (encrypted) calling via SRTP
 Codec name assignment
 Voice algorithms:
 G.711 (A-law and μ-law)
 G.726 (16/24/32/40 kbps)
 G.729 A
 G.722

53
WIRELESS ACCESS POINT
HUAWEI AP7050DE

PARAMETERS SPECIFICATIONS
Dimension (h x w x d) 53 mm x 220 mm x 220 mm
Power Input 12 VDC
Maximum Power Consumption 25 W
Operating Temperature -10C to 50C
Antenna Type Built-in dual band smart antenna
Maximum number of users  512
2.4 GHz : 26 dBm
Maximum Transmit Power
5 GHz : 27 dBm
MIMO: Spatial Patterns 4x4:4 MU/SU-MIMO
Radio Protocols 802.11 a/b/g/n/ac/ac wave 2
Maximum Rate 2.53 Gbps

54
POWER SUPPLY
HUAWEI ETP4830

Features:
 Wide range of AC input voltage from 85 V to 300 V
 Wide operation temperature range of rectifier from -40 ° C to 75 ° C
 Online swappable rectifier provides easy installation and maintenance
 Standard installation structure design, adapting to various scenarios
 Compact design, saving space and installation cost
 High rectifier efficiency over 96% helps save energy
 Excellent rectifier dormancy function helps to increase system efficiency
 Intelligent battery management through dry contact, serial interface or
Ethernet interface.

RACEWAY
SKU: SDPV2000WH6

55
RJ45

An 8P8C modular plug. This is the common crimp type plug, of the same
kind pictured above crimped onto a cable (with molded sleeve)

WALL OUTLET

6176 - dual telephone / dual universal network socket outlets (rj45/rj12/rj11)

56
COOLING SYSTEM

Samsung Split Type Inverter Aircon (1hp)

Specifications

Brand Samsung
SKU 263432670_PH-367006073
Model AR09MVFHHWKNTC
Warranty Type Local Supplier Warranty
Warranty Period 1 Year
Horsepower 1
Air Conditioner Features Fast Cooling,Inverter,Silent Mode,Timer
Inverter Inverter

57
APPENDIX B: BILL OF MATERIALS

PRI PRIC QUA U


GENERAL TOTAL
BRAND/SPECIFICATIONS CE E NTIT NI
NAME (Php)
($) (Php) Y T
Optical Line 1,000 52,387.
HUAWEI MA5608T - Mini OLT 1 pc. 52,387.9
Terminal .00 99
9
1490/1310nm Wavelength Fiber
SFP-SC
Sfp-SC Connector Fiber Transceiver 10.00 523.88 48 pc. 25,146.2
Connector
OLT 4
Feeder 430.0 22,526.
XX0484M1N-DWB 250 m. 5,631,70
Cable 0 84
9.25
Distribution 100.0 5,238.8
XX0081ANU 100 m. 523,879.
Cable 0 0
93
1x8 Fiber Optic PLC Splitter with SC 1,309.7
Splitter 25.00 40 pc. 52,387.9
Connector 0
9

Splitter Box Optical Fiber Cable Distribution Box 10.00 523.88 40 pc. 20,955.2
0
D-LINK DES-1024D 24-Port Fast
2,550.2
Switch Ethernet Unmanaged Desktop 48.68 10 pc. 25,502.4
5
Switch 7
HUAWEI SmartAX MA5620 8 port 1,000 52,387.
10 pc. 523,879.
Optical GPON .00 99
93
Network
Unit HUAWEI SmartAX MA5620 16 port 1,500 78,581.
15 pc. 1,178,72
GPON .00 99
9.84
Optical
150.0 7,858.2
Network HUAWEI HG8245Q 10 pc. 78,581.9
0 0
Terminal 9
300.0 15,716.
IP PBX KX-NS1000 1 pc. 15,716.4
0 40
0
139.1 7,290.8
IP Camera Geovision GV-ADR4701 228 pc. 1,662,31
7 4
0.83
Digital
GV-Hot Swap Recording Server 830.0 43,482.
Video 1 pc. 43,482.0
System V5 0 03
Server 3
Network
GV-Hot Swap NVR System V5 653.0 34,209.
Video 1 pc. 34,209.3
RevE-4U,20-Bay 0 36
Recorder 6
200.0 10,477.
IDF Intermediate Distribution Frame 30 pc.
0 60 314,327.

58
96
Cat 5e
NK5EPC10MBUY 0.36 18.86 100 m.
Patch Cable 1,885.97
Cat 6 Cat 6 0.10 5.24 50 m.
261.94
File Data 1,199 62,863.
IBM BLADECENTER HX5 1 pc. 62,863.5
Server .96 50
0
139.9 7,333.8
IP Phone CISCO SPA504G 4-Line IP Phone 52 pc. 381,357.
9 0
35
Wireless
1,261 66,082.
Access HUAWEI AP7050DE 28 pc. 1,850,30
.40 21
Point 2.00
3,190 167,11
Firewall CISCO ASA 5520 1 pc. 167,117.
.00 7.70
70
Equipment 702.0 36,776.
Commscope RK4P45-29A 1 pc. 36,776.3
Rack 0 37
7
Power 287.3 15,051.
HUAWEI ETP4830 1 pc. 15,051.0
Supply 0 07
7
1,823.1
Raceway SKU: SDPV2000WH6 34.80 100 m. 182,310.
0
22
RJ 45 8P8C Modular Plug Connector 0.55 28.81 50 pc.
1,440.67
Dual Telephone/Dual Universal
Wall Outlet Network Socket Outlets 7.50 392.91 25 pc.
9,822.75
(RJ45/RJ11/RJ12)
Cooling 270.3 14,160.
SA-97P 1 pc. 14,160.4
System 0 47
7

TOTAL 1195 12,906,


557.42

Note:
As of March 5, 2019, 9:43 pm 1.00 USD = 52.387993
PHP

59

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