Patton electronic Power Supply 2073RC User Manual

USER  
MANUAL  
MODEL 2073RC  
64k/G.703 Access  
Converter  
Part# 07M2073RC  
Doc# 031151U Rev. A  
Revised 1/23/03  
SALES OFFICE  
(301) 975-1000  
TECHNICAL SUPPORT  
(301) 975-1007  
An ISO-9001Certified  
Company  
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A.8 LED Status Indicators ................................................................. 24  
A.9 Connectors ................................................................................. 24  
A.10 Temperature Range .................................................................... 24  
A.11 Altitude ........................................................................................ 24  
A.12 Humidity ...................................................................................... 24  
A.13 Dimensions ................................................................................. 24  
A.14 Weight ......................................................................................... 24  
B
Interface Pin Assignment......................................................... 25  
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1.0 WARRANTY INFORMATION  
Patton Electronics warrants all Model 2073RC components to be free  
from defects, and will—at our option—repair or replace the product  
should it fail within one year from the first date of the shipment.  
This warranty is limited to defects in workmanship or materials, and does  
not cover customer damage, abuse or unauthorized modification. If this  
product fails or does not performs as warranted, your sole recourse shall  
be repair or replacement as described above. Under no condition shall  
Patton Electronics be liable for any damages incurred by the use of this  
product.These damages include, but are not limited to, the following: lost  
profits, lost savings and incidental or consequential damages arising  
from the use of or inability to use this product. Patton Electronics spe-  
cifically disclaims all other warranties, expressed or implied, and the  
installation or use of this product shall be deemed an acceptance of  
these terms by the user.  
Note Conformity documents of all Patton products can be viewed  
1.1 RADIO AND TV INTERFERENCE  
The Model 2073RC generates and uses radio frequency energy, and if  
not installed and used properly-that is, in strict accordance with the man-  
ufacturer’s instructions-may cause interference to radio and television  
reception.The Model 2073RC has been tested and found to comply with  
the limits for a Class A computing device in accordance with specifica-  
tions in Subpart B of Part 15 of FCC rules, which are designed to provide  
reasonable protection from such interference in a commercial installa-  
tion. However, there is no guarantee that interference will not occur in a  
particular installation. If the Model 2073RC does cause interference to  
radio or television reception, which can be determined by disconnecting  
the unit, the user is encouraged to try to correct the interference by one  
or more of the following measures: moving the computing equipment  
away from the receiver, re-orienting the receiving antenna and/or plug-  
ging the receiving equipment into a different AC outlet (such that the  
computing equipment and receiver are on different branches).  
1.2 CE NOTICE  
The CE symbol on your Patton Electronics equipment indicates that it is  
in compliance with the Electromagnetic Compatibility (EMC) directive  
and the Low Voltage Directive (LVD) of the European Union (EU). A Cer-  
tificate of Compliance is available by contacting Technical Support.  
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1.3 SERVICE  
All warranty and non-warranty repairs must be returned freight prepaid  
and insured to Patton Electronics. All returns must have a Return Materi-  
als Authorization number on the outside of the shipping container. This  
number may be obtained from Patton Electronics Technical Services at:  
Tel: +1 (301) 975-1007  
Note Packages received without an RMA number will not be  
accepted.  
Patton Electronics' technical staff is also available to answer any ques-  
tions that might arise concerning the installation or use of your Model  
2073RC. Technical Service hours: 8 AM to 5 PM EST (8:00 to 17:00  
UTC-5), Monday through Friday.  
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2.0 GENERAL INFORMATION  
Thank you for purchasing this Patton Electronics product.This product has  
been thoroughly inspected and tested and is warranted for one year for  
parts and labor. If questions arise during installation or use of this product,  
contact Patton Electronics Technical Support at +1 (301) 975-1007.  
2.1 FEATURES  
Bi-directionally converts X.21,V.35 or 10 Base-T to co-directional G.703  
LED indicators monitor Data, Network, and Diagnostic signals  
Internal, external (V.35 only), or network clocking options  
Test Mode controlled by switch, or by local DTE (V.35 version only)  
Complies with CCITT/ITU G.823 Jitter Control Specifications  
Built-in surge protection and transformer isolation  
Point-to-point distance up to 5250 ft (1600m) on 24 AWG twisted pair  
120-ohm (twisted pair) network termination  
2.2 DESCRIPTION  
The Patton Model 2073RC interface converter allow a synchronous V.35,  
X.21 or ethernet device to communicate bi-directionally over the G.703 co-  
directional PCM network. Supporting internal, external DTE timing or  
G.703 network generated timing, the Model 2073RC is perfect for network-  
ing applications that require speeds of 64 kbps. The modular rear cards  
style of interchangeable interface modules for the 2073RC allow various  
physical and electrical interfaces to connect to the 64K synchronous  
G.703 network.  
A 120-ohm twisted pair telephone port provides the interface for the G.703  
network. Additionally, 75-ohm terminations can be made using the Patton  
Model 460 (G.703 balun).  
Diagnostics include Local Loopback, V.54 RDL testing, and 511/51E built-  
in BER patterns. Synchronous clock jitter is attenuated in accordance with  
the G.823.  
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3.0 CONFIGURATION  
The 2073RC features configuration capability via hardware DIP switches.  
This section describes all possible hardware switch configuration. Figure 1  
shows the location of the DIP switches on the top of the printed circuit board  
Figure 1. Model 2073RC top view showing location of DIP switches  
Figure 2 shows the orientation of the DIP switches with respect to ON/  
OFF positions.  
ON  
ON  
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
OFF  
Figure 2. Close-up of DIP switches showing ON/OFF positions  
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DIP SW3-8 Not Used  
DIP SW3-7 Not Used  
DIP SW3-6 ON = DTE TM Lines Disabled  
OFF = DTE TM Lines Enabled  
DIP SW3-5 ON = FP TM Switches Disabled  
OFF = FP TM Switches Enabled  
DIP SW3-4 ON = V54 RX Disabled  
OFF = V54 RX Lines Enabled  
DIP SW3-3 Not Used  
DIP SW3-2 SW3-2 SW3-1  
OFF  
OFF  
ON  
OFF  
= Internal (Generated by 2073RC)  
= External (From DTE)  
DIP SW3-1  
ON  
OFF  
ON  
= Network (Normal)  
ON  
= Network (Campus)  
Note 0 = ON, 1 = OFF  
Note Boldface type indicates a factory-default setting.  
3.1 CONFIGURING THE FRONT INTERFACE CARD  
Switches SW3-2 and SW3-1: Clocking Mode  
Use Switch SW3 to set the system clock for the Model 2073RC. When  
using two Model 2073RC together in a point-to-point application as short  
range modems, set one unit for either Internal or External transmit clock  
and the other unit to Network clock. When connecting directly to the  
G.703 network, set the unit to Network clock.  
SW3-2 SW3-1  
Clocking Description  
OFF  
OFF  
ON  
OFF  
ON  
Internal (Generated by 2073RC)  
External (From DTE)  
Network (Normal)  
OFF  
ON  
ON  
Network (Campus)  
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Switches SW3-5: Front panel switch enabled/disabled  
Use Switch SW3-5 to enable or disable the Model 2073RC Test Mode  
(Local Loop, Remote Digital Loop, and 511/511E patterns).  
ON  
Front Panel Test Mode Switches Disabled  
OFF Front panel Test Mode Switches Enabled  
Switch SW3-6: Response to DTE Request for Local and Remote  
Loop  
Use Switch SW3-6 to enable the Model 2073RC to enter Local Loopback  
mode when pin interface (V.35 only) is raised. In the On position, the  
Local Loopback may only be enabled manually by Switch SW3-6.  
SW3-6  
Activation Description  
On  
Disabled Model 2073RC ignores DTE requests to enter  
Local Loopback  
Off  
Enabled Model 2073RC enters Local Loopback when the  
appropriate interface pin is raised (see appendix for interface  
pinout)  
Switch SW3-4 Response to Remote digital (RDL) Loopback  
Use Switch SW3-4 to enable or disable response to Remote digital Loop-  
back by the local 2073RC when a RDL request is sent by a remote  
device.  
SW3-4  
Description  
ON  
RDL Response Disabled  
RDL Response Enabled  
OFF  
Switch SW3-3 Terminal (DTE) data sampled using the 2073RC  
Transmit clock or External Clock (provided by V.35 DTEs only)  
Use Switch SW3-3 to sample data from DTE using the 2073RC Transmit  
clock (TC) or External Clock (XC))—normally Transmit clock (from  
2073RC) is used.  
ON  
TD Sampled with XC Source,  
OFF TD Sampled with TC Source  
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3.2 CONFIGURING THE REAR INTERFACE CARD  
Your Model 2073RC comes with one of the following rear cards:  
• The Model 1001RCM13448C (M/34/ RJ-48C)  
• The Model 1001RCM11548C (DB-15/RJ-48C)  
• The Model IM2RC/IA (RJ-45/10Base-T RJ-48C)  
Each of these options supports one DTE interface connection and one 4-  
wire line connection. Figure 3 illustrates the interface options for the  
Model 2073RC Series.  
Note The 2073RC Series function card is paired with a specially  
designed rear card and must not be swapped with other Patton  
rear cards.  
Model  
1001RCM11548C 1001RCM13448C IM2RC/IA  
RJ-48C RJ-48C RJ-48C  
Model  
Model  
DB-15 F  
M/34 F  
Figure 3. Model 2073RC Series interface card options  
Prior to installation, you will need to examine the rear card and make  
sure it is properly configured for your application.  
Each rear card is configured by setting straps located on the PC board.  
To configure the rear cards, you must set the configuration straps.  
Figure 4 shows the orientation of these straps. Each strap can either be  
on pegs 1 and 2,or on pegs 2 and 3.  
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Figure 4. Orientation of Interface Card Straps  
The following sections describe the strap locations and possible settings  
for each rear card.  
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Model 1001RCM13448C Strap Settings  
Figure 5 shows the strap location for the Model 1001RCM13448C (M/34)  
rear card. This strap determines whether Signal Ground and Frame  
Ground will be connected.  
1
JB3  
3
JB4  
1
2
3
Figure 5. 1001RCM13448C strap locations.  
Table 1 provides an overview of interface strap functions for the rear  
interface cards. Following the table overview are detailed descriptions of  
each strap’s function.  
Table 1: Interface Card Strap Summary  
Strap  
Function  
Position 1&2 Position 2&3  
JB3  
JB4  
DTE Shield (Pin A) & FRGND  
FRGND & SGND (Pin B)  
Connected*  
Connected*  
Open  
Open  
* Indicates default setting  
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DTE Shield (M/34 Pin A) & FRGND (JB3). In the connected position,  
this strap links M/34 pin A & frame ground. In the open position, pin A is  
disconnected from frame ground (see Table 2).  
Table 2: JB3 strap settings  
Position  
Description  
1 & 2  
2 & 3  
DTE Shield (Pin A) and FRGND Connection  
DTE Shield (Pin A) and FRGND Not Connected  
SGND & FRGND (JB4). In the connected position, this strap links Signal  
Ground and frame ground through a 100 ohm resistor. In the open posi-  
tion, signal ground is disconnected from frame ground (see Table 3).  
Table 3: JB4 strap settings  
Position  
Description  
SGND and FRGND Connected  
SGND and FRGND Not Connected  
1 & 2  
2 & 3  
Model 1001RCM11548C Strap Settings  
Figure 6 on page 14 shows strap locations for the Model  
1001RCM11548C (DB-15) rear cards. These straps determine various  
grounding characteristics for the terminal interface and twisted pair lines.  
JB3 and JB4 are user configurable.  
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1
JB3  
3
JB4  
1
2
3
Figure 6. 1001RCM11548C strap locations.  
Table 4 provides an overview of interface strap functions for the rear  
interface cards. Following the table overview are detailed descriptions of  
each strap’s function.  
Table 4: Interface Card Strap Summary  
Strap  
Function  
Position 1&2 Position 2&3  
JB3  
JB4  
DTE Shield (Pin1) & FRGND  
FRGND & SGND (Pin 8)  
Connected*  
Connected*  
Open  
Open  
* Indicates default setting  
DTE Shield (DB-15 Pin 1) & FRGND (JB3). In the connected position,  
this strap links DB-15 pin 1 & frame ground. In the open position, pin 1 is  
disconnected from frame ground (see Table 5).  
Table 5: JB3 strap settings  
Position  
Description  
1 & 2  
2 & 3  
DTE Shield (Pin 1) and FRGND Connected  
DTE Shield (Pin 1) and FRGND Not Connected  
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SGND & FRGND (JB4). In the connected position, this strap links DB-15  
pin 8 (Signal Ground) and frame ground through a 100 ohm resistor. In  
the open position, pin 8 is connected directly to frame ground  
(see Table 6).  
Table 6: JB4 strap settings  
Position  
Description  
1 & 2  
2 & 3  
SGND (Pin 8) and FRGND Connected through a 100 ohm resistor  
Model IM2RC/IA (10Base-T Ethernet Rear Card)  
There are no jumpers to set in the Model IM2RC/IA, for more informa-  
tion, refer to the Model IM2RC/IA user manual  
The Model IM2RC/IA provides line side connections through an RJ-45  
connector. Figure 7 shows rear panel options and connectors locations.  
Descriptions of the 10Base-T connector LEDs follow Figure 7.  
Figure 7. IM2RC/A, rear panel options  
Status. Blinks yellow from one to eleven times to indicate system status.  
Each pulse pattern is separated by a 2 second “off” period. Greater  
pulse patterns have higher priority (buffer saturation has greater priority  
than an empty MAC table). Valid system statuses are:  
• 1 pulse = system status ok  
• 2 pulses = No MAC entries in the MAC address table  
• 3 pulses = Clear to send (CTS) or Carrier Detect (DCD) from base unit  
are not asserted  
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• 4 pulses = IMRC2/IAbuffer is saturated  
• 5 pulses = WAN receive frame(s) too large  
• 6 pulses = WAN receive frame(s) not Octet aligned  
• 7 pulses = WAN receive frame(s) aborted  
• 8 pulses = Detected WAN receive frame(s) with bad CRC  
• 9 pulses = Detected LAN receive frame(s) too large  
• 10 pulses = Detected LAN receive frame(s) not Octet aligned  
• 11 pulses = Detected LAN receive frame(s) with bad CRC  
After a status code is displayed eight times and the associated condition  
is removed, the status code will no longer appear.  
Link. Glows green to indicate good link integrity on the 10Base-T twisted  
pair line.  
The RJ-45 Ethernet port on Ethernet Bridge Module is designed to con-  
nect directly to a 10Base-T network. Figure 8 shows the 10Base-T RJ-45  
port pin description.You may make connections up to 330 feet using  
Type 4 or 5 cable.  
1 (no connection)  
2 (no connection)  
3 (4-Wire ARX-)  
4 (2-Wire TIP)/(4-Wire TX+)  
5 (2-Wire RING)/(4-Wire TX-)  
6 (4-Wire ARX+)  
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
7 (no connection)  
8 (no connection)  
Figure 8. Model IMRC2/IA Ethernet Connector Pinout  
Connecting to the network. The Line Interface is an 8-position keyed  
modular jack configured as an RJ-48C (see. Figure 9).This interface will  
connect to a 64 kbps/G.703, co-directional network running AMI line coding.  
1 RX data (TIP)  
From network  
2 RX data (RING)  
3 (no connection)  
4 TX data (TIP)  
5 TX data (RING)  
6 (no connection)  
7 (no connection)  
8 (no connection)  
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
To network  
Figure 9. 64 kbps Network Interface  
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Note If the 2073RC is being used for private short-range modem  
applications, the twisted-pair cable connected to its port will  
need to be a cross-over cable.  
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4.0 INSTALLATION  
This section describes the functions of the Model 1001R14 rack chassis,  
tells how to install front and rear Model 2073RC Series cards into the  
chassis, and how to connect to the twisted pair interface and the serial  
interface.  
4.1 THE MODEL 1001R14 RACK CHASSIS  
The Model 1001R14 Rack Chassis (see Figure 10) has 14 or 16 device  
card slots, plus a single power supply or dual redundant power supplies.  
Measuring only 3.5” high, the Model 1001R14 is designed to occupy only  
2U in a 19” rack. Sturdy front handles allow the Model 1001R14 to be  
extracted and transported conveniently.  
Figure 10. Model 1001R14 Rack Chassis with power supply  
The Rack Power Supply  
The power supply included in the Model 1001R14 rack uses the same  
mid-plane architecture as the modem cards. The front card of the power  
supply slides in from the front, and the rear card slides in from the rear.  
They plug into one another in the middle of the rack. The front card is  
then secured by thumb screws and the rear card by conventional metal  
screws.  
There are no user-serviceable parts in the power  
supply section of the Model 1001R14 rack. Volt-  
age setting changes and fuse replacement  
should only be performed by qualified service  
personnel. Contact Patton Electronics Technical  
support at +1 (301) 975-1007, via our web site at  
WARNING  
[email protected], for more information.  
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Powering up your 1001R14 rack  
The power supplies that come with your 1001R14 rack system are  
equipped with a power entry connector on the rear power supply card.  
The power supplies are hot-swappable, so you are not required to  
remove the cards from the rack while applying power to the system.  
Note Please refer to the Model 1001R14 Series User Manual AC and  
DC Rack Mount Power Supplies for fuse and power card  
replacement information.  
4.2 INSTALLING THE MODEL 2073RC INTO THE CHASSIS  
The Model 2073RC is comprised of a front card and a rear card.The two  
cards meet inside the rack chassis and plug into each other by way of  
mating 50 pin card edge connectors. Use the following steps as a guide-  
line for installing each Model 2073RC into the rack chassis:  
1. Slide the rear card into the back of the chassis along the metal rails  
provided.  
2. Secure the rear card using the metal screws provided.  
3. Slide the card into the front of the chassis. It should meet the rear  
card when it’s almost all the way into the chassis.  
4. Push the front card gently into the card-edge receptacle of the rear  
card. It should “click” into place.  
5. Secure the front card using the thumb screws.  
Note Since the Model 1001R14 chassis allows “hot swapping” of  
cards, it is not necessary to power down the rack when you  
install or remove a Model 2073RC.  
4.3 CONNECTING TO A DTE DEVICE  
The serial port on most rear interface cards are hard-wired as “DCE”  
(Data Communications Equipment). The interfaces are designed to plug  
into a DTE such as a terminal, PC or host computer. When making the  
connection to your DTE device, use a “straight through” cable. When pur-  
chasing or constructing an interface cable, refer to the pin diagrams in  
Appendix B on page 25 as guides.  
4.4 CONNECTING TO A DCE DEVICE  
The rear interface cards on most interface modules are hard wired as  
“DCE”.Therefore, you must use a tail circuit cable when connecting to a  
modem or other DCE device. When purchasing or constructing a tail circuit  
interface cable, use the pin diagrams in Appendix B on page 25 as a guide.  
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Note Pin-out requirements for tail circuit applications vary between  
equipment manufacturers. If you have any questions about a  
specific installation, please contact Patton Electronics Technical  
Support.  
4.5 CONNECTING TO A G.703/64 KBPS NETWORK  
The Network Line Interface is an 8-position keyed modular jack config-  
ured as an RJ-48C (see Figure 11).  
1 RX data (TIP)  
From network  
2 RX data (RING)  
3 (no connection)  
4 TX data (TIP)  
5 TX data (RING)  
6 (no connection)  
7 (no connection)  
8 (no connection)  
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
To network  
Figure 11. NetLink-E1 twisted-pair interface  
Note If the 2073RC is being used for private short-range modem  
applications, the twisted-pair cable connected to its port will  
need to be a cross-over cable.  
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5.0 OPERATION  
Once the 2073RC is installed and configured properly it is ready to place  
into operation.This section describes the function of the LED indicators,  
and the use of the loopback and pattern test modes.  
5.1 LED DESCRIPTIONS  
The 2073RC is equipped with 12 LED indicators that monitor the status  
of communication.  
TD  
RD  
When the unit sends a one, the TXD LED is green.When it  
sends a zero, the TXD LED is yellow.  
When the unit receives a one, the RXD LED is green.When it  
receives a zero, the RXD LED is yellow.  
CTS  
CD  
Glows green to indicate that the clear-to-send signal from the  
2073RC is active.Yellow indicates inactive CTS.  
Glows green to indicate that the a carrier from the remote  
modem is being received.  
DTR  
Link  
TM  
Glows green to indicate that the DTE attached to the 2073RC  
is active.  
The Link LED lights when the unit is synchronized with the  
incoming 64k/G.703 network signal.  
The Test Mode indicator will turn on when the unit enters local  
or remote loopbacks. It will also turn on when test patterns 511  
or 511ER are activated.  
ERR  
The error LED indicates various error conditions, when send-  
ing a test pattern, the LED will remain lit if the unit does not  
receive the identical pattern. When it receives the correct pat-  
tern, the LED will turn off.If error insertion is on, the LED will  
blink once a second if everything is operating properly.  
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Loop (V.54 & Telco) Diagnostics  
The 2073RC offers two loop diagnostics for diagnosing the 2073RC and  
any communication links.These tests can be activated via signals on the  
serial port interface or the front panel switch.  
Operating Local Loopback (LLB)  
The Local Loopback (LLB) test checks the operation of the local 2073RC  
and is performed separately on each unit. Any data sent to the local  
2073RC in this test mode will be echoed (returned) back to the user  
device (i.e.,characters typed on the keyboard of a terminal will appear on  
the terminal screen).  
Figure 12. Local loopback  
To perform a LL test, follow these steps:  
1. The Local Loop can be initiated from the 2073RC unit either by acti-  
vating the LL signal on the DTE (if you are not sure which lead is the  
RDL signal, please refer to the Appendix,) or by toggling the top  
front panel switch towards the label “LLB”. The Yellow TM (Test  
mode) LED will turn on to indicate a successful Local loop condition.  
2. Verify that the data terminal equipment is operating properly and  
can be used for a test.  
3. Perform a V.52 BER (bit error rate) test bit error rate (V.52) diagnos-  
tics.If the BER test equipment indicates no faults, but the data termi-  
nal indicates a fault, follow the manufacturer’s checkout procedures  
for the data terminal. Also, check the interface cable between the  
terminal and the 2073RC.  
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Operating Remote Digital Loopback (RDL)  
The Remote Digital Loopback (RDL) test checks the performance of both  
the local and remote 2073RC as well as a point-to-pointcommunication  
link between them. Any characters sent to the remote 2073RC in this test  
mode will be returned back to the originating device (i.e,characters typed  
on the keyboard of the local terminal will appear on the local terminal  
screen after having been passed to the remote 2073RC and looped back).  
Figure 13. Remote loopback  
either by activating the RDL signal on the DTE (if you are not sure  
which lead is the RDL signal, refer to Appendix B “Interface Pin  
Assignment” on page 25) or by toggling the top front panel switch  
towards the label “RDL.The Yellow TM (Test mode) LED will turn on  
to indicate a successful RDL.  
2. Perform a bit error rate test (BERT) using the internal V.52 generator  
(as described in section “Bit Error Rate (V.52) Diagnostics”, turn the  
Bit error rate (V.52) diagnostics on or using a separate BER Tester.If  
the BER test indicates a fault, and the Remote Line Loopback test  
was successful for both 2073RC you may have a problem with the  
twisted pair line connection.  
Bit Error Rate (V.52) Diagnostics  
The 2073RC offers V.52 Bit Error Rate (BER) test patterns that can be  
invoked along with the LLB and RDL tests to evaluate the unit(s) and the  
communication links. When a 511 test is invoked, the 2073RC generates  
a pseudo-random bit pattern of 511 bits, using a mathematical polyno-  
mial.The receiving 2073RC then decodes the received bits using the  
same polynomial.If the received bits match the agreed upon pseudo-ran-  
dom pattern, the 2073RC and the communications link are functioning  
properly. 511 or 511/E is initiated by setting the bottom front panel switch  
towards the label ‘511’ or 511E” respectively. The Yellow TM (Test mode)  
LED will turn on to indicate activation of the 511 or 511E test modes.  
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APPENDIX A  
MODEL 2073RC SPECIFICATIONS  
A.1 TRANSMISSION FORMAT  
Synchronous 64k/G.703 co-directional  
A.2 TRANSMISSION LINE  
Four-Wire unconditioned twisted pair  
A.3 CLOCKING  
Internal, External (V.35 only), or Network  
A.4 INTERFACE MODULES  
ITU/T V.35, ITU/T X.21, 10Base-T  
A.5 LINE RATES  
256 kbps  
A.6 DTE RATES  
64 kbps  
A.7 DIAGNOSTICS  
V.54 test modes for LAL and RDL; V:52 511/511E BERT pattern genera-  
tor and detector.  
A.8 LED STATUS INDICATORS  
TD, RD, CTS, CD, DTR, Link, Error Test Mode  
A.9 CONNECTORS  
RJ-45 on line side; DB-25 female, M/34 female,RJ-45 female or DB-15  
female depending upon which serial interface module is installed.  
A.10 TEMPERATURE RANGE  
32–122°F (0–50°C)  
A.11 ALTITUDE  
0–15,000 feet (0–4572 m)  
A.12 HUMIDITY  
up to 90% non-condensing  
A.13 DIMENSIONS  
3.5L x 2.1W x 0.78H in. (9.0L x 5.3W x 2.0H mm)  
A.14 WEIGHT  
1 lb. (0.45 kg)  
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APPENDIX B  
INTERFACE PIN ASSIGNMENT  
V.35 Interface  
(M/34F Female Connector)  
(DCE Configuration)  
Pin #  
Signal  
B
C
D
E
SGND (Signal Ground)  
RTS (Request to Send)  
CTS (Clear to Send)  
DSR (Data Set Ready)  
CD (Carrier Detect)  
F
H
L
DTR (Data Terminal Ready)  
LLB (Local Line Loop)  
TM (Test Mode)  
M
N
P
RDL (Remote Digital Loop)  
TD(Transmit Data)  
R
S
RD (Receive Data)  
TD/ (Transmit Data-B)  
RD/ (Receive Data-B)  
XTC (External Transmit Clock)  
RC(Receive Timing)  
T
U
V
W
X
XTC/ (External Transmit Clock)  
RC/ (Receive Timing)  
TC(Transmit Clock-A)  
TC/ (Transmit Clock-B)  
Y
AA  
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X.21 Interface  
(DB-15 Female Connector)  
(DTE /DCE Configuration)  
Pin #  
Signal  
Frame Ground  
1
2
T (Transmit Data-A)  
C (Control-A)  
3
4
R (Receive Data-A)  
I (Indication-A)  
5
6
S (Signal Element Timing-A)  
BT (Byte Timing-A)  
SGND (Signal Ground)  
T/ (Transmit Data-B)  
C/ (Control-B)  
7
8
9
10  
11  
12  
13  
14  
R/ (Receive Data-B)  
I/ (Indication-B)  
S/ (Signal Element Timing-B)  
BT/ (Byte Timing-B)  
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Notes  
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Notes  
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Copyright © 2003  
Patton Electronics Company  
All Rights Reserved.  
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