Patton electronic 1069 CONNECTING THE 10/100BASE-T ETHERNET INTERFACE, 1 TX+/RX+, Tx-/Rx, Rx-/Tx

Models: 1069

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3.2 CONNECTING THE 10/100BASE-T ETHERNET INTERFACE

3.2 CONNECTING THE 10/100BASE-T ETHERNET INTERFACE

The Interconnecting cables shall be acceptable for

external use and shall be rated for the proper applica-

tion with respect to voltage, current, anticipated tem-

CAUTION perature, flammability, and mechanical serviceability.

The RJ-45 ports labeled Ethernet are the Auto-MDIX10/100Base-T inter- face. These ports are designed to connect directly to a 10/100Base-T device or network. Figure 5 shows the signal/pin relationships on this interface. You may connect this port to a hub or PC using a straight through or crossover cable that is up to 328 ft long.

 

1 TX+/RX+

1

2 TX-/RX-

23 RX+/TX+

4

4

(no connection)

 

 

5

5

(no connection)

6

6

RX-/TX-

7

7 (no connection)

8

8 (no connection)

Figure 5. Model 1069 10/100Base-T RJ-45 Connector Pinout.

3.3 CONNECTING THE POTS/ISDN LINE

The RJ-45 port labeled “POTS/ISDN” is the POTS/ISDN interface. A telephone or an ISDN device may be connected to this port and carried over the VDSL2 line. The units do not need power for the POTS interface to work. The RJ-45 connector in the Model 1069’s POTS/ISDN interface is wired as shown in Figure 7.

 

1 (no connection)

1

2 (no connection)

23 (no connection)

44 (2-wire RING)

55 (2-wire TIP)

6

6 (no connection)

7

7 (no connection)

8

8 (no connection)

Figure 6. Model 1069 (RJ-45) POTS/ISDN interface.

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Patton electronic 1069 CONNECTING THE 10/100BASE-T ETHERNET INTERFACE, Connecting The Pots/Isdn Line, 1 TX+/RX+, Tx-/Rx