ESSENTIAL CABLES AND CONNECTIONS
THE IMPORTANCE OF TESTING INFRASTRUCTURE FOR AV Aiden Jones, Technical Director, Blustream EMEA, underlines the importance of a safety first attitude when it comes to cables and connections. HDBaseT uses PAM16 signaling which creates 16 voltage levels across the cable from the point of transmission to the point of receive, with 8 voltage levels on the return path. This asymmetric link can transfer up to 8Gbps of data across infrastructures designed to cope with much less. This modulated signal will degrade dramatically over distance – even in a nearperfect environment. By the time the signal reaches the HDBaseT receiver chip over a full distance run, the eye diagram that would be seen at the start of the run, will have almost completely inter-twined. No longer will there be clearly differentiated voltage levels, but the magic of the HDBaseT receiver chipset, is its ability to take that collapsed eye diagram, and reopen it in order to recover the data encoded at each level. Quite simply, the process of sending data to the millions of pixels on our UHD displays, multiple times per second, cannot be carried
26 MARCH 2022
out efficiently where a cable infrastructure is compromised. As the demands of video distribution increasing as the technology evolves, the infrastructure our equipment is connected to has never needed to be as robust. This is an extremely important consideration as the performance of a cable will directly influence the performance of HDBaseT transmissions. As a manufacturer of HDBaseT equipment, we do receive calls from integrators asking why they are experiencing issues on certain cable runs when using HDBaseT technology. We hear statements such as, “the cable tested absolutely fine”, or “I am using HDBaseT cable.” Digging a little deeper into the tests that have been carried out, there are very few that have performed a suitable test that will qualify the cable for use with a modulated signal type. So, the ‘million-dollar’ question… What would be considered an adequate test for a cable that is going to be used for HDBaseT?
Many integrators will carry a type of LAN tester, these could range from basic wiremappers, right through to 10GbE certifier grade testers. The truth is any type of cable test is going to give some form of indication for the suitability of a signal being able to be transferred across the cable – be it the most basic test of ensuring that the pins have been terminated to their retrospective terminal on the far side of the link; to certifying the cable to a recognised international standard. However, the transmission of packetised data is very different to the modulated HDBaseT data flow. So, can a 10GbE IP / LAN tester therefore be used to qualify a link that is going to be used for a very different transmission type? Truth is, this will give you the best indication for an 8Gbps signal out of all the LAN test equipment out there, but they are two very different signal types being treated as one – a common misconception because we use the same cable.
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