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Why is it important to gain and maintain a high speed Internet?

The chart below indicates how consumers find businesses on the Internet.

You came to the best site to learn everything you need to know about high speed T1/ T-1 Broadband Internet and Internet access service

<< T1 >>

What is T1?


A T1or Trunk Level 1 is a term for a digital carrier facility used to transmit a DS-1 formatted digital signals at 1.544 megabits per second. This is made up of 24 digital channels. This requires a digital connection device (CSU/DSU {customer switching unit/digital switching unit}) to connect to four wires to carry the information. Most small Internet providers have a T1 (or a fractional T1) line as their connection to the Internet. A Full T1 should accommodate from one to over 200+ users and other services from an Internet provider. Unlike the modem that is in most computers a T1 line requires a CSU/DSU and the connection. The modem that is in your computer is analog. The newer 56K modems are a transition from analog to user affordable digital technology. The newer ISDN modems are digital to allow for the higher speeds.

How it works:

The T1 is like a large water main that serves a city, a large amount of water or traffic flows through it. Unlike the water hose in your front yard (your modem) the T1 is the major carrier of the Internet traffic. The T1 connects the backbone provider to the ISP provider via the telco (telecommunications provider) The signal comes into the CSU/DSU and then goes to the router. From there it goes into the master name server and may be routed to other servers. One of these severs may be a modem or terminal server that allows you to connect to the Internet. You log in and are verified as a user on the local network and then are allowed to proceed to the larger network (Internet).

What may affect You?

Things that may affect you are how busy the site is on the other side of the Internet. If I work from a Unix prompt and move files from one site to another using the FTP protocol. I would expect them to move as fast as my network connection (1.54megabits/sec) would allow, a 1 megabyte file will travel at about 120K/sec or take 8.3 seconds. If you are accessing the same file from a 28.8 modem then it would be expected that (because you have a 28.8 connection) that it would take 347 seconds or 5.8 minutes. This is optimum situation, however because of traffic at the other site it may take longer due to the number of people accessing the site and the files. The kind of connection that particular site has (ie T1). The number of users that are actually accessing the site affects what I would expect to see for a file transfer. If I'm the only one accessing a web site then I would expect the files to travel very quickly. If there are many users all accessing the files then I would expect things to slow down because of the traffic. The more traffic the slower the files travel.

What is a CSU/DSU?

A CSU/DSU [Channel Service Unit / Data Service Unit] is a piece of equipment that connects a leased line from the telephone company to the customer's equipment (such as a router). It performs line encoding and conditioning functions and often has a loopback function for testing. Although CSU/DSU's look similar to modems, they are not modems, and they don't modulate or demodulate between analog and digital. All they really do is interface between a 56K, T1, or T3 line and serial interface (typically a V.35 connector) that connects to the router. Many newer routers have 56K or T1 CSU/DSUs built into them. CSU/DSU's for 56K, T1, and T3 lines are NOT the same and are not interchangable as a general rule. In the case of a T1 CSU/DSU, it passes the data in 64K chunks (time slots) on the 24 different channels (64K x 24 = 1.54MB).


What is a Full T1?

When a carrier gives you the option of purchasing a full T1, you can get the full 1.544Mbps circuit unchannelized direct into the Internet (or Frame Network, or Point-to-Point); also known as a clear channel T1. A Fractional T1 is a channelized T1 with only some of the channels turned on. Fractionals are normally priced in terms of Kbps. For example you can get 384kbps, 512kbps or 768kbps from most carriers. However, given the cost of provisioning, you may be better off paying a couple hundred dollars extra for the full line.



Are Frame Relay, VPN, Dedicated Internet and T1 the same?

Frame Relay, VPN and Dedicated Internet Access all use T1 connections to make the respective service possible, but they are not the same. By itself, Trunk Level 1 service is nearly useless. It takes a standard or protocol like Frame Relay or VPN to provide data transport over a Wide Area Network. The four most common uses of a T1 line include:

  1. From one point to another, the is often referred to a Private Line;
  2. From one point into a secure carrier network as with Frame Relay;
  3. From one point into the public Internet;
  4. From one point into a carrier's voice network.


What is a difference between DSL and a T1?

The primary difference between DSL and a T1is in the level of over subscription that occurs before the service reaches the end user. When you purchase a full T1 of Internet access, what you are generally getting is access to 1.544 Mbps of transmission on the carrier's network, regardless of what other customers are transmitting and receiving. To better illustrate this, let's assume that a carrier has capacity for 150 Mbps at any given time. This means that the at the most, they would sell is 100 T1s; Tier One carrier networks are seldom oversubscribed. For every megabyte of capacity, they can sell one megabyte access to a customer. DSL works differently then T1 lines - and costs less - because of over subscription. When you use a DSL connection your service runs through a piece of equipment called a DSLAM, as opposed to running directly into the Internet. The DSLAM acts as a point of aggregation between the DSL subscribers and the direct connection to the Internet (normally a T1 or DS-3). Typical DSL over subscription rates run from 4:1 to 25:1. Or in other words, for every one megabyte of demand coming into the DSLAM, a fraction of that is available. The benefit to this design is that a DSL provider can provide a 2 Mbps connection for a fraction of the T1 price. The disadvantage is that when the DSLAM gets busy, your connection speed will slow considerably.

 

The price of an Internet T1 is generally made up of two components: the local loop price and the port price. The local loop is what connects your location to the carrier's POP (Point of Presence). Local T1 loops are priced according to the distance from your location to the carrier's POP and are priced differently by all carriers. If you are looking for T1 prices it is best that you receive quotes from multiple carriers to insure that you get the best deal available. As a rule you can expect an Internet T1, including local loop, to cost between $400 and $1,300 a month, depending on the installation location and the desired speed of the service.

A large company needs something more than a T1 line. The following table shows some of the common line designations:

DS0 - 64 kilobits per second
ISDN - Two DS0 lines plus signaling (16 kilobits per second), or 128 kilobits per second
T1 - 1.544 megabits per second (24 DS0 lines)
T3 - 43.232 megabits per second (28 T1s)
OC3 - 155 megabits per second (84 T1s)
OC12 - 622 megabits per second (4 OC3s)
OC48 - 2.5 gigabits per seconds (4 OC12s)
OC192 - 9.6 gigabits per second (4 OC48s

Benefits
• Reliable - T1 lines are dedicated for your use only. Unlike DSL, the T1 line is not shared by other people. The line is reserved exclusively for you - giving you the peace of mind that your connection will work, and stay working.
• Fast - T1 lines are reserved for your use only - giving you all the bandwidth the line can handle - 1.54 megabits per second
• Guaranteed - the speed, quality and uptime of a T1 line is guaranteed - your business will always be connected.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


 

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