Cable for power-over-ethernet having an extended usable length
11562835 · 2023-01-24
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
International classification
Abstract
A method of extending the usable length of a power-over-ethernet cable includes the steps of providing twisted pairs of wires with the conductor of each wire being a 20 AWG or 22 AWG conductor and terminating the cable at an RJ-45 style connector. The connector for the 20 AWG conductors has an insert therein with holes that can accommodate 20 AWG conductors. FEP, PVC or PP insulation may surround each conductor.
Claims
1. A power-over-ethernet cable, comprising: four twisted pairs of wires configured for transmission of both power and data and no other wires configured for transmission of both power and data; and a connector, wherein at least one of said twisted pairs of wires includes a pair of wires each having a 20 AWG conductor or a pair of wires each having a 22 AWG conductor, and the cable has a length greater than 100 meters.
2. The power-over-ethernet cable of claim 1, wherein at least one of said twisted pairs of wires includes a pair of wires each having a 20 AWG conductor, the connector is configured for receipt by an RJ-45 style jack and includes an insert defining a plurality of holes, and each wire of the four twisted pairs of wires is received by a different one of said holes.
3. The power-over-ethernet cable of claim 1, wherein at least one of said twisted pairs of wires includes a pair of wires each having a 22 AWG conductor, and the connector comprises an RJ-45 style plug.
4. The power-over-ethernet cable of claim 1, wherein each wire of the four twisted pairs of wires has a 20 AWG conductor.
5. The power-over-ethernet cable of claim 4, wherein the connector is configured for receipt by an RJ-45 style jack and includes an insert defining a plurality of holes, and each wire of the four twisted pairs of wires is received by a different one of said holes.
6. The power-over-ethernet cable of claim 1, wherein each wire of the four twisted pairs of wires has a 22 AWG conductor.
7. The power-over-ethernet cable of claim 6, wherein the connector comprises an RJ-45 style plug.
8. The power-over-ethernet cable of claim 1, having a length of at least 292 meters.
9. The power-over-ethernet cable of claim 1, further comprising a drain wire.
10. An electrical power delivery system, comprising: a jack; and a power-over-ethernet cable including four twisted pairs of wires configured for transmission of both power and data and no other wires configured for transmission of both power and data; and a connector received by the jack, wherein at least one of said twisted pair of wires includes a pair of wires each having a 20 AWG conductor or a pair of wires each having 22 AWG conductor, and the cable has a length greater than 100 meters.
11. The electrical power delivery system of claim 10, wherein at least one of said twisted pairs of wires includes a pair of wires each having a 20 AWG conductor, the jack comprises an RJ-45 style jack, and the connector includes an insert defining a plurality of holes, with each wire of the four twisted pairs of wires being received by a different one of said holes.
12. The electrical power delivery system of claim 10, wherein at least one of said twisted pairs of wires includes a pair of wires each having a 22 AWG conductor, the jack comprises an RJ-45 style jack, and the connector comprises an RJ-45 style plug.
13. The electrical power delivery system of claim 10, wherein each wire of the four twisted pairs of wires has a 20 AWG conductor.
14. The electrical power delivery system of claim 13, wherein the jack comprises an RJ-45 style jack, and the connector includes an insert defining a plurality of holes, with each wire of the four twisted pairs of wires being received by a different one of said holes.
15. The electrical power delivery system of claim 10, wherein each wire of the four twisted pairs of wires has a 22 AWG conductor.
16. The electrical power delivery system of claim 15, wherein the jack comprises an RJ-45 style jack, and the connector comprises an RJ-45 style plug.
17. The electrical power delivery system of claim 10, wherein the cable is not connected to a power-over-ethernet injector, a mid-span power supply, a booster, and/or an intermediate distribution frame.
18. The electrical power delivery system of claim 10, further including only a single power supply, wherein the power supply is associated with one end of the cable.
19. The electrical power delivery system of claim 10, wherein the cable has a length of at least 292 meters.
20. The electrical power delivery system of claim 10, wherein the cable further includes a drain wire.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)
(7)
(8)
(9)
(10)
(11)
(12)
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE EMBODIMENTS
(13) The present disclosure is directed to a cable for power-over-ethernet (POE) applications. The disclosure particularly concerns a method of extending the usable length of POE cables. An end portion of one embodiment of the cable is shown generally at 10 in
(14) The jacket 12 surrounds four twisted pairs of wires as seen at 18, 20, 22, 24. Each pair has two individual wires as shown by the designations A and B. Color codes may vary but, for example, pair 18 could be green×white/green, pair 20 could be brown×white/brown, pair 22 could be blue×white/blue, and pair 24 could be orange×white/orange. The pair lay length could be 1.40″ LHL (8.57 Tw/Ft) (each pair staggered lay length). The cable lay length could be 5.00″ LHL (2.40 Tw/Ft).
(15)
(16) The electrical characteristics of the cable include an impedance of 98.80Ω/Mft±10%, a capacitance of 15.0 pF/ft±10% and a DC resistance of 10.3Ω/Mft @ 20° C. The cable is UL listed as type CL3P per UL standard 13 and as type CMP c(UL)us 200° C. FT-6 per UL standard 444. All materials used in the manufacture of this cable are RoHS II & REACH Compliant. The maximum operating voltage is 300V.
(17) The cable as described delivers a greater distance while still being able to use connectors whose exterior dimensions are the same as standard RJ-45 connectors but whose interior is adapted to accept 20 AWG conductors.
(18) In alternate embodiments polypropylene or PVC insulation could be used that will provide similar results. This will enable cables which are appropriate for all types of installations at a cost commensurate with the physical demands on the cables. That is, the first embodiment as in
(19) TABLE-US-00001 UTP 20AWG All dimensions in UTP 20AWG UTP 20AWG UTP 20AWG Cat6 CMP or millimeters Cat5E CMP Cat5E CM-LSZH Cat5E CMR CL3P Conductor Material Solid annealed Solid annealed Solid annealed Solid annealed bare copper wire bare copper wire bare copper wire bare copper wire Composing 1/0.813 1/0.813 1/0.813 1/0.813 Diameter 0.813 ± 0.01 0.813 ± 0.01 0.813 ± 0.01 0.813 ± 0.01 Insulation Material FEP HDPE HDPE FEP Wall thickness, nom 0.2935 0.2935 0.2935 0.3048 Diameter 1.40 ± 0.05 1.40 ± 0.05 1.40 ± 0.05 Twisted Lay length ≤38 ≤38 ≤38 ≤38 Pair Diameter 2.80 2.80 2.80 Cable Core Composing 4 twisted pairs 4 twisted pairs 4 twisted pairs 4 twisted pairs stranded together stranded together stranded together stranded together Lay length ≤120 ≤120 ≤120 ≤127 Diameter 5.2 ± 0.5 5.2 ± 0.5 5.2 ± 0.5 Sheath Material FR-PVC CM-LSZH FR-PVC FEP Rip cord Present under the Present under the Present under Present under sheath sheath the sheath the sheath Wall thickness 0.50 0.50 0.50 0.33 Diameter 6.6 ± 0.5 6.6 ± 0.5 6.6 ± 0.5 6.3 Electrical Conductor ≤9.38Ω/100 m ≤9.38Ω/100 m ≤9.38Ω/100 m ≤10.3Ω/Mft ± 10% Performance resistance at 20° C. Insulation resistance ≥5000MΩKm(DC ≥5000MΩKm(DC ≥5000MΩKm(DC 500 V Charged 1 500 V Charged 1 500 V Charged 1 Min) Min) Min) Voltage endurance DC 1500 V/min DC 1500 V/min DC 1500 V/min Mutual capacitance ≤7.0 nF/100 m ≤7.0 nF/100 m ≤7.0 nF/100 m 15.0 pF/ft ± 10% Core-core ≤5% ≤5% ≤5% resistance unbalance
(20) The connector used with the cable of the present disclosure has an enlarged inner diameter of the RJ-45 front side to allow 20 AWG conductors to slide underneath the gold contact prongs. The gold prongs need to accommodate the 20 AWG size and the rear side has a metal clamp to hold the jacket (7.0 mm OD). The outside dimensions of the RJ-45 plug and boot are identical to the size of a regular RJ-45 patch cord, therefore the patch cord can plug into the regular patch panel and/or other connected devices, such as a security camera. Further details of the connector are shown and described below.
(21) Tests on the new 20 AWG cable connected to a video camera showed that the cable worked up to 960 feet with a 1920×1080 high-resolution picture, whereas conventional Cat 6 cable worked only to 650 feet and the conventional Cat 5e worked to only 600 feet. This is over a 45% improvement in reach and the cable met all TIA electrical requirements for Cat 5e performance to 100 MHz and extrapolated to 350 MHz.
(22) With 960 feet of usable length the present cable can extend 292 meters, which is almost three times the 100 meter distance for convention category cables. It is also possible that the FEP and polyethylene versions may be a little better in reach due to the different dissipation factor between FEP and PE insulation.
(23) Some comments are noted here. First, this cable has an advantage since in addition to carrying video and power it also complies with TIA electrical performance requirements for Cat 5e. Second, it is possible to include a spline separator which will minimize cross-talk. Third, CCTV is a good application for the type of cable of the present invention, since the reach is almost tripled. Fourth, when TIA standards were written 100 meters was chosen as the test length of a typical installation, but allowed 300 meters for indoor multi-mode optical fiber. Fifth, security cameras are just one possible application of the present disclosure. Data centers, airport concourse signage and other very large commercial and government installations are examples of other applications which would benefit. There may also be a use for this cable in solar and wind power and control cables, so that one cable could support a typical installation, rather than requiring a bundle of cables. The cable may also extend VOIP distances and network distances by the same lengths as CCTV without the need for IDF equipment or closets.
(24)
(25) The lip 52 leads into the interior of the housing which includes an angled ramp 54 extending upwardly from the bottom wall 46. At the top of the ramp are four semi-cylindrical conductor supports 56, as best seen in
(26) The centers of the supports and guides are each aligned with one of eight compartments which are defined by a set of seven partitions 60. The partitions are vertical plates located forwardly of the ramp 54 and inside the confines of the side walls 44 and front end wall 48. The front end of the housing has a window or opening at the front lower corner where the front end wall 48 meets the bottom wall 46. The partitions 60 extend into the window space to create eight compartments that each receive a contact blade 62.
(27) Details of one of the contact blades 62 are seen in
(28) Exterior features of the connector 36 include a block 70 formed at the corner where the top wall 42 meets the front end wall 48. A latch 72 is cantilevered from the block 70. The latch 72 is flexible and engageable in the usual manner with an RJ-45 receptacle to releasably retain the connector 36 in the receptacle. A release lever 74 attached to and extending from the latch can be depressed to allow the latch to escape the receptacle and permit withdrawal of the connector therefrom.
(29) The side walls 44 at their front ends have protrusions 76 (
(30) Details of the shield 40 will now be described. The shield is preferably made of metal, such as a copper alloy. It is a stamped or otherwise formed sheet that is folded into a four-sided enclosure having a roof 80 joined to a pair of side panels 82 which in turn have a pair of bottom flaps 84. The bottom flaps are connected to one another at a dovetail joint 86 (
(31) The roof 80 of the shield 40 has two three-sided piercings that form a pair of tabs 90. The tabs are bent inwardly slightly to engage depressions in the top wall 42 of the housing and thereby retain the shield on the housing. The rear edge of the roof 80 carries a clamp 92 which includes a strap 94 and a stirrup 96. The clamp starts out upraised as shown in
(32)
(33) In an alternate embodiment four twisted pairs of 22 AWG wires could be used. These wires are easier to bend and can be used with standard RF-45 connectors. The individual and very tight lay lengths are indicated shown below. The left-hand rotation is normally as shown, which is blue, orange, green and brown. The four twisted pairs are then twisted together in the bundle twist lay noted below, which is also a left-hand lay. Both the individual pairs and the four-pair bundle are twisted in the same left-hand direction and this slightly tightens the twist of the individual pairs. Both operations need to be performed very accurately. The pair lay length could be less than or equal to about 1.496″. The cable lay length could be less than or equal to about 4.724″. More specifically, the lay length of each pair is Blue: 0.5460″; Orange: 0.8996″; Green: 0.6929″; Brown: 0.8047″. Further, the four pairs cabling lay length is 3.9370″.
(34) The compatible twist lays indicated result in electrical performance that is vastly superior to that of a Cat 5e cable. Minimizing the cross-talk (high frequency noise) allows the digital signals in the cable to travel two to three times the distance of a Cat 5e cable, which is restricted to 100 meters (328 ft). The unique twist-lay combination together with the 22 AWG conductors minimizes the DC resistance of the cable significantly. Thus, the signal travels a longer distance and is less susceptible to noise. Since this cable meets and vastly exceeds the electrical performance specified for Cat 5e cables by TIA, which is a very good reference point, the cable of the present disclosure is an especially suitable cable for digital video surveillance and other demanding applications which require longer cable lengths than those specified by TIA.
(35) The following chart shows test results of the 20 AWG and 22 AWG cables of the present disclosure compared to 23 AWG and 24 AWG cables of the prior art. These tests were performed using an Intellinet 560542 Managed Switch together with three different brands of IP video cameras. Note the 20 AWG and 22 AWG cables of the present disclosure provide usable cable length increases ranging from at least 26% (for 22 AWG on the ACTi and Bosch cameras compared to 23 AWG) to 60% (for 20 AWG on the Axis camera compared to 24 AWG).
(36) TABLE-US-00002 Cable Size Camera Resolution Frames/Sec. Link Setting Cable Length Feet 20 AWG AXIS Q6045 PTZ 1920 × 1080 P 30 LAPTOP MP OPTIMIZED 960 BOSCH IP 5000 1440 × 1080 P 12 LAPTOP 1 MP 900 5 MP BOX OPTIMIZED H264 ACTi D22FA 5 MP 1920 × 1080 P 5 ACTi ENR-1000 Auto 800 * DVR 22 AWG AXIS Q6045 PTZ 1920 × 1080 P 30 LAPTOP MP OPTIMIZED 875 BOSCH IP 5000 1440 × 1080 P 12 LAPTOP 1 MP 825 5 MP BOX OPTIMIZED H264 ACTi D22FA 5 MP 1920 × 1080 P 5 ACTi ENR-1000 Auto 825 DVR 23 AWG AXIS Q6045 PTZ 1920 × 1080 P 30 LAPTOP MP OPTIMIZED 650 (Cat 6) 24 AWG AXIS Q6045 PTZ 1920 × 1080 P 30 LAPTOP MP OPTIMIZED 600 (Cat 5e) * All using Intellinet 560542 Managed Switch set to 10 MP Managed except * is set to auto
(37) It should be understood that various changes and modifications to the presently preferred embodiments described herein will be apparent to those skilled in the art. Such changes and modification can be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention disclosed herein. For example, in addition to the jacket 12, ripcord 14 and twisted pairs 18-24, an alternate embodiment may include an optional separator, a shield layer, a tape layer and/or a drain wire, the latter of which would be located between the shield and tape layers. The shield layer may be made of aluminum foil and the tape layer may be polyester film, such as Mylar®.