Termination & Connectors
Patch panels, punchdown blocks, RJ-45 termination, strain relief, service loops, and proper termination practices.
- Describe patch panel types and cross-connect configurations
- Explain proper punchdown technique using 110 blocks and IDC termination
- Identify modular plug and jack components and strain relief methods
- Apply service loop and torque specification best practices
Lección 1
Patch Panels & Cross-Connects
The Heart of the Telecom Room
A patch panel is a passive termination point where horizontal cables from work areas are terminated on the back and patch cords connect to active equipment on the front. Patch panels enable cross-connects - the ability to reroute connections by simply moving patch cords.
Cross-Connect vs Interconnect
A cross-connect uses two patch cords and an intermediate patch panel to link two cabling subsystems. An interconnect uses a single patch cord from the patch panel directly to the active equipment. Interconnects are simpler but cross-connects provide greater flexibility for moves, adds, and changes.
Cross-Connect
Two patch cords with intermediate panel
Maximum flexibility
More components
Used in large enterprise environments
Interconnect
Single patch cord to equipment
Fewer connection points
Lower insertion loss
Common in smaller installations
Patch Panel Density
Standard 19-inch rack-mount patch panels are available in common densities:
| Port Count | Rack Units | Common Use |
|---|---|---|
| 24 ports | 1U | Standard copper |
| 48 ports | 2U | High-density copper |
| 12/24 ports | 1U | Fiber LC duplex |
| 72/96 ports | 4U | High-density fiber |
Exam Tip
The permanent link is the fixed portion of the cabling from the patch panel to the work area outlet - maximum 90 meters. The channel includes patch cords on both ends - maximum 100 meters total.
Patch panels provide passive termination for cross-connects. The permanent link is 90 meters maximum from patch panel to outlet. The full channel including patch cords is 100 meters maximum.