[72666] in North American Network Operators' Group
Re: T1 short-haul vs. long-haul
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Christopher Woodfield)
Thu Jul 22 13:43:30 2004
In-Reply-To: <DD7FE473A8C3C245ADA2A2FE1709D90B0DB2DA@server2003.arneill-py.sacramento.ca.us>
Cc: <nanog@merit.edu>, "Andre Oppermann" <nanog-list@nrg4u.com>
From: Christopher Woodfield <rekoil@semihuman.com>
Date: Thu, 22 Jul 2004 13:43:08 -0400
To: "Michel Py" <michel@arneill-py.sacramento.ca.us>
Errors-To: owner-nanog-outgoing@merit.edu
In the interest of complicating things further, I think you have NIU
and smartjack backwards in your explanation...the smartjack has alarm
lights and can be remotely looped by the telco via ESF loopcodes; the
NIU (also known as an RJ48X) is the dumb wiring box. In my experience,
smartjacks are placed on the line at the MPOE, and extended demarcs are
presented on RJ48X jacks.
In the past few years, I've seen more and more T1s delivered without a
smartjack; the circuit is simply presented on the RJ48X, which will
loop back towards the telco if there's no cable plugged into it. I'm
not in provisioning, so I don't know whether or not telcos charge more
for smartjacks than they do for RJ48X jacks, but if you can get one,
do. Having to drive to the office to yank a cable so the telco can test
your line can kinda suck.
-C
On Jul 22, 2004, at 11:31 AM, Michel Py wrote:
>
>> What is the "NIU"?
>
> The box that converts the signal from the street (that can run for
> miles) into the signal you find on the smartjack (that can only go a
> few
> hundred feet). Although I don't like the term, it's some kind of a
> digital modem. The smartjack is dumb (no lights); the NIU is the brains
> of the smartjack, what has the lights and can be looped.