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- From: craigd@aruba.UUCP (Craig Dunham)
- Subject: Re: Token Ring wiring
- Message-ID: <1992Nov23.192258.12334@aruba.uucp>
- Sender: craigd@aruba (Craig Dunham)
- Date: Mon, 23 Nov 1992 19:22:58 GMT
- References: <BxwA18.3E1@well.sf.ca.us>
- Organization: Project Zed
- Lines: 58
-
- In article <BxwA18.3E1@well.sf.ca.us>, shiva@well.sf.ca.us (Kenneth Porter) writes:
- |> I've got a couple of PS/2 Model 95's with both Token Ring and
- |> Ethernet cards. We use the Ethernet cards for NFS and printer-sharing
- |> (the net is shared with Sun's and DOS boxes), but the Token Rings,
- |> which were bundled with the PS/2's, are sitting idle. I'd like to try
- |> using them for some experiments (I have the NDIS drivers), but I
- |> don't know how the cabling works. I'm used to thin-net cabling, where
- |> one just runs a hunk of coax between stations and puts a terminator
- |> on the ends of the coax.
- |>
- |> Each Token Ring card came with a cable with a strange multi-spade
- |> connector at the end. How do I connect the two station cables
- |> together to make a ring? Do I need some kind of expensive hub box, or
- |> can I just fashion an adapter to directly connect the two cables
- |> together?
-
- You cannot just plug these two cables together to get a working token
- ring network. IBM's token ring wiring system (and all others, as far
- as I know), employs a hub to wire stations on the ring together.
- A station can be a PC, an RS/6000 workstation, or any other computer
- with a token ring adaptor. Each station on the network has a cable
- which plugs into the hub, so that the network is wired as a physical
- star configuration, even though it is an electrical ring.
-
- That is, each station has wire from that station back to the hub, forming
- a "star" with the hub in the center. The hub electrically configures
- all the attached stations into a ring, so that the software "token" which
- carries information on the network travels from station to station in
- sequence, with every station seeing the token before it gets back to
- the one which originated it.
-
- In addition, the hub has relays that re-configure the network to maintain
- the ring if one of the stations is turned off, has its cable cut, or
- otherwise drops out of the ring. (This doesn't always work, depending on
- the nature of the fault).
-
- So, at a minimum, you will need a hub of some sort, such as IBM's 8228 MAU
- (Multi-Station Access Unit). This is basically a dumb unit, but it works
- well for small networks. For larger networks, you may want to look at 3rd
- party hubs, such as Star-Tek's. These "smart" hubs provide some nice
- features, such as improved fault tolerance, network statistics gathering,
- remote configuration via PC ports, etc..
-
- To wire your PCs to the hub, you can use IBM's wiring scheme, which employs
- the multi-spade type connectors and special wiring to plug systems together,
- or you can look at 3rd party devices which adapt the output of your token
- ring card in each PC to an electrical format which can run across unshielded
- twisted pair (UTP) wiring. This is a MUCH cheaper solution if you already
- have your building wired with UTP. It also allows you to use the same UTP
- wiring for running your Ethernet traffic (although not at the same time of
- course).
-
- Hope this helps.
-
-
- --
- Craig Dunham |Internet Style: aruba!craigd@uu2.psi.com
- |UUCP : ...!uunet!uu2.psi.com!aruba!craigd
-