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Joined: Jan 2009
Posts: 854 Likes: 1
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It has been quite some time since I've had to turn-up and test DS0's, but I am needing a loopback plug to test a 56K circuit. I have my circuit terminated on a RJ48S, using R1 on pin 1, T1 on pin 2, T on ping 7, and R on pin 8. I was reading on the forums that the loopback connects pins 1-7 and 2-8. Shouldn't the proper loopback on this actually be 1-8 and 2-7?
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Joined: Jan 2007
Posts: 1,951 Likes: 2
RIP
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Joined: Jan 2007
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Polarity is NOT important for metallic loopback tests, so it's a "Don't Care". Simply turning around the bits given to you is enough for that level of testing.
Same goes with T1 circuits...same goes with Ethernet.
"Press play and record at the same time" -- Tim Alberstein
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Joined: Jul 2005
Posts: 860
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Originally posted by ffej010: Shouldn't the proper loopback on this actually be 1-8 and 2-7? Nope... I’m going to guess you’re probably confusing what the “T-s†and the “R-s†are designating… You’ll see T, R, and R, R1 used to notate the pin-outs. Easy enough to confuse those for “transmit†and “receive†but those names signify Tip, Tip1, Ring, Ring1. A loop-back plug would connect Ring/Tip (the first pair) to Tip1/Ring1 (the second pair.)
----------------------- Bryan LEC Provisioning Engineer Cars -n- Guitars Racin' (retired racer Oct.'07)
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Joined: Jan 2009
Posts: 854 Likes: 1
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So you loop the Ring (R) side of the first pair (pin 8) to the tip side (T1) of the second pair (pin 2); and Tip side of the first pair (T - pin 7) to the Ring side of the second pair (R1 - pin 1)?
Makes more sense to me to put ring to ring and tip to tip....but I will go w/ what you are saying, you are the experts! Thanks for the info.
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Joined: Jul 2005
Posts: 860
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Pin 1 = R1 Pin 2 = T1
Pin 7 = T Pin 8 = R
Jumper pin 1 to pin 7 Jumper pin 2 to pin 8
Each pair works together as a transmit path or a receive path. A loop-back plug turns one PAIR back to the other. Gives the 1’s and 0’s a round trip ride. A loop-back.
Connecting tip to tip1 and ring to ring1 would create a short at the end of each pair. A pair could be tested that way but would be “dead-end†for any transmission tests.
----------------------- Bryan LEC Provisioning Engineer Cars -n- Guitars Racin' (retired racer Oct.'07)
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Joined: Jan 2009
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Thanks for the help and explanation. It is appreciated.
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Joined: Feb 2009
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Grab an RJ45 connector and loop pins 1-7 & 2-8 and have at it
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