Appendix F Cabling Recommendations; General Cabling Requirements; Prerequisites; Cable Management Guidelines - H3C SecPath M9000 Series Manual

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Appendix F Cabling recommendations

When an M9000 gateway is mounted in a 19-inch standard rack, the interface cables are routed
through the cable management brackets, bound at cabling racks on chassis sides, and then routed
up or down to pass through the chassis top or the raised floor, depending on the available equipment
room condition. The power cords run along the two sides of the chassis and out of the chassis either
from the chassis top or the raised floor depending on the equipment room conditions (power
distribution cabinet, lightning protection box, and connector strip, and so on) of the exchange office.

General cabling requirements

Minimum curvature radius of cables
The curvature radius of an attached power cord, communication cable, or ribbon cable should
be at least five times the cable's outer diameter. If the cable is frequently bent, plugged and
unplugged, the curvature radius should be at least seven times the cable's outer diameter.
The curvature radius of an ordinary attached coaxial cable should be at least seven times of the
cable's outer diameter. If the coaxial cable is frequently bent, plugged and unplugged, the
curvature radius should be at least 10 times the cable's outer diameter.
Minimum curvature radius of fibers
When the fiber is wrapped up around the cabling plate, the diameter of the cabling plate should
be at least 25 times the fiber's diameter.
When the fiber is being moved, the curvature radius of the fiber should be at least 20 times the
fiber's diameter.
When the fiber is attached, the curvature radius of the fiber should be at least 10 times the
fiber's diameter.
NOTE:
The fiber's diameter refers to the outer diameter of the fiber jacket. Typically, the diameter of a
single-core fiber is 0.9 mm (0.04 in), 2.0 mm (0.08 in), or 3.0 mm (0.12 in).

Prerequisites

Label cables before you route or bundle them.

Cable management guidelines

When you route and bundle up cables, follow these guidelines:
Bind and route the cables neatly inside the rack, and make sure they are not kinked or bent.
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