The Riser as a Contract Document. Peter Sharp, RCDD

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Transcription:

The Riser as a Contract Document Peter Sharp, RCDD IBI Group 1 1

Who am I? Presenter Credentials Electrical Engineer Specialties in communications, electronics and computer sciences, In practice for 40 years Member of BICSI, RCDD Institute of Engineering and Technology (IET) (UK), and TIA engineering TR42 standards committees Senior Telecommunications Consultant with IBI Group, Member firm of the IBI Group, (HQ in Toronto) Multi-disciplinary engineering gand architectural consulting practice. (3000 persons world wide) Responsibilities include Design and specification of communications, life safety, security and building management systems Systems integration for Data Centers. Major clients include 2 Governments, Nuclear power generation authorities, International border crossing agencies, Chartered banks, Insurance underwriters, and Transit authorities.

Why are we here? To think about.. The Riser as a Contract Document Idea What Components of a structured cabling system can be fully described on one schematic riser diagram. CAD drawing Different from current drawing practice and focuses on the cabling, not conduit or pathways. CAD Library of graphic elements described in detail. Examples Illustrate how the symbols are used to define and specify a complete cabling system. Included are the type and pair count of different cables and cable types, termination types, termination locations, cross connections and 3 patch-cords

What will we learn? Objectives Context of a construction contract Legal nature of a contract Establish need for clarity and completeness Identify key documents for structured cabling Identify use of LAYOUT PLANS Identify proper use of SPECIFICATIONS Identify use of SCHEMATIC RISER How to prepare a RICH DETAIL FORMAT (RDF) RISER SCHEMATIC 4

5 Part 2 CONTRACT DOCUMENTS

Context Owner, designer and contractor operate together in a world of contract law Owner + $$ + idea + designer = Contract Documents Contract Documents+ Contractor + materials = work results 6

Contract Documents General terms and conditions Technical specifications Drawings 7

Purpose and Proper Use of Contract Documents General terms and conditions 8 Establishes relationship between the Contractor and the Owner Details the do s and don ts of the work Sets up contract as Construction Management (CM) or General Contract (GC) CM or GC can affect way Data cabling is subcontracted

Purpose and Proper Use of Contract Documents Specifications Legally reinforces what is on the drawings Defines scope of work Defines material components Designer will use specifications to 9 Expand on scope of work Detail desired components Describes special execution of work

Purpose and Proper Use of Contract Documents Specification split by description of Work Does NOT separate work by trade Specific areas of interest to this subject 10 Division 26 Electrical rough in Communications pathways; supports cabling Division 27 Communications Structured cabling Division 28 Security/Safety Uses structured cabling

Division 27 - Communications General description of work What is included and excluded Look for Provide or Install or Furnish. Definitions of 11 Cable type and performance Connector type and performance Standards for execution/installation Testing and test reporting

Correct Use of Drawings - Layouts Communications layout drawings Outside plant shows conduits and site routing Inside plant Outlets positions and jack count Telecommunications rooms Conduit and tray (sometimes) Contractor responsible for 12 Take off - quantity

Correct Use of Drawings - Elevations Communications elevation drawings Communications rooms Identifies racking Identifies wall layouts Identifies cable routing 13

Correct Use of Drawings - Riser Communications Riser drawings 14 Describes the fixed link Details outside and inside cabling Details connector types Copper Optical fibre Details mounting locations Rack Wall

Three Parts to the Contract Documents Layout Describes placement/quantity of outlets Shows pathways Specifications Defines products and designer swants s Riser Describes the cabling infrastructure 15

Which Document is the Most Valuable Resource? 16

17 Part 3 THE RISER SCHEMATIC

Start with TIA 568.C.0 DISTRIBUTOR A (DA) HORIZONTAL CROSS-CONNECT FLOOR DISTRIBUTOR DISTRIBUTOR B (DB) INTERMEDIATE CROSS- CONNECT DISTRIBUTOR C (DC) MAIN CROSS-CONNECT 18

Traditional Riser Scheme Simple representation of cross connect Works for copper voice cabling Works for optical fibre Cannot mix cable types Does not show equipment Not good for detailing 19

Cross-Connect + Equipment New symbol needed to separate Backbone Equipment Distribution What kind of terminations? IDC? Patch panel? What kind of connections? Cross-connect? Interconnect? 20

Traditional + Equipment Drawing becomes crowded No space to add detail Suitable only for one cable type. Better approach needed 21

Part 4 DEVELOPING A NEW RISER SCHEMATIC 22

23 DISTRIBUTOR A: THE CROSS-CONNECT

1. Refine the Symbol Vertical lines become generic termination strips Identify with B Backbone E Equipment D Distribution Cross lines eliminated Horizontal lines represent cables 24

2. Show Cabling Back bone cables Distribution cables Indicate outlet jack 25

3. Add Cabling Terminations Open symbols represent RJ45 jacks 26

4. Add Patch Cords Solid symbols represent RJ45 plugs 27

5. Add Fibre Round symbols represent tfibre Open symbol = jack Solid symbol = plug 28

So far.. Horizontal copper cable terminated on RJ45 patch panel Backbone copper terminated on RJ45 patch panel Backbone fibre terminated on patch panel Copper patch cords between horizontal and backbone Copper equipment cords between horizontal and equipment Fibre equipment cords between equipment and backbone 29

6. Copper Terminations at 110/BIX ARROW symbol for 110/BIX punch-down Terminate TELEPHONE at 110/BIX IDC strip Terminate TELEPHONE backbone on 110/BIX IDC strip Show cross-connect connect between 110/BIX IDC strips 30

7. Separating Termination Locations Separate WALL and RACK terminations ti BW=Backbone/Wall BR=Backbone/Rack DW=Distribution/Wall DR=Distribution/Rack 31

8. Converged Services Crossover copper connection Link between RACK and WALL for backbone copper 32

9. Common Outlet ONE outlet for two services RED path for voice BLUE path for data 33

Summary: In the Telecom Room Symbolic representation for Copper cabling and terminations 110/BIX AND patch panel Optical fibre cabling and terminations Wall and rack mounting Equipment Patch/cross-connect cords Next up 34 Backbone cabling

35 BACKBONE CONNECTIONS

Revisit TIA 568.C.0 Note the Backbone connections between distributors 36

Distributor Connections Return to the same new starting ti point 37

Distributor Connections Expand the bubble 38

Distributors B and A 39

Backbone Cables Between Distributors 40

Step 1: Replace OLD symbol with NEW Compare OLD style with NEW style 41

Step 1: Replace OLD Symbol with NEW Note: Distributor B has Equipment but no Horizontal Distribution 42

Step 2: Extend the Backbone Between Distributor A and Distributor B 43

Cable Terminations are Detailed: Not Possible Using the Old Style 44

Better Organize the Diagram: Shift Elements to Prevent Symbol Interference 45

Clean Up: Tighten Symbols Group Backbone Cables Together; Apply Labels 46

Add Fibre to Backbone and Equipment (Symbols are Exaggerated for Clarity) 47

Add Legend: Component Details and Room Locations 48

Relating the Diagram to a Contract Document Cable: Types: defined Quantity: defined Termination: Types: defined Locations: defined Quantities and formats defined 49

Special Conditions: Overvoltage Protection 50

Special Conditions: Equipment Plug In (PBX) 51

Special Conditions: Equipment Plug In (PBX) 52

Symbols Used 53

Part 5 EXAMPLES 54

Sample: Full Riser Schematic 55

Focus Area: Entrance and Backbones 56

Building Entrance Copper Backbone 110 Terminations - Diverse Routing Building entrance Diverse backbone pathways 57

Focus: Distribution Terminations 58

Focus: Distribution Terminations Outlets in two work areas to common patch panel Pay phones run back to 110 in entrance room 59

EXAMPLE: Data Centre: Sample: 2 rows x 6 racks + 2 core Copper: Ethernet Cat 6A Rack to end of row End of row to core End of row to core Rack to end of row Admin point 1 60 Admin point 2

Data Centre: Sample: 2 rows x 6 racks + 2 core Fibre Channel + Ethernet Two more administration points Different End of row to Different core End of row to core Admin point 3 61 Admin point 4

Data centre: All cables + terminations: One diagram 62

Data centre: All cables + terminations: One diagram 1 3 4 2 63

Data Centre: Context 64

Data Centre: 4000 sf One drawing 100 Cabinets 3 levels of hierarchy Core Distribution Edge Parallel redundant backbone Ethernet fibre and Cat 6A distribution Fibre channel Two FC administration points 65

Part 6 CONCLUSION 66

Conclusion One drawing CAN represent entire system Cables AND terminations Rooms and enclosures Cross-connections and patch cords Equipment connections No duplications, no ambiguity Essential member of contract documents 67

The Riser as a Contract Document Peter Sharp, RCDD IBI Group peter.sharp@ibigroup.com 68