| Well, you've hit a sore spot with that one. Thinwire FDDI sales have
been less than stelar over these last 3 years and because of this we
have stopped development of new Thinwire devices. DEFZAs and DEFCNs
are the only two products that i know about that actually implement the
Thinwire solution. I don't think DEFTA implments Thinwire, but it
might.
You have a real problem on your hands. The balun idea is nice, but it
won't work for UTP cable lengths over 30 of 40 meters. Thinwire cable
is actually a VERY good cable in that its bandwidth is quite high. Much
higher than the same length Cat 5 UTP. Since the bw of Thinwire is so
high, no special TX encoding or RX equalization was put into the
thinwire adapters. UTP cable put into the place of Thinwire will
perform miserably unless the RX performs adaptive equalization --
something that is unique to TP-PMD. A balun is not the solution.
At last check, our Thinwire solution was proprietary -- no other
vendors supported it. Chances of you finding adapters for
non-turbochannel busses are low.
The only real solution is to rewire w/ Cat 5 cable. I know your
customer will bitch up a storm, but there really isn't any other
workable option.
Sorry for the bad news.
bill
|
| Thanks for the responses. For many years Digital pushed Thinwire over
UTP. For many years this was an excellent decision. When UTP came, in
most cases, Digital folks were instructed to continue to push Thinwire.
Thinwire has the same problem that Digital MMJs have/had: They are
closed solutions. MMJs are obviously closed and Thinwire doesn't
support token ring, which means the customer is locked into ethernet.
RJ45s and UTP and Fiber are open. For many years customers looked at
Digital and some of our solutions and just laughed. Not all, but those
who wanted to leave themselves with many options in the future.
Anyways, industry standards sell well, the rest of them are still up to
the market place (ie, OSI).
Lots of opportunities for our products now that we recognize the above
and TCP/IP, SNMP and other open solutions. Now we just need to spend a
few years rebuilding our credibility.
Regards,
Mark
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