Hello Tom K, Don H, David S

Thanks for this very valuable summary.

I do believe that there are two other relevant items worthy of note 
in this matter, they are 

        1)  where is the voltage being measured, and 
        
        2) what is "real world" duration/frequency of occurances 
           of -Vdc low limit.


I will address item 1 here.

Can you gentlemen shed some light on duration/occurances per year of -40Vdc 
appearing at products input power connectors or at the power distribution 
frames (PDFs)?   Is it greater than 3 hours? Thanks

GR 499
        -42.5 to -56.5 VDC is measured at the power distribution frame.

        -40.0 to -57.7 objective is measured at the input connector of 
                       Product (shelf level computer, line card bay, etc).

        -42.0V minimum and 56.7V Vdc maximum are respectively the mandated 
         low (discharge) and high (charging) limits of the power plant 
         operating voltage measured at the at the battery stack(s).


ETSI 300-132-2
        
        Is vague about where the voltage may appear (be measured), 
        due to the element of negotiation required (supplier/buyer) 
        to define location were power terminals connect to the 
        system block (interface A).
        
        Thus measurement could be made at the line ups PDF or at input 
        connector to computer, line card bay, etc.
        
        -40.5 to -57.0 VDC, is normal service steady state voltage 
         range for dc system having nominal voltage value of -48Vdc.

AT& T NEDs

        Is clear that -40.0 to -57.5 VDC is meausred at the lugs of
        the network equipment unit (I interpret this to mean input 
        connector to computer, line card bay, etc.)     

end

{}  From: David Spencer <dspen...@oresis.com>
{}  To: "'nebs@world.std.com'" <nebs@world.std.com>
{}  Cc: daus...@coppermountain.com
{}  Subject: RE: CO Battery output voltage range
{}  Date: Thu, 15 Feb 2001 16:54:18 -0800
{}  MIME-Version: 1.0
{}  
{}  Hey Tom,
{}  There are a number of different flavors you can pick.  For Telcordia, the
{}  objective in GR 499 has the widest swing.  We do ours from -40 to -60VDC.
{}  The extra head doesn't cost us anything as it keeps us within the SELV
{}  limits and makes us look good to customers who wonder why the other guy's
{}  equipment only goes to 57.5VDC, the inference being ours is better.  Here is
{}  a list of various standards requirements:
{}  
{}  -40.5 to -57.0 VDC          ETS 300 132-2:1996
{}  -42.75 to -56.7 VDC         ANSI T1.315:1994
{}  -40.0 to -57.5 VDC          AT&T NEDS 9069:1999
{}  -42.5 to -56.5 VDC          GR-499:1995 (-40.0 to -57.7 objective)
{}  
{}  Have a Great Day!
{}  Dave
{}  
{}  -----Original Message-----
{}  From: tla...@coppermountain.com [mailto:tla...@coppermountain.com]
{}  Sent: Thursday, February 15, 2001 1:23 PM
{}  To: nebs@world.std.com
{}  Cc: daus...@coppermountain.com
{}  Subject: CO Battery output voltage range
{}  
{}  
{}  Hi All,
{}  I am trying to determine the appropriate Telcordia standard number and title
{}  which defines the absolute minimum and maximum acceptable output voltages
{}  for a CO battery plant. I suspect the range is something like 42VDC absolute
{}  minimum and 56VDC absolute maximum, but it would help to have a reference.
{}  Also, are there any RBOC generated docs that cover this?
{}  
{}  Thanks.
{}  Tom Lavka
{}  Copper Mountain Networks, Inc.
{}  10145 Pacific Heights Blvd., Suite 100
{}  San Diego, CA 92121
{}  Voice:(858)410-7110
{}  Fax: (858)410-7286
{}  email:tla...@coppermountain.com

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Sun Microsystems
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