How do you get that? [7:41832]

2002-04-18 Thread Kelly Cobean
All, I was wondering if any of you have a good link to a site that explains how the bandwidth is derived for T-1/T-3 circuits. What I'm looking for specifically is how we come to 1.544 Mb/s for a T-1 that is 24x64K channels which = 1536K, and what happens to the other 8K, and the same calculat

RE: How do you get that? [7:41832]

2002-04-18 Thread Steve Smith
11:33 AM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: How do you get that? [7:41832] All, I was wondering if any of you have a good link to a site that explains how the bandwidth is derived for T-1/T-3 circuits. What I'm looking for specifically is how we come to 1.544 Mb/s for a T-1 that is 24x64K channel

RE: How do you get that? [7:41832]

2002-04-18 Thread Kelly Cobean
02 1:31 PM To: Kelly Cobean; [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: RE: How do you get that? [7:41832] You can credit Scott Morris for this explanation: Let's go way back to voice sampling days (where our DS0s and T-1 originate) and look at the bandwidth of each voice line. The human voice occupies 3,

RE: How do you get that? [7:41832]

2002-04-18 Thread Rico Ortiz
: Thursday, April 18, 2002 12:33 PM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: How do you get that? [7:41832] All, I was wondering if any of you have a good link to a site that explains how the bandwidth is derived for T-1/T-3 circuits. What I'm looking for specifically is how we come to 1.544 Mb/s

RE: How do you get that? [7:41832]

2002-04-18 Thread Michael Williams
"All you wanted to know about T1 but were afriad to ask" padding padding padding http://www.dcbnet.com/notes/9611t1.html HTH, Mike W. Message Posted at: http://www.groupstudy.com/form/read.php?f=7&i=41852&t=41832 -- FAQ, list archives, and subsc

RE: How do you get that? [7:41832]

2002-04-18 Thread Logan, Harold
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: RE: How do you get that? [7:41832] You can credit Scott Morris for this explanation: Let's go way back to voice sampling days (where our DS0s and T-1 originate) and look at the bandwidth of each voice line. The human voice occupies 3,200 Hz of sound waves. We cover s

Re: How do you get that? [7:41832]

2002-04-18 Thread Tom Lisa
: Thursday, April 18, 2002 12:33 PM > To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > Subject: How do you get that? [7:41832] > > All, >I was wondering if any of you have a good link to a site that explains > how the bandwidth is derived for T-1/T-3 circuits. What I'm looking for > specifica