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Network+ Online Course

Lesson 3 - The Physical Network

Introduction

Synopsis

This chapter deals with the physical aspects of the network and broadly corresponds to issues found at the physical layer of the OSI model. It covers transmission media, both cable and wireless, and the connectors and other miscellaneous hardware it takes to connect everything together. It also covers network topologies, which is the layout of the network.

Lesson Index

A. Cable concepts
B. Cable types
C. Wireless technology
D. Topologies
E. Cable hardware
F. Troubleshooting
Review and Final Exercise

Lesson Objectives

Upon completion of this section, students will:

Discussion

As a network designer, you must grapple with issues such as “how shall I lay out the network” and “what type of cable should I use.” In reality, many of these decisions are taken out of your hands as soon as you decide on a network technology. Small Ethernet LANs have a standard star topology and use category 5 UTP cable. Token Ring LANs use a star-wired ring topology and also use category 5 UTP cable. Does this mean that the information found in this chapter is useless? Clearly not. There will be situations when you will need to extrapolate from a standard network to solve particular problems. Here are a few examples.

Network+ test objectives covered in this lesson

1.1 Recognize the following logical or physical network topologies given a diagram, schematic or description – Star, bus, mesh, ring.

1.4 Recognize the following media connectors and describe their uses – RJ-11, RJ-45, F-Type, ST, SC, IEEE 1394, Fiber LC, MT-RJ, USB.

1.5 Recognize the following media types and describe their uses: Cat 3, 5, 5e & 6, UTP, STP, coaxial cable, single mode and multimode fiber optic cable.

2.15 Identify the basic characteristics of the following Internet access technologies — satellite, wireless.

3.3 Identify the appropriate tool for a given wiring task (e.g. wire crimper, media tester, punch down tool or tone generator).

4.3 Given a network scenario interpret visual indicators (e.g. link & collision LEDs) to determine the nature of a stated problem.

4.7 Given a troubleshooting scenario involving a network with a particular physical topology (i.e., bus, star, mesh, or ring) and including a network diagram, identify the network area affected and the cause of the stated failure.


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