Main Distribution Frame
Main Distribution Frame
Like other distribution frames the MDF provides flexibility in assigning facilities, at
lower cost and higher capacity than a patch panel.
The most common kind of large MDF is a long steel rack accessible from both sides. On
one side, termination blocks are arranged horizontally at the front of rack shelves.
Jumpers lie on the shelves and go through a steel hoop to run vertically to other
termination blocks that are arranged vertically. There is a hoop or ring at the intersection
of each level and each vertical. Installing a jumper requires two workers, one on each
side. The shelves are shallow enough to allow the rings to be within arm's reach, but the
workers prefer to hang the jumper on a hook on a pole so their partner can pull it through
the ring. A fanning strip at the back of the termination block prevents the wires from
covering each others' terminals. With disciplined administration the MDF can hold over a
hundred thousand jumpers, changing dozens of them every day, for decades without
tangling.
For the first half of the 20th Century, all MDF jumpers were soldered. This was reliable
but slow and expensive. In the 1960s wire wrap was introduced, and in the 1970s punch
blocks.
Each jumper is a twisted pair. Middle 20th century jumper wires in the USA were 24
AWG single strand copper, with a soft polyethylene inner jacket and a cotton wrapper,
impregnated to make it slightly brittle and easy to remove neatly. Late 20th century ones
had a single, thicker coating of polyethylene, cross-linked to provide the correct degree of
brittleness.
Some urban MDFs are two stories high so they don't have to be more than a city block
long.[citation needed] A few are three stories.[citation needed] By British custom the cables to the
outside world are terminated on the horizontal side, and the indoors equipment on the
vertical side.[citation needed] American usage is vice versa.[citation needed]
Smaller MDFs, and some modern large ones, are single sided so one worker can install,
remove or change a jumper. COSMOS and other computerized Operations Support
Systems help by assigning terminals close to one another, so most jumpers need not be
long and shelves on either type of MDF do not become congested. This database keeps
track of all terminals and jumpers. In the early and middle 20th century these records
were kept as pencil entries in ledger books. The later database method saves much labor
by permitting old jumpers to be reused for new lines.
The adoption of distributed switching in the late 20th century diminished the need for
large, active, central MDFs.
The MDF usually holds central office protective devices including heat coils and
functions as a test point between a line and the office.
Sometimes the MDF is combined with other kinds of distribution frame in a CDF
The MDF in a private branch exchange performs functions similar to those performed by
the MDF in a central office.
In order to automate the manual jumpering the Automated Main Distribution Frame
(AMDF) becomes an important role.
IDFs are used, but are not limited to, telephone exchange central office, customer-
premise equipment, Wide Area Network (WAN), and Local Area Network (LAN)
environments.
In central office environments the IDF may contain circuit termination equipment from
various auxiliary components. In WAN and LAN environments IDFs, can hold devices of
different types including, but not limited to, backup systems (Hard Drives or other media
as self-contained or as Raid Arrays, CD-ROM, etc.), Networking (Switches, Hubs,
Routers), and Connections (Fiber Optics, coaxial, category cables) and so on.
Distribution frame
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
For example, the Main Distribution Frame (MDF) located at a telephone central office
terminates the cables leading to subscribers on the one hand, and cables leading to active
equipment (such as DSLAMs and telephone switches) on the other. Service is provided to
a subscriber by manually wiring a twisted pair (called a jumper wire) between the
telephone line and the relevant DSL or POTS line circuit.
• 1 Types
• 2 Modernization
• 3 See also
• 4 References
[edit] Types
Distribution frames for specific types of signals often have specific acronyms:
[edit] Modernization
Distribution frames may grow to extremely large sizes. In major installations, audio
distribution frames can have as many as 10,000 incoming and outgoing separate copper
wires. (Balanced audio signals require two wires plus earth ground for each signal).
Telephone signals do not use a separate earth ground wire, but some urban exchanges
have about 250,000 wires on their MDF. Installing and rewiring these jumpers is a
labour-intensive task, leading to attempts in the industry to devise so-called active
distribution frames or Automated Main Distribution Frames. The principal issues which
stand in the way of their widespread adoption are cost and reliability.
Newer digital mixing consoles can act as control points for a distribution frame or router,
which can handle audio from multiple studios (even for multiple co-located radio or tv
stations) at the same time. Multiple smaller frames, such as one for each studio, can be
linked together with fibre-optics (which also helps eliminate ground loops), or with
gigabit Ethernet. This has the advantage of not having to route dozens of feeds through
walls (and sometimes floors and ceilings) to a single point.