Patton unveils RoHS-compliant G.703/G.704 IDC Krone baluns

July 17, 2006
July 17, 2006 -- The company's RoHS-compliant Model 430 single-port E1/E2 balun series is designed to provide easy coaxial/twisted-pair conversion for high-density G.703/G.704 installations.

Patton Electronics, a provider of network access and connectivity platforms, has unveiled its latest G.703/G.704 balun product line. The company's "ultra-miniature" Model 430 single- port E1/E2 IDC Krone balun series complies with the European Union's (EU's) recently enacted Restrictions on Hazardous Substances (RoHS) directive.

The company contends that the tiny, single-port baluns can cut costs in telecom environments by providing conversion from expensive coaxial cable to lower-cost copper twisted pairs. The company says the baluns ultra-miniature size conserves space in central office locations by facilitating high density installation within a digital distribution frame (DDF).

According to the company, the Model 430 features 3-pole Krone-type insulation displacement connectors (IDC) that install quickly and easily. No special tools are required to strip, screw, or solder the copper wire. The balun series offers a range of industry-standard coaxial connectors, including male and female versions of BNC, Type 43, 1.6/5.6, and 1.0/2.3.

In addition to physical interface conversion, the company says the baluns provide electrical impedance matching between 75-Ohm coaxial and 120-Ohm copper conductors, with transparent bi-directional signal conversion at speeds ranging from 2 to 8 Mbit/sec. No AC or DC power is required.

Up to 32 baluns can be mounted in the company's Model 430R panel, which is designed for installation in a standard 19-inch telecom equipment rack. The fully shielded baluns can also be cable-mounted.

Along with the new balun series, the company recently announced that its Model 460F (dual-E1 balun) and Model 460RC/16/F (16-port dual-E1 modular balun rack) are also RoHS compliant.

Sponsored Recommendations

imVision® - Industry's Leading Automated Infrastructure Management (AIM) Solution

May 29, 2024
It's hard to manage what you can't see. Read more about how you can get visiability into your connected environment.

Adapt to higher fiber counts

May 29, 2024
Learn more on how new innovations help Data Centers adapt to higher fiber counts.

Going the Distance with Copper

May 29, 2024
CommScopes newest SYSTIMAX 2.0 copper solution is ready to run the distanceand then some.