Testing & Certification
Field certifiers, OTDR, power meters, insertion loss, return loss, TDR, fiber loss testing methods, and test limits.
- Differentiate permanent link and channel test configurations
- Explain insertion loss, return loss, and crosstalk test parameters
- Describe fiber loss testing using OLTS and reference methods
- Interpret OTDR and TDR traces to locate faults and events
- Identify warranty testing and documentation requirements
Lesson 1
Copper Field Certification - Permanent Link vs Channel
Test Configurations
Copper cable certification uses a field certifier (also called a cable analyzer) to verify that installed cabling meets TIA-568 performance requirements. Two test configurations are defined:
Permanent Link
What it tests: Fixed cabling only
From: Patch panel IDC to outlet IDC
Max length: 90 meters
Excludes: Patch cords and equipment cords
Use: Installer warranty testing
Channel
What it tests: End-to-end path
From: User device to switch port
Max length: 100 meters
Includes: Patch cords on both ends
Use: Application verification
Exam Tip
The permanent link test is what installers perform for warranty certification. It tests only the fixed infrastructure - the cabling and connections you installed. The channel test includes user-supplied patch cords and is used for application troubleshooting.
Test Adapters
Permanent link testing requires permanent link adapters on the field certifier that de-embed the test cord connections from the measurement. Channel testing uses standard channel adapters that include the patch cord connections in the measurement.
Permanent link testing (90 m max) certifies the installed infrastructure for warranty. Channel testing (100 m max) verifies the complete end-to-end path including patch cords. Installers certify permanent links.