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Parallel vs. serial, Transmission speed, Figure 7-3. modes of link operation – AT&T DEFINITY 7200 series User Manual

Page 148: The speeds at which the dtes operate

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7-6

DATA CONNECTIVITY — AN OVERVIEW

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RECEIVE

SEND

MODES OF OPERATION

FULL DUPLEX

HALF DUPLEX
(TURNAROUND)

SIMPLEX

Figure 7-3. Modes of Link Operation

Parallel vs. Serial

The terms parallel and serial describe how bits are sent over the transmission media (see figure 7-4).

With parallel transmission, all the bits composing the byte are transmitted at the same time, each bit
being sent over a different subchannel. At the receiving end, all the bits are received at the same time
and the byte is reconstructed. Parallel transmission is usually used over low-speed lines since it
multiplies the line speed by the number of subchannels used in the connection. Parallel transmission is
limited to 17 feet because, over greater distances, variations in the speed of the subchannels may occur,
causing transmission errors.

With serial transmission, the bits are sent, one after another, over a single transmission channel. Data
transmitted through your communications system is sent serially.

Transmission Speed

Transmission channels that are switched through your communications system can travel at speeds up to 64
kbps. At the DTEs and DCEs speeds can be set to the following values: 300 bps, and 1.2, 2.4, 4.8, 9.6,
19.2, 56, and 64 kbps.

When you set the speed of the devices in a link, you should remember than the link speed is limited by the
slowest device in the transmission path. Therefore, all devices in the transmission path should be set to the
speed of the slowest device. This prevents data loss resulting, for example, from a DTE that runs faster
than the DCE with which it communicates.