A T3 connection is a 44.736 Mbps point-to-point dedicated line that provides 672 64-Kbps voice or data channels.
2007-03-21 06:31:53
·
answer #1
·
answered by falconrf 4
·
0⤊
0⤋
A T-3 is a dedicated phone connection supporting data rates of about 43 Mbps. A T-3 line actually consists of 672 individual channels, each of which supports 64 Kbps.
T-3 lines are used mainly by Internet Service Providers (ISPs) connecting to the Internet backbone and for the backbone itself.
T-3 lines are sometimes referred to as DS3 lines.
DS3's are most often delivered via a fiber optic connection mostly an OC-3. They are split from a multiplexer (Fujitsu FLM are popular in the US). Many DS3's can be split from a single Mux.
2007-03-21 07:00:31
·
answer #2
·
answered by dervin g 1
·
0⤊
0⤋
A dedicated phone connection supporting data rates of about 43 Mbps. A T-3 line actually consists of 672 individual channels, each of which supports 64 Kbps.
T-3 lines are used mainly by Internet Service Providers (ISPs) connecting to the Internet backbone and for the backbone itself.
T-3 lines are sometimes referred to as DS3 lines.
T3 T-carrier 3 (digital transmission line, 44.736 Mbps, 672 voice channels)
2007-03-21 06:33:38
·
answer #3
·
answered by ZEN 3
·
0⤊
0⤋
a simple search would have yeilded ann easy answer
What is T3?
A T1 line is the solution for businesses that have more than 200 individuals using the internet simultaneously or businesses that utilize significant voice and data applications. T3 is a group of 21 T1 lines combined together to form a single circuit. This type of T3 circuit is capable of 44.736 Mbps both upstream and downstream. Fractional T3's are the perfect option for businesses who need high-speed Internet downloads and uploads faster than a T1 line but who do not need a full T3 line
2007-03-21 06:34:46
·
answer #4
·
answered by Anonymous
·
0⤊
0⤋
DSL is DSL. not a lot to declare approximately it. that's an evolution of dial-up. Cable is idiotic. the place DSL supplies your max bandwidth in spite of the community load, cable stocks a max bandwidth between dozens of properties, so once you're all utilising it on the comparable time, that's slower for each individual. on the spot internet isn't a "connection sort". Having wireless does not magically supply you internet get right of entry to. except, of direction, you're speaking with regard to the telecoms' internet. 2. All are obtainable everywhere. except you reside in Montana or some thing. 3. they don't. The telecoms forcibly cap bandwidth on cellular information. there is surely no actual catch 22 situation on your velocity or quantity you may acquire. They do it because of the fact they get extra money from you in the event that they do it. era. and additionally you're performing like Comcast does not cap and throttle its cable. They do.
2016-12-19 10:47:18
·
answer #5
·
answered by schulman 4
·
0⤊
0⤋
It stands for Telecommunications carrier 3. This connection has a bandwidth of 45Mbits/s.
These are mostly used in office settings, Schools and hospitals.
2007-03-21 06:32:44
·
answer #6
·
answered by Bjorn 7
·
0⤊
0⤋
T3 speed (45Mbps)
a T-3 line is powered by DS3 technology
it is a dedicated high speed internet connection for big companies.
2007-03-21 06:38:34
·
answer #7
·
answered by S A 3
·
0⤊
0⤋
T-3 is a standard designation for the type of circuit your data is sent/received on. There are T-1, T-2, OC-3, etc etc designations. It's simply the industry way of specifying how much "pipe" you want/have.
2007-03-21 06:32:18
·
answer #8
·
answered by Anonymous
·
0⤊
0⤋
45 mbs..(and yes you really can pull 45 mbs on this link)..
it's an old standard, not deployed much anymore. The price for optical standard circuits are so cheap now that most people just opt for an OC3 (155mbs) b/c it's cheaper then the old standards that the old T/DS-3's run on..
2007-03-21 06:33:00
·
answer #9
·
answered by m34tba11 5
·
0⤊
0⤋
T3 speed (45Mbps)
2007-03-21 06:32:26
·
answer #10
·
answered by discraft_usa 3
·
0⤊
0⤋