nanog mailing list archives

Re: T3 Latency


From: Wayne Bouchard <web () typo org>
Date: Sat, 17 Feb 2001 08:41:03 -0700


Or, perhaps a more simplified and easily remembered figure...

RTT on a straight line run from sfo to dc would be ~63ms. (Seems to be
roughly 100 to 120 for most real circuits.)

We all know, however, that telcos rarely use straight lines. Still, I
would not expect more than 6 to 7ms. Perhaps your telcos equipment,
through some fluke, has you operating on the backup path?


On Sat, Feb 17, 2001 at 09:33:02AM -0500, Charles Scott wrote:


Matthew:
  Appears to be a typo in your final number of 130 mi/sec, but I get where
you're going with this. I'm just having a problem trying to figure out how
I end up with a couple thousand fiber miles from Northern Michigan to
Chicago. Should be interesting to sort this one out.

Thanks,

Chuck


On Sat, 17 Feb 2001, Matthew F. Ringel wrote:


The rule of thumb I use is that the speed of light in fiber-optic cable is 
roughly 2x10^8 m/sec.

2x10^8 m/sec = 200,000,000 m/sec = 200,000 km/sec = 200 km/msec =~ 130 mi/sec

I once worked with a customer whose first hop out was ~30ms, regardless of the
load on the line (a t3, iirc).  Sure enough, he was on a very large SONET ring 
that travelled the north-south length of the US roughly twice before his 
traffic went elsewhere.

                                                    ......Matthew


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Wayne Bouchard                                    [Imagine Your     ]
web () typo org                                      [Company Name Here]
Network Engineer
http://www.typo.org/~web/resume.html
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