Distribution frame
In telecommunications, a distribution frame is a passive device which terminates cables, allowing arbitrary interconnections to be made.
For example, the main distribution frame located at a telephone central office terminates the cables leading to subscribers on the one hand, and cables leading to active equipment on the other. Service is provided to a subscriber by manually wiring a twisted pair between the telephone line and the relevant DSL or POTS line circuit.
In broadcast engineering, a distribution frame is a location within an apparatus room through which all signals pass, with the ability to arbitrarily route and connect sources and destinations between studios and other internal and external points. Connections can either be soldered, or made using terminal blocks. Because the frame may carry live broadcast signals, it may be considered part of the airchain.
In data communication, a building distribution frame houses data switches, etc.
Types
Distribution frames for specific types of signals often have specific initialisms:- DDF – digital distribution frame
- IDF – Intermediate distribution frame
- MDF – Main distribution frame
- ODF or OFDF – optical fiber distribution frame
- VDF – voice distribution frame
Modernization
Newer digital mixing consoles can act as control points for a distribution frame or router, which can handle audio from multiple studios at the same time. Multiple smaller frames, such as one for each studio, can be linked together with fibre-optics, or with gigabit Ethernet. This has the advantage of not having to route dozens of feeds through walls to a single point.