What Is This Tool?
This tool allows you to convert data transfer rates from the T2 (signal) unit, a legacy digital telecommunications carrier rate, into terabytes per second (TB/s), a unit that represents extremely high data transfer speeds relevant for modern storage and network systems.
How to Use This Tool?
-
Enter the value in T2 (signal) that you wish to convert.
-
Select the output unit as terabyte per second [TB/s].
-
Click the convert button to see the equivalent data transfer rate.
-
Use the result to compare or plan with modern data transfer metrics.
Key Features
-
Converts legacy T2 (signal) telecommunications rates to modern TB/s units.
-
Supports understanding of historical medium-capacity leased line speeds.
-
Expresses data transfer rates in a standardized decimal-based terabyte per second format.
-
Helps integrate older telecommunication metrics with current high-performance computing and storage measurements.
Examples
-
10 T2 (signal) equals approximately 7.1759131969884e-6 TB/s.
-
1000 T2 (signal) equals approximately 0.00071759131969884 TB/s.
Common Use Cases
-
Evaluating legacy medium-capacity leased lines and trunk connections in historical telecommunication setups.
-
Translating old enterprise PBX trunk link speeds into current data transfer rates for system upgrades.
-
Planning and analyzing data center infrastructure that integrates legacy communications with modern high-bandwidth storage and networks.
-
Converting diverse legacy data rates in research environments handling scientific instrument data streams.
Tips & Best Practices
-
Understand that T2 (signal) is a nominal legacy rate and may not reflect actual transmission speeds.
-
Use the converted TB/s values to facilitate comparison with modern data transfer units, not as precise current speed measurements.
-
Be aware of unit distinctions, as TB/s uses decimal SI bytes, which differ from binary-based tebibyte units sometimes used in computing.
-
Combine this conversion with additional context about network or storage infrastructure for better planning.
Limitations
-
T2 (signal) is an outdated unit tied to legacy telecommunications technology, limiting its current practical relevance.
-
Conversion is based on nominal rates and excludes overhead or real-world network inefficiencies.
-
Differences may exist when comparing TB/s values to binary units like TiB/s used in some computing contexts.
Frequently Asked Questions
-
What is T2 (signal) used for?
-
T2 (signal) was used historically in North American telecommunications to provide medium-capacity leased lines and trunk connections between telephone central offices.
-
Why convert T2 (signal) to terabyte per second?
-
Converting T2 (signal) to TB/s helps express legacy telecommunication data rates in a modern, standardized unit suitable for comparing with current storage and network throughput measurements.
-
Is the conversion exact for real-world data transmission?
-
No, the conversion assumes nominal rates and does not factor in protocol overheads or real transmission inefficiencies.
Key Terminology
-
T2 (signal)
-
A legacy digital carrier level in the North American T-carrier system transmitting at nominal 6.312 megabits per second for medium-capacity leased lines.
-
Terabyte/second (TB/s)
-
A unit of data transfer rate defined as the transfer of one terabyte (10^12 bytes) of data each second, used in high-bandwidth network and storage contexts.