The main difference between QSFP+ and QSFP56 is their data transmission rate and power consumption.
QSFP+ (Quad Small Form-factor Pluggable Plus) is capable of transmitting data at a rate of up to 40 Gbps over a multi-mode fiber or copper cable, and up to 4x10 Gbps over a single-mode fiber. It has a power consumption of around 3.5W per port.
QSFP56, on the other hand, is capable of transmitting data at a rate of up to 200 Gbps over a multi-mode fiber or copper cable, and up to 400 Gbps over a single-mode fiber. It has a higher power consumption compared to QSFP+, at around 7W per port.
In summary, QSFP56 has a higher data transmission rate and power consumption compared to QSFP+.
Form factor & connectors
The term "form factor" refers to the standardized size and shape (or footprint ) of the optic, but other design features also help create each standard's definition. While there are many different transceiver form factors to consider, a few standards are more universal than the others.
Which you need is primarily determined by what form factors are compatible in the switch or router the optic is to be plugged in to, so it is always good to check what your system accepts.
AddOn's SFP-10G-SR-S-AO Cisco Compatible 1G SFP+ 40km LC Transceiver
Without the right form factor for your network environment, the optic may not fit into your switch or router at all. If it does connect, it may have impaired performance.
Can I use 100G QSFP28 port based with 40G QSFP+ transceiver?
Most Switches, Network Packet Broker (NPB), and other Network Element allow the use of 40G QSFP+ optics within QSFP28 slot to support 10G using fanout/Breakout cable or 40G Multimode straight conectivity using MTP to MTP fiber cable.
SFP vs SFP+ vs XFP vs QSFP+ vs CFP vs QSFP28 Differences
Through the above definitions of each type of fiber optic transceiver module, you may have a further understanding of them. Now, we are comparing these transeiver one by one.
SFP vs SFP+ (SFP+ vs SFP): Simple to understand, SFP+ is an updated vision
of SFP. SFP usually support 1.25Gbit/s to 4.25 Gbit/s while SFP+ supports data
rates up to 10 Gbit/s. When it comes to SFP vs SFP+, they have the same size and
appearance, but in a different standard which SFP is based on IEEE802.3 and
SFF-8472.
SFP+ vs XFP (XFP vs SFP+): In comparison to earlier XFP modules, SFP+ modules leave more circuitry to be implemented on the host board instead of inside the module. The size of SFP+ is smaller than XFP, thus it moves some functions to motherboard, including signal modulation function, MAC, CDR and EDC. XFP is based on the standard of XFP MSA while SFP+ is compliance with the protocol of IEEE 802.3ae, SFF-8431, SFF-8432.
SFP+ vs QSFP+: QSFP+ has four-channel SFP+ interfaces which can transfer rates up to 40Gbps. And of course, they have different standards.
CFP vs QSFP+: QSFP+ (Quad Small Form-Factor Pluggable Plus) modules offer customers a wide variety of high-density 40 Gigabit Ethernet. The CFP is a hot-pluggable transceiver module form factor that supports a wide range of 40Gb/s and 100Gb/s applications such as 40G and 100G Ethernet.
Related
What size is a QSFP DD module
What is the full form of QSFP DD
What speed is QSFP DD supported
How does the QSFP DD 400G LR4 optical transceiver accomplish a data rate of 400Gbps
Subscribe to the newsletter
for all the latest updates.
2-5# Building, Tongfuyu Industrial Zone, Aiqun Road, Shiyan Street, Baoan District, Shenzhen. China