Why it matters
Minimum compliance is not the same as confidence
Network cabling performance headroom is the difference between a basic PASS result and long-term confidence. When businesses compare structured cabling quotes, the wording can look almost identical.
Cat6A cabling. Professional installation. Fluke tested. Warranty included. But a commercial network is not judged by the cable category printed on a quote. It is judged by how reliably the completed infrastructure supports the building after the installers have left.
It has to support people, Wi-Fi access points, meeting rooms, CCTV, access control, cloud applications, PoE devices and the next round of changes that no one had fully planned when the first cable was installed. That is where the difference lies.
“Anybody can quote Cat6A and provide a pass report. The real difference is the discipline behind the finished installation. We do not want to be another cabling firm that gets to the pass line and stops. We want clients to know that the infrastructure beneath their business has been designed, installed, tested and documented properly for the building it will serve.”
The ACCL benchmark
What the ACCL +3dB standard means
The +3dB standard is ACCL’s internal quality benchmark. It does not replace recognised cabling standards, create a separate certification or claim that every network outcome can be measured by one number.
The applicable project standard still defines the formal requirement. ACCL’s approach is to look beyond a basic PASS result and review the quality, margin and handover evidence behind it.
How ACCL applies the principle
For qualifying copper projects, ACCL applies an internal headroom expectation to agreed key test parameters alongside the required certification standard. Where a link passes the specified test but does not meet the agreed internal expectation, the result is reviewed before handover.
This is an internal ACCL quality benchmark, applied alongside the relevant project testing standard and agreed acceptance criteria.
This page primarily relates to copper twisted-pair structured cabling, including Cat6 and Cat6A links. Fibre infrastructure is assessed separately against the applicable loss budget, test method and project acceptance criteria.
Quality on site
The difference starts before the first cable is pulled
The quality of a finished network is not decided at the test stage alone. It starts with the survey, the questions asked and the assumptions challenged before pricing. A lower-cost quote can sometimes be produced quickly by counting outlets and selecting minimum-compliant components. Commercial buildings are rarely that straightforward.
What good preparation considers
Before the installation starts, ACCL considers the building, current systems, future device demand, cable routes, risers, containment, comms room capacity, Wi-Fi access point locations, PoE requirements, security systems and the practical constraints of working in a live environment.
That is why ACCL’s work is not simply about installing cable. It is about understanding how the building works and what pressure points are likely to appear later.
Modern workplaces
One physical foundation, many critical systems
Structured cabling was once viewed mainly as the connection between a desk and a switch. Today it supports a much wider range of services. A weak, poorly documented or marginal physical layer makes every later technology change harder to plan and support.
AI-ready does not mean “AI cable”
AI tools do not require a special type of cable. Microsoft Copilot, Teams and other cloud platforms do not make every existing Cat6 installation unusable. They can, however, increase a business’s dependency on reliable connectivity, video collaboration, cloud access and connected workplace systems.
For ACCL, AI-ready infrastructure is about ensuring the physical layer has been planned, installed and documented well enough to support a workplace that is becoming more connected.
Relevant ACCL services include structured data cabling, office cabling, commercial Wi-Fi installation, Wi-Fi site surveys, fibre optic installation, CCTV infrastructure, access control installation and data cabinet tidy services.
Buyer guidance
What to ask when comparing cabling quotes
A cabling quote should not be evaluated only on cost per outlet. These questions reveal far more about what the finished installation is likely to be like.
Will every installed link be certified using calibrated test equipment?
Will full test reports, labels and cable schedules be included in the handover pack?
What test standard and configuration will be used for this project?
How are low-margin or unusual results reviewed before sign-off?
How will bend radius, containment capacity and separation from electrical services be managed?
How have future Wi-Fi, PoE, CCTV, access control and device requirements been considered?
Clear limits
What the +3dB standard does not mean
The +3dB standard makes ACCL’s quality position clearer. It should not be used to overstate what cabling alone can guarantee.
Formal certification remains against the applicable project standard and agreed configuration.
A standards-compliant PASS remains a PASS. ACCL’s review creates greater confidence in qualifying work.
Wi-Fi, internet and cloud performance depend on many factors beyond the physical cabling installation.
The right recommendation depends on the existing infrastructure, operations and future plans.
The ACCL position
Not another cabling firm
The difference between ACCL and a basic installation-only contractor is not a slogan or a logo. It is accountability.
We are not simply supplying metres of cable, outlets and a report at the end of the job. We are accountable for the finished infrastructure being sensibly specified, properly installed, fully tested, clearly labelled, useful to the IT team and supported by handover evidence.
That is why the +3dB standard matters. It gives clients a practical way to understand the difference between a network installed to meet a minimum line and one delivered with more care, more evidence and more thought for the future.
Plan with confidence
Bring ACCL in before the scope is fixed
Planning an office move, refurbishment, Wi-Fi upgrade, CCTV installation, access control project or wider AI-ready workplace programme? A free site survey gives ACCL the opportunity to review the building, understand the infrastructure and recommend a practical design for what comes next.
Book a free site surveyFrequently asked questions
Questions clients ask about the +3dB standard
What is the ACCL +3dB standard?
The ACCL +3dB standard is our internal quality benchmark for structured cabling. It is intended to encourage stronger performance headroom, careful installation practice and clear handover evidence in addition to meeting the applicable project test standard.
Is +3dB an industry cabling standard?
No. It is an ACCL internal quality position, not a replacement for ISO, EN, TIA or manufacturer requirements. Formal cabling certification is still completed against the applicable project standard.
Does a cable PASS result mean the installation is perfect?
A PASS result confirms the link met the selected test limit. It is important evidence, but it should sit alongside proper installation practice, sensible result review, clear labelling and useful documentation.
Does the +3dB approach apply to fibre?
This page primarily relates to copper structured cabling. Fibre links are tested against the relevant loss budget, test method and project acceptance criteria.
Does +3dB guarantee better Wi-Fi or faster AI tools?
No. Wi-Fi and application performance depend on many factors, including survey design, switching, internet connectivity, configuration and endpoint devices. Strong physical infrastructure gives those systems a better foundation to work from.
Related pages
Explore the infrastructure behind the standard
Technical references
External references are included to support standards terminology and technology context.



