That's just Cisco's bizarre way of showing you bandwidth utilization. 
Convert it to a percentage and you will see that you have no problem:

28/255 = about 11 percent utilization
14/255 = a little over 5 percent utilization

Theoretically you could get to 100 percent utilization, since on a T1 you 
don't have to worry about collisions, like you would on Ethernet.

The recommendation we used to use at Network General was that average WAN 
utilization should not exceed 70 percent, averaged over a 10-minute window. 
That way you have some head room. (Using a 10-minute window allows you to 
capture a reasonable number of data points over a long period of time, so 
you can get a baseline.)

Priscilla

At 12:31 PM 10/27/00, Rakesh Singh wrote:
>Guys,
>      I am getting the following when I give Sh int
>serial command.It is a full T1.
>
>
>reliablility 255/255, txload 14/255, rxload 28/255
>
>I am not getting any input/output errors,no packet
>drops.When one application is launched rxload shoots
>up from the existing value of 4/255 to 28/255 on one
>end of T1 where application is launched.
>
>On the other end of T1 txload goes up to 15/255 from
>existing value of 4/255.
>
>Any idea the permitted range for rxload and txload.
>
>Thanks,
>Rakesh
>
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