-A-
A & B Signalling
A signalling method used in T1 transmission in which one bit, robbed
from each of the 24 sub-channels in every sixth frame, is used for carrying
and controlling information. See also Robbed Bit Signalling (RBS).
A, B, C & D Signalling
A signalling method in which the A bit is robbed from the 6th frame, the
B bit is robbed from the 12th frame, the C bit is robbed from the 18th frame
and the D bit is robbed from the 24th frame. See also ESF, Robbed Bit
Signalling.
alternating current (AC)
A current which alternates between negative and positive voltage sources
in a cyclic manner. Commonly, the 120 volts of electricity delivered by a
power utility company to an outlet.
access charge
The cost assessed to communications customers for accessing the
interexchange, intrastate and interstate phone network to originate and
receive calls.
AccunetT
A family of digital long-distance transmission services from AT&T
Communications including the use of leased and high speed lines, and a
packet switching digital network.
Adaptive Differential Pulse Code Modulation (ADPCM)
A voice digitization technique which uses various speeds (e.g. 32 kbps)
per voice channel.
adaptive equalization
An equalization that is adjusted during a transmission in order to
compensate for variations in line characteristics.
adaptive routing
The routing that automatically adjusts to network changes such as traffic
patterns or failures.
address
1. The destination of the data sent through a communications system.
Multiple terminals on one communications line must each have a unique address.
2. A group of digits that make up a telephone number. Also known as the called number.
aggregate card
A circuit board that interfaces between data terminal equipment and a T1
link. It provides the allocation of bandwidth over a T1 link.
alarm
A signal generated when an abnormal network condition exists. D/I Mux III
multiplexers also indicate alarms due to shelf problems. Four types of alarm
conditions are:
- System Node Alarm: Indicates abnormal node conditions.
- Major Alarm: Indicates major abnormal conditions where service is
disrupted or out.
- Minor Alarm: Indicates minor abnormal conditions where service is not
disrupted.
- Status Alarm: Indicates information messages about the status of an
action or event.
All Rate Office Channel Unit Data Port (All Rate OCDUP)
A Coastcom programmable channel card that interfaces data applications
onto the T1 transmission line(s). The All Rate OCUDP supports Dataphone
Digital Service (DDS) primary data rates, switched 56 kbps, dial-out, and a
secondary channel. It may be set at various transmission data rates: 2.4,
4.8, 9.6, 19.2, and 56 kbps with the primary channel. The secondary channel
supports 4-wire transmission rates of 3.2, 6.4, 12.8, 25.6 and 72 kbps with
1.2, 2.4, 3.2 and 6.4 kbps secondary channel rates.
alternate route
A secondary or backup communications route used when normal routing is
temporarily unavailable.
Alternate Mark Inversion (AMI)
A line code that employs a ternary signal to convey binary digits, in
which successive binary ones are represented by signal elements that are
normally of alternating, positive and negative polarity but equal in
amplitude, and in which binary zeros are represented by signal elements that
have zero amplitude. This is the primary mode for T1.
amplitude modulation (AM)
A form of modulation in which the amplitude of the carrier is varied in
accordance with the instantaneous value of the modulating signal.
ampere (amps)
A measure of electrical current that is equal to watts divided by volts.
amplitude
The extreme range of a voltage or current.
analog
A signal which may continuously vary voltage and/or current.
analog channel
An analog channel is a transmission channel which is provided on audio
pairs or analog transmission systems, and which is voice frequency at both
ends.
analog trunk
A circuit that interconnects two analog devices.
American Standard Code for Information Interchange (ASCII)
A standard format for representing characters so that data from one
computer or communications device can be recognized and understood by other
computers and communications devices.
asynchronous
A method of data transmission that allows characters to be sent at
irregular intervals by preceding each character with a start bit and
following it with a stop bit. In asynchronous data transmission, bits may
not be of uniform duration, causing variable time delays between characters.
Asynchronous data transmission is usually used for low-speed devices.
attenuation
A decrease in the magnitude of the current, voltage, or power of a
signal.
auto answer
The capability of a terminal, modem, computer or similar device to
respond to an incoming call on a dial-up telephone line and to establish a
data connection with a remote device without operator intervention.
Auto Dial-Up
A modem with the ability to dial into a telephone network and answer
incoming data calls.
Automatic Loop Protection Switching (ALPS)
ALPS is a D/I Mux III multiplexer feature. When the T1 transmission paths
in a network of D/I Mux III multiplexers are connected in a ring
configuration, the ALPS feature protects against single-point or multi-point
failures. Up to a total of 24 DS0 channels can be protected within the ring.
ALPS provides automatic protection from a failed transmission path and
complete protection from a single transmission path failure. A failed
transmission path is detected whenever there is loss of clock or an alarm
indication signal (AIS) unframed "all ones." Protection switching occurs
within 500 milliseconds without the need for network management control.
Automatic Ringdown
The ringing that occurs when a phone is picked up, off-hook and rings at
the other end. Used in point-to-point configurations.
-B-
bandwidth
The range of frequencies available to transmit signals for a specific
media. It is measured in Hertz.
baud rate
A measure of signalling speed in data communications that specifies the
number of signal elements that can be transmitted per second.
baseband
A form of modulation in which signals are pulsed directly on the
transmission medium without frequency division.
baseband signalling
The transmission of a digital or analog signal at its original
frequencies, not changed by modulation.
BER
See Bit Error Ratio.
BERT
See Bit Error Ratio Test.
Bipolar Eight Zero Substitution (B8ZS)
A method of satisfying the ones' density requirements of a digital T1
carrier facility in the public network while allowing 64 kbps of clear
channel data. Strings of eight consecutive zeros are replaced by an
eight-bit code containing two intentional bipolar violations.
binary
A numbering system that describes values with only two mathematical
digits: zero (0) or one (1).
bipolar
A signal which varies positively and negatively around zero.
bipolar return-to-zero (BRZ)
A bipolar signal in which each pulse returns to zero amplitude before its
time period ends. This prevents the buildup of a DC current on the signal
line.
bipolar violation (BPV)
The occurrence of two successive pulses of the same polarity in an AMI
bipolar signal. In T1 it is detected as an error and considered a violation
of the Alternate Mark Inversion technique.
bit
A basic unit of data in a binary system. A bit is either a one (1) digit
or a zero (0) digit. The word "bit" is a contraction of the words "binary
digit". See also mark, one.
Bit Error Rate (BER)
The ratio of bits with errors to the total number of bits detected,
usually expressed as a number with an exponent to a power of ten. Used to
measure the quality of a signal path.
Bit Error Rate Test (BERT)
A type of digital line test in which a known pattern of bits is
transmitted and compared with received bits to determine the Bit Error Rate
(BER).
bit rate
The rate of transmission of a data signal, stated as bits-per-second
(bps). Higher rates are stated as kilobits-per-second (kbps) and
megabits-per-second (Mbps).
bit 7 stuffing
A technique to meet ones density requirements wherein the seventh bit in
any 8-bit word containing all zeros is changed to one. Used in T1 lines to
prevent loss of synchronization from 15 or more consecutive zero (0) bits.
This method can only be used on voice channels.
blocking
1. The inability to interconnect to lines in a network cross-connect or
switch
because all possible paths between them are already in use.
2. The intentional prevention of data passing through a system.
bps
Bits-per-second. The measure of speed in serial communications.
BPV
See Bipolar Violation.
broadband
A broadband facility (usually a coaxial cable) that can carry numerous
voice, video, and data channels simultaneously, each channel taking up a
different frequency on the cable. Broadband cables are typically used for
broadcasting multiple channels, while baseband is used more frequently for
office LANs.
BRZ
See Bipolar Return-to-Zero.
bus
A transmission path or channel with one or more conductors in which all
attached devices receive all transmissions at the same time.
byte
A sequence of eight consecutive bits used as a unit to represent
information.
bypass
1. To go around a system or device.
2. Private network operation that can access long distance transmission
facilities without going through the local exchange carrier.
3. The connection between the call origin point and the final destination
point.
byte stuffing
Insertion of specific information bytes into a data stream which acts as
a control for that stream of data.
B8ZS
See Bipolar Eight Zero Substitution.
-C-
Carrier Failure Alarm (CFA)
An alarm that results from an out-of-frame or loss-of-carrier condition.
carrier frequency
The frequency of the carrier wave that is modulated to transmit signals.
Carrier Group Alarm (CGA)
An alarm indicating that a signal derived from multiplexing a group of
channels, typically 24, has failed. In T1, a carrier group alarm indicates
the failure of the DS1 signal.
carrier signalling
Any signalling techniques used in multi-channel carrier transmission. The
most commonly used techniques are in-band signalling, out-of-band signalling,
separate channel signalling and common channel signalling.
carrier system
The means of obtaining a number of channels over a single path by
modulating each channel on a different carrier frequency and demodulating at
the receiving point to restore the signals to their original form.
CB
See Channel Bank.
CCU
See Common Control Unit.
Cellular One Synchronous Data Channel Unit (CEL 1 SDCU)
The Cellular 1 Synchronous Data Channel Unit is a data interface for
Coastcom D/I Mux III multiplexers. The CEL1 SDCU is a channel card designed
to be used in cellular telephone networks. It is used in conjunction with
4-Wire E&M channel cards to extend the cellular network capability.
Central Processing Unit (CPU)
The intelligent main processor of a computer or other information
handling system which controls, organizes and processes all incoming and
outgoing information.
Central Office (CO)
A location where communications common carriers terminate customer lines
and where switching equipment is located. The central office is also
referred to as the exchange or end office.
CFA
See Carrier Failure Alarm.
CGA
See Carrier Group Alarm.
channel
The part of a transmission bandwidth which carries one circuit's
information. In T1, the lowest data rate that can be directly multiplexed
onto the T1 line. There are 24 channels in a T1 signal. Typically customer
premise equipment signals are converted onto a channel.
Channel Bank (CB)
The telecommunications equipment that converts DS0 circuits into a T1
channel format and translates received channels into circuits.
Channel Service Unit (CSU)
The first device encountered by a T1 line entering a facility. The CSU
protects the equipment from damage due to disturbances on the T1 line and
regenerates the T1 signal to meet specifications. The CSU also provides a
network loop point used to test the integrity of the span. A CSU is required
in order to interface the Customer Premise Equipment (CPE) to the Public
Switch Network (PSN).
circuit
A communications path between two or more points.
circuit switching
The temporary direct connection of one or more channels between two or
more points, which provides the user with the exclusive use of an open
channel in order to exchange information. A discrete circuit path is set up
between the incoming and outgoing lines, in contrast to message switching
and packet switching. Also called line switching.
clear channel
A transmission path where the full 64 kbps bandwidth is available to the
customer.
clock
The timing pulses used to synchronize transmissions.
clocking
The defining of a time base in a transmission system in order to control
the timing of certain functions such as the duration of signal elements. See
also Timing.
cloud
The cloud is described as such because the customer can connect at one
point on it and expects the data/voice input to continue to the other side,
properly sequenced and formatted at the output. Also called the public
network.
CODEC
A Coder/Decoder device that converts analog signals to digital signals
for transmission over a digital medium and back again to the original analog
form. A CODEC is required at each end of the communications channel. It is
sometimes referred to as a "de-converter".
common carrier
A public provider of communications services.
Common Control Unit (CCU)
The Common Control Unit (CCU) acts as the master controller for the
D/I Mux III system. The CCU maintains all shelf configuration information
and provides a control interface for the user.
common equipment
In the Coastcom D/I Mux III multiplexer, the common equipment consists of
a T1 interface or T1 CSU, two line interface units, a common control unit, a
strobe and one or more power supplies. In the D/I Mux III, the common
equipment performs the essential multiplexing functions.
In telephone systems, common equipment refers to items that are used by
more than one phone for processing calls.
concentrator
A device that connects a number of circuits that are not all used at once
to a smaller group of circuits for the purpose of economical transmission.
control byte
In T1, a byte that is reserved to only carry control and monitoring
information.
controlled slip
The result of an underflow or overflow of a frame buffer. A frame buffer
will slip by repeating or deleting all the data bits in a frame. See also
frame slip and uncontrolled slip.
control signals
The signals that pass between one part of a communications system and
another to control the system.
CPE
See Customer Premise Equipment.
CPU
See Central Processing Unit.
Cyclic Redundancy Check (CRC)
A method of checking the integrity of received data, in which the check
uses a polynomial algorithm based on the content of the data.
cross modulation
The interference caused by the interaction of two or more carriers in a
transmission system.
cross talk
A form of background noise that occurs when a signal from one channel
causes an unwanted signal in another channel.
cross talk attenuation
The extent to which a communications system resists cross talk.
CSU
See Channel Service Unit.
Customer Premise Equipment (CPE)
Any communications equipment owned by the customer and which is connected
to the public telephone network.
cutover
The physical changing of lines from one system to another, usually at the
time of a new system installation.
-D-
D1, D2
T1 framing that divides the T1 into 24 channels resulting in equal 64
kbps transmission channels (one DS0). The D1D and D2 specify the numbering
sequence of the 24 DS0s in a T1 frame.
D1D Channel Assignments
Channel Time Slot Channel Assignments
1 1
2 13
3 2
4 14
5 3
6 15
7 4
8 16
9 5
10 17
11 6
12 18
13 7
14 19
15 8
16 20
17 9
18 21
19 10
20 22
21 11
22 23
23 12
24 24
D2 Channel Assignments
Channel Time Slot Channel Assignments
1 12
2 13
3 1
4 17
5 5
6 21
7 9
8 15
9 3
10 19
11 7
12 23
13 11
14 14
15 2
16 18
17 6
18 22
19 10
20 16
21 4
22 20
23 8
24 24
D3, D4
T1 framing that divides the T1 into 24 channels resulting in equal 64
kbps transmission channels (one DS0 channel). The D3 and D4 specify the
numbering sequence of the 24 DS0s in a T1 frame.
D3/D4 Channel Assignments
Channel Time Slot Channel Assignments
1 1
2 2
3 3
4 4
5 5
6 6
7 7
8 8
9 9
10 10
11 11
12 12
13 13
14 14
15 15
16 16
17 17
18 18
19 19
20 20
21 21
22 22
23 23
24 24 data bridge
A device which combines two separate data streams into a single data
stream.
data circuit
A communications path between two or more points transporting data.
Data Communications Equipment (DCE)
Any devices used to transport information from Data Terminal Equipment to
other Data Terminal Equipment (DTE) or a host computer.
Data Line Interface (DLI)
The point at which a data line is connected to a communications system.
data link
Any serial data communications transmission path, generally between two
adjacent nodes or devices, and without any intermediate switching nodes.
Data Terminal Equipment (DTE)
The equipment such as a computer or a printer that originates and
terminates data transmission signals. In RS-232C connections, the
designation of either DTE or DCE determines the signalling role of the
handshaking lines.
Data Service Unit (DSU)
A device used to connect terminal equipment to a digital communications
line.
data transmission
The process of transmitting information as digital pulses; the movement
of information in coded form as electrical energy.
Dataphone Digital Service (DDS)
Private line digital service, typically with data rates at 2400, 4800,
9600 and 56,000 bits per second. Part of AT&T's Accunet(tm) family of
offerings.
dB
Decibel. A unit for measuring relative strength of a signal parameter
such as power or voltage. The number of decibels is ten times the logarithm
(base 10) of the power of two signals, or the ratio of the power of one
signal to a reference level:
dBm
Decibels relative to one milliwatt.
dBr
Relative level in decibels.
DDS
Dataphone Digital Service.
dedicated circuit
A transmission line without any switching functions, used exclusively by
one circuit.
default (values)
Hardware or software responses that are preset by the manufacturer and
allow the equipment or software to operate without any additional
programming being supplied by the user.
delay
In communications, the elapsed time between two events; the beginning
moment a signal is sent and the ending moment the same signal is received.
Deluxe 4-Wire E&M Channel Card
The Deluxe 4-Wire E&M channel card operates in the Coastcom D/I Mux III
multiplexer. The dual capability provides two 4-wire voice frequency
circuits plus signalling. Each circuit occupies one standard DS0 channel.
demarc
The demarcation point between carrier equipment and customer premises
equipment (CPE).
demodulation
The process of retrieving data from a modulated carrier wave; the reverse
of modulation.
diagnostic programs
Software routines used to check for equipment malfunctions and to
pinpoint faulty components.
dial-up
The process, equipment, or facilities involved in establishing a
connection through the switched network.
Digital Access Cross-connect System (DCS)
The equipment used to route circuits to a specific location and often
used to group voice and data calls together, sending them over one T1 line
to another location.
digital
Transmission of signals encoded in binary form.
digital loopback
The diagnostic feature for testing the digital processing circuitry of a
communications device. A loopback can be initiated locally or remotely. The
device being tested will echo back a receive test message after first
decoding and will then re-encode it. The results are then compared with the
original message.
digital network
A network incorporating both digital switching and digital transmission.
digital signal (DS)
A discontinuous signal whose state consists of ones (1s) and zeros (0s).
Digital Signal Designation
The categories of the North American Digital Hierarchy that specify the
transmission data rate and other technical specifications. They are: DS0,
DS1, DS2, DS3, and DS4. The DS stands for digital signal level.
digital switching
The process of establishing and maintaining a connection, under stored-program control, in which binary-encoded information is routed
between an input and an output port. This method is more efficient than
requiring dedicated circuits for the period of time that connections are set
up.
Direct Connect Card (DCC)
Data cards with direct connections to interfaces such as V.35, RS-232C or
RS-252.
Direct Inward Dialing (DID)
An option that enables a caller from outside a company to call an
internal extension without having to pass through an operator or attendant.
distortion
An unwanted change in a waveform that occurs between points in a
transmission system.
distribution frame
A structure for terminating permanent wires of telephone exchanges and
private branch exchanges and to facilitate the change of connections between
them by means of cross-connecting wires.
DNIS
Dial Number Information Service.
downtime
The total time that a system is out of service due to equipment failure.
DP
1. Dial pulse (signalling).
2. Distribution point.
DPC
Digital Program Channel.
drop
The receive connection made available for a terminal unit on a
transmission line.
drop and insert
The ability to demultiplex (or drop) up to 24 channels from a T1 line
passing through a node and multiplex (or insert) the same number of channels
onto that line toward the next node. The remaining channels on the T1 line
pass through the node unaffected.
DS0
A 64 kbps channel. There are 24 DS0 time slots in a T1 line.
DSU
See Data Service Unit.
DTE
See Data Terminal Equipment.
DTMF
See Dual Tone Multifrequency Signalling.
Dual Channel Bank (DCB)
In a Dual Channel Bank operation, a D/I Mux III multiplexer terminiates
two T1 transmission lines. The Dual Channel Bank mode allows the system to
synchronize with the T1 network (loop timing mode) or supply timing to the
T1 network (local timing mode). Dual Channel Bank operation requires
Coastcom's Line Interface Units with slip buffers. The slip buffer LIUs
align all clocks, bytes, frames and multiframes to one common multiframe.
T1 inputs and outputs are synchronized to the same multiframe signal.
Dual Tone Multifrequency Signalling (DTMF)
A method of signalling in which a matrix combination of two frequencies
is used to transmit numerical dialing information.
Dual 2-Wire Foreign Exchange Office Channel Card (FXO)
The Coastcom Dual 2-Wire Foreign Exchange Office channel card
(Dual 2-Wire FXO) plugs into the Coastcom D/I Mux III multiplexer. The
FXO channel card is perceived by the switch to be a standard telephone. The
switch supplies talk battery, ringing, busy signals and all of the other
telephone requirements; the FXO channel card provides on-hook, off-hook and
dial pulse or touch-tone number signalling.
Dual 2-Wire Foreign Exchange Subscriber (FXS)
Coastcom's Dual 2-Wire Foreign Exchange Subscriber (Dual 2-Wire FXS)
channel card plugs into the D/I Mux III multiplexer shelf. Located at a
remote or receiving location(s), the FXS channel card transports received
digital signals that imitate the original, central office or user switch
locations and communicates the information to a standard telephone.
Dual 4-Wire E&M
Coastcom's Dual 4-Wire channel card operates in the D/I Mux III
multiplexer. The E&M channel cards offered by Coastcom can connect a group
of PBX's together in a private T1 network. Companies with extensive internal
communications between various office locations can benefit by dedicating a
T1 network to internal communications.
Dual 4-Wire Transmission Only (TO)
Coastcom's Dual 4-Wire TO channel card provides a toll quality E&M
interface between the D/I Mux III common equipment and two 4-wire trunks.
The difference between this card and other 4-wire channel cards is that this
card is hardwired for voice transmission-only mode.
dumb terminal
A data terminal with no processing or programming capability.
duplex circuit
A circuit used for transmission in both directions at the same time. It
can be called "full duplex" to distinguish it from "half duplex."
duplex
A two-way data transmission mode in which transmission can occur in both
directions simultaneously.
-E-
Ericsson Digital Channel Unit (EDCU)
A Coastcom digital interface channel card used in conjunction with the
D/I Mux III multiplexer. The Ericsson Digital channel unit is designed to
extend cellular phone service to remote locations over the public network
telephone company, T1, fiber or microwave media. Used with the
D/I Mux III multiplexer and configured with the appropriate channel
cards, the EDCU extends the features and increases the cellular phone
coverage area without loss of performance.
E&M
A method of signalling that uses separate paths for voice and signalling.
E&M may refer to ear and mouth or earth and magnet.
electromagnetic interference (EMI)
Radiation leakage outside a transmission medium that results mainly from
the use of high-frequency wave energy and signal modulation. EMI can be
reduced by appropriate shielding.
end office
A central office to which a telephone subscriber is connected.
EPROM
Erasable Programmable Read-Only Memory.
equalization
The technique of altering the output impedance of a circuit to compensate
for losses in amplitude and delay due to the line impedance of the
transmission medium.
error rate
The ratio of the number of bits, elements, characters or blocks
incorrectly received to the total number of bits, elements, characters, or
blocks transmitted.
ESF
See Extended Superframe.
exchange, private branch
A private automatic telephone exchange that provides for the internal
switching of calls to and from the public telephone network.
expandor
A transducer that, for a given amplitude range of input voltages,
produces a larger range of output voltages. An expandor is used in
conjunction with a compression system. The compressor lowers the voltage
levels and the expandor recreates the original signal.
Extended Superframe (ESF)
A framing format that extends the D4 framing format from 12 to 24 frames.
Overhead bit positions are shared between an Extended Superframe (ESF)
alignment signal, a Cyclic Redundancy Check (CRC) and a Facility Data Link (FDL).
external clock
An external clocking source to a D/I Mux III multiplexer. Clock rates can be any accepted channel speed and defined for primary and secondary
redundancy sources. An external clock is often the primary timing mechanism
in synchronous devices, such as a T1 multiplexer.
-F-
far end
The equipment located at the remote end of a communications system.
FCC
United States Federal Communications Commission.
Facilities Data Link (FDL)
In DS1, a four kbps channel that comprises one half of the framing bits
in ESF formatted facilities.
FDM
See Frequency Division Multiplexing.
First In, First Out (FIFO)
A protocol used in computer and telephone networks that services requests
on a "first-come-first-served" basis.
firmware
Programs stored in permanent or semi-permanent storage devices such as
PROMS or EPROMS. Firmware contains software which is so frequently used by
the computer or other equipment that it is imprinted or "burned" onto a chip
to permanently retain the information.
FM
See Frequency Modulation.
Foreign Exchange Office (FXO)
An interface at the end of a private line that connects to a switch.
Foreign Exchange Subscriber (FXS)
Local telephone service provided from a central office outside of a
subscriber's area.
four-wire circuit
A circuit that uses two pairs of conductors; one pair for transmitting
and the other pair for receiving. The result is two-way communication to a
handset such as the telephone on a desk.
A 4-wire E&M interface uses two wires for Tx, two wires for Rx, and two
wires for signalling.
four-wire repeater
A repeater with two amplifiers, one for amplification of the outgoing
signal and the other for amplification of the incoming signal.
fractional T1
A portion of the T1 bandwidth.
frame
The control procedure used with mutliplexed digital channels in which
bits are inserted so that the receiver can identify the time slots allocated
to each channel. A T1 D4 frame consists of 24, eight-bit DS0s and one
framing bit.
frame alignments
The correlation between the significant instants of the timeslots within
a signal and their ideal positions in time.
frame buffer
A digital storage device used when transmitting data from one device to
another to compensate for a difference in data flow or rates.
frame slip
See controlled slip.
framing error
An error that occurs when a receiver cannot find the frames in a T1 data
stream.
frequency
The number of repetitions per unit of time during a complete waveform or
cycle. Typically expressed in Hertz (Hz).
Frequency Division Multiplexing (FDM)
A technique in which an available transmission bandwidth of a circuit is
divided by frequency into narrower bands, each used for a separate voice or
data transmission channel.
FM frequency modulation
A form of modulation in which the instantaneous frequency of a sine wave carrier is caused to depart from the carrier frequency by an
amount proportional to the instantaneous value of the modulating signal.
full duplex
Communications equipment capable of simultaneously transmitting and
receiving.
functional test
A test carried out under normal working conditions to verify that a
circuit or a particular part of the equipment functions correctly.
FXO
See Foreign Exchange Office.
FXS
See Foreign Exchange Subscriber.
-G-
gain
An increase in signal power for transmission from one point to another,
usually expressed in decibels.
gateway
A protocol converter that restructures packets of information so that
they can pass between networks using different standards.
GHz
Gigahertz (1 billion Hertz).
gnd
Ground.
ground circuit
1. A circuit in which energy is carried one way over a metallic path and returned through the earth.
2. One circuit connected to the earth at one or more points.
ground start
A signalling method in which a station detects a grounded circuit at the
other end as an off-hook condition.
ground station
The equipment that receives and transmits signals to and from a
communications satellite. Also called an earth station.
-H-
half duplex
A communications system or equipment capable of transmitting or
receiving, but not simultaneously.
handshaking
The exchange of predetermined signals for control when a connection is
established between two modems or other data devices.
harmonic distortion
The presence of unwanted harmonic frequencies in a received signal due to
nonlinear characteristics of a transmission line.
Hertz (Hz)
A frequency measurement that indicates the number of cycles which pass a
specific point per second. One Hertz equals one cycle per second.
high frequency (HF)
The portion of the electromagnetic spectrum usually used in short-wave
radio applications.
hum
The electrical interference picked up from a conventional alternating
current power supply.
host CPU
The main computer in a system. The host CPU can be a mainframe computer,
microcomputer or mini-computer.
-I-
impedance
The effect of resistance, inductance and capacitance on a transmitted
signal and expressed in ohms.
inband
The data timeslots of a DS1 frame (non-overhead bits).
I/O Channel
The input and output channel at an electronic device.
interface
The physical connection between two communications devices, such as an
electrical plug and socket connection.
insertion loss
The difference in the amount of power received before and after a device
is inserted into a circuit or a call is connected.
intelligent terminal
A CRT terminal that is programmable and can process messages or
information. It usually consists of a CRT, a keyboard, a CPU, and local
storage.
internal clock
A timing source internal to a digital device.
internal clock source
The internal clock source can be defined as the primary master node
reference clock (oscillating source), that provides the timing reference for
a transmission link.
Integrated Services Digital Network (ISDN)
A digital network that provides a wide range of voice and non-voice
services using a limited number standard interfaces.
interrupt
A mechanism by which elements of a computer system can request service
from the central processor.
isochronous
A regularly occurring interval. A signal is isochronous if the time
interval separating any two significant instants is theoretically equal to
the unit interval or to a multiple of the unit interval.
IXC
Inter-Exchange Carrier. Also abbreviated as IEC.
-J-
jack
1. A device used for terminating the permanent wiring of a circuit. It is
accessed by the insertion of a plug.
2. A device provided by the telephone company at a customer site for
connection to the CSU.
jitter
Jitter is unintentional phase modulation which has both an amplitude and
a frequency component. When the changes in frequency are greater than 10 Hz
they are called jitter because of the magnitude of the phase deviation and
the speed of the frequency. The measurement gauge for the amplitude is
called the unit interval, which is the time period that it takes one bit to
pass a fixed point at the T1 transmission rate of 1.544 Mbps.
Changes in frequency which happen at less than 10 Hz are considered
wander because of the very low frequency and long wavelength. The amplitude
and frequency of jitter can be severe enough to disrupt data transmission.
jumper
1. A cable or wire used to connect equipment for testing.
2. A small piece of wire or "plug" used to set options on a linecard or common equipment card.
-K-
kbps
Kilobits per second (kbps). See bit rate.
kHz
Kilohertz (one thousand Hertz)
kW
Kilowatt. A measure of power.
kWh
Kilowatt hour. A measure of energy.
-L-
label
Labels are symbolic names assigned to an instruction or data element
located in a firmware or software module for the purpose of defining its
address in related program operations.
LAN
See Local Area Network.
LAN bridge
The hardware and software used to connect LANs.
leased line
A telephone line reserved for the exclusive use of a leasing customer. A
leased line is a permanent circuit which may be point-to-point or
point-to-multipoint.
Light Emitting Diode (LED)
A solid state device that emits light when current is passed through it.
line
A transmission path from a non-switching subscriber terminal to a
switching system.
Line Build Out (LBO)
A circuit that is used in a CSU interface to equalize or compensate for
fluctuations in the T1 line.
line code
Techniques used to modify a signal or pulse during the transmission for
T1. AMI is one type of line encoding, B8ZS is another.
line loopback
A signal path and timing mode in which a signal is retransmitted exactly
as it was received by the terminal equipment.
line hit
The electrical interference causing the introduction of undesirable
signals on a circuit.
line speed
The maximum data rate that can be reliably transmitted over a line.
link
1. A physical circuit between two points.
2. A conceptual or virtual circuit between two users of a packet switched network that allows them to communicate, even when different physical paths are used.
loading
Adding load coils to a transmission line to minimize amplitude
distortion.
Local Area Network (LAN)
The interconnection of digital devices that communicate with each other
using the same communications protocol and that are located in the same
general area.
Local Exchange Carrier (LEC)
The local telephone company.
local alarm
A locally detected failure which generates a Carrier Failure Alarm (CFA).
It may also be called a red alarm.
local loop
The part of a communications circuit between the subscriber's equipment
and the equipment in the local exchange.
Long Distance Carrier (LDC)
A common carrier that can transmit long distance calls. Also known as
Interchange Carrier.
loop
A local circuit between an exchange and a subscriber telephone station.
loop activate
A code which is sent to a remote piece of equipment, such as a CSU, to
cause the equipment to go into a loopback condition.
loop deactivate
A code which is sent to a piece of equipment such as a CSU to cause the
equipment to cancel any loopback condition.
loopback
Connection of Tx to Rx at one end of a communications link used to test
the performance and quality of a line and/or terminating equipment.
loop timing
A timing mode where the transmit timing is derived from the input signal.
loop start
A common method of signalling an off-hook condition between an analog
phone set and a switch.
loopback tests
Any tests in which a test signal is injected at one end of a circuit,
looped back at the other end of the circuit and monitored at the originating
end of the circuit.
Loss of Carrier (LOC)
An alarm condition that occurs when 32 consecutive zeros are transmitted
on a T1 line.
Loss of Frame (LOF)
An extended out-of-frame state.
Loss of Signal (LOS)
A state which occurs when there is no detectable signal that operates
within specific set parameters.
-M-
major alarm
An AT&T definition for an alarm indicating service failure.
mark
A non-zero pulse representing a binary one. See bit, one.
master clock
A node containing the master reference clock for a network.
matrix
In switch technology, the portion of the switch architecture where input
leads and output leads meet, any pair of which may be connected to establish
a through circuit. Also called a switching matrix.
Mbps
A notation for megabits per second; a million bits per second. See Bit
Rate.
Megacom Mode
A service of AT&T, either a variation on INWATS or OUTWATS. Both are
normal WATS services in all respects except that the local T1 lines are the
responsibility of the customer.
Megacom 800
An 800 service for Wide Area Telephone Service (WATS) customers.
message
A sequence of characters used to convey information or data.
message feedback
A method of checking the accuracy of data transmission in which the
received data is returned to the sending end for comparison with the
original data.
message numbering
The identification of each message within a communications system by the
assignment of a sequential number.
message switching
The technique of receiving a message, storing it until the proper
outgoing line is available, and then retransmitting it. No direct
connections between the incoming and the outgoing lines is set up as in line
switching.
MHz
Megahertz. One million Hertz or one million cycles (megacycles) per
second.
microprocessor
An electronic circuit that performs arithmetic, logic, and control
operations, usually with the assistance of internal memory. Typically, the
microprocessor contains Read-Only Memory (ROM), permanently stored
instructions; Random Access Memory (RAM), and a control decoder for breaking
down the instructions stored in ROM into detailed steps.
minimum ones density
A line code that employs a ternary signal to convey binary digits, in
which successive binary ones are represented by signal elements that are
normally of alternating, positive and negative polarity but equal in
amplitude, and in which binary zeros are represented by signal elements that
have zero amplitude. This is the primary mode for T1. Also see Alternate
Mark Inversion.
mobile earth station
A satellite communications radio transmitter and or receiver situated on
a ship, vehicle, or aircraft.
Mobile Telephone Switching Office (MTSO)
The MTSO controls the switching between the public switched telephone
network and the cell sites for all wireline-to-mobile and mobile-to-wireline
calls as well as for mobile-to-mobile calls.
modem
Modulator-demodulator. A device that converts digital signals into analog
signals and then analog back to digital signals.
modulation
The process of varying some characteristics of the carrier wave in
accordance with the instantaneous value or sample of the intelligence to be
transmitted.
modulator
A device that converts a signal (voice or other) into a form that can be
transmitted.
ms
A notation for millisecond. A millisecond equals one thousandth of a
second.
multifrequency signalling
A supervisory signalling scheme used between telephone company offices in
which the digits and codes are each comprised of a combination of two tones.
multiplex
To simultaneously transmit two or more messages on a single channel.
multiplexer
Equipment that combines individual signals into a composite signal for
more efficient transmission. A T1 multiplexer combines 24 channels of 64
kbps plus a framing bit into a single bitstream of 1.544 Mbps. The term
generally refers to a device that performs both multiplexing and
demultiplexing.
multipoint
1. A system of wiring so arranged that a circuit, a line or a group of
lines is accessible at a number of points.
2. A remote end of a broadcast circuit or polled circuit.
multipoint line
A single communications channel (typically a leased telephone circuit) to
which more than one station or logical unit is attached, although only one
transmits at a time. Such arrangements usually require a polling mechanism
under the control of a master station to ensure that only one device at a
time transmits data. Also called a multidrop line.
mux
See multiplexer.
-N-
near end
Equipment located at the user site as opposed to equipment located at a
remote location.
network
An interconnecting group of computer systems, terminals or data
communications facilities, usually three or more stations. It implies that
the lines physically extend from one station to another until all are
connected. (As contrasted with point-to-point).
Network Communications Controller (NCC)
Coastcom offers several network management software packages to enhance
the control of the D/I Mux III.
The NCC2 is a software package that enables the user to connect and
communicate with up to 103 Coastcom devices with a standard personnel
computer (PC) and dial-up modems.
The NCC5 is a turnkey system which allows a central network manager to
dial-up D/I Mux IIIs and DXC IIs in a network.
NCC6 allows a network manager to communicate with D/I Mux IIIs and DXC
IIs through customer provided, out-of-band communications channels, or with
an inband control channel using a premium Subrate Data Multiplexer (pSDM)
channel card.
network management center
A center used for control of a network that provides traffic analysis,
call detail recording, configuration control, fault detection and diagnosis
or maintenance.
network redundancy
A communications pathway that has redundant links connecting all nodes in
case one link fails.
network typology
The physical and logical relationship description of the nodes in a
network.
node
A point of interconnection to a network (general).
A unit that is polled (multipoint).
One of the switches forming the network backbone (Packet Switching).
A unit in a ring or station.
node reference
A clock source within a selected node is the reference for all timing
clocks within the node. The reference clock can be derived from the internal
clock, recovered T1 link clock, clock supplied by a channel card, or by an
external clock source.
noise
Random electrical signals generated by circuit components or by natural
disturbances that corrupt the data by introducing errors.
non-blocking
A feature designed into the architecture of a switch so that the original
call always reaches an ideal line without encountering a busy condition.
non-return-to-zero (NRZ)
A technique for transmitting digital data in which a positive voltage
pulse signifies a binary one (1) and a negative voltage pulse signifies a
binary zero (0).
Non-volatile Random Access Memory (NVRAM)
A data storage device that retains its memory contents when power is
turned off or is disconnected.
North American Digital Hierarchy
A hierarchy of T1 carrier transmission standards and their corresponding
characteristics used in North America and Japan.
ns
A notation for a nanosecond. A nanosecond equals one billionth of a
second.
-O-
office channel unit
A device used in the central office to terminate DDS circuits. The office
channel unit performs functions similar to the CSU at the customer premise.
Office Channel Unit Data Port (OCUDP)
The Coastcom OCUDP is designed to connect to the public network's data
transport service. It supports DDS, switched 56 kbps dial-out capabilities.
See also All Rate OCUDP.
off-hook
The telephone receiver has been removed from the cradle.
office repeater
A device at the central office which terminates a T1 line and regenerates
the T1 signal for routing and switching at the customer office.
ohms
A measurement of the resistance to the flow of current. One ohm allows
one ampere to flow when one volt is applied across the resistance.
on-hook
The telephone receiver is in the cradle.
one
A binary digit represented digitally by a non-zero pulse. See bit.
one-way trunk
A trunk between a switch (PBX) and a central office or offices, where
traffic begins from only one end. It can only be used to dial out or to
receive in.
out-of-band-signalling
A signal that is separate from the voice channel.
outgoing trunk
A line used to make calls.
out-of-frame
A state when the digital terminal or testset cannot detect a valid frame
sequence.
-P-
packet switching
A data communications technique where a message is broken down into
fixed-length units (packets) which are then transmitted to their destination
by the fastest route. All packets may not travel the same pathway, however,
and the receiving station determines when all units are received and in the
proper sequence before forwarding the complete message to an addressee.
packet-switching network
A network designed to carry and route data in the form of packets. The
packet and its format are internal to that network.
parallel transmission
A technique that sends each bit simultaneously over a separate line.
Usually used to send a byte at a time to a high speed printer or other
locally attached peripherals.
parity, odd or even
The addition of non-information bits to data to make the number of ones
in a grouping of bits either always even or always odd. This procedure
allows detection of bit grouping that contain single errors. It can be
applied to characters, blocks or any specific bit grouping.
pattern errors
Bit errors that occur in the test pattern on a tested signal.
payload
The voice or data information transmitted on a signal.
phase hit
The occurrence of time interval error reaching or exceeding a
pre-specified threshold.
phase jitter
The measurement in degrees-out-of-phase that an analog signal deviates
from the referenced phase of the main data-carrying signal. Phase jitter is
often caused by alternating current components in a telecommunications
networks.
PLAR
Private Line Automatic Ringdown. A transmission mode used with VF
circuits.
point-to-point
A circuit that connects two points directly where there are generally no
intermediate processing nodes,although there could be switching facilities.
polling
A means of controlling terminals on a multipoint line. The computer
functions as the master station and sends a message to each terminal, asking
for information to be sent.
port
1. A physical interface between a multiplexer and a synchronous data
channel, asynchronous data channel or voice channel.
2. A physical connector that provides an entrance and exit for
information flow.
port interface
The equipment that provides a connection and marks a boundary between CPE
and the T1 communications systems.
POTS
Plain Old Telephone Service.
Private Branch Exchange (PBX)
A private telephone exchange that provides for the transmission of calls
to and from the public network.
premium Sub-Rate Data Multiplexer (pSDM)
The premium Subrate Data Multiplexer channel card (pSDM) is an
intelligent programmable channel card that combines up to five low speed
synchronous and asynchronous RS-232C data circuits onto one 64 kbps DS0
channel. The pSDM is fully integrated into the D/I Mux III multiplexer and
provides the functionality of a separate subrate multiplexer within a single
channel card.
private line
The channel and channel equipment furnished to a customer as a unit for
exclusive use, generally with no access to the public switched telephone
network. Also called a leased line.
Private Line Automatic Ringdown (PLAR)
A transmission mode used with VF circuits.
private network
A network established and operated by a private organization or
corporation.
processor
The intelligent central element of a computer or other information
handling system.
programmable
In telephone and computer equipment, the ability to change a feature or
function without rewiring, typically by issuing instructions through a
software command.
protocol
In the telecommunications field, protocol means a formal set of
conventions that determine the format and the relative timing of message
exchanges between two communications processes.
Public Switched Telephone Network (PSTN)
The complete public telephone system including telephones, local loop,
trunk lines, and exchanges.
pulse
A brief change of current or voltage produced in a circuit to operate a
switch or relay or which can be detected by a logic circuit.
pulse amplitude modulation (PAM)
See Modulation, pulse amplitude.
pulse code modulation (PCM)
The sampling of an analog signal into a binary code to be digitally
transmitted.
pwr
An abbreviation for power.
-Q-
Quad 2-Wire FXS Foreign Exchange Subscriber FXS Channel Unit
The Quad 2-Wire FXS channel card plugs into a D/I Mux III multiplexer
shelf and provides access to four 64-kbps PCM channels. The Quad 2-Wire fxs
channel card also provides access to a 2-wire battery-operated interface
between the D/I Mux III common equipment and a variety of 2-wire trunk or
line circuits, in both toll and subscriber applications.
QRSS
Quasi-Random Stress Signal is a stress pattern test which does not
violate the one's density requirement and used to validate the integrity of
the T1 span.
-R-
rack
A structure on which apparatus is mounted, usually by means of shelves or
mounting plates.
random access
Computer memory or storage that has the ability to directly address and
access any piece of data in the memory.
Random Access Memory (RAM)
The primary memory in a computer. RAM can be overwritten with new
information. All data can be located in RAM in an equal amount of time, thus
allowing considerably faster access than data that must be accessed
serially. RAM memory is considered "volatile" because when the power is off,
the contents of RAM are lost.
Read Only Memory (ROM)
A memory device that is programmed at the factory, and whose contents
thereafter cannot be altered. ROM memory is also random access, which is
faster than serially accessed devices (e.g., magnetic tape). ROM memory is
non-volatile because the contents are not lost when power is removed.
real time
1. Actual time in which a process transpires.
2. An application in which response to input is fast enough to effect
subsequent input, as when conducting the dialog that takes place at a
terminal in interactive systems.
recovery from fallback
When a system has switched to a fallback mode of operation and the cause
of the fallback has been removed. This is the process that restores the
system to its former condition.
red alarm
A local alarm caused by failure of T1 or the loss of framing on T1.
redundancy
Provision of duplicate, backup equipment to immediately take over the
function of equipment that fails.
redundancy check
An automatic or programmed check based on the systematic insertion of
components or characters used especially for checking purposes.
redundant bits
Extra bits added to a transmission for the propose of detecting and
correcting any errors.
redundant power supply
An extra power supply used as a backup for another power supply.
regenerate
To restore a signal to its original shape.
reinitiation time
The time required for a device or system to restart (usually after a
power outage).
relay
An electrically operated device that open or closes an electrical
circuit.
repeater
In digital transmission, equipment that receives a pulse train, amplifies
it, re-times it, and then reconstructs the signal for retransmission. In
fiber optics, a device that decodes a low-power light signal, and converts
it to electrical energy, then retransmits it through a LED or laser light
source, often including some form of signal amplification.
remote access
To send or receive data to and from a computer terminal connected by a
telephone link.
remote alarm
A failure in one direction in the transmit or near-to-far direction. See
also yellow alarm.
Radio Frequency (RF)
Signal frequencies that range between 10 kHz to 100,000 MHz.
ring network
A network in which each node is connected to two adjacent nodes to form a
continuous ring configuration.
robbed bit signalling (RBS)
In Pulse Code Modulation (PCM) it is a scheme in which the signalling
bits for each channel are assigned to bit 8 of frames 6 and 12 in Superframe
Format (SF) and in frames 6, 12, 18 and 24 in Extended Superframe Format (ESF).
ROM
See Read Only Memory.
router
A sophisticated, protocol-specific device that examines data and finds
the best routing for it between sender and receiver by selecting the
cheapest, fastest, or least busy of all available routes.
routing
The assigned communications path by which a message or telephone call
will reach its destination.
routing code
Address or group of characters in the heading of a message which defines
the final circuit or terminal where the message is to be delivered.
RJ-48
An eight position connector used for T1 communications.
RS-232C
An ANSI/IEEE standard physical interface with associated electrical
signalling between data communications equipment (DCE) and data terminal
equipment (DTE).
RS-422
An ANSI/IEEE standard serial interface for balanced voltage digital
interface circuits.
RS-449
An ANSI/IEEE interface for data terminal equipment (DTE) and data
communications equipment (DCE) employing serial binary data interchange.
Rx
An abbreviation for "receive".
-S-
schematic
A diagram that shows the electrical elements and connections of a circuit
or a system.
scrambler
A security coding device applied to a digital channel that produces an
apparently random bit sequence.
screening, shielding
The prevention of electric, magnetic, or electromagnetic fields from
escaping or entering an enclosed area by use of a barrier.
sealing current
A current run on an interface loop is used to improve the quality of the
transmission by burning the connectors and sealing the connections.
secondary channel (slave channel)
A channel that does not initiate transmission of data but is polled by a
master unit to send information.
serial transmission
A method where the bits of a character are sent sequentially on a single
transmission channel.
serial port
An input/output port that handles data one bit at a time.
Severely Errored Seconds (SES)
AT&T Publication 54016 defines a Severely Errored Second as a second with
320 or more Cyclic Redundancy Checks (CRC6's) or one or more Out of Frame (OOF)
events.
SF
1. Single frequency: A method of in-band signalling which detects a
single
frequency as signalling.
2. Superframe: A T1 frame format that consists of twelve D4 frames.
signal
The aggregate waves propagated along a transmission channel intended to
act on a receiving unit.
signalling bits
Robbed bits that carry dialing and control information on signal.
sink
The part of a communications system that receives information.
smart jack
A jack with network loopback capabilities.
Smart Omni-orderwire Station Unit (SO/S)
The Smart Omni-orderwire Station Unit (SO/S) provides the
operator with the ability to access a voice channel for communication
to other stations or multiplexers in the T1 network as well as a standard
telephone or butt-set unit. The SO/S channel card also serves as a
terminating device in both point-to-point applications and drop-and-insert applications. It simultaneously communicates on the T1-1 (west) and the T1-2 (east) transmission paths.
source
The part of a communications system that transmits information.
Software Defined Network (SDN) or Virtual Private Network
Use of the carrier's public telephony network to provide the network
functions of private lines. Customers design, change and manage large
national network without investing in capital equipment.
span
A T1 line connected at two points.
stop element
The last bit of a character in asynchronous serial transmission, used to
mark the end of the data element. Signalling is used to provide
communications between the two ends of a circuit, usually for call set-up
and call tear-down.
store and forward
An application in which messages are received at intermediate routing
points and stored for later transmission to another routing point or to the
final receiving point.
subrate
Subrate data multiplexing. Permits the operation of several low-speed
synchronous and asynchronous channels on one DS0. The bit rates are 1.2, 2.4, 4.8, 9.6 and 19.2 kbps.
Subrate Data Multiplexer (SDM)
The Subrate Data Multiplexer (SDM) channel card is an intelligent,
programmable card that combines low-speed synchronous/asynchronous data
applications onto a standard 64 kbps channel. The SDM provides the function
of a separate subrate multiplexer within a single channel card.
superframe (SF)
A T1 frame format that consists of twelve D4 frames.
switch
A device that makes, breaks or changes the connections in an electrical
circuit. Switch is often used as a synonym for a central office switch or
PBX.
switched service network
A network consisting of terminals, transmission links and at least one
exchange in which any user can communicate with others at any time.
switch over
In an equipment failure, a switch occurs to an alternative component.
synchronous
A method of data transmission requiring the transmission of timing pulses
to keep the sender and receiver synchronized in their communication (i.e., sending information blocks). Contrast with asynchronous.
Synchronous Data Channel Unit (SDCU)
Synchronous Data Channel Units (SDCUs) are high speed data channel units
that are ideal for computer-to-computer data transfer, distributed CAD/CAM,
high-speed facsimile, compressed video for teleconferencing, and other
applications that require large amounts of data to be transferred. The SDCU
acts as the Data Communications Equipment (DCE).
synchronous network
A network in which all the communication links are synchronized to a
common clock.
synchronous transmission
Transmission in which the data characters and bits are transmitted at a
fixed rate. The transmitter and the receiver are synchronized together.
-T-
T1
A digital transmission link with a capacity of 1.544 Mbps (1.544 million
bits per second). A T1 line can handle 24 channels, each of which is
digitized at 64 kbps. T1 is a standard for digital transmission in North
America.
T-carrier services
High-speed, digital transmission services that provide large-volume
transmission between two stations. T1, the most common T-carrier service,
operates at an aggregate data rate of 1.544 Mbps and consists of 24 separate
channels.
Tandem T1 Unit (TTU)
The Coastcom Tandem T1 channel card (TTU) supports applications where
selected channel information from a T1 line can be switched to one of two T1
spans. It also allows a D/I Mux III with Automatic Loop Protection Switching
(ALPS) to interface to a network device such as a Digital Cross-connect
system such as Coastcom's DXC II.
tandem switching
The switching of circuits between exchanges only.
tariff
The published cost for a specific communications service, equipment, or
facility that constitutes a contract between the user and the communications
carrier or supplier.
telco
A term used in communications to refer to the local telephone company.
T-Carrier Designation
The categories of the North American Digital Hierarchy that corresponds
to the Digital Signal Designations. They are called T1 Carrier because they
are time division multiplexed signals. See also North American Digital
Hierarchy.
T Carrier
A digital transmission facility designed to carry speech and other
signals in digital form.
time-division multiplexing (TDM)
A method of digital multiplexing where the means of obtaining a number of
channels over a single path is accomplished by dividing the path into a
number of time slots and assigning each channel its own time slot.
timing
The process of one or more communications devices synchronizing to a
stable, fixed reference signal (clock) that enables the accurate transfer of
information.
TO
Transmission only.
trunk
A facility between the customer premise and the local exchange carrier
customer office.
turnkey system
A complete communications system that includes both hardware and software
already assembled and installed by a vendor as a complete package.
twisted pair
Two insulated wires twisted together but not covered with an outer
sheath.
-U-
unavailable seconds (UAS)
A group of ten or more continuous severely errored seconds. A signal is
considered available again after ten seconds that are not severely errored
seconds (SES).
uncontrolled slip
The overflow or underflow of an unframed buffer. An unframed buffer slips
by repeating or deleting a portion of a frame. Uncontrolled slips result in
framing bit positions shifts known as "change of frame alignment." See also
controlled slip.
UVG
Universal Voice Grade. A service offered from and designated by the
Regional Bell Operating Companies. UVG services are extensive. Check the
Bellcore Publications for further details.
-V-
VA
See volt-ampere.
V AC
Volts, alternating current.
V DC
Volts, direct current.
voice circuit
An analog telephone channel used in homes and offices. Its bandwidth may
vary between 300 Hz and 3500 Hz.
voice digitization
The conversion of an analog signal into digital symbols for storage or
transmission.
Voice Frequency (VF)
An analog signal with an audio frequency range between 300 to 3500 Hz.
voice grade channel (VG)
Circuit used for speech transmission but also suitable for the
transmission of analog data, modem data, or facsimile.
voice grade data (VGD)
Data that can be transmitted without distortion and that has good sound
quality.
Virtual Private Network
Use of the carrier's public telephony network to provide the network
functions of private lines. Customers may design, change and manage a large
national network without investing in capital equipment.
-W-
WAN
Wide Area Network. A service that provides customers the ability to call
specific zones for a set regular monthly fee.
WATS
Wide Area Telephone Service. A reduced-cost service provided by a
telephone company. Certain telephone call arrangements such as In-WATS or
800-number service (calls placed to a location from anywhere) or Out-WATS
(calls placed from a central location) are offered at a special price. Cost
is usually based on hourly usage per WATS circuit and on distance-based
zones from where the calls originate.
watt(s)
A unit of electrical power.
waveform
The shape of a signal over a specific period of time.
wavelength
The length of a wave measured from any specified point on a wave to the
corresponding point on the next wave.
wideband channel
A channel wider in bandwidth than a voice grade channel.
wink
A signal indicating that the distant central office is ready to receive
the number dialed.
wire pair
Two separate conductors traveling the same route to service a
communications channel.
-Y-
yellow alarm
An alarm condition that occurs on a T1 line that signifying a failure at
a remote location that is sometimes called a remote alarm.
-Z-
zero
The binary digit 0 also referred to as a "space".
zero code suppression
The insertion of a "one" bit to prevent the transmission
of eight or more consecutive zero bits. Zero code suppression
is used mostly with digital T1 and related telephone company facilities,
which require a minimum ones density in order to keep the individual
sub-channels of a multiplexed, high-speed facility active.
|