Micro-cell
Base Station Extension
Extend the Maximum Distance
Limitation of an Ericsson 882 M Micro-cell Base Station from
1.25 to 20 Miles
Problem
The Ericsson 882M Micro-cell provides the RF coverage needed
at an airport. However, to cover the entire airport complex
you need to extend over 1.25 miles to a remote Micro-cell base
station (MCBS). The alternative would be separate Micro-cell
control nodes (MCCN), but the traffic expected would not justify
the cost. Cell enhancers cannot provide the quality of service
needed for this application.
Solution
Coastcom's analog Micro-cell equipment can be configured to support
analog 882M Micro-cell transceivers, MCC, and MLOC with remote
alarm capability. The equipment consists of two D/I Mux III
special T1 multiplexers with dual 4-Wire TO channel cards,
a TTU channel card, SDM, and CEL1 SDCU data link(s). Installing
MCBS and co-locating Coastcom equipment establishes a remote
MCBS to an existing NCCN up to 50 miles awayremote MCBS, reducing
hardware and T1 deployment costs significantly.
How Does It Work?
The CEL1 SDCU is a special data card that interfaces to the MDIO
bus in the MCCN Ericsson control equipment. The 4-Wire TO channel
cards connect the VF paths to the D/I Mux III at the remote
Micro-cell location. These extend through the D/I Mux III at
the control node, connecting to the MBLT at the MTSO. The TTU
interfaces to the TDI card in the MCCN, connecting all local
voice channels and the STC/STR data link. Typical configurations
of 6 to 14 voice channels are connected to the MCCN over a
single T1 facility, using microwave, fiber optics, or a T1
through the LEC. At the remote MCBS, the SDM channel card can
be used as an option to support remote alarms support ofand
extend the TW port of the IOIM to the MCBS. This provides access
to the MTSO for control purposes.
Figure c9. Conventional Configuration
for MCCN/MCBS
Figure c10. Remote Extension
for Drop-and-Insert Configuration
What Actually Occurs?
The remote MCBS behaves similarly to the local MCBS in that it
supports both hand-off and hand-over functions. The MCC and
MLOC perform the same functions in the Micro-cell, but are
remotely attached to an MCCN at the control node cell site.
The CEL1 SDCU receives data from the MDIO and transfers them
to the CEL1 SDCU in the Micro-cell. The CEL1 SDCU, in turn,
passes the data to an MDCU bus cable connected to the MCBS
radio rack.
The 4-wire voice connections
from the transceivers bypass the MCCN, using dual channel 4-Wire
TO cards in the D/I Mux III, to send data directly to the MTSO.
Each external alarm contact
closure at the Micro-cell switches a ground condition to the
alarm unit. This activation extends over the SDM link to the
control node cell where the alarm unit activates an IOIM contact
by providing a dry contact closure. IOIM thereby supports external
alarm activation at both the remote Micro-cell and the local
control node. Each external alarm -- and even the D/I Mux III
equipment -- can be uniquely named within the IOIM alarm table
to help with troubleshooting.
How Do You Set It Up?
As many as 19 analog voice channels can be located at the remote
Micro-cell over a single T1 facility. Digital bandwidth allocation
is limited to one DS0 (64 Kbps) for each MVC (analog voice
channel), four DS0s (256 Kbps) for each CEL1 SDCU and one DS0
for the SDM alarm/TW port feature. At the MCCN, the D/I Mux
III is set up in drop-and-insert mode at the MCCN, and it distributes
the Mobile Bothway Line Trunk (MBLT) voice channels to the
TDI, extending the other channels to the remote Micro-cell.
The D/I Mux III at the remote MCBS is set up in channel bank
mode, terminating all voice channels and the CEL1 SDCU data
channel. The MCCN supports multiple remote Micro-cells. The
MCC, MLOC, and MVC programming in the MTSO is similar to a
conventional installation. An alarm unit terminates up to 16
remote alarms and interfaces to an SDM channel card in the
D/I Mux III. The alarm unit at the control node provides the
contact closure(s) to the IOIM should alarms be activated at
the remote Micro-cell.
What Information Do You
Need?
-
How many MVC voice channels
do you need at the local and remote Micro-cell locations?
-
What is the distance between
the local and remote Micro-cell sites, and what medium is
used between the MTSO and cell sites (microwave, fiber, or
local phone company T1)?
-
How many sectors are you
planning to deploy at the Micro-cell?
Remote
Micro-cell Base Stations
Locate a Number of Micro-cell
Base Stations (MCBS) 20 Miles or More from a Micro-cell Control
Node (MCCN)
Problem
Use of a Micro-cell provides the RF coverage needed at the downtown
business center. However, there are four major buildings that
need coverage using the LEC, resulting in distances of many
miles to each remote MCBS. An alternative would be four separate
Micro-cell control node (MCCN) systems, but the traffic expected
would not justify the cost. Cell enhancers cannot provide the
voice transmission quality needed to support this application.
Solution
Coastcom's analog Micro-cell equipment can be configured to support
analog 882M Micro-cell transceivers, MCC, and MLOC with remote
alarm capability. The equipment consists of D/I Mux III T1
multiplexers with dual 4-Wire TO channel cards, TTU channel
cards, SDM, and CEL1 SDCU data link(s). By co-locating Coastcom
equipment, remote MCBSes can be established up to 50 miles
from an existing MCCN. Savings in hardware and T1 facilities
can reduce deployment costs significantly.
How Does It Work?
The CEL1 SDCU is a special data card interface to MDIO bus that
interfaces to the MDIO bus in the MCCN control equipment. Each
MCBS has a dedicated CEL1 SDCU link back to the MCCN using
256 Kbps or four DS0s. The 4-Wire TO channel cards connect
the VF paths at the remote Micro-cell locations to channels
or DS0s through the TTU interfaces at the control node. These
T1s support either an MBLT to the MTSO or connect to the TDI
interface and derive voice channels through the MCCN. Typical
configurations of 6 to 14 voice channels per MCBS connect to
the MCCN over a single T1 facility, using microwave, fiber
optics, or a T1 through the LEC. Each D/I Mux III can be configured
individually as channel bank, dual channel bank, or drop-and-insert,
enabling many different MCBS network topologies. Similarly,
the SDM channel card can support remote alarms and extend the
TW port of the IOIM to the Micro-cell location, providing access
to the MTSO for control purposes.
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Figure c11. Locating Multiple
Micro-cell Base Stations (MCBS) Over 20 Miles from a Micro-cell
Control Node (MCCN)
What Actually Occurs?
The remote MCBS behaves similarly to the local MCBS in that it
supports both hand-off and hand-over functions. The MCC and
MLOC perform the same functions in the micro cell, but are
remotely attached to an MCCN at the control node cell site.
The CEL1 SDCU receives data from the MDIO and transfers data
transfer from the MDIO to the CEL1 SDCU in the micro cell.
The CEL1 SDCU, in turn, passes the data to a MDCU bus cable
connected to the MCBS radio rack.
The 4-wire voice connections
from the transceivers use dual-channel 4-Wire TO cards in the
D/I Mux III to pass signals back to the MTSO, bypassing the MCCN
completely.
Each external alarm contact
closure at the micro cell switches a ground condition to the
alarm unit. This extends over the SDM link to the control node
cell where the alarm unit activates an IOIM contact by providing
a dry contact closure. The IOIM thereby supports external alarm
activation at both the remote micro cell and the local control
node. Each external alarm, and even the D/I Mux III equipment,
can be uniquely named within the IOIM alarm table to aid troubleshooting.
How Do You Set It Up?
Up to 19 analog voice channels can be located at the remote Micro-cell
over a single T1 facility. Digital bandwidth allocation is
limited to one DS0 (64 Kbps) for each MVC (analog voice channel),
four DS0s (256 Kbps) for each CEL1 SDCU, and one DS0 for the
SDM alarm/TW port feature.
At the MCCN location, the D/I
Mux III, which is set to drop-and-insert mode, distributes the
Mobile Bothway Line Trunk (MBLT) voice channels to the TDI and
extends the other channels to the remote Micro-cell.
The D/I Mux III at the remote
MCBS is set to channel bank mode, terminating all voice channels
and the CEL1 SDCU data channel. The MCCN can support multiple
remote Micro-cells. The MCC, MLOC, and MVC programming in the
MTSO is similar to a conventional installation. Up to 16 remote
alarms are terminated by an alarm unit that interfaces to an
SDM channel card in the D/I Mux III. The alarm unit at the control
node provides the contact closure(s) to the IOIM should alarms
be activated at the remote micro cell.
What Information Do You
Need?
-
How many MVC voice channels
do you need at the local and remote Micro-cell locations?
-
What is the distance between
the local and remote Micro-cell sites, and what medium is
used between the MTSO and the cell sites (microwave, fiber,
or local phone company T1)?
-
How many sectors are you
planning to deploy at the Micro-cell?
Analog Macro-cell
Hook-Up
Connect a Micro-cell Base Station
to an Existing Analog Macro-cell Site and Install as a Remote
Sector Up to 50 Miles Away
Problem
The Micro-cell meets the limited space and RF coverage available
at the conference center. A macro-cell site is in place five
miles away, but cell enhancers do not have the quality needed
to support this application within the allocated budget. The
traffic expected could not justify the cost of a full Micro-cell
control node and Micro-cell base station combination.
Solution
Coastcom's analog Micro-cell equipment can be configured to support
a remote sector of the local macro-cell site. Analog Micro-cell
transceivers with MCC and MLOC functionality operate from the
existing EMRP/EMDM control at a donor cell site. The equipment
consists of D/I Mux III T1 multiplexers equipped with dual
4-Wire TO channel cards and one or more CEL1 SDCU data link.
By installing the remote MCBS and co-locating the Coastcom
equipment, an MCBS can be established as a remote sector up
to 50 miles from an existing macro cell site. Savings in hardware
and T1 facilities can reduce deployment costs significantly.
How Does It Work?
The CEL1 SDCU is a special data card that interfaces to the MDIO
bus in the EMRP/EMDM control equipment. The MCBS has a dedicated
CEL1 SDCU link that uses 256 Kbps or four DS0s. The 4-Wire
TO channel cards connect the VF paths at the remote Micro-cell
location to MBLT channels or DS0s, using the D/I Mux III at
the donor cell site. Additional savings on T1 facility costs
can be realized by cross-connecting spare voice channels on
the D4 at the donor to the 4-Wire TO channel cards on the D/I
Mux III. Typical configurations of 6 to 14 voice channels per
MCBS can be connected over a single T1 facility. The SDM channel
card support of remote alarms and extends the TW port of the
IOIM to the Micro-cell location, providing access to the MTSO.
Figure 12. Remote Sector -
Ericsson GE 882M
What Actually Occurs?
Each remote MCBS behaves like a remote sector to the donor macro
cell site, supporting both hand-off and hand-over functions.
The MCC and MLOC perform the same functions, but are connected
remotely to an EMDM at the donor site. The CEL1 SDCU CEL1 SDCU
data linkreceives data from the MDIO and transfers data transmission
to the CEL1 SDCU in the MCBS. The CEL1 SDCU, in turn, passes
the data to a MDCU bus cable, connected to the MCBS radio rack.
The 4-Wire voice connections
for the transceivers use dual channel 4-Wire TO cardsdual 4-Wire
TO in the D/I Mux III and connect directly to the MTSO, using
the D/I Mux III at the donor.
Each external alarm contact
closure at the Micro-cell switches a ground condition to the
alarm unit. This activation extends over the SDM link to the
control node cell where the alarm unit activates an IOIM contact
by providing a dry contact closure. The IOIM thereby supports
external alarm activation at the remote as well as the local
control node. Each external alarm and even the D/I Mux III equipment
can be uniquely named within the IOIM to aid troubleshooting.
How Do You Set It Up?
From 6 to 14 analog voice channels can be remotely located at
each base station, operating over a single T1 facility. Digital
bandwidth allocation is limited to one DS0 (64 Kbps) for each
MVC (analog voice channel), four DS0s (256 Kbps) for each CEL1
SDCU and one DS0 for the SDM alarm/TW port feature. At the
donor cell, the D/I Mux III is set to drop-and-insert mode
and distributes the MBLT voice channels, using the D/I Mux
III and over the T1 facility to the MCBS. The D/I Mux III at
the remote MCBS is set to channel bank mode, terminating all
voice channels and the CEL1 SDCU data channel. The MCC, MLOC,
and MVC programming in the MTSO is similar to a sectorized
cell site and necessitates no special programming. An optional
alarm unit terminates up to 16 remote alarms, connecting via
an SDM channel card in the D/I Mux III. Should alarms be activated
at the base station, the alarm unit at the donor provides the
contact closure(s) to the IOIM.
What Information Do You
Need?
-
How many MVC voice channels
do you have at the donor and remote locations?
-
What is the distance between
the donor and remote site, and what medium is used between
the MTSO and cell sites (microwave, fiber, or local phone
company T1)?
-
How many sectors are you
planning to deploy at each?
-
Are you using compact or
non-compact hardware, and what contingency requirements do
you have at the donor (redundant EMDM/EMRPs, STRs, power)?
-
What configuration best
serves your needs -- dedicated T1 for the host, or a shared
configuration, using spare voice channels at the donor?
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