Remote Analog
Sector, Point-to-Point
Create a Remote Sector of Ericsson 880/882
Analog Transceiver Modules at a Mini-cell, Using the Point-to-Point
Method
Problem
A developing business park needs a new analog cell sitecell site.
The traffic expected cannot justify the cost associated with
an macro-cell sitemacro-cell site. Cell enhancers and micro-cells
cannot provide the quality needed to attract new customers
or pull customers from the competitive B-carrier.
Solution
Configure Coastcom's analog Mini-cell equipment to support analog
880/882 transceivers, MCC and MLOC radio with remote alarm
capability. The equipment consists of two D/I Mux III special
T1 multiplexers equipped with Dual 4-Wire E & M channel
cards and a CEL1 SDCU channel card. by installing a frame(s)
of Ericsson transceivers at the remote Mini-cell, and co-locating
the Coastcom equipment, a remote sector can be established
to an existing Ericsson Donor cell up to 50 miles away. Savings
in Ericsson hardware and T1 facilities can reduce deployment
significantly.
How Does It Work?
The CEL1 SDCU is a special data card that interfaces to the MDIO
bus in the EMRP or EMDM Ericsson control equipment. The 4-Wire
E & M channel cards connect both the VF paths and the remote
alarms to the Donor-cell. Typical configurations of 6 to 14
voice channels connect to the donor over a single T1 facility.
A second T1 can be added if expansion is needed. The SDM channel
card can be used as an option to extend the TW port of the
IOIM to the Mini-cell, providing access to the MTSO for control
purposesSDM. The ericsson Chennel Tester can be used in this
configuration by installing it in the transceiver radio rack
at the Mini-cell.
What Actually Occurs?
The Mini-cell behaves exactly as a macro-cell sector by supporting
both hand-off and hand-over functionshand-offhand-over. MTSO
programming is similar to activation of a cell sector where
all analog MVCs, neighbor sectors, and cells are defined. The
MCC and MLOC perform the same functions in the Mini-cell, but
attach remotely to an EMRP/EMDM at the Donor-cell site. The
CEL1 SDCU receives data from the MDIO and transfers the data
transmission to the CEL1 SDCU in the Mini-cell. The CEL1 SDCU,
in turn, passes the data to an MD bus cable connected to the
transceiver radio rack.
Coastcom's 4-Wire E & M cards 4-Wire
E & M connect between the transceivers and the D4 D4at the
Donor-cell using unused channels back to the MTSO.
Each external alarm contact closure at the
Mini-cell switches a ground condition groundingto a pre-determined "M" lead
of a voice channel. This activation extends over the D/I Mux
III link to the Donor-cell where the "E" lead of the
channels activates an IOIM contact by grounding the battery wire
of the pair. The IOIM thereby supports external alarm activation
at the Mini-cell as well as the Donor-cell.
How Do You Set It Up?
The "point-to-point" method, illustrated in figure
c1, is used when there sufficient unused channels or DS0s in
the Ericsson D4 at the Donor. The drop and insert method is used
when there are insufficient channels available and you would
need to provision a new T1 between the MTSO and the Donor cell
site. The drop and insert option is used to connect to a "compact" MTSO
or DACS system located at the MTSO..
What Information Do You Need?
-
How many MVC voice channels do you need
at the Mini-cell, and how many are you already using at the
donor?
-
What is the distance between the donor
and Mini-cell sites, and what medium are you using (microwave,
fiber, or local phone company T1)?
-
How many sectors are you planning to
deploy at the Mini-cell?
-
Are you using compact or non-compact
hardware, and what contingency requirements do you have at
the donor (redundant EMDM/EMRPs, STRs, power)?
Remember that you will need to order the
the transceiver radio rack(s), the antenna, and power systems.
Remote Analog
Sector, Drop-and-Insert
Creating Three Remote Sectors
at a Mini-cell, Using the Drop-and-Insert Method
Problem
A new freeway intersection needs a three-sector cell site. The
traffic expected cannot justify the cost associated with an
Ericsson macro-cell site. Cell enhancers and micro-cells cannot
provide the quality needed to support the application or pull
customers from the competitive B carrier.
Solution
Coastcom's analog Mini-cell equipment can support 880/882 analog
transceivers tranceivers, and MCC and MLOC radios with remote
alarm capabilityMCC radios MLOC radios. Equipment consists
of two D/I Mux III special T1 multiplexers equipped with dual
4-Wire TO channel cards and a CEL1 SDCU channel card. By installing
transceivers at the remote Mini-cell and co-locating the Coastcom
equipment installation, three remote sectors can be established
to an existing Ericsson Donor-cell up to 50 miles away. 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 MDIO bus in the EMRP or EMDM control equipment. The 4-Wire
TO channel cards provide MVC connections MVC connectionsto
the MTSO. Typical configurations of 6 to 20 voice channels
are connected to the Donor over a single T1 facility, and then
are connected directly over a T1 to the MTSO (Compact). The
SDM channel card can be used as an option to extend the TW
port of the IOIM to the Mini-cell, providing access to the
MTSO for control. The Ericsson Channel Tester can be used in
this configuration by installing it in the transceiver radio
rack at the Mini-cell.
Figure c1. Remote Sector Extension
to a Mini-cell "Point-to-Point"
Figure c2. Remote-Sector
Extension to a Mini-cell "Drop and Insert"
What Actually Occurs?
The Mini-cell behaves exactly like a macro cell sector, supporting
both hand-off and hand-over functions. MTSO programming is
similar to activation of a cell site sector where all analog
MVCs, neighbor sectors, and cells are defined. The MCC and
MLOC transceivers per sector perform the same functions in
the Mini-cell, but attach remotely to an EMRP/EMDM at the Donor-cell
site. The CEL1 SDCU receives data from the MDIO and transfers
the data transmission to the CEL1 SDCU in the Mini-cell. It,
in turn, passes the data to an MD bus cable connected to the
transceiver radio rack.
Coastcom's 4-Wire TO cards connect to the
880/882 transceivers, and use DS0 channels to connect to MTSO
via the Donor-cell.
How Do You Set It Up?
The "drop-and-insert" method shown in figure c2 is
used when there are insufficient channels available and you would
need to privision a new T1 between the MTSO and the Donor-cell
site. This option is udes to connect to a "compact" MTSO
or DACS system at the MTSO.
In drop-and-insert configuration, the MDIO
data drop out at the Donor-cell site, but the VF channels are
passed through the D/I Mux III at the donor site to the T1 facility,
returning directly to the MTSO. Remote alarms are supported over
an alarm unit that terminates up to 16 and interfaces to an SDM
channel card in the D/I Mux III. The alarm unit at the Donor
provides the contact closure(s) to the IOIM, should alarms be
activated at the Mini-cell.
What Information Do You Need?
-
How many MVC voice channels do you need
at the Mini-cell, and how many are you already using at the
donor?
-
What is the distance between the donor
and Mini-cell sites, and what medium is used (microwave,
fiber, or local phone company T1)?
-
How many sectors are you planning to
deploy at the Mini-cell?
-
Are you using compact or non-compact
hardware, and what contingency requirements do you have at
the donor (redundant EMDM/EMRPs, STRs, power)?
To complete the electronics needed for the
Mini-cell, you will need to order the transceiver radio rack(s),
the antenna, and power systems. A Mini-cell system is tailored
to meet your needs.
Multiple
Remote Sectors for "Fill-In" Applications
Creating Multiple Remote Sectors
for "Fill-In" Applications Over a Single T1 Facility
Problem
A section of freeway suffers from marginal coverage with many
complaints of dropped calls or automatic roaming to the B-carrier.
Marketing has asked you to focus on a solution, but costs need
to be contained. Two cell sites are needed to adequately cover
this area and maintain the quality expected by your customers.
An extender is not an option because you don't want to have
to re-engineer this section when future growth exceeds present
capacity.
Solution
Coastcom's analog Mini-cell equipment supports analog 880/882
transceivers -- MCC and MLOC with remote alarm capability.
The equipment consists of three D/I Mux III special T1 multiplexers
equipped with dual 4-Wire E & M channel cards, and two
CEL1 SDCU data link(s). By installing a frame(s) of transceivers
at each remote Mini-cell, and co-locating the Coastcom equipment,
two remote sectors are established to an existing Donor cell
up to 50 miles away, 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 EMRP or EMDM control equipment. The 4-Wire E & M
channel cards provide two functions, connecting both the VF
paths and the remote alarms back to the Donor cell. Typical
configurations of 7 to 12 voice channels per Mini-cell are
connected back to the Donor over a single T1 facility using
microwave, fiber optics, or a T1 through the LEC. Expansion
to over 16 voice channels or even digital TDMA can easily be
accomplished by adding a second T1. The SDM channel card s
used as an option to extend the TW port of the IOIM to the
Mini-cell providing access to the MTSO for control purposes.
A channel tester can also be used in this configuration by
installing it in the transceiver radio rack at the Mini-cell
locations.
Figure c3. Two Mini-cells Extended
as Two Sectors "Drop and Insert" (A)
What Actually Occurs?
The Mini-cell behaves exactly as a macro-cell sector by supporting
both hand-off and hand-over functions. MTSO programming defines
all analog MVCs, neighbor sectors, and cells. The MCC and MLOC
perform the same functions in the Mini-cell, but attach remotely
to an EMRP/EMDM at the Donor cell site. The CEL1 SDCU receives
data from the MDIO and transfers data transmission to the CEL1
SDCU in the Mini-cell. The CEL1 SDCU, in turn, passes the data
to an MD bus cable connected to the transceiver radio rack.
The 4-wire voice connections from the 880/882
transceivers use dual channel 4-wire TO cards in the D/I Mux
III, passing over the T1 facility directly to the MTSO, thereby
bypassing the Ericsson D4 at the donor site. Up to 16 remote
alarms are terminated over an alarm unit that interfaces to a
pSDM channel card in the D/I Mux III. The alarm unit at the Donor
provides the contact closure(s) to the IOIM should alarms be
activated at the Mini-cell.
How Do You Set It Up?
There are two set-up configuration options: "drop-and-insert" as
illustrated in figure c3, or if excess capacity exists on the
initial T1 facility at the Donor, then a special TTU can be added
as shown in figure c.4. This configuration shares the VF channels
on a single T1 among the Donor and Mini-cells. Use Drop-and-Insert
when there are insufficient channels available and you would
need to provision a new T1 between the MTSO and the Donor cell
site. This option can be used to connect a "compact" MTSO
or DACS located at the MTSO.
Figure c4. Two Mini-cells Extended
as Two Sectors "Drop and Insert" (B)
What Information Do You Need?
-
How many MVC voice channels do you require
at each Mini-cell, and how many are you already using at
the donor?
-
What is the distance between the donor
and Mini-cell sites, and what is the medium (microwave, fiber,
or local phone company T1)?
-
How many sectors are you planning to
deploy at each Mini-cell?
-
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 -- a dedicated T1 for the Mini-cells, or a TTU for
a shared configuration?
To complete the electronics needed for the
Mini-cell, you will need to order the transceiver radio rack(s),
the antenna, and power systems.
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