Smooth Hand-Off
from Digital to Analog
Maintain Smooth Hand-Off from Digital to
Analog Without Installing a Transmission Interface at Every Ericsson
882 Radio Base Station
Problem
Plans are in place to introduce digital within the core market,
but you need to make sure all your digital subscribers in the
outer fringe areas experience a smooth hand-off to analog radio
base stations. Also, some of your roaming customers are complaining
that their dual-mode phones drop calls when entering or leaving
the analog-only part of your systems. Budgetary constraints
prevent a total digital deployment at all radio base stations.
Solution
Coastcom's digital Mini-cell equipment can be configured to support
digital locating verification module (LVM) transceivers. The
equipment consists of two D/I Mux III T1 multiplexers, using
CDCU channel cards. A single locating LVM digital transceiver
at a remote Mini-cell, co-located with Coastcom equipment,
allow smooth mobile assisted hand-off to analog transceiver
radios at that cell site. The transmission interface (TRI)
can be up to 50 miles away from the cell site, reducing hardware
and T1 deployment costs significantly.
How Does It Work?
The CDCU is a special data card that interfaces to the RTT in
the TRI control equipment. Multiple cell sites are supported
by an MTSO that has been set up with an ERI/TRI configuration.
By configuring the D/I Mux III in drop-and-insert mode and
intercepting the existing T1 facility at the cell site, the
LVM is supported without the need for a dedicated TRI or T1
facility. This option can be used to connect to a "compact" MTSO
or DACS at the MTSO.
How Do You Set It Up?
This configuration allows the LVM access to the existing T1,
providing there are spare DS0s (64 Kbps). The drop-and-insert
configuration provides the flexibility to use any DS0 in the
T1, so that channel 9 can continue to support the STR/STC data
connection to the MTSO. MDEQ IDs and the mobile verification
MVER programming in the MTSO are similar to a conventional
installation.
Figure c5. LVMs Support Smooth
Hand-Off "Drop-and-Insert"
What Information Do You Need?
-
What is the distance between the MTSO
and each radio base station, and what is the medium (microwave,
fiber, or local phone company T1)?
-
How many LVMs are you planning to deploy
at remote cell sites?
-
Are you using compact or non-compact
hardware?
You'll need an LVM for each site, and a
centrally located Exchange Radio Interface/Transmission Interface
(ERI/TRI).
Remote
Frame Location
Remotely Locate a Frame of
Ericsson 882D Digital Transceiver Modules Up to 50 Miles From
a Centrally Located ERI/TRI Control Rack
Problem
Plans are in place to introduce digital TDMA within the core
market, but all subscribers need dual mode analog and digital,
including those in outlying areas. Therefore, a cost-effective
solution is needed to provide digital TDMA to a number of existing
radio base stations.
Solution
Coastcom's digital Mini-cell equipment can be configured to support
both digital LVM and Digital Transceiver Modules (DTRM). The
equipment consists of two D/I Mux III T1 multiplexers, using
Digital Cellular Unit (CDCU) channel cards. Full digital support
can be achieved by installing both an LVM and DTRM digital
transceivers at the remote radio base station, and co-locating
Coastcom equipment. The TRI can be up to 50 miles away from
the cell site, reducing hardware and T1 deployment costs significantly.
How Does It Work?
The CDCU is a special data card that interfaces to the Radio
Transceiver Terminal (RTT) in the TRI Ericsson control equipment.
Multiple cell sites are supported at a MTSO that has been set
up with an ERI/TRI configuration. Configuring the D/I Mux III
in drop-and-insert mode and intercepting the existing T1 facility
at the cell site supports DTRMs and LVM, making a dedicated
TRI or T1 facility unnecessary. This option is used to connect
to a compact MTSO or DACS at the MTSO.
Figure c6. Remote DTRM and
LVM Mini-cell "Drop-and-Insert" Over an Existing Network
How Do You Set It Up?
This configuration allows access to the existing T1, providing
there is at least one spare DS0 (64 Kbps) for the LVM and four
spare DS0s (256 Kbps) for each DTRM on each radio base station
T1 facility. The drop-and-insert configuration enables use
of any DS0 in the T1, allowing channel 9 to continue supporting
the STR/STC data connection to the MTSOs. This ERI/TRI can
support digital at multiple remote RBSes.
Figure c7. Dual Channel Bank,
Adding Analog and Digital Capacity
This option is used in low-capacity cell
site, but expansion is readily available by reconfiguring the
D/I Mux III to dual channel bank mode. This adds another T1 to
expand either the analog or digital coverage. The MBLT is reconnected
to the D/I Mux III over a TTU channel card. EDCU channel cards
are added to support additional DTRMs at that cell site.
The MDEQ device IDs and MVER data-fill in
the MTSO are similar to those in a conventional installation,
necessitating no special programming.
What Information Do You Need?
-
What is the distance between the MTSO
and each radio base station, and what is the medium (microwave,
fiber, or local phone company T1)?
-
How many LVMs are you planning to deploy
at remote cell sites?
-
How many DTRMs are you planning to deploy
at remote cell sites?
-
Are you using compact or non-compact
Ericsson hardware?
To complete the electronics needed for the
Mini-cell, you will need to order the transceiver radio rack(s),
the antenna, and power systems.
Remote Sector
Support of the Dual-Mode Mini-cell
Create a Remote Sector to Support
a Dual-Mode "Analog and Digital" Mini-cell
Problem
Approval has been given to add a number of new cell sites supporting
both analog and digital TDMA, including outlying areas. A cost-effective
solution is needed to achieve maximum deployment and coverage.
Solution
Coastcom's hybrid Mini-cell equipment can be configured to support
both digital and analog transceivers. The equipment consists
of two D/I Mux III special T1 multiplexers equipped with CEL1
SDCU, CDCU, TTU, SDM, and 4-Wire TO channel cards. Installing
one or more racks of transceivers at the remote radio base
station and co-locating Coastcom equipment offers full analog
and digital support. Also, the ERI/TRI can be located up to
50 miles away at a donor cell site. The cost associated with
the ERI/TRI equipment, MBLT and ETC/STC hardware in the MTSO
can be amortized over two or more cell sites. Savings in hardware
and T1 facilities can reduce deployment costs significantly.
How Does It Work?
The hybrid Mini-cell combines an analog and a digital Mini-cell.
Similar to previous examples, the hybrid Mini-cell is configured
as a remote sector of the Donor-cell site. The MDIO data for
ATRM control transmits over the CEL1 SDCU link. The DTRM digital
voice channels with data control information are each linked
via a CDCU to RTT equipment at the donor cell site. The analog
VF channels are passed over the 4-Wire TO channel cards to
a TTU channel card at the donor4-Wire TO, while the TTU interfaces
to an ETB card on the TRI equipment. From here the TRI cross-connects
the various analog and digital voice channels use in cross-connecting
analog and digital voice channels from both the donor and Mini-cell,
passing these over T1 facilities to the MTSO. The link also
includes STR/STC data control channel 9.
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 donor closes the contact(s) to the
IOIM should alarms activate at the Mini-cell. This option connects
to both compact and non-compact Ericsson hardware.
How Do You Set It Up?
This Mini-cell configuration is ideal for fringe markets where
lower capacity cell sites are needed. For example, six analog
and nine digital voice channels could be located at the Mini-cell.
This capacity could be doubled by activating the dual channel
bank feature on the D/I Mux III and connecting a second T1
facility. Digital bandwidth allocation is limited to one DS0
(64 Kbps) for the LVM and each ATRM (analog voice channel),
four DS0s (256 Kbps) for each DTRM and/or CEL1 SDCU, and one
DS0 for the alarm feature. At the donor, the TRI distributes
the MBLT voice channels to the RTT or the ETB, which are remotely
connected to the Mini-cell. This ERI/TRI can support analog
and digital at multiple remote Mini-cells. The MDEQ device
IDs and data from the MCC, MLOC, MVER, MVC, and MDVC programming
in the MTSO is similar to a conventional installation, necessitating
no special programming.
Figure c8. Hybrid Mini-cell
for Analog and Digital Point-to-Point
What Information Do You Need?
-
How many MVC/ATRM voice channels do
you require at each Mini-cell, and how many voice channels
are you already using at the donor?
-
How many MDVC/DTRM voice channels do
you require at the Mini-cell, and how many voice channels
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, STRs, power)?
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