| .oO Phrack 49 Oo. |
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| Volume Seven, Issue Forty-Nine |
| |
| File 05 of 16 |
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| Introduction to Telephony and PBX |
| by Cavalier[TNO] |
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|
| Table of Contents |
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| 1. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . The Central Office |
| 2. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Private Branch Exchange (PBX) |
| 3. . . . . . . . . Properties of Analog and Digital Signals |
| 4. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Analog-Digital Conversion |
| 5. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Digital Transmission |
| 6. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Multiplexing |
| 7. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Transmission Media |
| 8. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Signaling |
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|
| .--------------------. |
| 1 | The Central Office | |
| `--------------------' |
|
|
| Telephones alone do nothing special. Their connection to the rest of |
| world makes them one of mankind's greatest achievements. |
|
|
| In the early days of telephone communications, users had to establish |
| their own connections to other telephones. They literally had to string |
| their own telephone lines. |
|
|
| Although the customer inconvenience of building their own connections |
| limited the availability of phone service, an even greater problem soon |
| arose. As the telephone became more popular, more people wanted to be |
| connected. At the time, each phone had to be directly wired to each |
| other. In a very short time there was a disorganized maze of wires |
| running from the homes and businesses. |
|
|
| A simple mathematical formula demonstrates the growth in the number of |
| connections required in a directly wired network: |
|
|
| I = N(N-1)/2 |
| (I = number of interconnections; N = number of subscribers) |
|
|
| I = 100(100-1)/2 |
|
|
| If just 100 subscribers attempted to connect to each other, 4950 |
| separate wire connections would be needed! Obviously, a better method |
| was needed. |
|
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|
|
| Switching |
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|
|
| A Central Office (CO) switch is a device that interconnects user |
| circuits in a local area, such as a town. The CO is a building where |
| all subscriber phone lines are brought together and provided with a |
| means of interconnection. If someone wants to call a neighbor, the call |
| is routed through the CO and switched to the neighbor. |
|
|
| What if someone wanted to call a friend in the next town? If their |
| friend was connected to a different CO, there was no way to communicate. |
|
|
| The solution was to interconnect COs. Then, CO-A routed calls to CO-B |
| to complete the connection. |
|
|
| Today every CO in the world is connected to every other CO in a vast |
| communication highway known as the Public Switched Network (PSN). The |
| PSN goes by a variety of different names: |
|
|
| Dial-up network |
| Switched network |
| Exchange network |
|
|
| The CO provides all users (subscribers) with a connection to each other. |
| A critical note, however, is that no CO has the resources to switch all |
| their users simultaneously. It would be too expensive and it is |
| unnecessary to attempt to do so because for the vast majority of the |
| time, only a small percentage of subscribers are on the phone at the |
| same time. |
|
|
| If, on a rare occasion, all the circuits are busy, the next call will be |
| blocked. A call is blocked if there are no circuits available to switch |
| it because all the circuits are in use. |
|
|
| The term `probability of blocking` is a statistical logarithm which |
| determines the chance that a call cannot be switched. For modern day |
| commercial COs, the probability of blocking is very low. |
|
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|
|
| History of COs |
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| Operating switching |
|
|
| In the first COs, a subscriber who wanted to place a call cranked a |
| magneto-generator to request service from the local phone company. An |
| operator at the CO monitored subscriber connections by observing lamps |
| on a switchboard console. When a subscriber's lamp lit, indicating the |
| request for service, the operator would answer: "Number please...". |
|
|
| The operator connected one call to another by plugging one end of a cord |
| into the jack of the caller and the other end of the cord into the jack |
| of the called party, establishing a manual, physical connection. |
|
|
| The switchboard had to have a jack for every incoming and outgoing line |
| that needed service. The number of lines an operator could monitor was |
| limited by her arm's reach. Billing was accomplished by the operators |
| writing up a ticket for each call designating its starting and ending |
| times. |
|
|
| When telephone subscribers were few in number, this method worked fine. |
| As the popularity of the phone increased, more phones placed more calls |
| and it became increasingly unmanageable and expensive to manually switch |
| and bill each call. |
|
|
| Strowger Step-by-Step Switch |
|
|
| A mechanical switch was invented in the 1890's by a Kansas City |
| mortician named Almon B. Strowger. He became very suspicious because |
| callers looking for a mortician were continually referred to his |
| competition instead to him. When he learned that the local operator was |
| the wife of his rival, his suspicions were confirmed. He set about to |
| invent a switching system that would not be dependent upon human |
| intervention. |
|
|
| His creation, called the Strowger or Step-by-Step switch, was the first |
| automated electromechanical switching system. It placed switching |
| control in the hands of the subscriber instead of the operator by adding |
| a dialing mechanism to the phone. |
|
|
| The Strowger switch completed a call by progressing digit by digit |
| through two axes of a switching matrix in the CO. A call was stepped |
| vertically to one of ten levels and rotated horizontally to one of ten |
| terminals. |
|
|
| It was called step-by-step because calls progress one step at a time as |
| the customer dialed each digit of the number. When the final digit was |
| dialed, the switch seized an available circuit and connected the call. |
|
|
| The result of the step-by step switch was to eliminate the need for |
| manual operator connection and grant privacy and call control to the |
| subscriber. |
|
|
| The step-by-step switch was a wonderful invention for its day. Today |
| it is obsolete. Compared to modern day switches, it is slow, noisy |
| and too expensive to maintain. It is also both bulky and inefficient. |
|
|
| The Crossbar Switch |
|
|
| The crossbar switch was invented and developed in the late 1920s. One |
| of its main technological advanced was the introduction of a hard wired |
| memory to store dialed digits until the dialing was complete. |
|
|
| Unlike the step-by-step method, calls are not processed under the |
| direct control of incoming dial pulses. In the step-by-step method, |
| each phone call controlled its own pathway through the switching matrix |
| at the speed the digits were dialed by the user. The crossbar switch |
| introduced a better method. |
|
|
| Devices called registers stored the digits in memory as they were dialed |
| by the callers. Not until all the digits were dialed would the call |
| begin to be switched. Once all the digits were received and stored in |
| the register, the register handed the digits to a processor to be |
| examined and used to route the call. |
|
|
| When a pathway had been established and the call was connected, the |
| register and processor would release and become available to handle |
| another call. Collectively, this process was called `common control`. |
|
|
| Common control resulted in faster call completion and increased capacity |
| of the switch. With the old step-by-step, the time it would take a user |
| to physically dial the digits would occupy valuable switch time because |
| dialing the digits was the most time consuming part of switching a call. |
| This 8 to 12 seconds of dialing time prevented other users from |
| accessing the switching matrix and generally slowed things down. |
|
|
| The genius of the crossbar common control was to store the dialed digits |
| as they came in and then after the user finished dialing, send the |
| digits off for processing. The act of dialing no longer kept other |
| calls waiting for switch resources. |
|
|
| Common control created the separation of the control functions (setting |
| up and directing the call) from the switching functions (physically |
| creating the connections). |
|
|
| Crossbar Switching Matrix |
|
|
| Calls were connected by sharing a dedicated wire path through the |
| switching matrix. Crossbar switches used the intersection of two points |
| to make a connection. They selected from a horizontal and vertical |
| matrix of wires, one row connected to one column. The system still |
| stepped the call through the network, but only after all the digits were |
| dialed. This method created a more efficient allocation of switch |
| resources. |
|
|
| There are four important components of a crossbar switch. |
|
|
| . The marker is the brain of a crossbar switch. It identifies a |
| line requesting service and allocates a register. |
|
|
| . The register provides dial tone and receives and stores the dialed |
| digits. |
|
|
| . The matrix is a set of horizontal and vertical bars. The point at |
| which the crosspoints meet establishes the connection. |
|
|
| . A trunk interface unit, also called a sender, processes calls from |
| a PBX. |
|
|
| Although crossbar is faster and less bulky than step-by-step, it is |
| still electromechanical and requires a lot of maintenance. It requires |
| huge amounts of space, generates a lot of heat, and makes a great deal of |
| noise. |
|
|
| Electronic Switching System (ESS) |
|
|
| The advent of electronic switching (also called stored program |
| switching) was made possible by the transistor. Introduced in 1965, the |
| Electronic Switching System (ESS) greatly sped up switch processing |
| capacity and speed and has done nothing less than revolutionize the |
| industry. |
|
|
| Modern ESS switches perform five main functions to establish and |
| maintain service in a public network. |
|
|
| 1. Establish a connection between two or more points |
| 2. Provide maintenance and testing services |
| 3. Record and sort customer billing charges |
| 4. Offer customer features, such as call waiting |
| 5. Allow access to operators for special services |
|
|
| An ESS uses computer-based logic to control the same two primary |
| operations we introduced with the crossbar -- common control and the |
| switching matrix. |
|
|
| (In an ESS, the terms stored program control, common control, and |
| electronic switching are all synonymous.) |
|
|
| ESS Common Control |
|
|
| The function of the common control is similar to its function in the |
| crossbar. The difference is that common control is accomplished |
| electronically instead of electromechanically. Like the crossbar, one |
| group of control devices controls the functions of all lines. However, |
| instead of the hard wired logic of the crossbar, the control device |
| consists of a computer with memory, storage, and programming capability. |
|
|
| In the ESS, the computer governs the common control. It monitors all |
| the lines and trunks coming into the CO, searching for changes in the |
| electrical state of the circuit, such as a phone going off-hook. When a |
| subscriber goes off- hook and dials a number, the common control |
| equipment detects the request for service and responds by returning the |
| dial tone. It then receives, stores, and interprets the dialed digits. |
|
|
| Again, similar to the workings of the crossbar, once the digits have |
| been processed, the computer establishes a path through the switching |
| matrix to complete the call. After the connection for the call has been |
| established, the common control equipment releases and becomes available |
| to complete other calls. |
|
|
| ESS Switching Matrix |
|
|
| Recall that in the crossbar, calls were connected by sharing a dedicated |
| wire path through the matrix, establishing a connection between an input |
| and an output. The matrix in an ESS is logically similar to the |
| crossbar grid except the pathway is electronic instead of |
| electromechanical. Called a TDM bus, it is solid state circuitry and is |
| printed into small computer controlled circuit boards. The computer |
| controls the connections and path status map to determine which path |
| should be established to connect the calling and called parties. |
|
|
| Remember |
|
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| Crossbar switching matrix = maze of physical wire cross connections |
|
|
| ESS switching matrix = electronic multiplexed TDM (time division |
| multiplexing) bus |
|
|
| ESS Advancements |
|
|
| The unprecedented advancement of the ESS was the speed and processing |
| power advantage it had over the crossbar because it switched calls |
| digitally instead of electromechanically. The processing capacity that |
| would have required a city block of crossbar technology could be |
| accomplished by one floor of ESS equipment. Much less effort was |
| required to maintain the ESS because it was smaller and had fewer moving |
| parts. |
|
|
| Telephone companies would have moved to the new technology for these |
| advantages alone. But, there was much more to be offered. There was |
| the power of the computer. |
|
|
| There are major advantages to a computer stored program. It allows the |
| system to perform functions earlier switches were incapable of. For |
| example, the switch can collect statistical information to determine its |
| effectiveness. It can perform self-diagnostics of circuit and system |
| irregularities and report malfunctions. If trouble occurs, technicians |
| can address it via a keyboard and terminal. The same terminal, often |
| called a system managers terminal, allows personnel to perform system |
| changes and to load new software, eliminating the need for manually |
| rewiring connections. |
|
|
| The computer uses two types of memory: |
|
|
| . Read Only Memory (ROM) is used to store basic operating |
| instructions and cannot be altered by the end user. The contents |
| of this memory can only be changed by the manufacturer. |
|
|
| . Random Access Memory (RAM) stores configuration and database |
| information. The contents of its memory can be changed by a |
| system administrator. |
|
|
| Other important functions of the computer include |
|
|
| . Performing telephone billing functions |
| . Generating traffic analysis reports |
| . Generating all tones and announcements regarding the status of |
| circuits and calls |
|
|
| Computer control operates under the direction of software called its |
| generic program. Periodically updating or adding to the generic program |
| allows the ESS to be much more flexible and manageable than previous |
| switch generations because it is the software, not the hardware, that |
| normally has to be upgraded. |
|
|
| Electronic switching heralded the introduction of new customer features |
| and services. Credit card calls, last number redial, station transfer, |
| conference calling, and automatic number identification (ANI) are just |
| a few examples of unprecedented customer offerings. |
|
|
| The ESS is an almost fail-safe machine. Its design objective is one |
| hour's outage in 20 years. In today's competitive environment for |
| higher quality communication equipment, ESS machines provide a level of |
| service and reliability unachievable in the past. |
|
|
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|
|
|
| .-----------------------------------. |
| 2 | The Private Branch Exchange (PBX) | |
| `-----------------------------------' |
|
|
| The two primary goals of every PBX are to |
|
|
| . facilitate communication in a business |
| . be cost effective |
|
|
|
|
| Organizations that have more than a few phones usually have an internal |
| switching mechanism that connects the internal phones to each other and |
| to the outside world. |
|
|
| A PBX is like a miniature Central Office switching system designed for a |
| private institution. A PBX performs many of the same functions as a CO |
| does. In fact, some larger institutions use genuine COs as their private |
| PBX. |
|
|
| Although a PBX and a CO are closely related, there are differences |
| between them |
|
|
| . A PBX is intended for private operation within a company. A CO is |
| intended for public service. |
|
|
| . A PBX usually has a console station that greets outside callers |
| and connects them to internal extensions. |
|
|
| . Most PBXs do not maintain the high level of service protection |
| that must be maintained in a CO. Assurance features such as |
| processor redundancy (in the event of processor failure) and |
| battery backup power, which are standard in a CO, may not be a |
| part of a PBX. |
|
|
| . COs require a seven digit local telephone number, while PBXs can |
| be more flexible and create dialing plans to best serve their |
| users (3, 4 5, or 6 digit extensions). |
|
|
| . A PBX can restrict individual stations or groups of stations from |
| certain features and services, such as access to outside lines. A |
| CO usually has no interest in restricting because these features |
| and services are billed to the customer. COs normally provide |
| unlimited access to every member on the network. |
|
|
| A PBX is composed of three major elements. |
|
|
| 1. Common equipment (a processor and a switching matrix) |
| 2. CO trunks |
| 3. Station lines |
|
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|
| Common Equipment |
|
|
| The operation of a PBX parallels the operation of a Central Office ESS. |
| Its common control is |
|
|
| . A computer operated Central Processing Unit (CPU) running software |
| that intelligently determines what must be done and how best to do |
| it. |
|
|
| . A digital multiplexed switching matrix printed on circuit boards |
| that establishes an interconnection between the calling and called |
| parties. |
|
|
| The CPU stores operating instructions and a database of information from |
| which it can make decisions. It constantly monitors all lines for |
| supervisory and control signals. A switching matrix sets up the |
| connections between stations or between stations and outgoing trunks. |
|
|
| Housed in equipment cabinets, PBX common equipment is often compact |
| enough to occupy just a closet or small room. Given the extremely high |
| rental rates many companies have, a major benefit of a PBX is its small |
| size. |
|
|
| CO Trunks and Station Lines |
|
|
| A trunk is a communication pathway between switches. A trunk may |
| provide a pathway between a PBX and the CO or between two PBXs and two |
| COs. A trunk may be privately owned or be a leased set of lines that |
| run through the Public Switched Network. |
|
|
| A line is a communication pathway between a switch and terminal |
| equipment, such as between a PBX and an internal telephone or between a |
| CO and a home telephone. |
|
|
| The function of the PBX is to interconnect or switch outgoing trunks |
| with internal lines. |
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|
|
| Two Varieties of Lines |
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|
| Station lines are either analog or digital, depending on the station |
| equipment it is connecting. If the phone on one desk is digital, it |
| should be connected to a digital line. If the phone on the desk is |
| analog, it should be connected to an analog line. |
|
|
|
|
| Varieties of Trunks |
|
|
| There exists a wide variety of trunks that can be connected to a PBX for |
| off-premises communication. Each variety has different functions and |
| capabilities. It is important to be able to distinguish them. |
|
|
| Tie Trunks |
|
|
| Organizations supporting a network of geographically dispersed PBXs |
| often use tie trunks to interconnect them. A tie trunk is a permanent |
| circuit between two PBXs in a private network. Tie trunks are usually |
| leased from the common carrier; however, a private microwave arrangement |
| can be established. Usually, leased tie trunks are not charged on a per |
| call basis but rather on the length of the trunk. If a tie trunk is |
| used more than one or two hours a day, distance sensitive pricing is |
| more economical. |
|
|
| A T1 trunk is a digital CO leased trunk that is capable of being |
| multiplexed into 24 voice or data channels at a total rate of 1.544 |
| Mbps. T1 trunks are used as PBX-to-PBX tie trunks, PBX-to-CO trunks as |
| well as PBX trunks to bypass the local CO and connect directly to a long |
| distance carrier. It is a standard for digital transmission in North |
| America and Japan. |
|
|
| T1 uses two pairs of normal, twisted wire--the same as would be found in |
| a subscriber's residence. Pulse Code Modulation is the preferred method |
| of analog to digital conversion. |
|
|
| A T2 trunk is capable of 96 multiplexed channels at a total rate of |
| 6.312 Mbps. |
|
|
| A T3 trunk is capable of 672 multiplexed channels at a total rate of |
| 44.736 Mbps. |
|
|
| A T4 trunk is capable of 4,032 multiplexed channels at a total of |
| 274.176 Mbps. |
|
|
|
|
| Direct Inward Dialing (DID) Trunks |
|
|
| Incoming calls to a PBX often first flow through an attendant position. |
| DID trunks allow users to receive calls directly from the outside |
| without intervention from the attendant. DID offers three main |
| advantages. |
|
|
| 1. It allows direct access to stations from outside the PBX. |
| 2. It allows users to receive calls even when the attendant |
| switchboard is closed. |
| 3. It takes a portion of the load off the attendants. |
|
|
| Trunk Pools |
|
|
| Trunks do not terminate at a user's telephone station. Instead trunks |
| are bundled into groups of similarly configured trunks called trunk |
| pools. When a user wants to access a trunk, he can dial a trunk access |
| code--for example, he can dial 9 to obtain a trunk in the pool. Trunk |
| pools make system administration less complicated because it is easier |
| to administer a small number of groups than a large number of individual |
| trunks. |
|
|
|
|
| Ports |
|
|
| Ports are the physical and electrical interface between the PBX and a |
| trunk or station line. |
|
|
|
|
| PBX Telephones |
|
|
| Telephone stations in a PBX are not directly connected to the CO but to |
| the PBX instead. When a station goes off-hook, the PBX recognizes it |
| and sends to the station its own dial tone. The PBX requires some |
| access digit, usually "9" to obtain an idle CO trunk from a pool to |
| connect the station with the public network. This connection between |
| the telephone and the PBX allows stations to take advantage of a myriad |
| of PBX features. |
|
|
| The attendant console is a special PBX telephone designed to serve |
| several functions. Traditionally, most PBXs have used attendants as the |
| central answering point for incoming calls. Calls placed to the PBX |
| first connected to the attendant, who answered the company name. The |
| attendant then established a connection to the desired party. The |
| attendant also provided assistance to PBX users, including directory |
| assistance and reports of problems. |
|
|
| In recent years a number of cost-saving improvements have been made to |
| the attendant console. A feature commonly called automated attendant |
| can establish connections without a human interface, substantially |
| decreasing PBX operating costs. |
|
|
| Blocking versus Non-blocking |
|
|
| Blocking is a critical aspect of the functioning of a PBX. A |
| non-blocking switch is one that provides as many input/output interface |
| ports as there are lines in the network. In other words, the switching |
| matrix provides enough paths for all line and trunk ports to be |
| connected simultaneously. |
|
|
| PBX systems are usually blocking. It requires an exponential increase |
| in resources and expense to ensure non-blocking. Based on call traffic |
| studies and the nature of calls, it is generally acceptable to engineer |
| a low level of blocking in exchange for a major savings of common |
| equipment resources. |
|
|
| Grades of service are quantitative measurements of blocking. They are |
| written in the form: |
|
|
| P.xx |
|
|
| where xx is a two digit number that indicates how many calls out of a |
| hundred will be blocked. The smaller the number, the better the grade |
| of service. |
|
|
| P.01 means one call out of a hundred will be blocked. It is a better |
| grade of service than P.05 that block five calls out of a hundred. |
| Naturally the P.05 service costs less than the better grade of service |
| provided by P.01. |
|
|
| Even if a PBX's switching matrix is non-blocking, an internal caller may |
| still not be able to reach an outside trunk if all the trunks are busy. |
| CO trunks cost money, and very few PBXs dedicate one trunk to every |
| internal line. Instead, traffic studies are performed to determine the |
| percentage of time a station will be connected to an outside trunk |
| during peak hours. |
|
|
| If, for example, it is determined that the average station uses a trunk |
| only 20% of the time during peak hours, then the switch may be |
| configured to have a 5:1 line-to-trunk ratio, meaning for every five |
| lines (or extensions) there is one trunk. Most PBXs are configured on |
| this principle as a major cost saving method. |
|
|
|
|
| PBX Features |
|
|
| COs and PBXs share many of the same attributes and functionality. |
| However, COs are built to perform different tasks than a PBX, resulting |
| in feature differences between them. The following is an overview of |
| common PBX features not found in a CO. |
|
|
| Automatic Route Selection (ARS) |
|
|
| A primary concern of any telecommunications manager is to keep costs |
| down. One of these costs is long distance service. ARS is a feature |
| that controls long distance costs. |
|
|
| Most PBXs have more than just public CO trunks connected to them. They |
| may have a combination of tie trunks to other PBXs (T1/E1 trunks and |
| many others). Each type of trunk has a separate billing scheme, |
| relatively more or less expensive for a given number of variables. |
|
|
| It is extremely difficult to attempt to educate company employees on |
| which trunks to select for which calls at what time of day. It defeats |
| the productivity-raising, user-transparency goal of any PBX if employees |
| must pour over tariffing charts every time they want to use the phone. |
|
|
| Instead, ARS programs the PBX central processor to select the least |
| expensive trunk on a call by call basis. When a user places a call, the |
| computer determines the most cost effective route, dials the digits and |
| completes the call. |
|
|
|
|
| Feature Access |
|
|
| PBXs support a wide variety of user features. For example, call |
| forward, hold, and call pickup are all user features. There are two |
| methods of activating a feature. A code, such as "*62" can be assigned |
| to the call forward feature. To activate call forward the user presses |
| "*62" and continues dialing. |
|
|
| Dial codes are not the preferred method of feature access. The problem |
| is that users tend to forget the codes and either waste time looking |
| them up or do not take advantage of time saving features, thereby |
| defeating the purpose of buying them. |
|
|
| Dedicated button feature access is a better solution. Programmable |
| feature buttons, located on most PBX telephones, are pressed to activate |
| the desired feature. If a user wants to activate call forward, he |
| presses a button labeled "call forward" and continues dialing. |
|
|
| The only drawback of telephones with programmable feature buttons is |
| that they are more expensive than standard phones. |
|
|
|
|
| Voice Mail |
|
|
| For a voice conversation to occur, there is one prerequisite so obvious |
| it is usually overlooked. The called party must be available to answer |
| the call. In today's busy world, people are often not accessible which |
| can create a major problem resulting in messages not being received and |
| business not being conducted. |
|
|
| Statistics confirm the need for an alternate method. |
|
|
| 75% of call attempts fail to make contact with the desired party. |
|
|
| 50% of business calls involve one-way information--one party |
| wishing to deliver information to another party without any |
| response necessary. |
|
|
| 50% of incoming calls are less important than the activity they |
| interrupt. |
|
|
| Voice mail (also known as store and forward technology) is a valuable |
| feature that is designed around today's busy, mobile office. It is like |
| a centralized answering machine for all telephone stations in a PBX. |
| When a telephone is busy or unattended, the systems routes the caller to |
| a voice announcement that explains that the called party is unavailable |
| and invites the caller to leave a message. The message is stored until |
| the station user enters a security dial access code and retrieves the |
| message. |
|
|
|
|
| Automated Attendant |
|
|
| Automated attendant is a feature sometimes included with voice mail. It |
| allows outside callers to bypass a human attendant by routing their own |
| calls through the PBX. Callers are greeted with a recorded announcement |
| that prompts them to dial the extension number of the desired position, |
| or stay on the line to be connected to an attendant. |
|
|
| Reducing cost is the primary goal of automated attendant. The decreased |
| attendant work load more d) an pays for the cost of the software and |
| equipment. |
|
|
| When automated attendant was first introduced, it met with substantial |
| resistance from the general public. People did not want to talk to a |
| machine. But, as its cost effectiveness drove many companies to employ |
| it, the public has slowly adjusted to the new technology. |
|
|
| Restriction |
|
|
| Nearly every PBX enforces some combination of inside and outside calling |
| restrictions on certain phones. Depending upon the sophistication of |
| the PBX, a system administrator can have nearly unlimited flexibility in |
| assigning restrictions. For example, a tire manufacturing plant could |
| restrict all lobby phones at corporate headquarters to internal and |
| local calls only. The phones at the storage warehouse could be |
| restricted for only internal calling. But, all executive phones could |
| be left unrestricted. |
|
|
| Long distance toll charges can be a crippling expense. Toll fraud is a |
| major corporate problem. Restriction combats unauthorized use of |
| company telephone resources and is a prime function of any PBX. |
|
|
|
|
| Tandems |
|
|
| As stated earlier, it is necessary to have a switching mechanism to |
| interconnect calls. If a number of phones all wish to be able to talk |
| to each other, an enormous amount of cabling would be wasted tying each |
| of them together. Thus, the switch was born. |
|
|
| The same principle applies for interconnecting PBXs. Large firms that |
| have PBXs scattered all over the country want each PBX to have the |
| ability to access every other one. But the expense of directly |
| connecting each could drive a company out of business. The solution is |
| to create a centrally located tandem switching station to interconnect |
| the phones from one PBX with the phones from any other. This solution |
| creates a Private Switched Network. |
|
|
| Directing digits are often used to inform the tandem switch where to |
| route the call. Each PBX is assigned a unique number. Let's say a PBX |
| in Paris is numbered "4." To call the Paris PBX from a PBX in Chicago, |
| a user would dial "4- XXXX." |
|
|
|
|
| Uniform Dialing Plan |
|
|
| A network of PBXs can be configured poorly so that calling an extension |
| at another PBX could involve dialing a long, confusing series of numbers |
| and create a lot of user frustration. A Uniform Dialing Plan enables a |
| caller to dial another internal extension at any PBX on the network with |
| a minimum of digits, perhaps four or five. The system determines where |
| to route the call, translates the digits and chooses the best facility, |
| all without the knowledge of the user. As far as the user knows, the |
| call could have been placed to a station at the next desk. |
|
|
|
|
| Call Accounting System (CAS) and Station Message Detail Recording (SMDR) |
|
|
| CAS works in conjunction with SMDR to identify and monitor telephone |
| usage in the system. SMDR records call information such as the calling |
| number, the time of the call, and its duration. The raw data is usually |
| listed chronologically and can be printed on reports. |
|
|
| SMDR by itself is not particularly useful because the sheer volume and |
| lack of sorting capability of the reports make them difficult to work |
| with. A Call Accounting Systems is a database program that addresses |
| these shortcomings by producing clear, concise management reports |
| detailing phone usage. |
|
|
| The primary function of CAS reports is to help control and discourage |
| unnecessary or unauthorized use and to bill back calling charges to |
| users. Many law firms use a call accounting system to bill individual |
| clients for every call they make on behalf of each client. |
|
|
|
|
| Attendant Features |
|
|
| A number of features are available to improve the efficiency of |
| attendant consoles. |
|
|
| Here are a few of them. |
|
|
| Direct Station Selection (DSS) allows attendants to call any |
| station telephone by pressing a button labeled with its extension. |
|
|
| Automatic Timed Reminder alerts the attendant that a station has |
| not picked up its call. The attendant may choose to reconnect to |
| the call and attempt to reroute it. |
|
|
| Centralized Attendant Service groups all network attendants into |
| the same physical location to avoid redundancies of service and |
| locations. |
|
|
|
|
| Power Failure Schemes |
|
|
| If a city or a town experiences a commercial power failure, telephones |
| connected directly to the CO will not be affected because the CO gets |
| power from its own internal battery source. A PBX, however, is |
| susceptible to general power failures because it usually gets its power |
| from the municipal electric company. |
|
|
| There are several different ways a PBX can be configured to overcome a |
| power failure. |
|
|
| A PBX can be directly connected to a DC battery which serves as |
| its source of power. The battery is continually recharged by an |
| AC line to the electric company. In the event of a power failure, |
| the PBX will continue functioning until the battery runs out. |
|
|
| A PBX can have an Uninterruptable Power Supply (UPS) to protect |
| against temporary surges or losses of power. |
|
|
| A PBX can use a Power Failure Transfer (PFT) which, in the event |
| of a power failure, immediately connects preassigned analog phones |
| to CO trunks, thereby using power from the CO instead of from the |
| PBX. |
|
|
|
|
| Outgoing Trunk Queuing |
|
|
| In the event all outgoing trunks are busy, this feature allows a user to |
| dial a Trunk Queuing code and hang up. As soon as a trunk becomes free, |
| the system reserves it for the user, rings the station and connects the |
| outside call automatically. |
|
|
|
|
| System Management |
|
|
| PBXs can be so large and complex that without a carefully designed |
| method of system management chaos can result. The best, most advanced |
| systems mimic CO management features--computer access terminals which |
| clearly and logically program and control most system features. The |
| system manager has a wide variety of responsibilities which may include, |
| but is not limited to |
|
|
| Programming telephone moves, additions, and changes on the system |
|
|
| Performing traffic analysis to maximize system configuration |
| resources and optimize network performance |
|
|
| Responding to system-generated alarms |
|
|
| Programming telephone, system, attendant, and network features. |
|
|
|
|
| ISDN |
|
|
|
|
| ISDN is not a product. Rather, it is a series of standards created by |
| the international body, ITU (previously known as CCITT), to support the |
| implementation of digital transmission of voice, data, and image through |
| standard interfaces. Its goal is to combine all communications services |
| offered over separate networks into a single, standard network. Any |
| subscriber could gain access to this vast network by simply plugging |
| into the wall. (At this time not all PBXs are compatible with the ISDN |
| standard.) |
|
|
|
|
| Alternatives to a PBX |
|
|
| There are two main alternatives to purchasing a PBX. They are |
| purchasing a Key system or renting Centrex service from the local |
| telephone company. |
|
|
|
|
| Key System |
|
|
| Key systems are designed for very small customers, who typically use |
| under 15 lines. There is no switching mechanism as in a PBX. Instead |
| every line terminates on every phone. Hence, everyone with a phone can |
| pick up every incoming call. |
|
|
| Key systems are characterized by a fat cable at the back of each phone. |
| The cables are fat because each phone is directly connected to each |
| incoming line and each line has to be wired separately to each phone. |
|
|
| Fat cables have become a drawback to Key systems as building wire |
| conduits have begun to fill with wire. It has become increasingly |
| difficult to add and move stations because technicians must physically |
| rewire the bulky cables instead of simply programming a change in the |
| software. |
|
|
| Key telephones are equipped with line assignment buttons that light on |
| incoming calls and flash on held calls. These buttons enable a user to |
| access each line associated with each button. Unlike a PBX, there is no |
| need to interface with an attendant console to obtain an outside line. |
|
|
|
|
| Differences between Key and PBX Systems |
|
|
| Key systems have no switching matrix. In a Key system, incoming |
| calls terminate directly on a station user's phone. In a PBX, |
| incoming calls usually first go to the attendant who switches the |
| call to the appropriate station. |
|
|
| PBX accesses CO trunk pools by dialing an access code such as "9." |
| Key systems CO trunks are not pooled. They are accessed directly. |
|
|
| Key systems make use of a limited number of features, many of them |
| common to the PBX. These include |
|
|
| Last number redial |
| Speed dialing |
| Message waiting lamp |
| Paging |
| Toll restriction |
|
|
| Today's PBXs can simulate Key system operation. For example, telephones |
| can have a line directly terminating on a button for direct access. |
|
|
|
|
| Centrex |
|
|
| The other alternative to purchasing a PBX is leasing a Centrex service. |
|
|
| Centrex is a group of PBX-like service offerings furnished by the local |
| telephone company. It offers many of the same features and functions |
| associated with a PBX, but without the expense of owning and maintaining |
| equipment and supporting in-house administrative personnel. |
|
|
| Because network control remains the responsibility of the CO, companies |
| that choose Centrex service over purchasing and maintaining a private |
| PBX can ignore the sophisticated world of high tech telecommunications |
| and leave it up to the telephone company representatives. |
|
|
| To provide Centrex service, a pair of wires is extended from the CO to |
| each user's phone. Centrex provides an "extension" at each station |
| complete with its own telephone number. No switching equipment is |
| located at the customer premises. Instead, Centrex equipment is |
| physically located at the CO. |
|
|
| There are a number of reasons a company would choose a Centrex system |
| over owning their own PBX. Currently Centrex has six million customers |
| in the United States market. |
|
|
| Advantages of a Centrex System over a PBX: |
|
|
| Nearly uninterruptable service due to large redundancies in the CO |
|
|
| Easily upgraded to advanced features. |
|
|
| No floor space requirement for equipment. |
|
|
| No capital investment |
|
|
| 24-hour maintenance coverage by CO technicians |
|
|
| Inherent Direct Inward Dialing (DID). All lines terminate at |
| extensions, instead of first flowing through a switchboard. |
|
|
| Call accounting and user billing as inherent part of the service. |
|
|
| Reduced administrative payroll. |
|
|
|
|
| Disadvantages of a Centrex System: |
|
|
| Cost. Centrex is tariffed by the local telephone company and can |
| be very expensive. Companies are charged for each line connected |
| to the Centrex, as well for the particular service plan chosen. |
| Additionally, Centrex service may be subject to monthly increases. |
|
|
| Feature availability. Centrex feature options are generally not |
| state of the art, lagging behind PBX technology. Not all COs are |
| of the same generation and level of sophistication--a company |
| associated with an older CO may be subject to inferior service and |
| limited or outdated feature options. |
|
|
| Control of the network is the responsibility of the CO. While |
| this release from responsibility is often cited as a positive |
| feature of Centrex, there are drawback to relinquishing control. |
| CO bureaucracy can be such that a station move, addition or change |
| can sometimes take days to achieve. Furthermore, each request is |
| charged a fee. Also, some companies are more particular about |
| certain features of their network (security for example) and |
| require direct control for themselves. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
| .------------------------------------------. |
| 3 | Properties of Analog and Digital Signals | |
| `------------------------------------------' |
|
|
| A man in Canada picks up a telephone and dials a number. Within |
| seconds, he begins talking to his business partner in Madrid. How can |
| this be? |
|
|
| Telephony is a constantly evolving technology with scientific rules and |
| standards. You will learn to make sense of what would otherwise seem |
| impossible. |
|
|
| Voice travels at 250 meters per second and has a range limited to the |
| strength of the speaker's lungs. In contrast, electricity travels at |
| speeds approaching the speed of light (310,000 Km per second) and can be |
| recharged to travel lengths spanning the globe. Obviously, electricity |
| is a more effective method of transmission. |
|
|
| To capitalize on the transmission properties of electricity, voice is |
| first converted into electrical impulses and then transmitted. These |
| electrical impulses represent the varying characteristics that |
| distinguish all of our voices. The impulses are transmitted at high |
| speeds and then decoded at the receiving end into a recognizable |
| duplication of the original voice. |
|
|
| For a hundred years, scientists have been challenged by how best to |
| represent voice by electrical impulses. An enormous amount of effort |
| has been devoted to solving this puzzle. The two forms of electrical |
| signals used to represent voice are analog and digital. |
|
|
| Both analog and digital signals are composed of waveforms. However, |
| their waveforms have very distinctive properties which distinguish them. |
| To understand the science of telephony, it is necessary to understand |
| how analog and digital signals function, and what the differences |
| between them are. |
|
|
| If you do not possess a fundamental understanding of basic waveforms, |
| you will not understand many of the more advanced concepts of |
| telecommunications. |
|
|
|
|
| Analog Signal Properties |
|
|
| Air is the medium that carries sound. When we speak to one another, our |
| vocal chords create a disturbance of the air. This disturbance causes |
| air molecules to become expanded and compress thus creating waves. This |
| type of wave is called analog, because it creates a waveform similar to |
| the sound it represents. |
|
|
| Analog waves are found in nature. They are continually flowing and have |
| a limitless number of values. The sine wave is a good example of an |
| analog signal. |
|
|
|
|
| Three properties of analog signals are particularly important in |
| transmission: |
|
|
| amplitude frequency phase |
|
|
| Amplitude |
|
|
| Amplitude refers to the maximum height of an analog signal. Amplitude |
| is measured in decibels when the signal is measured in the form of |
| audible sound. Amplitude is measured in volts when the signal is in the |
| form of electrical energy. |
|
|
|
|
| Amplitude of an Analog Wave |
|
|
|
|
| Volts represent the instantaneous amount of power an analog signal |
| contains. |
|
|
| Amplitude, wave height, and loudness of an analog signal represent the |
| same property of the signal. Decibels and volts are simply two |
| different units of measurement which are used to quantify this property. |
|
|
| Frequency |
|
|
| Frequency is the number of sound waves or cycles that occur in a given |
| length of time. A cycle is represented by a 360 degree sine wave. |
| Frequency is measured in cycles per second, commonly called hertz (Hz). |
|
|
| Frequency corresponds to the pitch (highness or lowness) of a sound. The |
| higher the frequency, the higher the pitch. The high pitch tone of a |
| flute will have a higher frequency than the low pitch tone of a bass. |
|
|
| Phase refers to the relative position of a wave at a point in time. It |
| is useful to compare the phase of two waves that have the same frequency |
| by determining whether the waves have the same shape or position at the |
| same time. Waves that are in-step are said to be in phase, and waves |
| that are not synchronized are called out-of-phase. |
|
|
| Modulation |
|
|
|
|
| The reason these three properties are significant is that each can be |
| changed (modulated) to facilitate transmission. |
|
|
| The term modulation means imposing information on an electrical signal. |
|
|
| The process of modulation begins with a wave of constant amplitude, |
| frequency, and phase called carrier wave. Information signals |
| representing voice, data, or video modulate a property (amplitude, |
| frequency, or phase) of the carrier wave to create a representation of |
| itself on the wave. |
|
|
| Amplitude Modulation is a method of adding information to an analog |
| signal by varying its amplitude while keeping its frequency constant. AM |
| radio is achieved by amplitude modulation. |
|
|
| Frequency Modulation adds information to an analog signal by varying its |
| frequency while keeping its amplitude constant. FM radio is achieved by |
| frequency modulation. |
|
|
| Phase Modulation adds information to an analog signal by varying its |
| phase. |
|
|
| The modulated wave carrying the information is then transmitted to a |
| distant station where it is decoded and the information is extracted |
| from the signal. |
|
|
|
|
| Properties of Digital Signals |
|
|
|
|
| Unlike analog signals, digital signals do not occur in nature. Digital |
| signals are an invention of mankind. They were created as a method of |
| coding information. An early example of digital signals is the Morse |
| Code. |
|
|
| Digital signals have discrete, non-continuous values. Digital signals |
| have only two states: |
|
|
|
|
| Type of Signal State |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| Light switch On Off |
|
|
|
|
| Voltage Voltage Level 1 Voltage Level 2 |
| (-2 volts) (+2 volts) |
|
|
| Morse Short beat Long beat |
|
|
|
|
|
|
| Computers and humans cannot communicate directly with each other. We do |
| not understand what tiny bits and voltage changes mean. Computers do |
| not understand the letters of the alphabet or words. |
|
|
| For computers and humans to communicate with each other, a variety of |
| binary (digital) languages, called character codes, have been created. |
| Each character of a character code represents a unique letter of the |
| alphabet: a digit, punctuation mark, or printing character. |
|
|
| The most popular character code is call ASCII (America Standard Code for |
| Information Interchange). It uses a seven bit coding scheme-- each |
| character consists of a unique combination of seven 1s and 0s. For |
| example, the capital letter T is represented by the ASCII 1010100; the |
| number 3 by the ACSII 0110011. The maximum number of different |
| characters which can be coded in ASCII is 128). |
|
|
|
|
| English ASCII |
|
|
| T 1010100 |
|
|
| 3 0110011 |
|
|
|
|
| Another character code is called Extended ASCII. Extended ASCII builds |
| upon the existing ASCII character code. Extended ASCII codes characters |
| into eight bits providing 256 character representations). The extra 127 |
| characters represent foreign language letters and other useful symbols. |
|
|
|
|
| Signal Loss - Attenuation |
|
|
| Analog and digital signals are transmitted to provide communication over |
| long distances. Unfortunately, the strength of any transmitted signal |
| weakens over distance. This phenomenon is called attenuation. Both |
| analog and digital signals are subject to attenuation, but the |
| attenuation is overcome in very different ways. |
|
|
|
|
| Analog Attenuation |
|
|
| Every kilometer or so, an analog signal must be amplified to overcome |
| natural attenuation. Devices called amplifiers boost all the signals |
| they receive, strengthening the signals to their original power. The |
| problem is that over distance, noise is created and it is boosted along |
| with the desired signal. |
|
|
| The result of using amplifiers is that both the noise (unwanted |
| electrical energy) and the signal carrying the information are |
| amplified. Because the noise is amplified every kilometer, it can build |
| up enough energy to make a conversation incomprehensible. If the noise |
| becomes too great, communication may become impossible. |
|
|
| Two different types of noise affect signal quality. |
|
|
| White noise is the result of unwanted electrical signals over |
| lines. When it becomes loud enough, it sounds like the roar of |
| the ocean at a distance. |
|
|
| Impulse noise is caused by intermittent disturbances such as |
| telephone company switch activity or lightning. It sounds like |
| pops and crack over the line. |
|
|
| As analog signals pass through successive amplifiers, the noise is |
| amplified along with the signal and therefore causes the signal to |
| degenerate. |
|
|
|
|
| Digital Attenuation |
|
|
| Although digital signals are also affected by attenuation, they are |
| capable of a much more effective method to overcome signal loss. A |
| device called a regenerative repeater determines whether the incoming |
| digital signal is a 1 or a 0. The regenerative repeater then recreates |
| the signal and transmits it at a higher signal strength. This method is |
| more effective than repeating an analog signal because digital signals |
| can only be one of two possible states. Remember that an analog signal |
| is comprised of an infinite number of states.) |
|
|
| The advantage of a digital regenerator is that noise is not reproduced. |
| At each regenerative repeater, all noise is filtered out-- a major |
| advantage over analog amplification. |
|
|
|
|
| Advantages of Digital over Analog Signals |
|
|
|
|
| 1. Digital regenerative repeaters are superior to analog amplifiers. |
|
|
| A buildup of noise causes a distortion of the waveform. If the |
| distortion is large enough, a signal will not arrive in the same |
| form as it was transmitted. The result is errors in transmission. |
|
|
| In digital transmission, noise is filtered out leaving a clean, |
| clear signal. A comparison of average error rates shows |
|
|
| Analog: 1 error every 100,000 signals |
|
|
| Digital: 1 error every 10,000,000 signals |
|
|
| 2. The explosion of modern digital electronic equipment on the market |
| has greatly reduced its price, making digital communications |
| increasingly more cost effective. The price of computer chips, |
| the brains of electronic equipment, has dropped dramatically in |
| recent years further reducing the price of digital equipment. |
|
|
| This trend will almost certainly continue adding more pressure to |
| use digital methods. |
|
|
|
|
| 3. An ever increasing bulk of communication is between digital |
| equipment (computer-to-computer) |
|
|
| For most of telephony history, long distance communication meant |
| voice telephone conversations. Because voice is analog in nature, |
| it was logical to use analog facilities for transmission. Now the |
| picture is changing. More and more communication is between |
| computers, digital faxes, and other digital transmission devices. |
|
|
| Naturally, it is preferable to send digital data over digital |
| transmission equipment when both sending and receiving devices are |
| digital since there is no need to convert the digital signals to |
| analog to prepare them for analog transmission. |
|
|
| Historically, telephone networks were intended to carry analog voice |
| traffic. Therefore, equipment was designed to create, transmit, and |
| process analog signals. As technology in computers (microprocessors) |
| and digital transmission has advanced, nearly all equipment installed in |
| new facilities are digital. |
|
|
|
|
| .---------------------------. |
| 4 | Analog-Digital Conversion | |
| `---------------------------' |
|
|
|
|
| Because it offers better transmission quality, almost every long |
| distance telephone communication now uses digital transmission on the |
| majority of their lines. But since voice in its natural form is analog, |
| it is necessary to convert these. In order to transmit analog waves |
| over digital facilities to capitalize on its numerous advantages, analog |
| waves are converted to digital waves. |
|
|
|
|
| Pulse Code Modulation (PCM) |
|
|
| The conversion process is called Pulse Code Modulation (PCM) and is |
| performed by a device called a codec (coder/decoder). PCM is a method |
| of converting analog signals into digital 1s and 0s, suitable for |
| digital transmission. At the receiving end of the transmission, the |
| coded 1s and 0s are reconverted into analog signals which can be |
| understood by the listener. |
|
|
|
|
| Three Step Process of PCM |
|
|
|
|
| Step 1 - Sampling |
|
|
|
|
| Sampling allows for the recording of the voltage levels at discrete |
| points in prescribed time intervals along an analog wave. Each voltage |
| level is called a sample. Nyquist's Theorem states: |
|
|
| If an analog signal is sampled at twice the rate of the highest |
| frequency it attains, the reproduced signal will be a highly |
| accurate reproduction of the original. |
|
|
| The highest frequency used in voice communications is 4000 Hz (4000 |
| cycles per second). Therefore, if a signal is sampled 8000 times per |
| second, the listener will never know they have been connected and |
| disconnected 8000 times every second! They will simply recognize the |
| signal as the voice of the speaker. |
|
|
| To visualize this procedure better, consider how a movie works. Single |
| still frames are sped past a light and reproduced on a screen. Between |
| each of the frames is a dark space. Since the frames move so quickly, |
| the eye does not detect this dark space. Instead the eye perceives |
| continuous motion from the still frames. |
|
|
| PCM samples can be compared to the still frames of a movie. Since the |
| voice signal is sampled at such frequent intervals, the listener does |
| not realize that there are breaks in the voice and good quality |
| reproduction of voice can be achieved. Naturally, the higher the |
| sampling rate, the more accurate the reproduction of the signal. Dr. |
| Nyquist was the one who discovered that only 8000 samples per second are |
| needed for excellent voice reproduction. |
|
|
| The 8000 samples per second are recorded as a string of voltage levels. |
| This string is called a Pulse Amplitude Modulation (PAM) signal. |
|
|
|
|
| Step 2 - Quantizing |
|
|
|
|
| Since analog waves are continuous and have an infinite number of values, |
| an infinite number of PAM voltage levels are needed to perfectly |
| describe any analog wave. In practice, it would be impossible to |
| represent each exact PAM voltage level. Instead, each level is rounded |
| to the nearest of 256 predetermined voltage levels by a method called |
| Quantizing. |
|
|
| Quantizing assigns each PAM voltage level to one of 256 amplitude |
| levels. The amplitude levels do not exactly match the amplitude of the |
| PAM signal but are close enough so only a little distortion results. |
|
|
| This distortion is called quantizing error. Quantizing error is the |
| difference between the actual PAM voltage level and the amplitude level |
| it was rounded to. Quantizing error produces quantizing noise. |
| Quantizing noise creates an audible noise over the transmission line. |
|
|
| Low amplitude signals are affected more than high amplitude signals by |
| quantizing noise. To overcome this effect, a process call companding is |
| employed. Low amplitude signals are sampled more frequently than high |
| amplitude signals. Therefore, changes in voltage along the waveform |
| curve can be more accurately distinguished. |
|
|
| Companding reduces the effect of quantizing error on low amplitude |
| signals where the effect is greatest by increasing the error on high |
| amplitude signals where the effect is minimal. Throughout this process, |
| the total number of samples remains the same at 8000 per second. |
|
|
| Two common companding formulas are used in different parts of the world. |
| The United States and Japan follow a companding formula called Mu-Law. |
| In Europe and other areas of the world, the formula is slight different |
| and is called A-Law. Although the two laws differ only slightly, they |
| are incompatible. Mu-Law hardware cannot be used in conjunction with |
| A-Law hardware. |
|
|
|
|
| Step 3 - Encoding |
|
|
| Encoding converts the 256 possible numeric amplitude voltage levels into |
| binary 8-bit digital codes. The number 256 was not arrived at |
| accidentally. The reason there are 256 available amplitude levels is |
| that an 8-bit code contains 256 (28) possible combinations of 1s and 0s. |
| These codes are the final product of Pulse Codes Modulation (PCM) and |
| are ready for digital transmission. |
|
|
| PCM only provides 256 unique pitches and volumes. Every sound that is |
| heard over a phone is one of these 256 possible sounds. |
|
|
| Digital-Analog Conversion |
|
|
| After the digital bit stream is transmitted, it must be convert back to |
| an analog waveform to be audible to the human ear. This process is |
| called Digital-Analog conversion and is essentially the reverse of PCM. |
|
|
| This conversion occurs in three steps. |
|
|
| Step 1 - Decoding |
|
|
| Decoding converts the 8-bit PCM code into PAM voltage levels. |
|
|
| Step 2 - Reconstruction |
|
|
| Reconstruction reads the converted voltage level and reproduces |
| the original analog wave |
|
|
| Step 3 - Filtering |
|
|
| The decoding process creates unwanted high frequency noise in the |
| 4000 Hz - 8000 Hz range which is audible to the human ear. A |
| low-pass filter blocks all frequencies above one-half the sampling |
| rate, eliminating any frequencies above 4000 Hz. |
|
|
|
|
| .----------------------. |
| 5 | Digital Transmission | |
| `----------------------' |
|
|
| Importance of Digital Transmission |
|
|
| Digital transmission is the movement of computer-encoded binary |
| information from one machine to another. Digital information can |
| represent voice, text, graphics, and video. |
|
|
| Digital communication is important because we use it everyday. You have |
| used digital communications if |
|
|
| - your credit card is scanned at the checkout line of a department |
| store. |
|
|
| - you withdraw money from an automated teller machine. |
|
|
| - you make an international call around the world. |
|
|
| There are a million ways digital communication affects us every day. |
|
|
| As computer technology advances, more and more of our lives are affected |
| by digital communication. A vast amount of digital information is |
| transmitted every second of every day. Our bank records, our tax |
| records, our purchasing records, and so much more is stored as digital |
| information and transferred whenever and wherever it is needed. It is |
| no exaggeration to say that digital communications will continue to |
| change our lives from now on. |
|
|
|
|
| Digital Voice Versus Digital Data |
|
|
|
|
| The difference between voice and non-voice data is this: |
|
|
| Voice transmission represents voice while data transmission |
| represents any non-voice information, such as text, graphics, or |
| video. Both can be transmitted in identical format--as digitized |
| binary digits |
|
|
| In order to distinguish digital voice binary code from digital data, |
| since they both look like strings of 1s and 0s, you must know what the |
| binary codes represent. |
|
|
| This leads us to another important distinction-- that between digital |
| transmission and data transmission. Although these two terms are often |
| confused, they are not the same thing. |
|
|
| Digital transmission describes the format of the electrical |
| signal--1s and 0s as opposed to analog waves. |
|
|
| Data transmission describes the type of information transmitted- |
| -text, graphics, or video as opposed to voice. |
|
|
| Basic Digital Terminology |
|
|
| A bit is the smallest unit of binary information--a "1" or a "0" |
|
|
| A byte is a "word" of 7 or 8 bits and can represent a unit of |
| information such as a letter, a digit, a punctuation mark, or a printing |
| character (such as a line space). |
|
|
| BPS (bits per second) or bit rate refers to the information transfer |
| rate-- the number of bits transmitted in one second. BPS commonly refers |
| to a transmission speed. |
|
|
| Example: |
|
|
| A device rated at 19,200 bps can process more information than one |
| rated at 2,400 bps. As a matter of fact, eight times more. Bps |
| provides a simple quantifiable means of measuring the amount of |
| information transferred in one second. |
|
|
| Bits per second is related to throughput. Throughput is the amount of |
| digital data a machine or system can process. One might say a machine |
| has a "high throughput," meaning that it can process a lot of information. |
|
|
|
|
| Digital Data Transmission |
|
|
|
|
| Data communications is made up of three separate parts: |
|
|
| 1. Data Terminal Equipment (DTE) is any digital (binary code) device, |
| such as a computer, a printer, or a digital fax. |
|
|
| 2. Data Communications Equipment (DCE) are devices that establish, |
| maintain, and terminate a connection between a DTE and a facility. |
| They are used to manipulate the signal to prepare it for |
| transmission. An example of DCE is a modem. |
|
|
| 3. The transmission path is the communication facility linking DCEs |
| and DTEs. |
|
|
|
|
| The Importance of Modems |
|
|
|
|
| A pair of modems is required for most DTE-to-DTE transmissions made over |
| the public network. |
|
|
| The function of a modem is similar to the function of a codec, but in |
| reverse. Codecs convert information that was originally in analog form |
| (such as voice) into digital form to transmit it over digital |
| facilities. Modems do the opposite. They convert digital signals to |
| analog to transmit them over analog facilities. |
|
|
| It continues to be necessary to convert analog signals to digital and |
| then back again because the transmission that travels between telephone |
| company COs is usually over digital facilities. The digital signals |
| travel from one telephone company Central Office to another over high |
| capacity digital circuits. Digital transmission is so superior to |
| analog transmission that it is worth the time and expense of converting |
| the analog signals to digital signals. |
|
|
| Since computers communicate digitally, and most CO-to-CO facilities are |
| digital, why then is it necessary to convert computer-generated digital |
| data signals to analog before transmitting them? |
|
|
| The answer is simple. Most lines from a local Central Office to a |
| customer's residence or business (called the local loop) are still |
| analog because for many years, the phone company has been installing |
| analog lines into homes and businesses. Only very recently have digital |
| lines begun to terminate at the end user's premises. |
|
|
| It is one thing to convert a telephone company switch from analog to |
| digital. It is quite another to rewire millions of individual customer |
| sites, each one requiring on-site technician service. This would |
| require a massive effort that no institution or even industry could |
| afford to do all at one time. |
|
|
| In most cases, therefore, we are left with a public network that is part |
| analog and part digital. We must, therefore, be prepared to convert |
| analog to digital and digital to analog. |
|
|
|
|
| Modulation/Demodulation |
|
|
|
|
| To transmit data from one DCE to another, a modem is required when any |
| portion of the transmitting facility is analog. The modem (modulater/ |
| demodulater) modulates and demodulates digital signals for |
| transmission over analog lines. Modulation means "changing the |
| signals." The digital signals are changed to analog, transmitted, and |
| then changed back to digital at the receiving end. |
|
|
| Modems always come in pairs-- one at the sending end and one at the |
| receiving end. Their transmission rates vary from 50 bps to 56 Kbps |
| (Kilobits per second). |
|
|
|
|
| Synchronous Versus Asynchronous |
|
|
|
|
| There are two ways digital data can be transmitted: |
|
|
| Asynchronous transmission sends data one 8-bit character at a time. For |
| example, typing on a computer sends data from the keyboard to the |
| processor of the computer one character at a time. Start and stop bits |
| attach to the beginning and end of each character to alert the receiving |
| device of incoming information. In asynchronous transmission, there is |
| no need for synchronization. The keyboard will send the data to the |
| processor at the rate the characters are typed. Most modems transmit |
| asynchronously. |
|
|
| Synchronous transmission is a method of sending large blocks of data at |
| fixed intervals of time. The two endpoints synchronize their clocking |
| mechanisms to prepare for transmission. The success of the transmission |
| depends on precise timing. |
|
|
| Synchronous transmission is preferable when a large amount of data must |
| be transmitted frequently. It is better suited for batch transmission |
| because it groups data into large blocks and sends them all at once. |
|
|
| The equipment need for synchronous transmission is more expensive than |
| for asynchronous transmission so a data traffic study must be made to |
| determine if the extra cost is justified. Asynchronous transmission is |
| more cost effective when data communication is light and infrequent. |
|
|
|
|
| Error Control |
|
|
|
|
| The purpose of error control is to detect and correct errors resulting |
| from data transmission. |
|
|
| There are several methods of performing error control. What most |
| methods have in common is the ability to add an error checking series of |
| bits at the end of a block of data that determines whether the data |
| arrived correctly. If the data arrived with errors, it will contact the |
| sending DTE and request the information be re-transmitted. Today's |
| sophisticated error checking methods are so reliable that, with the |
| appropriate equipment, it is possible to virtually guarantee that data |
| transmission will arrive error-free. There are almost no reported cases |
| of a character error in received faxes. |
|
|
| Error control is much more critical in data communication than in voice |
| communication because in voice communication, if one or two of the 8000 |
| PCM signals per second arrive with an error, it will make almost no |
| difference to the quality of the voice representation received. But, |
| imagine the consequences of a bank making a funds transfer and |
| misplacing a decimal point on a large account. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
| .--------------. |
| 6 | Multiplexing | |
| `--------------' |
|
|
|
|
| Function of Multiplexers |
|
|
| Analog and digital signals are carried between a sender and receiver |
| over transmission facilities. It costs money to transmit information |
| signals from Point A to Point B. It is, therefore, of prime importance |
| to budget conscious users to minimize transmission costs. |
|
|
| The primary function of multiplexers is to decrease network facility |
| line costs. |
|
|
| Multiplexing is a technique that combines many individual signals to |
| form a single composite signal. This allows the transmission of |
| multiple simultaneous calls over a single line. It would cost a lot |
| more money to have individual lines for each telephone than to multiplex |
| the signals and send them over a single line. |
|
|
| Typical transmission facilities in use today can transmit 24 to 30 calls |
| over one line. This represents a significant savings for the end user |
| as well as for commercial long distance and local distance carriers. |
|
|
|
|
| Bandwidth |
|
|
| The bandwidth of a transmission medium is a critical factor in |
| multiplexing. Bandwidth is the difference between the highest and lowest |
| frequencies in a given range. For example, the frequency range of the |
| human voice is between 300 Hz and 3300 Hz. Therefore, the voice |
| bandwidth is |
|
|
| 3300 Hz - 300 Hz = 3000 Hz |
|
|
| We also refer to the bandwidth of a transmission medium. A transmission |
| medium can have a bandwidth of 9600 Hz. This means that it is capable |
| of transmitting a frequency range up to 9600 Hz. A medium with a large |
| bandwidth can transmit more information and be divided into more |
| channels than a medium with a small bandwidth. |
|
|
| We will investigate three different methods of multiplexing: |
|
|
| Frequency Division Multiplexing (FDM) |
| Time Division Multiplexing (TDM) |
| Statistical Time Division Multiplexing (STDM) |
|
|
|
|
| Frequency Division Multiplexing (FDM) |
|
|
| FDM is the oldest of the three methods of multiplexing. It splits up |
| the entire bandwidth of the transmission facility into multiple smaller |
| slices of bandwidth. For example, a facility with a bandwidth of 9600 |
| Hz can be divided into four communications channels of 2400 Hz each. |
| Four simultaneous telephone conversations can therefore be active on the |
| same line. |
|
|
| Logically, the sum of the separate transmission rates cannot be more |
| than the total transmission rate of the transmission facility: the 9600 |
| Hz facility could not be divided into five 2400 Hz channels because 5 x |
| 2400 is greater than 9600. |
|
|
| Guard bands are narrow bandwidths (about 1000 Hz wide) between adjacent |
| information channels (called frequency banks) which reduce interference |
| between the channels. |
|
|
| The use of FDM has diminished in recent years, primarily because FDM is |
| limited to analog transmission, and a growing percentage of transmission |
| is digital. |
|
|
|
|
| Time Division Multiplexing (TDM) |
|
|
|
|
| Time division multiplexing has two main advantages over frequency |
| division multiplexing: |
|
|
| - It is more efficient |
| - It is capable of transmitting digital signals |
|
|
| Instead of the bandwidth of the facility being divided into frequency |
| segments, TDM divides the capacity of a transmission facility into short |
| time intervals called time slots. |
|
|
| TDM is slightly more difficult to conceptualize than FDM. An analogy |
| helps. |
|
|
| The problem is |
|
|
| We must transport the freight of five companies from New York to |
| San Francisco. Each company wants their freight to arrive on the |
| same day. We must be as fair as we can to prevent one company's |
| freight from arriving before another company's. The freight from |
| each company will fit into 10 boxcars so a total of 50 boxcars |
| must be sent. Essentially, there are three different ways we can |
| accomplish this. |
|
|
| 1. We can rent five separate locomotives and rent five |
| separate railway tracks and send each company's freight on |
| its own line. |
|
|
| 2. We can rent five separate locomotives, but only one track and |
| send five separate trains along one line. |
|
|
| 3. We can join all the boxcars together and connect them to one |
| engine and send them over a single track. |
|
|
| Obviously the most cost effective solution is Number 3. It saves us |
| from renting four extra rail lines and four extra locomotives. |
|
|
| To distribute the freight evenly so that each company's freight arrives |
| at the same time, the could be placed in a pattern as illustrated below: |
|
|
| Company A + Company B + Company C + Company A + Company B + Company C . . . |
|
|
| At San Francisco, the boxcars would be reassembled into the original |
| groups of 10 for each company and delivered to their final destination. |
|
|
| This is exactly the principle behind TDM. Use one track (communication |
| channel), and alternate boxcars (pieces of information) from each |
| sending company (telephone or computer). |
|
|
| In other words, each individual sample of a voice or data conversation |
| is alternated with samples from different conversations and transmitted |
| over the same line. |
|
|
| Let's say we have four callers in Boston (1, 2, 3, and 4) who want to |
| speak with four callers in Seattle (A, B, C, and D). The task is to |
| transmit four separate voice conversations (the boxcars) over the same |
| line (the track). |
|
|
| The voice conversations are sampled by PCM. This breaks each |
| conversation into tiny 8-bit packets. For a brief moment, caller 1 |
| sends a packet to receiver A. Then, caller 2 sends a packet to receiver |
| B-- and so on. The result is a steady stream of interleaved |
| packets-- just like our train example except the boxcars stretch all |
| across the country. Notice that every fourth packet is from the same |
| conversation. At the receiving end, the packets are reassembled and |
| sent to the appropriate receiver at the rate of 8000 samples per |
| seconds. |
|
|
| Remember that if the receiver hears the samples at the rate of 8000 |
| times per second, it will result in good quality voice reproduction. |
| Therefore, the packets are transmitted fast enough so that every 1/8000 |
| of a second, a packet from each send arrives at the appropriate |
| receiver. In other words, each conversation is connected 8000 times per |
| second-- enough to satisfy Nyquist's Theorem. |
|
|
| In FDM the circuit was divided into individual frequency channels for |
| use by each sender. In contrast, TDM divides the circuit into |
| individual time channels. For a brief moment, each sender is allocated |
| the entire bandwidth-- just enough time to send eight bits of |
| information. |
|
|
|
|
| TDM Time Slots |
|
|
|
|
| Because a version of the TDM process (called STDM) is the primary |
| switching technique in use today, it is important that this challenging |
| concept be presented as clearly and understandably as possible. Here is |
| a closer look at TDM, emphasizing the "T"--which stands for time. |
|
|
| Each transmitting device is allocated a time slot during which it is |
| permitted to transmit. If there are three transmitting devices, for |
| example, there will be three time slots. If there are four devices |
| there will be four time slots. |
|
|
| Two devices, one transmitting and one receiving, are interconnected by |
| assigning them to the same time slot of a circuit. This means that |
| during their momentary shared time slot, the transmitting device is able |
| to send a short burst of information (usually eight bits) to the |
| receiving device. During their time slot, they use the entire bandwidth |
| of the transmission facility but only for a short period of time. Then, |
| in sequence, the following transmitting devices are allocated time slots |
| during which they too use the whole bandwidth. |
|
|
| Clock A and Clock B at either end of the transmission must move |
| synchronously. They rotate in unison, each momentarily making contact |
| with the two synchronized devices (one sender and one receiver). For |
| precisely the same moment, Clock A will be in contact with Sender 1 and |
| Clock B will be in contact with Receiver 1, allowing one sample (8 bits) |
| of information to pass through. The they will both rotate so that clock |
| A comes into contact with Sender 2 and Clock B with Receiver 2. Again, |
| one sample of information will pass. This process is repeated for as |
| long as needed. |
|
|
| How fast must the clocking mechanism rotate? Again, the answer is |
| Nyquist's theorem. If a signal is sampled 8000 times per second, an |
| accurate representation of voice will result at the receiving end. The |
| same theory applies with TDM. If the clocking mechanism rotates 8000 |
| times per second, the rate of transfer from each sender and receiver |
| must also be 8000 times per second. This is so because every revolution |
| of the two clocking mechanisms result in each input and output device |
| making contact once. TDM will not work if the clocking mechanism |
| synchronization is off. |
|
|
| Each group of bits from one rotation of the clocking mechanism is called |
| a frame. One method for maintaining synchronization is inserting a frame |
| bit at the end of each frame. The frame bit alerts the demultiplexer of |
| the end of a frame. |
|
|
|
|
| Statistical Time Division Multiplexing (STDM) |
|
|
|
|
| STDM is an advanced form of TDM and is the primary switching technique |
| is use now. The drawback of the TDM process is that if a device is not |
| currently transmitting, its time slot is left unused and is therefore |
| wasted. |
|
|
| In contrast, is STDM, carrying capacity is assigned dynamically. If a |
| device is not transmitting, its time slot can be used by the other |
| devices, speeding up their transmission. In other words, a time slot is |
| assigned to a device only if it has information to send. STDM |
| eliminates wasted carrying capacity. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
| .--------------------. |
| 7 | Transmission Media | |
| `--------------------' |
|
|
|
|
| Voice and data information is represented by waveforms and transmitted |
| to a distant receiver. However, information does not just magically |
| route itself from Point A to Point B. It must follow some predetermined |
| path. This path is called a transmission medium, or sometimes a |
| transmission facility. |
|
|
| The type of transmission medium selected to join a sender and receiver |
| can have a huge effect on the quality, price, and success of a |
| transmission. Choosing the wrong medium can make the difference between |
| an efficient transmission and an inefficient transmission. |
|
|
| Efficient means choosing the most appropriate medium for a given |
| transmission. For example, the most efficient medium for transmitting a |
| normal call from your home to your neighbor is probably a simple pair of |
| copper wires. It is inexpensive and it gets the job done. But if we |
| were to transmit 2-way video teleconferencing from Bombay to Burbank, |
| one pair of wires might be the least efficient medium and get us into a |
| lot of trouble. |
|
|
| A company may buy all the right equipment and understand all the |
| fundamentals, but if they transmit over an inappropriate medium, they |
| would probably be better off delivering handwritten messages than trying |
| to use the phone. |
|
|
| There are a number of characteristics that determine the appropriateness |
| of each medium for particular applications: |
|
|
| - cost |
| - ease of installation |
| - capacity |
| - rate of error |
|
|
| In choosing a transmission medium, these and many other factors must be |
| taken into consideration. |
|
|
|
|
| Terminology |
|
|
|
|
| The transmission media used in telecommunications can be divided into |
| two major categories: conducted and radiated. Examples of conducted |
| media include copper wire, coaxial cable, and fiber optics. Radiated |
| media include microwave and satellite. |
|
|
| A circuit is a path over which information travels. All of the five |
| media serve as circuits to connect two or more devices. |
|
|
| A channel is a communication path within a circuit. A circuit can |
| contain one or more channels. Multiplexing divides one physical link |
| (circuit) into several communications paths (channels). |
|
|
| The bandwidth of a circuit is the range of frequencies it can carry. |
| The greater the range of frequencies, the more information can be |
| transmitted. Some transmission media have a greater bandwidth than |
| others and are therefore able to carry more traffic. |
|
|
| The bandwidth of a circuit is directly related to its capacity to carry |
| information. |
|
|
| Capacity is the amount of information that may pass through a circuit in |
| a given amount of time. A high capacity circuit has a large amount of |
| bandwidth-- a high range of frequencies-- and can therefore transmit a |
| lot of information. |
|
|
| Copper Cable |
|
|
| Copper cable has historically been the most common medium. It has been |
| around for many years and today is most prevalent in the local loop--the |
| connection between a residence or business and the local telephone |
| company. |
|
|
| Copper cables are typically insulated and twisted in pairs to minimize |
| interference and signal distortion between adjacent pairs. Twisting the |
| wires into pairs results in better quality sound which is able to travel |
| a greater distance. |
|
|
| Shielded twisted pair is copper cable specially insulated to reduce the |
| high error rate associated with copper transmission by significantly |
| reducing attenuation and noise. |
|
|
| Copper cable transmission requires signal amplification approximately |
| every 1800 meters due to attenuation. |
|
|
| Advantages of Copper Cable |
|
|
| There is plenty of it and its price is relatively low. |
|
|
| Installation of copper cable is relatively easy and inexpensive. |
|
|
|
|
| Disadvantages of Copper Cable |
|
|
| Copper has a high error rate. |
|
|
| Copper cable is more susceptible to electromagnetic interference (EMI) and |
| radio frequency interference (RFI) than other media. These effects can |
| produce noise and interfere with transmission. |
| |
| Copper cable has limited bandwidth and limited transmission capacity. |
|
|
| The frequency spectrum range (bandwidth) of copper cable is relatively low |
| -- approximately one megahertz (one million Hz). Copper circuits can be |
| divided into fewer channels and carry less information than the other media. |
|
|
|
|
| Typical Applications of Copper Cable |
|
|
| Residential lines from homes to the local CO (called the local loop). |
|
|
| Lines from business telephone stations to an internal PBX. |
|
|
| Coaxial Cable |
|
|
| Coaxial cable was developed to provide a more effective way to isolate |
| wires from outside influence, as well as offering greater capacity and |
| bandwidth than copper cable. |
|
|
| Coaxial cable is composed of a central conductor wire surrounded by |
| insulation, a shielding layer and an outer jacket. |
|
|
| Coaxial cable requires signal amplification approximately every 2000 |
| meters. |
|
|
|
|
| Advantages of Coaxial Cable |
|
|
| Coaxial cable has higher bandwidth and greater channel capacity than |
| copper wire. It can transmit more information over more channels than |
| copper can. |
|
|
| Coaxial cable has lower error rates. Because of its greater insulation, |
| coaxial is less affected by distortion, noise, crosstalk (conversations |
| from adjacent lines), and other signal impairments. |
|
|
| Coaxial cable has larger spacing between amplifiers. |
|
|
| Disadvantages of Coaxial Cable |
|
|
| Coaxial cable has high installation costs. It is thicker and |
| less flexible and is more difficult to work with than copper wire. |
|
|
| Coaxial cable is more expensive per foot than copper cable. |
|
|
|
|
| Typical Applications |
|
|
| - Data networks |
|
|
| - Long distance networks |
|
|
| - CO-to-CO connections |
|
|
| Microwave |
|
|
| For transmission by microwave, electrical or light signals must be |
| transformed into high-frequency radio waves. Microwave radio transmits |
| at the high end of the frequency spectrum --between one gigahertz (one |
| billion Hz) and 30 GHz. |
|
|
| Signals are transmitted through the atmosphere by directly aiming one |
| dish at another. A clear line-of-sight must exist between the |
| transmitting and receiving dishes because microwave travels in a |
| straight line. Due to the curvature of the earth, microwave stations |
| are spaced between 30 and 60 kilometers apart. |
|
|
| To compensate for attenuation, each tower is equipped with amplifiers |
| (for analog transmission) or repeaters (for digital transmission) to |
| boost the signal. |
|
|
| Before the introduction of fiber optic cable in 1984, microwave served |
| as the primary alternative to coaxial cable for the public telephone |
| companies. |
|
|
|
|
| Advantages of Microwave |
|
|
|
|
| Microwave has high capacity. Microwave transmission offers greater |
| bandwidth than copper or coaxial cable resulting in higher transmission |
| rates and more voice channels. |
|
|
| Microwave has low error rates. |
|
|
| Microwave systems can be installed and taken down quickly and inexpensively. |
| They can be efficiently allocated to the point of greatest need in a |
| network. Microwave is often used in rural areas because the microwave |
| dishes can be loaded on trucks, moved to the desired location, and |
| installed quickly. |
|
|
| Microwave requires very little power to send signals from dish to dish |
| because transmission does not spread out into the atmosphere. Instead |
| it travels along a straight path toward the next tower. |
|
|
| Microwave has a low Mean Time Between Failures (MTBF) of 100,000 |
| hours-- or only six minutes of down time per year. |
|
|
| Microwave is good for bypassing inconvenient terrain such as mountains |
| and bodies of water. |
|
|
| Disadvantages of Microwave |
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| Microwave is susceptible to environmental distortions. Factors such as |
| rain, snow, and heat can cause the microwave beam to bend and vary. |
| This affects signal quality. |
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| Microwave dishes must be focused in a straight line-of-sight. This can |
| present a problem over certain terrain or in congested cities. |
| Temporary physical line-of-sight interruptions, such as a bird or plane |
| flying through the signal pathway, can result in a disruption of |
| signals. |
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| Microwave usage must be registered with appropriate regulatory agencies. |
| These agencies monitor and allocate frequency assignments to prevent |
| systems from interfering with each other. |
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| Extensive use of microwave in many busy metropolitan areas has filled up |
| the airwaves, limiting the availability of frequencies. |
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| Typical Applications |
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| - Private networks |
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| - Long distance networks |
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| Satellite |
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| Satellite communication is a fast growing segment of the |
| telecommunications market because it provides reliable, high capacity |
| circuits. |
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| In most respects, satellite communication is similar to microwave |
| communication. Both use the same very high frequency (VHF) radio waves |
| and both require line-of-sight transmission. A satellite performs |
| essentially the same function as a microwave tower. |
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| However, satellites are positioned 36,000 kilometers above the earth in |
| a geosynchronous orbit, This means they remain stationary relative to a |
| given position on the surface of earth. |
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| Another difference between microwave and satellite communications is |
| their transmission signal methods. Microwave uses only one frequency to |
| send and receive messages. Satellites use two different |
| frequencies--one for the uplink and one for the downlink. |
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| A device called a transponder is carried onboard the satellite. It |
| receives an uplink signal beam from a terrestrial microwave dish, |
| amplifies (analog) or regenerates (digital) the signal, then retransmits |
| a downlink signal beam to the destination microwave dish on the earth. |
| Today's satellites have up to 48 transponders, each with a capacity |
| greater than 100 Mbps. |
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| Because of the long distance traveled, there is a propagation delay of |
| 1/2 second inherent in satellite communication. Propagation delay is |
| noticeable in phone conversations and can be disastrous to data |
| communication. |
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| A unique advantage of satellite communication is that transmission cost |
| is not distance sensitive. It costs the same to send a message across |
| the street as around the world. |
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| Another unique characteristic is the ability to provide |
| point-to-multipoint transmission. The area of the surface of the earth |
| where the downlinked satellite signals can be received is called its |
| footprint. Information uplinked from the earth can be broadcast and |
| retransmitted to any number of receiving dishes within the satellite's |
| footprint. Television broadcast is a common application of |
| point-to-multipoint transmission. |
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| Advantages of Satellite Transmission |
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| Satellite transmission provides access to wide geographical areas (up to the |
| size of the satellite's footprint), point-to-multipoint broadcasting, a large |
| bandwidth, and is very reliable. |
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| Disadvantages of Satellite Transmission |
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| Problems associated with satellite transmission include: propagation delay, |
| licensing requirement by regulatory agencies security issue concerning the |
| broadcast nature of satellite transmission. Undesired parties within a |
| satellites footprint may illicitly receive downlink transmission. |
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| Installation requires a satellite in orbit. |
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| Fiber Optics |
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|
| Fiber optics is the most recently developed transmission medium. It |
| represents an enormous step forward in transmission capacity. A recent |
| test reported transmission rates of 350 Gbps (350 billion bits), enough |
| bandwidth to support millions of voice calls. Furthermore, a recently |
| performed record- setting experiment transmitted signals 10,000 Km |
| without the use of repeaters, although in practice 80 to 300 Km is the |
| norm. Recall the need for repeaters every kilometer or so with copper |
| wire and coaxial. |
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| Fiber optics communication uses the frequencies of light to send |
| signals. A device called a modulator converts electrical analog or |
| digital signals into light pulses. A light source pulses light on and |
| off billions and even trillions of times per second (similar to a |
| flashlight turned on and off-- only faster). These pulses of light are |
| translated into binary code. The positive light pulse represents 1; a |
| negative light pulse (no light) represents 0. Fiber optics is digital |
| in nature. |
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| The light is then transmitted along a glass or plastic fiber about the |
| size of a human hair. At the receiving end, the light pulses are |
| detected and converted back to electrical signals by photoelectric |
| diodes. |
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| Advantages of Fiber Optics |
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| Fiber optics has an extremely high bandwidth. In fact, fiber optic |
| bandwidth is almost infinite, limited only by the ability of engineers |
| to increase the frequency of the pulses of light. Current technology |
| achieves a frequency of 100 terahertz (one million billion). |
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| Fiber optics is not subject to interference or electromagnetic |
| impairments as are the other media. |
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| Fiber optics has an extremely low error rate-- approximately one error |
| per 1,000,000,000,000. |
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| Fiber optics has a low energy loss translating into fewer |
| repeaters/regenerators per long distance transmission. |
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| Fiber is a glass and glass is made of sand. There will never by a |
| shortage of raw material for fiber. |
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| Disadvantages of Fiber Optics |
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| Installation costs are high for a fiber optic system. Currently it |
| costs approximately $41,000 per km to install a fiber optic system. The |
| expense of laying fiber is primarily due to the high cost of splicing |
| and joining fiber. The cost will almost certainly decrease dramatically |
| as less expensive methods of splicing and joining fiber are introduced. |
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|
| A potential disadvantage of fiber optics results from its enormous |
| carrying capacity. Occasionally a farmer or construction worker will |
| dig into the earth and unintentionally split a fiber optic cable. |
| Because the cable can carry so much information, an entire city could |
| lose its telephone communication from just one minor mishap. |
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| .-----------. |
| 8 | Signaling | |
| `-----------' |
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| Types of Signals |
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|
| When a subscriber picks up the phone to place a call, he dials digits to |
| signal the network. The dialed digits request a circuit and tell the |
| network where to route the call--a simple enough procedure for the |
| caller. But in fact, it involves a highly sophisticated maze of |
| signaling to and from switches and phones to route and monitor the call. |
| Signaling functions can be divided into three main categories. |
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| Supervisory |
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| Supervisory signals indicate to the party being called and the CO |
| the status of lines and trunks--whether they are idle, busy, or |
| requesting service. The signals detect and initiate service on |
| requesting lines and trunks. Signals are activated by changes in |
| electrical state and are caused by events such as a telephone |
| going on-hook or off-hook. Their second function is to process |
| requests for telephone features such as call waiting. |
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| Addressing |
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| Addressing signals determine the destination of a call. They |
| transmit routing information throughout the network. Two of the |
| most important are |
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| Dial Pulse: These address signals are generated by alternately |
| opening and closing a contact in a rotary phone |
| through which direct current flows. The number of |
| pulses corresponds to the number of the dialed |
| digit. |
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| Tone: These address signals send a unique tone or |
| combination of tones which correspond to the |
| dialed digit. |
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| Alerting |
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| Alerting signals inform the subscriber of call processing |
| conditions.. These signals include: |
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| Dial tone |
| The phone ringing |
| Flashing lights that substitute for phone ringing |
| Busy signal |
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|
| Let's take a look at how signaling is used to set up a typical call over |
| the public network. |
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| Step 1 - Caller A goes off-hook |
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| Step 2 - The CO detects a change in state in the subscriber's line. |
| The CO responds by sending an alerting signal (dial tone) to |
| caller A to announce that dialing may begin. The CO marks |
| the calling line busy so that other subscribers can not call |
| into it. If another subscriber attempts to phone caller A, |
| he will get the alerting busy signal. Caller A dials the |
| digits using tones from the keypad or dial pulses from a |
| rotary phone. |
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| Step 3 - The dialed digits are sent as addressing signals from caller |
| A to CO A |
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| Step 4 - CO A routes the addressing signals to CO B. |
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| Step 5 - Supervisory signals in CO B test caller B to determine if the |
| line is free. The line is determined to be free. |
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| Step 6 - CO B sends alerting signals to caller B, which causes caller |
| B's telephone to ring. |
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| This is an example of a local call which was not billed to the customer. |
| If the call had been a billable, long distance call, it would have used |
| a supervisory signal known as answer supervision. When the receiving |
| end of a long distance call picks up, it sends a signal to its local CO. |
| The CO then sends an answer supervision signal to the caller's CO |
| telling it that the phone was picked up and it is time to begin billing. |
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| Where on the Circuit Does Signaling Occur? |
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| There are only three places where signaling can occur: |
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| In-band means on the same circuit as voice, within the voice |
| frequency range (between 300 and 3400 Hz). |
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| Out-of-band means on the same circuit as voice, outside of the |
| voice frequency range (3400 - 3700 Hz). |
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| Common Channel Signaling (CCS) means signaling occurs on a |
| completely separate circuit. |
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| The frequency range of human voice is approximately 0 - 4000 Hz. |
| However, most voice signals fall in the area between 300 and 3400 Hz. |
| Therefore, to save bandwidth, telephones only recognize signals between |
| 300 and 3400 Hz. It is conceivable that someone with an extremely high |
| voice would have difficulty communicating over the telephone. |
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| In-band and Out-of-band |
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| In-band signaling (300 to 3400 Hz) can take the form of either a single |
| frequency tone (SF signaling) of a combination of tones (Dual Tone |
| Multifrequency - DTMF). DTMF is the familiar touch tone. |
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| Out-of-band signaling (3400 to 3700 Hz) is always single frequency |
| (SF). |
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| In other words, using the frequency range from 300 to 3700 Hz, there are |
| three methods of signaling. |
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| Method A: In-band (300 to 3400 Hz) by a single frequency |
| (SF) |
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| Method B: In-band (300 to 3400 Hz) by multifrequencies |
| (DTMF) |
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| Method C: Out-of-band (3400 to 3700 Hz) by a single |
| frequency (SF) |
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| Single Frequency (SF) Signaling |
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| Methods A and C are examples of Single Frequency (SF) signaling. SF |
| signaling is used to determine if the phone line is busy (supervision) |
| and to convey dial pulses (addressing). |
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| Method A: In-band SF signaling uses a 2600 Hz tone which is carried |
| over the frequency bandwidth of voice (remember the frequency |
| bandwidth of voice is between 300 and 3300 Hz), within the |
| speech path. So as not to interfere with speech, it is |
| present before the call but is removed once the circuit is |
| seized and speech begins. After the conversation is over, it |
| may resume signaling. It does not, however, signal during |
| the call because it would interfere with voice which also may |
| transmit at 2600 Hz. Special equipment prevents occasional |
| 2600 Hz speech frequencies from accidentally setting off |
| signals. |
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| Method C: To improve signaling performance, SF out-of-band signaling |
| was developed. It uses frequencies above the voice frequency |
| range (within the 3400 to 3700 Hz bandwidth) to transmit |
| signals. |
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| The problem with Methods A and C is that they are easily susceptible to |
| fraud. In the late 1960s, one of the most popular breakfast cereals in |
| America had a promotion in which they packaged millions of children's |
| whistles, one in each specially marked box. Never did General Mills, |
| the producer of the cereal, anticipate the fraud they would be party to. |
| It turned out that the whistles emitted a pure 2600 Hz tone, exactly the |
| tone used in Method A. It did not take long for hackers to discover |
| that if they blew the whistles into the phones while making a long |
| distance phone call, it tricked the telephone company billing equipment |
| and no charge was made. |
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| This trick grew into its own little cottage industry, culminating in the |
| infamous mass produced Blue Boxes which played tones that fooled |
| telephone billing equipment out of millions of dollars. |
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| Method B: DTMF was introduced to overcome this fraud, as well as to |
| provide better signaling service to the customer. Instead of |
| producing just one signaling frequency, DTMF transmits |
| numerical address information from a phone by sending a |
| combination of two frequencies, one high and one low, to |
| represent each number/letter and * and # on the dial pad. |
| The usable tones are located in the center of the voice |
| communication frequencies to minimize the effects of |
| distortion. |
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| Drawbacks to SF and DTMF Signaling |
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| There are drawbacks to both SF and DTMF signaling that are promoting |
| their replacement in long distance toll circuits. The most important is |
| that these signals consume time on the circuit while producing no |
| revenues. Every electrical impulse, be it a voice conversation or |
| signaling information, consumes circuit time. Voice conversations are |
| billable. Signaling is not. Therefore, it is in the best interest of |
| the phone carriers to minimize signaling. |
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|
| Unfortunately, almost half of all toll calls are not completed because |
| the called party is busy, not available or because of CO blockage. |
| Nevertheless, signals must be generated to attempt to set up, then take |
| down the call. Signals are generated but no revenue is produced. For |
| incompleted calls, these signals compete with revenue producing signals |
| (whose calls were completed) for scarce circuit resources. |
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| CCS introduced several benefits to the public network: |
|
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| . Signaling information was removed from the voice channel, so |
| control information could travel at the same time as voice |
| without taking up valuable bandwidth from the voice channel. |
|
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| . CCS sets up calls faster, reducing signaling time and freeing |
| up scarce resources. |
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| . It cost less than conventional signaling. |
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| . It improves network performance. |
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| . It reduces fraud. |
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| Signaling System 7 (SS7) |
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|
| Today the major long distance carriers use a version of CCS called |
| Signaling System 7 (SS7). It is a standard protocol developed by the |
| CCITT, a body which establishes international standards. |
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| Common Channel Signaling (CCS) |
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| Common Channel Signaling (CCS) is a radical departure from traditional |
| signaling methods. It transmits signals over a completely different |
| circuit than the voice information. The signals from hundreds or |
| thousands of voice conversations are carried over a single common |
| channel. |
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| Introduced in the mid-1970s CCS uses a separate signaling network to |
| transmit call setup, billing, and supervisory information. Instead of |
| sending signals over the same communication paths as voice or data, CCS |
| employs a full network dedicated to signaling alone. |
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| Loop Start Versus Ground Start Signaling |
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|
| Establishing an electrical current connection with a CO can be done in |
| several different ways. Here are a few of the possibilities |
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| Loop Start |
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| Inside of the CO, there is a powerful, central battery that provides |
| current to all subscribers. Loop start is a method of establishing the |
| flow of current from the CO to a subscriber's phone. |
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| The two main components of a loop start configuration are |
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| The tip (also called the A line) is the portion of the line loop |
| between the CO and the subscriber's phone that is connected to the |
| positive, grounded side of the battery. |
|
|
| The ring (also called the B line) is the portion of the line loop |
| between the CO and the subscriber's phone that is connected to the |
| negative, ungrounded side of the battery. |
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|
| To establish a loop start connection with the CO, a subscriber goes |
| off-hook. This closes a direct current (DC) path between the tip and |
| ring and allows the current to flow in a loop from the CO battery to the |
| subscriber and back to the battery. Once the current is flowing, the CO |
| is capable of sending alerting signals (dial tone) to the subscriber to |
| begin a connection. |
|
|
| The problem with loop start signaling is a phenomenon called glare that |
| occurs in trunks between a CO and a PBX. When a call comes into a PBX |
| from CO trunk, the only way the PBX knows that the trunk circuit is busy |
| is the ringing signal sent from the CO. |
|
|
| Unfortunately the ringing signal is transmitted at six second intervals. |
| For up to six seconds at a time, the PBX does not know there is a call |
| on that circuit. If an internal PBX caller wishes to make an outgoing |
| call, the PBX may seize the busy trunk call at the same time. The |
| result is confused users on either end of the line, and the abandonment |
| of both calls. |
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|
| Ground Start |
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|
| Ground start signaling overcomes glare by immediately engaging a circuit |
| seize signal on the busy trunk. The signal alerts the PBX that the |
| circuit is occupied with an incoming call and cannot be used for an |
| outgoing call. |
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|
| Ground start is achieved by the CO by grounding the tip side of the line |
| immediately upon seizure by an incoming call. The PBX detects the |
| grounded tip and is alerted not to seize this circuit for an outgoing |
| call, even before ringing begins. |
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|
| Because ground start is so effective at overcoming glare, it is commonly |
| used in trunks between the CO and a PBX. |
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| E & M |
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|
| E & M signaling is used in tie lines which connect two private telephone |
| switches. In E & M signaling, information is transmitted from one |
| switch to another over two pairs of wires. Voice information is sent |
| over the first pair, just as it would be in a Loop Start or Ground Start |
| trunk. However, instead of sending the signaling information over the |
| same pair of wires, it is sent over the second pair of wires. |
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