Introduction To Telephony Basics
Introduction To Telephony Basics
Introduction To Telephony Basics
Created by:
Eddie Phillips
Purpose
7 Purpose of High Level Overview
Introduction
9 Telephone Services
10 POTS – Plain Old Telephone Service
11 Special Circuits – Generic Types
21 Special Circuit Overview
23 Sound versus Frequency
25 Analog lines, Digital trunks
26 Converting an Analog signal to Digital
27 Filtering, Sampling & PAM
29 PAM – Pulse Amplitude Modulation
30 Quantizing Error
31 PCM
32 Voice to PAM to PCM
2
Table of Contents (Continued)
Slide Topic_____________
89 DSX-1 cross-connect
96 D4 channel bank
100 Dual Ringing Generators
102 Special Circuits
108 ISDN channel bank
112 Digital Cross-connect System - DCS
115 DCS 1/0 - DS1 input/DS0 cross-connect
122 DCS Functional types
126 Hi-cap circuit
127 DS1 versus T1
129 Line Termination Shelf
130 T1 Repeater Housing
133 Repeater Housing Symbol
134 T1 Repeatered Span Line
137 HDSL
143 Fractional T1 (DS1)
147 DSX-3 Cross-connect
153 M13 Asynchronous Multiplexer
148 Fiber Systems - Asynchronous
159 Fiber Optic Systems – interoffice components 4
Table of Contents (Continued)
Slide Topic_____________
166 SONET Fiber Optic Systems
169 SONET Hierarchy & Rates
173 SONET Rings - UPSR
174 SONET Rings - BLSR
176 Fiber Cable Termination - LGX
189 Tracing an FX circuit through an office
190 Wave Division Multiplexing
193 Dense WDM
196 Wideband DCS
199 Broadband DCS
201 Microwave Radio
208 Digital Loop Carrier (DLC’s)
218 MDF in DLC’s – Equipment protection
5
Table of Contents (Continued)
Slide Topic_______________________
220 ADSL
231 Timing
242 Power Diagram
249 Main Power Board feeding Trans. Dist. Power Board
253 Batteries
256 Generator
257 AC Transfer Switch
258 Grounding - protection from lightning, etc
Purpose:
To provide an high level overview
of the signal formats, circuits and
equipment types that are found
in a typical telephone office.
7
Central Office Concepts
Overview - Part One
• Telephone Services - POTS Vs. Special Circuits
• Analog to Digital Conversion
• Data Rates - DS0, DS1, DS3
• Main Distribution Frame
• DSX-1, DSX-3 Jacks
• D4 Channel Bank
• ISDN Banks
• DCS 1/0 - Digital Access Cross-connect System
8
Telephone Services
ISP CLEC IXC Operator
Special Circuits
POTS
PBX
Telephone
Office
CLASS
Centrex
ACD
Automatic Call
ADSL Distribution
DS1
Hi-caps
9
Call Center
POTS
Plain Old Telephone Service
Telephone
2 wires, 1 pair Office
Voice Signal
Maximum distance from telephone office – 18,000 feet.
Under 12,000 feet is preferred. 10
Special Circuits
Everything Else but POTS
Overview of Generic Types
Central Office
Analog Phone To distant office
11
POTS & Special Circuits
Telephone Office
13
Digital Switch
- Automatic
Electric
GTD-5
14
Transmission
Equipment
15
Transmission
Equipment
16
Main
Distribution
Frame
- terminates
copper outside
plant cables &
equipment cables
17
Copper outside plant cables
18
Copper cable splice closures
in vault
19
Fiber Optic cable
& jumper
termination
20
Special Circuits Overview
3 Broad Categories
• Voice-grade circuits
– Foreign exchange - draws dial tone from a ‘foreign
office’
• Analog Data circuits - non-digital
– ex. Circuits for real-time measurements;
– pump starting, water levels, door open/close etc.
• Digital Data circuits
• digital circuits, ISDN, hi-caps, etc.
21
Introduction Summary
What a telephone office does:
Frequency -
Electrical representation of sound
- unit of measure is
Sound Waves
Hertz or cycles per second
Human ear - 20 -10,000 Hertz (and higher)
Telephone Telephone
Office
Network Office
1 0 1 1 0 1 0 1 Telephone
Office Line
Telephone 1 0 1 1 0 1 0 1
Telephone
Analog Signal
Office
Line
25
Converting an Analog Signal to a
Digital Signal
Analog Signal Digital Signal
1 0 1 1 0 1 0 1
Binary digit or ‘bit’
Low-pass Filter
20 Hz - 4000 Hz
Output
125 microseconds 27
Voice signal voltage ‘sampled’ at
125 microseconds intervals.
- 8000 times per second
Voltage
T0 T1 T2 T3 T4 T5 T6 T7 T8 T9 Time
6 - 110
5 - 101
4 - 100
3-bit binary code
3 - 011
Quantizing Error
2 - 010
1 - 001
0 - 000
30
Decimal - Binary T0 T1 T2 Time
8-bit
PCM
Binary
Code
Pulse Code Modulation
11111111 128
PAM pulse
Each voltage level has a pre-assigned code
10000110 6
Maximum Quantization
10000101 5 distortion error
10000100 4
10000011 3
10000010 2
10000001 1
00000000 0 time
00000001 -1
00000010 -2
00000011 -3
00000110 -4
00000101 -5
00000110 -6
31
01111111 -128
Voice Encoding
Voice to PAM to PCM - 8-bit word
converted to
8-bit word PCM encoder
8000 samples/sec X 8 bits/sample
= 64,000 bits/sec digital stream per voice channel
DS0 = 64,000
1 0 1 1 0 1 0 1 1 0 1 0 1 1 0 1 bits per second
8-bits 8-bits
32
Why Digital?
Analog Transmission Noise Problems
Analog Signal
33
Effect of Noise
Analog versus Digital
Analog-only signal plus noise:
Signal Noise Received Signal
+ =
+ =
34
Summary
• Analog lines, digital trunks
• Voice frequency:
– Filtered
– Sampled – PAM – Pulse Amplitude Modulation
– Quantized – PCM – Pulse Code Modulation
8-BIT word – 8,000 times per second
• PCM – 64,000 bits/second = 1 DS0
35
Digital Signal rate 0 - DS0
8-bit format - 64 kbs
1 0 1 1 0 1 0 1
125 microsecond
interval per 8-bit word
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
Information is on the
‘leading edge’
of the pulse. Same 8-bit word, but occupying less time.
3 TDM
DS1 - 1.544 Mbs
Bi-directional multiplexer.
Only one direction is shown.
24
TDM
21
22
23 Framing bit
DS0 1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0 24
24 1
DS0 DS0 DS0 DS0 DS0 DS0 DS0 DS0 DS0 DS0 DS0 DS0 DS0 DS0 DS0 DS0 DS0 DS0 DS0 DS0 DS0 DS0 DS0
40 DS0
Voice to Digital to TDM
2
Time
Analog Division
3
to Multiplexer
Digital 24 channels ‘multiplexed’
Converter together in time.
24
41
A/D-Mux - TDM – Demux-D/A
24 channels ‘multiplexed’
together in time.
1 1
2 2
Time Time
3 Analog Division Division Digital 3
to Multiplexer De-multiplexer to
Digital Analog
Converter Converter
24 24
DS0’s 24 3 2 1
1 DS1 frame is:
24 DS0 channels (64 kbs) plus one framing bit
= 24 channels X 8 bits/channel + 1 framing bit
= 193 bits/frame.
Rate per second:
193 bits/frame X 8000 frames/sec
= 1,544,000 bits/sec -OR- 1.544 Mbs.
Framing Bit indicates the beginning of the frame. 43
Bits in a DS1 are Bi-polar
Every other ‘1’ bit is reversed in polarity
0 1 1 0 1 0 1 1 1 1 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 1 1 0 1 0 1 1
1 8 1 8
One 8-bit channel One 8-bit channel 45
One DS1 frame
RX - Receive TX - Transmit
125 microseconds
24 8-bit words +1framing bit = 193 bits
24 8-bit words = 192 bits
1 24
Framing bit
(1 bit only)
Uni-polar signal
1 0 1 1 0
Bi-polar signal
1 0 1 1 0
47
Line Frequency of Uni-polar and
Uni-polar signal
Bi-polar signals
6 times crossing reference line
1 0 1 1 0
1 0 1 1 0
1 0 1 1 0
1 0 1 1 0
Distance
Bi-polar signal
2 times Distance
8 zero’s 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Substitute
with B8ZS
line encoding
52
DS3 Multiplexer
TDM - 28 DS1’s to 1 DS3
DS1 - 1.544 Mbs
Multiplex : 28 DS1s to 1 DS3
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
26
The pulse widths of the bits in the 28 DS1’s are ‘squeezed’ to put
53
all 28 channels on one high-speed DS3 channel.
DS3 Frame Format
24 DS0 channels for each DS1
28 27 26 5 4 3 2 1
DS3 rate = 44.736 Mbit/sec
• 28 DS1 channels plus DS3 framing
• 672 DS0 channels
= (28 DS1’s X 24 DS0’s/DS1)
• Bi-directional - TX and RX
54
DS-30
DS-30 Frame
193 bits/frame
DS0’s 32 3 2 1
Digital voice
56
Central Office
• Switching
– Lines, Trunks
• Transmission
– connection between offices
– special circuits
– most anything else
• Switching & Transmission are blending
together
57
Lines versus Trunks
Trunk - connection from office-to-office
Telephone Telephone
Office Office
Line Line
- access from customer 1 Trunk = one 2-path digital voice circuit = 1 DS0
to the network
Transmit & Receive on two separate facility paths
1 Line = one 1-path voice circuit
Transmit & Receive on 1 cable pair
- analog or digital connection
58
Signaling
Signaling is the process by which two or more
telephone offices communicate between each
other to setup and take down a telephone call.
Telephone Telephone
Office Office
Line Line
59
In-band Signaling from Telephone
office to Telephone office
A B
Telephone Telephone
Office
Trunk
Line Office Line
Telephone Telephone
Line Office Office Line
Telephone Telephone
Line Office Office
Line
1 8
1 8 1 8 1 8 63
Robbed-bit Signaling
56 kbs - Computer to Computer
Telephone Telephone
Office Office
Line Line
64
SS7 Signaling - Signaling System 7
Out-of-band signaling
SS7 Signaling uses a separate Really Big City
data paths to send call setup Big City SCP database
information from the calling
office to the called office. STP
of frame before
first 8-bit word
1 8
1 8
1 6 12 18 24
This allows the entire 64 kbs bandwidth in each DS0 voice channel
to send voice information.
Telephone
Office
1 cable pair
Digital Line
69
ISDN
BRI - Basic Rate Interface
2 digital voice channels ISDN
Entire 64 kbs channel phone
ISDN line card used for voice.
in line bay or
channel bank Network
Termination 1
1 Bearer channel
Digital 1-path
64 kbs
circuit
Demarcation
ISDN
phone
Telephone office and local loop Customer Premise 70
ISDN
BRI - Basic Rate Interface
One 128 kbs channel
ISDN line card
in line bay or
channel bank
2 Bearer channels
128 kbs
2B + D = 160 kbs
BRI NT1
Local 2-wire loop
Network
Digital 1-path Termination 1
circuit
demarcation
D 16 kbs
64 kbs
2B 160 kbs channel
64 kbs
16 kbs
Overhead
1 24
Framing
Bit BBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBD
73
Internet Service
PRI Trunking
Provider (ISP)
ISDN BRI Line
Internet connection
Telephone Telephone
Office Office
PRI, a DS1, uses each entire 64 kbs DS0 channel for information.
Signaling information is sent via the Data channel & ESF.
Allows for clear channel data transfer – ALL 8 bits in each DS0.
No Robbed-bit signaling is used.
74
Summary
• ISDN BRI – Basic Rate Interface
– 2B+D - 2 ‘Bearer’ channels, 1 Data channel
– Full 64,000 bits/sec – no robbed bits
– Higher quality, all digital phone lines
– Used also for data connections.
1/0 DS1
M
Digital switch
D4 Channel VF signal
DS1 DS1
Bank
D
DSX-1
DSX-1
DS1
HDSL
HDSL DS1
F
DS1
DSX-1 DS1
DS1 line
Span powered
DS1
termination shelf DS1 (T1)
OSP fiber
DS3
cable
M13 Mux DSX-3
coaxial DS3 Fiber Optic
cable DSX-3 LGX
coaxial System fiber 76
cable jumpers
Main
Distribution
Frame – C.O.
- 2 sided frame Horizontal
side
Vertical side
- cable protectors
Horizontal side
- line blocks
Vertical
side 77
Main Distribution
Frame -
Vertical side
- pair protection
Protectors
- termination
of cable pairs
- may also have
blocks 78
Main Distribution Frame in a
typical central office
• Pair Protection
– Protectors
• terminate the outside plant pair
• provide lightning protection on the pair
– Blocks
• terminate the lines from the equipment
• wired out to a cross connect cabinet
Protector Terminal block
Line
Equipment
Copper pairs Line equip. jumper Equipment Bay
in outside cabling
plant cable 79
Vertical side – Cosmic frame
80
Main Distribution
Frame cable pair
protector (connector)
- 100-pair termination
of cable pairs
- lightning protection;
sends lightning surge
to the c.o. ground field
81
Protector module (solid state)
Main Frame
Cable pair
protector
- jumpers to
line circuits of
telephone switch.
82
Main Frame
Horizontal side
Blocks
- termination
of line circuits
83
Blocks on
Main Distribution Frame
84
Blocks – Cosmic frame
85
‘Tipping’ cables
from frame
to vault
86
Vault – Splice Closures
- connects ‘tipping’ cable to
outside plant cable
87
Summary
• Main Distribution Frame terminates all
voice grade connections in a telephone
office.
– Outside Plant cables
– Line cables
– Special circuits
• Pair protection – each cable pair is
grounded if a lightning surge occurs.
88
Central Office Functional Layout Outside
2B + D Plant cables
BRI
DCS ISDN
1/0 DS1
M
Digital switch
D4 Channel VF signal
DS1 DS1
Bank
D
DSX-1
DSX-1
DS1
HDSL
HDSL DS1
F
DS1
DSX-1 DS1
DS1 line
Span powered
DS1
termination shelf DS1 (T1)
OSP fiber
DS3
cable
M13 Mux DSX-3
coaxial DS3 Fiber Optic
cable DSX-3 LGX
coaxial System fiber 89
cable jumpers
DSX-1 Cross-connect
Connecting DS1 circuits
between equipment
30-pair high-frequency
30-pair high-frequency
cabling from equipment
cabling from equipment
jacks
Light jacks
DS1 LED Bantam patch cord LED
DS1
MON (dual) MON
OUT OUT
Terminates DS1’s IN Terminates DS1’s
IN
from equipment from equipment
91
DSX-1 Bays
92
DSX-1 Bays
5-wire jumpers
93
DSX-1 jumpers – what NOT to do
94
Central Office Layout Outside
2B + D Plant cables
BRI
DCS ISDN
1/0 DS1
M
Digital switch
D4 Channel VF signal
DS1 DS1
Bank
D
DSX-1
DSX-1
DS1
HDSL
HDSL DS1
F
DS1
DSX-1 DS1
DS1 line
Span powered
DS1
termination shelf DS1 (T1)
OSP fiber
DS3
cable
M13 Mux DSX-3
coaxial DS3 Fiber Optic
cable DSX-3 LGX
coaxial System fiber 95
cable jumpers
D4 Channel Bank
A/D, D/A conversion + TDM
A/D, D/A TDM
• Aggregates many low
24 Voice
Frequency 24 DS0’s 1 DS1 speed circuits into one
circuits high speed circuit for
1 transport
D4
• 24 low speed circuits
24 Voice channel 1 DS1 - converted to
bank
channels 64kbit/sec – DS0
24
• 1 DS1 high speed side
- 1.544 Mbit/sec
Low-speed High-speed
side side 96
D4 channel 12 channels
bank Common cards
for one di-group
12 channels
Alcatel (Charles Ind.)
- dual di-group
- two - 24 channels
- common cards in the
middle of each
di-group (digital group) 97
D4 bank to D4 bank
1
DS1 1
24 Voice D4 D4 24 Voice
channels channel channel channels
bank bank
24 24
98
Nortel D4
- dual di-group
- two - 24 channels
- common cards
on right side of
shelf
99
Dual Ringing Generators
100
Summary
• DSX-1 jacks – terminating DS1 cables,
providing cross-connections between DS1
circuits.
• D4 Bank – Combines 24 incoming voice
channels into 1 DS1 output.
24 Low-speed VF – A/D, D/A – TDM –
High-speed DS1.
101
Special Circuits
Voice Grade:
– FX - Foreign exchange
historically most popular special circuit
used for extending dial tone from another
office
Local office Foreign Dial tone office
– Austin, TX – Washington, DC
DS1 DS1
Network
Line
Channel
102
Banks
Special Circuits
Voice Grade:
E & M - Ear & Mouth
- used for trunk circuits in electromechanical offices.
Analog Analog
trunks trunks
DS1
Channel
Banks
103
Special Circuits
Analog Data:
- ETO - Equalized Transmission Only
used mainly for sending analog data
• on/off condition
• real-time measurements, etc.
• utility company circuits
Channel
Data center
Banks
DS1
104
Special Circuits
Digital Data:
- Data rates 64 kbs or less (1 DS0 or less)
• 2.4 kbs, 4.8 kbs, 9.6 kbs, 19.2 kbs, 56 kbs, 64 kbs
- Fractional T1 - data rate multiples of 64 kbs
• 128 - 384 kbs (2-6 DS0’s)
- operates at a DS1 rate,
but with only the DS0’s used turned on.
Typically used with Frame Relay circuits.
Channel
Banks
106
Slots in channel bank
Central Office Layout Outside
2B + D Plant cables
BRI
DCS ISDN
1/0 DS1
M
Digital switch
D4 Channel VF signal
DS1 DS1
Bank
D
DSX-1
DSX-1
DS1
HDSL
HDSL DS1
F
DS1
DSX-1 DS1
DS1 line
Span powered
DS1
termination shelf DS1 (T1)
OSP fiber
DS3
cable
M13 Mux DSX-3
coaxial DS3 Fiber Optic
cable DSX-3 LGX
coaxial System fiber 107
cable jumpers
ISDN Channel Bank
Office ‘A’ Office ‘B’
DS1
ISDN ISDN
channel channel
bank bank
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
109
Summary
• Special Circuits:
– Foreign Exchange – dial tone from a different c.o.
– E & M – Ear & Mouth – analog trunks
– ETO – Equalized Transmission Only – analog data.
– Digital Data – data rates from 2.4 kbs to 64 kbs.
– ISDN in channel bank uses 3 slots.
110
Central Office Layout Outside
2B + D Plant cables
BRI
DCS ISDN
1/0 DS1
M
Digital switch
D4 Channel VF signal
DS1 DS1
Bank
D
DSX-1
DSX-1
DS1
HDSL
HDSL DS1
F
DS1
DSX-1 DS1
DS1 line
Span powered
DS1
termination shelf DS1 (T1)
OSP fiber
DS3
cable
M13 Mux DSX-3
coaxial DS3 Fiber Optic
cable DSX-3 LGX
coaxial System fiber 111
cable jumpers
DCS
– Digital Cross-connect System
DS1 DS1
112
DCS
Digital Cross-connect System
24 DS0’s each DS1
DACS
DS1 DS1
DS1 DS1
113
Why have a DCS?
Before DCS: Back-to-Back D4’s
VF circuits VF circuits
D4 Jumpers D4
DS1 Channel Channel DS1
Bank Bank
D4 D4
DS1 Channel Channel
DS1
Bank Bank
D4 D4
DS1 Channel Channel DS1
Bank Bank
DS1 DS1
DS1
DS1 D4
.
.
Channel .
DS1 DS0 Bank .
cross-connects
in matrix
D4 bank for
115
DS0 cross connects in 1/0 DACS local circuits.
Digital Cross-connect System
Unit shelves & Matrix
Unit Shelves Unit Shelves
Matrix
28 DS1’s 28 DS1’s
28 DS1’s
28 DS1’s
28 DS1’s
28 DS1’s
DS0
28 DS1’s cross-connects
in matrix
Inter-shelf bus
DS1 input / DS0 cross-connect 116
DSC - ALCATEL
DEXCS Bay layout
Fuse Panel Fuse Panel
Fuse Panel Fuse Panel Fuse Panel
Filler DS1 Unit DS1 Unit
Panel Shelf Shelf
Admin
Shelf DS1 Unit DS1 Unit
Shelf Shelf
Disk Drive
Unit Bay Expansions
to 5,376 DS1s
Matrix DS1 Unit DS1 Unit
Shelf Shelf Shelf
Dual, on-line matrices and dual data paths for full circuit protection
Fully distributed A and B power feeds
Dual power supply architecture
Single DS1 per port card
Distributed processing
117
Alcatel DS1 Unit Bay
1 DS1 per port card
28 ports per unit shelf
Matrix bay
Admin bay
119
Alcatel DEXCS Unit Shelf
28 DS1 Ports per shelf
Unit cards ( 28 1-DS1 cards )
Power Controller
Supply cards
card
Power
Supply
card
120
Alcatel Narrowband
DEXCS sizes - matrix Size
• CS1S - 84 DS1's - small Fuse Panel
Filler
Panel
Admin
Shelf
• CS1 - 336 DS1's - medium Disk Drive
Matrix
Shelf
122
Summary
• 1/0 DCS – DS1 input, DS0 cross-connect
• DCS accesses all DS0’s in a DS1 bit stream,
while keeping the circuits digital; no A/D
conversion
• reduces the need for back-to-back channel
banks for ‘through’ circuits.
• Saves on equipment quantity and cost,
keeps quality of signal high.
• Easier to add, delete, & manage circuits.
123
Central Office Concepts
Overview Part Two
• T1 Span lines, HDSL
• M13 Multiplexer
• Introduction to Fiber Systems
• Fiber Cable Termination – LGX
• Broadband DCS
• Digital Loop Carrier
• ADSL
• Timing - BITS Clock
• Power - AC/DC, Batteries, Generator
• Grounding - protection from lightning, etc. 124
Central Office Layout Outside
2B + D Plant cables
BRI
ISDN
DCS DS1
M
Digital switch
D4 Channel VF signal
DS1 DS1
Bank
D
DSX-1
DSX-1
DS1
HDSL
HDSL DS1
F
DS1
DSX-1 DS1
DS1 line
Span powered
DS1
termination shelf DS1 (T1)
OSP fiber
DS3
cable
M13 Mux DSX-3
coaxial DS3 Fiber Optic
cable DSX-3 LGX
coaxial System fiber 125
cable jumpers
Hi-Cap
High Capacity Line – DS1 to Customer
DS1 Frame
Framing bit 193 bits/frame
DS0’s 1 2 3 24
Business or
Industry
Telephone
Office DS1
0 Volts
- 5 Volts
+130 Volts
+125 Volts
0 Volts
DC power component added
127
Central Office Layout Outside
2B + D Plant cables
BRI
ISDN
DCS
1/0 DS1
M
Digital switch
D4 Channel VF signal
DS1 DS1
Bank
D
DSX-1
DSX-1
DS1
HDSL
HDSL DS1
F
DS1
DSX-1 DS1
DS1 line
Span powered
DS1
termination shelf DS1 (T1)
OSP fiber
DS3
cable
M13 Mux DSX-3
coaxial DS3 Fiber Optic
cable DSX-3 LGX
coaxial System fiber 128
cable jumpers
Line Termination Shelf
(span shelf)
12-slot shelf Two
12-pair
Two Shielded
12-pair Cables
Shielded
D Cables
S
X To
1 cable
pairs
Wired to
DSX-1 jacks
Wired to block
C.O. repeater cards
On MDF to access
cable pairs
129
T1 Repeater Housing
Telephone pole
12 - Position
Aerial or Buried Cable 25 - Position
50 - Position
Local Cable or Housings
Toll Cable (T-Screen)
Side 2
Repeater makes a new
pulse in each direction 132
Repeater Housing
Symbol
Side 1
Side 2
133
T1 Repeatered Span Line
Central Office ‘A’ Central Office ‘B’
Line Termination Shelf Line Termination Shelf
C.O. repeater
Repeater Housings
Line
Repeater,
12, 25, 50 slots
Outside plant
copper cable
134
T1 Span Line - Schematic
DC power component Spacing Between
added to signal to power Housings
repeater housings
- 3000-5000 feet
- see slide ‘DS1 vs. T1’
Office A Office B
DS1 in T1 signal (DC powered DS1) DS1 out
1/0 DS1
M
Digital switch
D4 Channel VF signal
DS1 DS1
Bank
D
DSX-1
DSX-1
DS1
HDSL
HDSL DS1
F
DS1
DSX-1 DS1
DS1 line
Span powered
DS1
termination shelf DS1 (T1)
OSP fiber
DS3
cable
M13 Mux DSX-3
coaxial DS3 Fiber Optic
cable DSX-3 LGX
coaxial System fiber 136
cable jumpers
HDSL
High-bit-rate Digital Subscriber Line
Distances up to 12,000
without a repeater. 10
11
138
HDSL shelf & wiring
H D S L
C
H H H H H H H H H H H H H
N
T T T T T T T T T T T T T
T
U U U U U U U U U U U U U
R
R R R R R R R R R R R R R
L
139
HDSL shelf
Two
12-pair To
Two 13-slot shelf Shielded cable
12-pair Cables pairs
Shielded
D Cables
S
X
1 MDF
Block
DS0 DS0 DS0 DS0 DS0 DS0 DS0 DS0 DS0 DS0 DS0 DS0
DS0 DS0 DS0 DS0 DS0 DS0 DS0 DS0 DS0 DS0 DS0 DS0
DS0 DS0 DS0 DS0 DS0 DS0 DS0 DS0 DS0 DS0 DS0 DS0
DS1 DS1
2-wire circuit 12 DS0’s 2-wire circuit 12 DS0’s
142
Fractional T1 (Fractional DS1)
• DS1 rate, but with only a portion of the 24 DS0’s carrying
traffic - can be delivered via a T1 span line or HDSL
• customer wanting MORE than ONE 64Kbps channel
• typically 2-6 DS0's - rate - 128kbps to 384kpbs
• Can be provisioned on one pair
6 DS0’s shown
24 6 1
Framing bit
(1 bit only)
8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
12 6 1
High-speed Low-speed DS0 DS0 DS0 DS0 DS0 DS0 DS0 DS0 DS0 DS0 DS0 DS0
side side
2-wire circuit, 2-6 DS0’s, 12 max
D4 bank
DS1 HTU-C HTU-R Customer’s
LC Only one pair required
4-wire Equipment
circuit
Up to 12,000 feet
MDF
6 DS0’s in D4 bank
Fractional T1 with 6 DS0’s carrying traffic
1 24
DS0 DS0 DS0 DS0 DS0 DS0 DS0 DS0 DS0 DS0 DS0 DS0 DS0 DS0 DS0 DS0 DS0 DS0
DS0 DS0 DS0 DS0 DS0 DS0 DS0 DS0 DS0 DS0 DS0 DS0 DS0 DS0 DS0 DS0 DS0 DS0
24 1
144
Summary
• Hi-cap – DS1 to customer
• T1 span line – transports DS1’s on copper
cable facilities from one office to another;
uses T1 repeater housings 3000-5000 feet
apart.
• HDSL – transports DS1’s on copper cable
facilities up to 12,000 feet without a
repeater housing.
145
Central Office Layout Outside
2B + D Plant cables
BRI
DCS ISDN
1/0 DS1
M
Digital switch
D4 Channel VF signal
DS1 DS1
Bank
D
DSX-1
DSX-1
DS1
HDSL
HDSL DS1
F
DS1
DSX-1 DS1
DS1 line
Span powered
DS1
termination shelf DS1 (T1)
OSP fiber
DS3
cable
M13 Mux DSX-3
coaxial DS3 Fiber Optic
cable DSX-3 LGX
coaxial System fiber 146
cable jumpers
DSX-3 Cross-Connect
- connecting DS3 circuits
between equipment
coaxial cabling Rear Light
Rear coaxial cabling
from fiber
optic terminal MON Front Front From M13 mux
MON
IN IN
DS3 OUT OUT DS3
I-X Patch I-X
jacks jacks
O-X cords O-X
Cables
DSX-3 module DSX-3 module flipped over
cross-connect cables
(backside of modules)
147
DSX-3 Bay – front
148
DSX-3 Lineup
149
DSX-3 Bay-
Rear View
- equipment
termination
- cross-connect
cables
150
Coaxial Terminations
151
Central Office Layout Outside
2B + D Plant cables
BRI
DCS ISDN
1/0 DS1
M
Digital switch
D4 Channel VF signal
DS1 DS1
Bank
D
DSX-1
DSX-1
DS1
HDSL
HDSL DS1
F
DS1
DSX-1 DS1
DS1 line
Span powered
DS1
termination shelf DS1 (T1)
OSP fiber
DS3
cable
M13 Mux DSX-3
coaxial DS3 Fiber Optic
cable DSX-3 LGX
coaxial System fiber 152
cable jumpers
M13 Asynchronous Multiplexer
• 28 DS1's multiplex
up to 1 DS3
• typically use Nortel
DS1
DMT-300 mux or
1 M13
. DS3 Telco Systems
. Multiplexer
to DSX-1 jacks .
RC-28D
.
.
.
to DSX-3 jacks
28
153
Nortel DMT-300 M13 multiplexer
4 drawers per shelf
30-pair
High-frequency coaxial cables
Cabling for for DS3
28 DS1 terminations
terminations
155
NEC RC-28D M13 Multiplexer
156
Central Office Layout Outside
2B + D Plant cables
BRI
DCS ISDN
1/0 DS1
M
Digital switch
D4 Channel VF signal
DS1 DS1
Bank
D
DSX-1
DSX-1
DS1
HDSL
HDSL DS1
F
DS1
DSX-1 DS1
DS1 line
Span powered
DS1
termination shelf DS1 (T1)
OSP fiber
DS3
cable
M13 Mux DSX-3
coaxial DS3 Fiber Optic
cable DSX-3 LGX
coaxial System fiber 157
cable jumpers
Fiber System - Async
Fundamental structure
DS3 working
Tx
D
S
.
.
Fiber Optic Rx
X
3
.
Terminal
. Tx
Rx
DS3
protection
158
Fiber optic system -
interoffice components
Point-to-Point configuration
Office A Office B
DS3’s DS3’s
D D
S
Fiber Optic L L Fiber Optic
S
Terminal Terminal
X G G X
3 FOT X X FOT 3
Outside plant
Inside plant fiber cable
Fiber termination
‘mic’ cable panel
Fiber optic
159
splice closure
Basic Fiber Optic Terminal
Simplified block diagram
To DSX-3 panels To outside plant
135 Mb/s
fiber facilities
45 Mb/s D
M X
DS3 #1
S
C working
3
U V
D X R Light – 1300 nm
DS3 #2 S
D
Tx or In
3
E X wavelength
M C
DS3 #3 D
U V
S
protection
Rx or Out 3 X R
Working side
Optics cards
(Tx, Rx,
Mux, Demux)
Coaxial
termination Protection side
Optics cards
161
DS3 interface cards Transmit card Receive card
Multiplexing Hierarchy & wiring
DS0 64 Kbs
channel 1 1.544 Mbs
D4 DS1 #1
45.736 Mbs
Channel DS3
bank M13 Fiber Optic
DS0
channel 24 mux Terminal
25-pair
Fibers to
24-gauge 30-pair next office
voice 24-gauge
frequency Coaxial
shielded
cable cable
cable
162
Test Equipment
DS1, DS3, SONET T-Berd
Acterna Products - formerly TTC
163
Mux, DSX-3, & F.O.T.
connections
coaxial
cross-connect
cords
DS1
DS3 working
DS3 Fiber Tx
M13 . Rx
MUX . Optic
. Tx
coaxial Terminal Rx
High- DS3
cable coaxial protection
frequency
DSX-3 DSX-3
cabling cable
PANEL To fiber termination panel
PANEL
164
Summary
• DSX-3 jacks - terminating DS3 cables,
providing cross-connections between DS3
circuits. Connects to M13 muxes & FOT’s.
• M13 Multiplexer – TDM device combining
28 DS1’s into one DS3.
• Fiber Optic Terminal – TDM device
combining lower speed DS3 (and DS1)
circuits together into a high speed circuit.
This high speed circuit is converted into light
pulses and connected to a fiber cable.
165
SONET
Synchronous Optical NETwork
• SONET is a standard for synchronous data transmission
on fiber optic equipment.
• STS-1 Synchronous Transport Signal rate 1.
- fundamental bit rate within SONET hierarchy.
• SONET rate = 51.840 Mbs. When transmitted via light,
called Optical Carrier rate 1, or OC-1.
• STS-1 typically is a DS3 signal within a SONET frame.
SONET Frame DS1 DS1 DS1 DS1 DS1 DS1 DS1 DS1 DS1 DS1 Header
28 27 26 5 4 3 2 1
166
DS3
SONET Frame
Synchronous Transport Signal Rate - 1
Optical Carrier - Rate 1
STS-1 – electrical, OC-1 - optical
Transport Overhead
90 Columns
87 Columns
9 Rows
8-bit word
Payload 8-bit word
Frame Rate=9 Rows X 90 Columns X 8 bits/sec X 8000 frames/sec = 51.84 Mbs
Payload = 50.112 Mbs, Transport Overhead = 1.728 Mbs 167
SONET
Advantages:
• Mix and match fiber vendors on same span.
• Since the SONET bit streams are byte-
interleaved and timed from a common,
stable clock source, the individual lower-
rate bit streams can be accessed without de-
multiplexing the entire bit stream.
Vendor “A” Vendor “B”
. . SONET SONET . .
. .
.
.. Fiber Optic Fiber Optic .
.
.
. . .
.. System System .
. 168
DS3 DS3
SONET Hierarchy & Rates
# DS3's SONET OPTICAL Rate Capacity - DS1's
1 STS-1 OC-1 51.84 Mbs 28 DS1's
3 STS-3 OC-3 155 Mbs 84 DS1's
12 STS-12 OC-12 622 Mbs 336 DS1's
48 STS-48 OC-48 2488 Mbs - 2.4 Gbs 1344 DS1's
192 STS-192 OC-192 9953 Mbs - 9.9 Gbs 5376 DS1's
. SONET
.
.. Fiber Optic
.. System
.
DS3
169
Lucent DDM-2000
Processor
Transceiver cards OC-3 shelf cards
Timing Cards
DS1 Interface
cards – Group A
28 DS1’s
Drop down door
Group B - empty
Group C - empty 170
SONET Fiber Optic System
Synchronous Optical NETwork – OC12
Transceiver cards
Operational
Controller Timing
OPC cards
Processor
card
DS3 or DS1
Interface cards
Fan shelf 171
Fujitsu FLM-150 Fiber Shelf
172
SONET Rings
UPSR - Uni-directional Path Switched Ring
OC-12 UPSR Ring
Number of available STS-1’s = rated capacity of system (N)
12 STS-1’s maximum available around the ring.
DS3’s P M M M M M M
DS3’s
BB
P M M M M M M
A
R A A A A A A
R A A A A A A O O S
O O S C O P P P P P P
C O P P P P P P C C W T
C C W O P P T P P P P P P
O P P T P P P P P P T - - I I
- - I N O O . E E E E E E
I 12 12 T M
N O O . E E E E E E T W W
12 12 T M M R R R R R R I
T W W M R R R R R R X X C
X X C I R E E A 14 14 14 14 14 14 N
R E E A 14 14 14 14 14 14 N C C H
C C H O R R P D D D D D D G
O R R P D D D D D D G V V E
V V E L P S- S- S- S- S- S-
L P S- S- S- S- S- S- R R R
R R R E 1' 1' 1' 1' 1' 1'
E 1' 1' 1' 1' 1' 1' R S S S S S S
R S S S S S S
12 STS-1’s
Example:
A-B - Ch.1 working
B-C-A - Ch.1 protection P M M M M M M
C
R A A A A A A
O O S
C O P P P P P P
C C W T
O P P T P P P P P P
- - I I
N O O . E E E E E E
12 12 T M
T W W M R R R R R R I
X X C
the ring.
DS3’s 173
SONET Rings
BLSR –Bi-directional Line Switched Ring
Number of available STS-1’s = N/2 * number of nodes
Each segment is has ½ working STS-1’s and ½ protection STS-1’s
B
R A A A A A A R A A A A A A
O O S O O S
C O P P P P P P
B
C
A
C C W T O P P P P P P
O P P T P P P P P P C C W T
- - I I O P P T P P P P P P
N O O . E E E E E E - - I I
12 12 T M N O O . E E E E E E
T W W M R R R R R R 12 12 T M
6 STS-1’s available
in each segment.
½ STS-1’s working, P M M M M M M ½ STS-1’s working,
C
R A A A A A A
O O S
½ STS-1’s protection
C
½ STS-1’s protection
O P P P P P P
C C W T
O P P T P P P P P P
- - I I
C
N O O . E E E E E E
12 12 T M
T W W M R R R R R R I
X X C
R E E A 14 14 14 14 14 14 N
C C H
O R R P D D D D D D G
V V E
L P S- S- S- S- S- S-
R R R
E 1' 1' 1' 1' 1' 1'
174
R S S S S S S
DS3’s
Summary
• SONET – standard format for fiber optic
equipment.
• Accesses bits in the bit stream without
de-multiplexing the entire bit stream.
• Allows concatenation of signals together
for higher speeds.
• Equipment must be synchronized or timed
together.
175
Fiber Cable Termination
OSP cable - closure - fiber panel
fiber
Fiber closure connector panel
Fiber
connectors
ST SC FC Biconic
Most commonly Used in video Older type,
used in telephony applications not being
placed in
new systems
179
Fiber Termination Bays
- Lucent
LGX
– Light Guide Cross-connect
also called,
OSX
- Optical Signal Cross-connect
Fiber jumpers
Fiber termination
shelf
Designation
strip
182
OCEF
Optical Cable
Entrance Facility
183
Fiber Jumper Inter-connect
Fiber closure LGX panel
Fiber
Optic
Terminal
Outside Plant Fiber Jumper
MIC cable
Fiber
- terminates - connects to
on back of front of
LGX panel LGX panel
184
Fiber Jumper Connections
Inter-connect
Fiber optic
connectors
Fiber
MIC cable
Optic
12-, 24-, 72-fiber, etc. Terminal
185
Fiber Jumper cross-connect
187
Summary
• LGX – fiber cable & jumper termination;
allows for fiber cable management.
• MIC cable is fire retardant
• ST & SC connectors are the most
commonly used in telephony.
• Inter-connect & cross-connect are both
used.
188
Tracing an FX circuit through an office
Summary of circuits, signals & equipment
FX circuit
M13
DS3 D D DS3
DS1 Multiplexer
D4 DS1 S S Fiber Optic
channel DSX-1 DSX-1 X X Terminal
bank
3 3
DSX-1 DSX-1 prot
work
DS1 DS1
Fiber jumpers LGX
DS0
MDF matrix
LGX
Outside Plant
DACS fiber cable
Over network to
‘foreign exchange’
for dial tone
189
Wave Division Multiplexing
WDM
WDM is used to place multiple wavelengths of light on a single fiber.
Office A Office B
Fiber Optic Tx
+
Fiber Optic
Terminal #2 Rx Terminal #2
190
Wave Division Multiplexing
Wavelengths of Light
Nanometers – nm
1557.2 1557.2
1557.3 1557.3
1557.4 1557.4
1557.5 1557.5
1557.6 1557.6
1557.7 1557.7
1557.8 1557.8
195
Wideband DCS
DS3, SONET fiber input, DS1 cross-connect
-‘Grooming’ DS1 circuits
Verizon approved from one port to another.
Tellabs Titan 5500 - Reduces back-to-back equipment.
DCS Port cards
DS3 3/1
DS3
DS3 DS3
DS3
SONET Fiber optic
DS3 DS1 interface
cross-connects
in matrix OC-1, OC-3, OC-12
196
DS1 cross connects in 3/1 DCS
Tellabs Titan 5500
SONET 3/1 DCS
197
Titan 5500 unit shelf
DS3 input
198
SONET Broadband DCS
DS3, SONET fiber input, DS3 cross-connect
‘Grooming’ DS3 circuits
from one port to another.
DCS Port cards
3/3
DS3
DS3
201
Microwave Radio
Point-to-Point - DS1 & DS3 circuits
2 – 11 GigaHertz
Microwave carrier Parabolic Dish
frequencies Antenna
Waveguide
Telephone Telephone
Office Office
Tower
202
structure
Microwave Radio
Waveguide
Waveguide
Ports
MW Radio
Equipment Tower structure
DS1 or DS3
Inputs 204
Microwave Radio
Frequencies & Distances
• 2 GHz – now used for PCS.
Existing systems - grandfathered
• 6 GHz – 11 to 30 miles
• 11 GHz – 3 to 15 miles
• 18 GHz – 0 to 5 miles
• 38 GHz – across the street
Typically, transmit power is only
one Watt.
Microwave dishes are from 2 – 15 feet
in diameter. The larger the dish, the
higher the gain, hence greater distance
is achieved. 205
Microwave Radio
Passive
Reflector
206
Summary
• Microwave Radio – used to transport telephony
signals in lieu of fiber cable; over mountains,
bodies of water, etc.
• Both DS1 and DS3 circuits are transported
207
Digital Loop Carrier
Existing copper plant
450 homes
Distribution cables
Telephone
Office 500-pair feeder cable
600-pair ‘Feeder’ cable
208
Digital Loop Carrier
DLC added in growing subdivision
450 homes
Distribution cables
Telephone
Office 500-pair feeder cable
600-pair ‘Feeder’ cable
DLC
75 homes
Distribution cables 300 new homes
209
Digital Loop Carrier
DLC distribution cable
& span cable added
450 homes
Distribution cables
Telephone
Office 500-pair feeder cable
600-pair ‘Feeder’ cable
210
Digital Loop Carrier
DLC is cutover; old feeder cable is
free to be reused
450 homes
Distribution cables
Telephone
Office 500-pair feeder cable
600-pair ‘Feeder’ cable
211
NGDLC
Next Generation Digital Loop
Carrier
To provide telephone services to areas where
it would be economically unfeasible to place copper cable.
• POTS
• Special Circuits Concrete pad
- ISDN, FX, etc. AFC AccessMax (formerly UMC-1000A),
Alcatel Litespan,
• Hi-caps Zhone (formerly Nortel) AccessNode,
• ADSL Lucent SLC-96, SLC-5, SLC-2000
Marconi DISC*S (Reltec), and others. 212
Digital Loop Carrier cabinet site
672 lines maximum
Generator
Cross connect
cabinet
Digital Loop
Carrier cabinet
AC Power
cabinet
214
Walk-in
Cabinet
Digital Loop Carrier
equipment (lines)
directly cabled
to protectors. Protectors
Cabled to external
cross-connect cabinet
– no blocks, no jumpers
required in DLC cabinet.
215
DLC bays Protectors
DLC
Digital Loop Carrier
Universal arrangement
Central office / remote COT - Central Office Terminal
MDF
Central Office Fiber optics or DLC cabinet 672 lines
Line bay
DLC copper DS1’s
672 lines
Cross-connect
Jumpers cabinet
240 lines
216
DLC
Digital Loop Carrier
Direct interface into switch
Host central office
4-6 DS1
Fiber optics
connections
DS1 no lines Cross-connect
interfaces cabinet
DLC cabinet
4-6 DS1 672 lines
connections
Fiber Inter-cabinet
termination cabling
Fiber cable panel Outside
to central office Plant
Ground rods distribution
219
for ground field cable
ADSL
Asymmetrical Digital Subscriber
Line
Telephone
Office
ADSL
ADSL ADSL
POTS
Upstream Downstream
bandwidth bandwidth Frequency
LC
Line
Line Block Protector Cable Pair
cabling
LC-line card
Main Distribution
222
Frame
Basic phone circuit - with ADSL
POTS Telephone Office
Line Bay Splitter
Line Protector
Block NID
LC
ATU-R
Line Jumpers
Cable Pair
cabling
DS1 to
Frame Relay
switch Ethernet
A
T connection
ADSL U
| Splitter Block
C
xLC=xDSL line card
Fujitsu Speedport Main Distribution 223
ADSL
Frame
Fujitsu ADSL shelf
MDF-mounted
splitter block -
passive electronics
POTS
frequency
0 kHz 4kHz 20 kHz 140 KHz 1.1 MHz
RJ48 ADSL
Data
Power Supply
RJ11 Voice
POTS
230
TIMING - What is it?
• Everybody is marching to the same 'beat'
Bit Slip
Original Signal
232
TIMING - For what equipment?
• Purely analog circuits DO NOT require
timing.
234
GPS & BITS Clock
GPS satellites
235
GPS
Antenna
236
3 clock levels of timing
- Stratum Levels
Telephone Telephone
Office Office
GPS GPS
Stratum 1 Stratum 1
Stratum 2 Stratum 2
237
TIMING - Stratum levels
• Stratum 1 Clock - directly from GPS receiver
– typically put at host offices with Stratum 2
– stability – infinite – continuously connected to GPS
• Stratum 2 Clock - stability - 28 days w/out external
input
• Stratum 3 Clock - stability - 5 days w/out external
input
– typically put at main wire centers other than hosts
• Stratum 4 Clock - stability - less than 24 hours
– typically for clocks put on fiber optic cards
238
BITS Clock/Timing Distribution Shelf
& GPS Antenna control shelf
239
BITS
GPS Antenna
+ - +
-
- + To
shunt
AC -48V -48V C.O.
meters equipment
DC DC
Fuses
AC -48V
Distribution:
32 ‘A’ fuses (30 Amp)
32 ‘B’ fuses (30 Amp)
- for feeding fuse panels
in equipment bays. 243
POWER
Main Power Board
• measures voltage & current used by office
Shunt
– Shunt - measures current - ammeter
Voltage Current
• provides main fuses to power
secondary distribution boards
• may provide distribution fuses for
transmission racks (remote)
• provides a 'battery return' bus for
battery grounds
Fuses
244
Shunt – used to measure office current
individual plates
247
POWER
Transmission Distribution Power
Board
shunt shunt
• provides secondary power distribution
Voltage Current
to transmission racks
• may be fuses or breakers
B-side • A & B sides - 2 Shunts, 2 voltmeters,
2 ammeters
• powers A & B battery & ground to
fuse panels with 2 power inputs
• distribution fuses typically 10 to 30 Amp
A-side
• requires two 600-Amp fuses from Main
Power Board for diversity protection
Fuses or breakers 248
Main Power Board feeding
Transmission Power Board
Main Power Transmission
Board Power Board
-48V
To Transmission
Racks to Power
‘B’ side fuse panels.
Ground
Battery plant cable Ground leads
BDFB
Ground Bar Ground Bar
Fuse panel
Shunt
shunt Shunt Shunt
Voltage Current
Voltage Current
‘A’ side Telephone
-48V Equipment
‘B’ side
Equipment
Rack
Main Power Board BDFB 250
Power cables
Power Board
A side
Distribution
Shunt panel
Meter panel
Remote building
Two Rectifiers,
Power Board 100-Amp each
with Rectifiers exceed 100
- Load not to
Amps
(Maximum load
+1 rectifier) 252
Batteries
C.O.
Common bus for (+) & ( -)
ground bus
+ - - +
To
- + Shunt
C.O.
AC -48V -48V equipment
Voltage Current
DC DC -48V
AC
254
Batteries
- Sealed ‘Dry’ cells
- Valve Regulated
- GNB “Absolyte”
has Absorbent glass mat.
- 20 year life
255
Backup Generator
• provides electrical power to run the office in event of A/C
power failure - typically 7.5 kW to 60 kW units
• larger sizes for main central offices – 250kW to 750kW+
• runs on propane (older installations) or diesel fuel (newer
installations.
Shown is a
365 kW diesel
Generator.
256
AC Transfer Switch
Commercial
AC Power
Automatic
Transfer Switch
Normal
AC Load
To: rectifiers
Emergency
air conditioning
lights
Backup Generator 257
Grounding
Keep People & Equipment Safe from Lightning
4 Grounding Elements:
– Producers
– Absorbers
– Isolated Ground Zone - IGZ
– Non-Isolated Ground Zone - Non-IGZ
258
Grounding
MDF
Producers – anything protectors
259
Grounding
• • • •
• • • •
261
Master Ground Bar - MGB
To IGZ • •
•
MGB
(digital switch) •
263
Grounding
Non-IGZ
Non-Isolated Ground Zone
Transmission equipment: Fuse panel
– May not have the cards
isolated from the shelves
– May not have the shelves Transmission
Cards
isolated from the bays Equipment
shelf
1/0 DS1
M
Digital switch
D4 Channel VF signal
DS1 DS1
Bank
D
DSX-1
DSX-1
DS1
HDSL
HDSL DS1
F
DS1
DSX-1 DS1
DS1 line
Span powered
DS1
termination shelf DS1 (T1)
OSP fiber
DS3
cable
M13 Mux DSX-3
coaxial DS3 Fiber Optic
cable DSX-3 LGX
coaxial System fiber 265
cable jumpers