CCRP - IP-20N Manual
CCRP - IP-20N Manual
CCRP - IP-20N Manual
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Thank You
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Agenda
• General Rules for Safety
• Personal Protective Gear
• Working at heights guidelines
• Selecting the right equipment
• Rules and considerations for working at heights
• Safety Procedures When Working at Cell Site
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Working at Heights
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• Proper safety shoes should be worn, use gumboots for sites access, boots for working at heights.
Heights:
• Only trained personnel should work at heights.
• Always maintain at least 3 points of contact while climbing or working on a ladder, to reduce the risk of falling.
• Use full body safety harness and helmet while working on heights / towers.
• Make sure that hook safety harness and lanyards are properly secured at a safe place before starting the work.
• Climb the tower with proper, leather shoes. Do not use sandals.
• Check that platform railing is secure before holding or standing next to the railing.
• Lifting a load - angle between straps is less than 90°where they are attached to the lifting device.
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• Any medical condition / implants worn, should be reported to the appropriate manager before engaging in any
work at height.
• EMF sign should be clearly visible and identifiable and may contain the following text:
• Warning! Non-ionizing Radiation! Beyond this point RF fields exist that exceed the rules for human exposure.
Authorized Personnel Only.
• Caution! Non-ionizing Radiation!
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Thank You
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Agenda
• Ceragon Technology Overview
• Installation Types:
• All outdoor installations
• All indoor installation
• Split Mount installation
Ceragon
The #1 Wireless Backhaul Specialist
• Global reach – local presence
Over 33%
750,000 of sales
Radios installed in with global
over 130 countries Tier 1 operators
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4th Generation
Modems and RFICs
Multicore
5th
256QAM Gen
FibeAir IP-20 Platform First XPIC 4th 2019
Gen
3rd
2nd Gen 2013
Gen
2007
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IP-20 ASSURED
for enhanced security
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Hybrid All-IP
Product selection - band
Microwave Modular Multi-core
Hybrid All-IP
Sub-6GHz E-Band
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Modular Multi-core
Microwave Hybrid All-IP
All-Indoor/Split
All Outdoor
mount
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• IP-20C
• IP-20E
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2x MultiCore 2+0
Single Polarization
Splitter
Dual Splitter
1+0 or 2+0
Configuration
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Main Antenna
Space Antenna
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All-Indoor/Split mount
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Examples
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IF Cable
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Radio Units
Standard Power (Max 24 dBm) in 6-42 GHz, with 3.5 - 56Mhz Ch. Bandwidth
QPSK – 256 QAM or 2048 QAM(Premium) FibeAir RFU-C or RFU-Ce
Very Compact
Power (Max 30 dBm) in 4-13 GHz, with 7-60 Mhz Ch. Bandwidth,
4QAM to 2048 QAM(Select frequencies), Evolution XCVR
ACM capable, XPIC capable
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Types of Mounts
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Thank You
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Agenda
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RF Principles
Radio Spectrum
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Medium frequency MF 6 300–3000 kHz 1 km – 100 m AM (medium-wave) broadcasts, amateur radio, avalanche beacons
High frequency HF 7 3–30 MHz 100 m – 10 m Shortwave broadcasts, amateur radio and over-the-horizon aviation communications & radars, RFID,
radar, automatic link establishment (ALE) / near-vertical incidence sky wave (NVIS) radio
communications, marine and mobile radio telephony
Very high frequency VHF 8 30–300 MHz 10 m – 1 m FM, television broadcasts and line-of-sight ground-to-aircraft and aircraft-to-aircraft communications, land
mobile and maritime mobile communications, amateur radio, weather radio
Ultra high frequency UHF 9 300–3000 MHz 1 m – 100 mm Television broadcasts, microwave oven, microwave devices/communications, radio astronomy, mobile
phones, wireless LAN, Bluetooth, ZigBee, GPS and two-way radios such as land
mobile, FRS and GMRS radios, amateur radio
Super high frequency SHF 10 3–30 GHz 100 mm – 10 mm Radio astronomy, microwave devices/communications, wireless LAN, most
modern radars, communications satellites, cable and satellite television broadcasting, DBS, amateur radio
Extremely high frequency EHF 11 30–300 GHz 10 mm – 1 mm Radio astronomy, high-frequency microwave radio relay, microwave remote sensing, amateur
radio, directed-energy weapon, millimeter wave scanner
Tremendously high THz 12 300–3000 GHz 1 mm – 100 μm Terahertz imaging – replacement for X-rays, ultrafast molecular dynamics, condensed-matter physics, time-
frequency THF domain spectroscopy, terahertz computing/communications, sub-mm remote sensing, amateur radio
waves Stratosphere
(12-50 km)
Direct wave
Line of Sight(LOS)
Antenna
Reflected wave mounting
height
Earth’s Curvature
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f1’
Path Terrain
High station means: Tx(f1) >Rx(f1’) Low station means: Tx(f1’) < Rx(f1)
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√
High
Low
×
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Frequency
bands
6L 7 8 10 13 15 18 23 26 28 32 38 42 GHz
5 6U 11 24
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V H
H
Passive Repeaters
• When terrain does not permit Line of Sight, some passive repeaters can be used
Back-to-back antennas
Repeater
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About E-band
• What is E-band?
• Proven and mature technology – in commercial use since the 1980’s
• 10GHz of spectrum: 71-76GHz and 81-86GHz
• Requires Line of Sight
mmWave Characteristics
8 GHz 38 GHz 71-76 GHz
• Higher free space loss FSL 110 dB 124 dB 130 dB
• High attenuation due to rain Main factor that limits the effective link distance
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Wireless Alternatives
• E-band
• Inexpensive
• Very quick to deploy
• Mature technology
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Modulation
Modulation
• Modulation = facilitating a message over a medium with the help of a more easily
modifiable signal;
• The process of modifying parameters of one signal based on another, for data
transmissions.
• Why do modulation ?
• To overcome medium limitations when transmitting information: voice over air, power of signal
over cable, signal fidelity, etc.
• To compact information so that it is transmittable at higher speeds.
• To use smaller antennas for transmitting the signal, less costly.
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Modulation types
Analog Modulation Digital Modulation
Digital modulation
• ASK - modulation changes the amplitude to the analog signal. ”1” and “ 0” have different
1 0 1 1 0 1 1 0
amplitude. 1 0 1 1 0 1 1 0
Modem
• PSK modulation changes the phase to the transmitted signal. The simplest method uses 0°
and 180°. 1 0 1 1 0 1 1 0
1 0 1 1 0 1 1 0
Modem
• FSK modulation is a method of represent the two binary states ”1” and ”0” with different
specific frequencies.
1 0 1 1 0 1 1
1 0 1 1 0 1 1 0
Modem
F1 F2 F1 F1 F2 F1 F1
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QAM Modulation
• Quadrature Amplitude Modulation employs both phase
modulation (PSK) and amplitude modulation (ASK) QAM Type Bits
4QAM 2bits/symbol
• The input stream is divided into groups of bits based on the 8QAM 3bits/symbol
number of modulation states used. 16QAM 4bits/symbol
32QAM 5bits/symbol
• In 8 QAM, each three bits of input, which provides eight 64QAM 6bits/symbol
128QAM 7bits/symbol
values (0-7) alters the phase and amplitude of the carrier to 256QAM 8bits/symbol
512QAM 9bits/symbol
derive eight unique modulation states 1024QAM 10bits/symbol
2048QAM 11bits/symbol
• In 64 QAM, each six bits generates 64 modulation states; in
128 QAM, each seven bits generate 128 states, and so on
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Constellation diagram
• Represents the possible symbols that may be selected by a given modulation scheme as
points in the complex plane.
• Constellation diagrams can be used to recognize the type of interference and distortion in a
signal.
4QAM vs 16QAM
4QAM 16QAM
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2048 QAM
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512 QAM
512 QAM
256 QAM
256 QAM
2048QAM
2048QAM
128 QAM
128 QAM
64 QAM
64 QAM
32 QAM
32 QAM
16 QAM
16 QAM
8 QAM
8 QAM
QPSK
High
Priority
Traffic
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ACM Profiles
• 11 Profiles QPSK to 2048 QAM
• Each profile differs by modulation order and coding rate =>different capacities per profile
• ACM Tx profile can be different than ACM Rx profile
• ACM Tx profile is determined by far-end MSE.
Tx
Rx MSE
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To simplify….
Imagine a production line where a
machine needs to insert one part into
the other, so both pieces must match
perfectly.
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Quantity 9
3
3
2
1
width
6mm 7mm 10mm 12mm 16mm
The accuracy of our machine is given by how many values differ from the expected value.
9 parts were good, rest not so much.
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Error = + 2 mm
Error = - 3 mm
Error = + 6 mm
Error = - 4 mm
width
6mm 7mm 10mm 12mm 16mm
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+ 2 mm = 4
-3 mm = 9
- 4 mm = 16 + 6 mm = 36
width
6mm 7mm 10mm 12mm 16mm
The squared values give bigger differences more weight than smaller differences,
resulting in a more powerful statistics tool:
16cm parts are 36 ”units” away than 2cm parts which are only 4 units away
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Calculating MSE
Error = 0 mm
Quantity
+ 2 mm = 4
-3 mm = 9
- 4 mm = 16 + 6 mm = 36
width
To evaluate the total errors, we sum all the squared errors and take the average:
The bigger the errors (differences) >> the bigger MSE becomes
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Calculating MSE
MSE determines how narrow / wide the “Bell” is
Quantity
width
10mm
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I
e4
e3
11 10
For example –
256QAM has great capacity but poor immune
to noise
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As you can see, the radio remains @ profile 8 untill MSE improves to -38dB:
ACM
Profile
Downgrade
-41 Downgrade
-38
-37
-34
MSE
-39 -36 -35 -32 -30 -27 -24 -21
When RF signal degrades and MSE does not pass the upgrade point (green point) – ACM waits till MSE improves to
the point of next available upgrade point (takes longer time to switch back to the higher profile).
ACM
Profile
-41 -38
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Signal
S/N Power Signal
Power
Power
Power
S/N Signal
S/N S/N
Noise Noise Noise Noise
10 -4
10 -5
10 -8
-75 -72 -69 -66
Receiver input level [dBm]
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Fading Margin
BER<10-6
-73 Sensitivity Threshold level
@ BER=10-6
BER>10-6 SNR
-96 Receiver amplifies thermal noise
Transmission Techniques
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V 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
ACCP (Adjacent Channel Common Pol.)
H
BW
V 1 3 5 7 9
H ACAP (Adjacent Channel Alternating Pol.)
2 4 6 8 10
BW
V 1 2 3 4 5
H CCDP (Co-Channel Dual Polarization)
6 7 8 9 10
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V 1 V 1
H H
2 2
Cross-
Polarization Cross-
Polarization
Interference
(XPI)
Horizontal Polarization Interference
(XPI)
Cross-Polarization Discrimination (XPD)= The relative level of interference
between polarizations (Co-channel sensitivity of 10dB)
•ATPC power mode is always recommended with CCDP systems to reduce the effect of
XPD fading and prevent loosing both channels when one TX fails.
•The XPIC improvement factor is typically 26 dB.
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SD (Space Diversity)
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3dB lower
BER receiver
threshold
Space Diversity
Carrier 1
1+0 SD Carrier 1
Carrier 2
(Muted)
X Carrier 2
Slave Slave
X Muted
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Spatial Diversity
2+2 HSB = Protected 2+0 SD
Optical
GbE
Port
Modem 1 RF Chain
GbE
Port
Modem 2 RF Chain
Optical
Splitter Active IP-20C Unit
Optical
GbE
Port
Modem 1 RF Chain
GbE
Port
Modem 2 RF Chain
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MIMO Basics
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Must be
consistent
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MIMO Benefits
4 x Capacity on the SAME CHANNEL!
• Using the a single channel to quadruple the capacity
Site 2
• Simple direct mount installation V
V
H 1Gbps on a single
30/28 MHz channel
• Supports 28MHz, 40MHz, 56MHz H
Site 1
LoS 4x4 MIMO Quadruples radio
throughput using the same
Upgrading the Capacity without network re-planning spectrum, at half the form-factor
MultiCore Benefits
System Gain
1+0 MultiCore 2+0 DP
11dB f1
f1
1024 to 64QAM
+
30/28MHz
30/28MHz 2dB
Higher TX power
due to QAM change
13dB!
Addition to System Gain
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MIMO Benefits
System Gain
MultiCore 2+0 XPIC 4X4 MIMO
3dB f1
f1
Operating in MIMO
+
30/28MHz
11dB 30/28MHz
1024 to 64QAM 28MHz V
+
2dB
Higher TX power
due to QAM change
452Mbps 4 x 133 = 532Mbps
1024QAM 64 QAM
16dB!
Addition to System Gain
MIMO Benefits
Spectrum Decongestion
1+0 SISO 2X2 MIMO
3ft 3ft
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MIMO Benefits
Lowest Cost of Ownership
Ceragon provides Higher System Gain using MIMO
• MIMO allows either to double capacity over the same channel bandwidth
or to improve system gain Longer links
• Typical solution results in 20-25% cost reduction
Test Case:
18GHz System gain and Capacity improvement using MIMO :
MIMO Benefits
Lowest Cost of Ownership
Ceragon provides Higher System Gain using MIMO
• MIMO allows either to double capacity over the same channel bandwidth
or to improve system gain Longer links
• Typical solution results in 20-25% cost reduction
Test Case:
15GHz System gain and Capacity improvement using MIMO :
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✓Transmission Techniques
✓XPIC
✓SD
✓LoS MIMO
Thank You
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Agenda
• Transporting and moving microwave goods:
• Antennas
• Network Elements
• Waveguides and Cables
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Inspecting Equipment
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Transporting Antenna
• Observe & follow storage and transportation instructions.
• Position cargo straps onto the strongest part of the crate.
• Check the load regularly to make sure it remains secure.
• On poor road conditions, position the large antenna where they will be least
affected by vibration and shocks – more robust equipment loaded onto
remaining space
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Remember:
• Check quantities against the BOM document
• Check damage to equipment
• Damaged items of equipment should never be installed;
• Missing items need to be reported ASAP:
• Check all equipment on arrival – not after the driver has gone.
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Inspection
• Loading & Dispatching, check:
• antenna is not damaged
• assembly kits are complete
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• Place timber or other protection under equipment when unpacking crates at site.
• No system or components should ever come in contact with the ground
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Steel Components
• Surface contamination of metal components on the ground. Contamination will eventually :
• Lead to surface corrosion
• Accelerate depletion of the coating system.
• Bring about premature failure
• IF THE RATING IS UNKOWN IT WILL BE REJECTED BY CERAGON AND MUST BE REMOVED FROM SITE
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• Winch Cable (steel): Check for fraying, cuts and kinking, wound correctly onto the
• Rope (fiber) : Check for fraying of fibers, cuts and contamination from oil, grease etc. and build up
of dirt/grit inside strands that will cause internal fiber wear
• Shackles :Check for pin or bow wear, thread damage or distortion of the bow.
• Pulley Block: lubricate, check for wear to the grove, looseness of pins and wear or damage of the
pulley groove.
• Slings: Check for cuts, fraying, contamination.
CERAGON can and will reject any item of equipment and have it removed from the
site if considered unsuitable or unsafe for its intended use.
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Thank You
CeraOS 8.5
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Agenda
• Roles and responsibilities of Installer/Technician
• Installation Process
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Installation Process
Technical
Purchase Technical Site Shipping to
Engineering
Order Survey warehouse
Configuration
Equipment
Equipment
Site RFI confirmation & Installation
Shipment
inspection
Acceptance
Acceptance
Agreement &
Testing
Handover
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• The checklist will be checked and implemented before visiting the site in order to reduce
costs, manage resources and avoid revisits in the sites.
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• There will be a time stamp with the date and the name of the Person/ PM who completed the data (After the actual checking).
• Status “In- progress” in the Service Task – should be mandatory like the “Planned” status.
1 week before the visit start date In Inside, while changing the status of the service task from
Currently –PM’s "planned" to "in- progress" (mandatory alert from the system), a window with the questions
will jumped and completed by PM’s
Africa PM’s 1 week before the visit start date In Inside, while changing the status of the service task from Should apply 1 week before the site visit
"planned" to "in- progress" (mandatory alert from the system), a window with the questions
will jumped and completed by PM’s
India PMO (Ajay Comment: Only 1-2 days they are notified by the customer that the site is ready.
Agrawal) The information still not updated properly in Inside. Once it will be finalized, we can Needs to eliminate RJIL. Right now the data is not available properly in
implement the checklist. Inside
2 working days (Excluding Saturday & Sunday) before the visit start date In Inside, while
changing the status of the service task from "planned" to "in- progress" (mandatory alert from
the system), a window with the questions will jumped and completed by PM’s.
***This is applicable as long there is a complete RFI
NA N/A N/A Not relevant. Low volume, no reoccurring issues.
Brazil N/A N/A Not relevant. Cell plan conduct the site checklist and in case there is a
problem make escalations.
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Antenna Check
• Antenna is grounded.
• Antenna sway braces are fitted and installed.
• For 1.2 m or larger antennas, an extra sway brace is
fitted.
• Antenna Water Drain Plugs are fitted
• Drain plugs at the bottom of the antenna
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Link Commissioning
• Interoperability Verification
• Management Verification
IDU
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Link Verification
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• Connect PDH Analyzer to the E1/T1 interface and verify error-free operation for at
least 1 hour.
• Use a physical or software loop at the far end.
Interoperability Verification
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Management Verification
• Launch the HTTP management and verify that you can manage the
link and that you are able to perform changes to the link
configuration (frequency channel, Tx power, system name, time &
date, etc.)
• Verify that correct parameters are reported when performing the
above.
• Verify that there are no active alarms on the link.
• If the management station is located at a remote site (Network
Operation Center), verify that the management station can manage
the link and receive traps.
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Link Report
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• Example
360
340
320
Elevation (m)
300
280
260
240
220
200
0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16
Path length (18.14 km)
Brown County Frequency (MHz) = 6200.0 Coper Tower
Latitude 39 18 35.63 N K = 1.33 Latitude 39 24 57.60 N
Longitude 086 08 43.68 W %F1 = 100.00 Longitude 086 18 19.90 W
Azimuth 310.55° Azimuth 130.45°
Elevation 299 m ASL Elevation 279 m ASL
Antenna CL 42.7 m AGL Antenna CL 54.9 m AGL
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Link Budget
• Example
RX threshold level Receive signal Thermal fade Flat fade margin -
TX power (dBm) EIRP (dBm)
(dBm) (dBm) margin (dB) multipath (dB)
2KQAM 534-653Mbps 23.00 23.00 -52.25 -52.25 58.10 58.10 -40.45 -40.45 11.80 11.80 11.80 11.80
1KLQAM 464-567Mbps 25.00 25.00 -52.25 -52.25 60.10 60.10 -38.45 -38.45 13.80 13.80 13.80 13.80
1KHQAM 493-602Mbps 25.00 25.00 -54.25 -54.25 60.10 60.10 -38.45 -38.45 15.80 15.80 15.80 15.80
512QAM 427-521Mbps 25.00 25.00 -57.75 -57.75 60.10 60.10 -38.45 -38.45 19.30 19.30 19.30 19.30
256QAM 397-485Mbps 27.00 27.00 -59.75 -59.75 62.10 62.10 -36.45 -36.45 23.30 23.30 23.30 23.30
128QAM 344-420Mbps 27.00 27.00 -62.75 -62.75 62.10 62.10 -36.45 -36.45 26.30 26.30 26.30 26.30
64QAM 284-348Mbps 27.00 27.00 -65.75 -65.75 62.10 62.10 -36.45 -36.45 29.30 29.30 29.30 29.30
32QAM 232-283Mbps 27.00 27.00 -68.75 -68.75 62.10 62.10 -36.45 -36.45 32.30 32.30 32.30 32.30
16QAM 176-215Mbps 28.00 28.00 -70.50 -70.50 63.10 63.10 -35.45 -35.45 35.05 35.05 35.05 35.05
QPSK 87-106Mbps 28.00 28.00 -83.50 -83.50 63.10 63.10 -35.45 -35.45 48.05 48.05 48.05 48.05
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Availability Report
• Example
Worst month multipath Annual multipath Annual rain Total annual (2 way) Time in mode (2 way)
2KQAM 534-653Mbps 99.9158 99.9158 99.9789 99.9789 99.9997 99.9997 99.9575 99.9575
1KLQAM 464-567Mbps 99.9469 99.9469 99.9867 99.9867 99.9998 99.9998 99.9732 0.0157
1KHQAM 493-602Mbps 99.9665 99.9665 99.9916 99.9916 99.9999 99.9999 99.9831 0.0099
512QAM 427-521Mbps 99.9850 99.9850 99.9963 99.9963 99.9999 99.9999 99.9925 0.0093
256QAM 397-485Mbps 99.9940 99.9940 99.9985 99.9985 99.9999 99.9999 99.9970 0.0045
128QAM 344-420Mbps 99.9970 99.9970 99.9992 99.9992 99.9999 99.9999 99.9985 0.0015
64QAM 284-348Mbps 99.9985 99.9985 99.9996 99.9996 99.9999 99.9999 99.9992 0.0008
32QAM 232-283Mbps 99.9992 99.9992 99.9998 99.9998 99.9999 99.9999 99.9996 0.0004
16QAM 176-215Mbps 99.9996 99.9996 99.9999 99.9999 99.9999 99.9999 99.9998 0.0002
QPSK 87-106Mbps 99.9999 99.9999 99.9999 99.9999 99.9999 99.9999 99.9999 0.0002
✓ Installation Process
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Thank You
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Agenda
• Equipment inspection
• General Antenna Instructions and Procedures
• Propagation Report
• Using a Compass
• Antenna hoisting, assembly and mounting
• Winch Cable (steel): Check for fraying, cuts and kinking, wound correctly onto the winch
• Rope (fiber) : Check for fraying of fibers, cuts and contamination from oil, grease etc. and build up
of dirt/grit inside strands that will cause internal fiber wear
• Shackles :Check for pin or bow wear, thread damage or distortion of the bow.
• Pulley Block: lubricate, check for wear to the groove, looseness of pins and wear or damage of
the pulley groove.
• Slings: Check for cuts, fraying, contamination.
CERAGON can and will reject any item of equipment and have it removed from the
site if considered unsuitable or unsafe for its intended use.
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Site Safety
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• When working with antenna, ALWAYS read and follow the manufacturer’s documentation
for safe handling, assembly and hoisting procedures.
• Always adjust the rigging method to suit the size and weight of load to be hoisted.
• Always protect the antenna and interface steelwork from contact with the ground when
assembling – use timber or other suitable material
• Always ensure sufficient personnel are on site to cover all possible eventualities
Follow Procedures
Tower Interface:
• To keep the hoisting weight to a minimum – first, assemble and mount the antenna to tower
interface onto the tower leg/face.
• Ensure that the tubular column is vertical before mounting the antenna. Check all bolts are
properly tightened.
Antenna:
• Adjust the feed horn polarity and place a temporary seal over the port
• Hoist and mount the antenna. Perform course antenna alignment using a magnetic compass.
• Use a spirit level on the rear of the antenna and bring it into vertical.
• Tighten all antenna bolts and secure the side strut(s) to the tower
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Propagation Report
• Antenna height and direction - in the propagation report for the radio hop.
• An antennas offset, if leg or face mounted and where to anchor side strut - installers/riggers.
• Making the right decisions is important for the long term integrity of the antenna system
Magnetic Compass
• Used incorrectly, a Compass will give wrong information possibly leading to time consuming and costly
readjustment or even relocation of antenna – before using a compass make sure everyone fully
understands what external influences can affect compass readings and therefore how to avoid errors.
Can be used to establish:
• Antenna direction of shoot
• Where best to mount the antenna - leg or face mount
• If the Antenna should be left or right offset – preliminary
By knowing the above and knowing the height of the antenna it will be possible to further establish:
HAND HELD MAGNETIC COMPASS
• If suitable positions are available to anchor side struts
• If there are any conflicts with the proposed antenna position
• If there is a requirement to structurally strengthen the tower at the antenna position:
• if the tower is built this can be decided during the survey
• If the tower is still to be constructed, this can be established from tower design drawings where available)
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Magnetic Declination
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Antenna Components
• Parabolic Reflector
• Feeder system with feedhorn.
• Radome
• Rim
• Shield
• Wind Absorber
Antenna
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Thread assemblies
Functions of a threaded assembly:
1. Create clamp force
2. Maintain clamp force
3. Allow disassembly
Why do threaded assemblies fail?
A. Gaps between nuts and bolts.
B. Vibration & side-to-side movement.
C. Expansion/contraction & loosening
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• How do I use a thread locker? To achieve optimum performance all parts must be
clean and free of contaminants (e.g. oil, grease)
• In the example ANDREW feed horn shown here the ‘better side’ is the side marked in red, which, when installed to the left or right can
reduce any potential interference at that side.
• If a ‘better side’ has been specified ensure the feed horn has been correctly orientated before beginning to align the antenna.
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• The offset option allows us to more stabilizing position of the antenna by side struts.
• With the antenna illustrated above, this is done by adjusting the mount frame at the rear of the antenna.
• In this example the main antenna dish is not rotated, but this can vary from manufacturer to manufacturer
Proprietary and Confidential 212
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Side Strut The function of a side strut is to transfer the wind loading
on a antenna back to the tower structure
WIND
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• Bracket assemblies must be from high grade steel, hot dipped galvanized
• If antenna fails, Ceragon is responsible for the repair and replacement
Initial coarse antenna alignment should permit panning within the adjustment range of the hardware
Riggers must know the weight of an antenna assembly before hoisting - example data only is shown here
Mandatory = minimum. Antenna may require more side strut than shown here under some conditions
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Tower Space
• Tower space is valuable Real Estate, DO NOT WASTE IT!
• Keep side strut angles within limits
• Be considerate of future antenna installation, don’t cause
obstructions
• Cut side strut to keep the climbing area clear
• Treat exposed cuts with zinc rich paint compound
• If multiple side strut, it is vital that positions are established
before attempting to install the antenna.
• Install it right first time!
Avoiding Injuries
• Keep the climbing area inside the tower free of obstructions that may inflict injury
• Plan carefully how the antenna should be mounted onto the tower
• It’s easier to prepare a correct offset on the ground rather than trying to make changes after the antenna has been
installed
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Antenna - Offsetting
• If the antenna boresight aligns closely to the diagonal of the tower or,
perpendicular to the tower face, offsetting ‘left’ or ‘right’ may make little
difference.
• Mounting decision should be based on
• optimum feeder run,
• side strut anchorage
• service access
• Using the short side strut arrangement will provide better stability if a solid
anchorage can be established on the tower structure.
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Antenna azimuth inoperable A modest downwards height adjustment would have placed this
from this angle – could not have Antenna in a better position to anchor the side strut
been used to pan the Antenna
If the redundant part of the side strut becomes an obstruction, cut it off, but only after the
antenna is finally aligned !
Just remember to treat any cuts with zinc rich paint compound.
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Adding Protection
With a good hacksaw blade it takes less than a couple minutes to cut a side strut
If you must cut a side strut always seal the end with zinc rich cold galvanizing compound
Stop Ring
A Stop Ring may not always be provided in Before fixing the Stop Ring decide first antenna
the kit, if it is, always use it height.
The Stop Ring provides a platform to rotate Minor vertical adjustment of the stop ring should be
the antenna and additional security considered if side strut limits are difficult to achieve
and/or side strut brackets cannot be positioned to
Installation Tip suit the side strut angle
Some antenna mount may not rotate For waveguide, ensure there is sufficient space for
smoothly over the stop ring when panning connecting to the feedhorn and tolerance to pan
the antenna. the antenna.
This can often be overcome if the antenna When a stop ring is not provided, it is important to
direction is perpendicular to the stop ring set the direction of shoot as accurately as possible.
joint
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Hoisting Antenna
Approx. 45º
Hoist
WINCH Rope /
Cable
When using a winch make
sure it is well restrained
against any movement
When hoisting manually loop the free end of rope through a
safe anchor point to brake and support the load should the
hoisting be halted or those hoisting the antenna need rest.
Proprietary and Confidential 230
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Gin Pole
Mounting larger antenna at the very top of a tower can be Therefore, always use a well
difficult and risky if the right equipment is not used. designed gin pole to minimise risk !
It is important to position the pulley block as high as
possible above the antenna
Summary / Checklist
✓ Important to set out accurately the antenna’s direction of shoot using a magnetic compass
✓ Decide if the antenna is to be leg mounted or face mounted
✓ Choose which antenna offset will provide best option for antenna stability
✓ Confirm the antenna can be rotated through azimuth without any conflicts
✓ Ensure that side support arm will have good anchorage and will not exceed angle limits
✓ Decide if additional structural members are needed for antenna stability
✓ If permissible, raise or lower the antenna to establish a better position (seek permission!)
✓ Keep antenna column close as possible to the tower and must be vertical
✓ Ensure the waveguide will not be in conflict with structural members
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2
Proprietary and Confidential 3
3
Thank You
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Antenna Alignment
Ceragon Training Services
Agenda
• Why do we align the antenna?
• Hop Data
• Column Support
• Stop Ring usage
• Antenna Coarse alignment
• Tools needed
• Azimuth, Elevation
• Radiation Pattern, Main and Side lobes
• Antenna Alignment, Cross Polarized and Spatial Diversity Scenarios
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• Before you begin to align antenna it is important that good installation practice has been
followed and antenna are correctly set up.
• Always have the manufacturer’s notes or Installation guides available and READ them!
• The antenna bulletin will normally list what the minimum tool requirement is to pan the antenna.
• Aligning an antenna is not just a simple matter of using a few tools – difficulties can arise trying to establish the
signal, and when they do, having the ability to interpret the received signal can mean all the difference between
having a successful or, deeply frustrating day !
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• When setting the radio hop remember: Geographical, Physical and Performance
Characteristics will be unique to each Station / Antenna – make a note !
COLUMN SUPPORT
MUST BE VERTICAL
PLUMB TWO FACETS
USING SPIRIT LEVEL
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Stop Ring
• Stop ring are normally delivered together with larger antenna and must be
fitted to the column.
• The stop ring provides a platform for the antenna when panning and will
prevent the antenna sliding down the column, which could damage the
waveguide
• They can also be used to marginally adjust the vertical position of the
antenna up or down the column to improve side strut installation.
• With most smaller antenna, stop ring are not needed as the azimuth /
elevation adjustment is independent from the mount bracket
• However, any coarse alignment error outside the antenna’s adjustment
range would require the mount bracket to be loosened – before you do
this fit a temporary stop ring. Carry a spare in your vehicle
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• This table is presented as a guide only – always check the antenna adjustment range from the installation bulletin
provided by the antenna Manufacturer.
• Confirm magnetic declination for your area, adjust the compass and bearings.
• Move some distance away from the tower – interference from tower.
• Establish Azimuth, place a marker into the ground Note: Do not cut the side
strut until the antenna is
• Stretch a rope between the tower and marker. finally aligned
• Bring the antenna into alignment with the rope.
• Carry out this same procedure with the antenna on other end
Proprietary and Confidential 244
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Antenna - Verticality
• After coarse azimuth bring antenna vertical using a spirit level
• This must be carried out with antennas both sides of the hop, before beginning final alignment.
• The antenna is now set and ready for final alignment – fix the side strut(s) and secure these to
the tower.
• Before alignment, using water proof pen, mark the starting
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Protecting Waveguide
• It often happens to forget what’s happening to the waveguide.
• Waveguide can easily become stressed and may break if it meets
resistance.
• Waveguide is most vulnerable where it enters the connector.
• Resistance increases considerably along the waveguide’s H plane.
• Waveguide runs - planned to ensure no conflicts when aligning.
• Loosen enough support to so that waveguide has free movement.
• Check that waveguide is not stressed or ran up against obstruction.
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Feed horn
• Before commencing alignment confirm the feed horn is levelled – if not – bring it into level
using a spirit level on the top of the waveguide flange.
• This must be done for all feed horns at both sides of the link.
• Loosen the feed horn retaining bolts sufficiently to allow it to rotate smoothly by hand.
• Never use force or any metal on the copper guide to increase leverage, hands only.
• Remember to tighten all bolts back to the original torque
Proprietary and Confidential 249
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• Connect a Digital Multimeter: the voltage reading has a direct correlation to the received signal strength in dBM – see RSSI Diagram
• Number after .decimal shows conversion from Received Signal Level, for e.g.: 1.48Volts means an RSL of -48dBm(+-2dB variance)
1,9V
1,6V
1,3V
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250m AMSL
LEVEL
150m AMSL
• Attaining the signal strength exactly as predicted is not always possible under actual field
conditions but, a maximum signal strength is.
• This is the signal that technicians must establish to ensure optimum system performance
across the radio hop.
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• Observing the changes in received signal strength as the antenna is panned can provide valuable information to where the receiving
antenna is pointing relative to the transmitting antenna. Technicians often mistake the received signal from a side lobe for that of the main
beam.
• Once antennas aligned the receive signal should be within 2-3 dB of the calculated signal level.
Beam Width
-3dBM
114mmØ (4½”) Antenna Pole Mount Take care when panning the
antenna and be aware that:
1º of Antenna Rotation =
1 mm of Distance Travelled 1º of antenna rotation
around a standard 114mmØ
column only requires 1mm
of antenna movement
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Transmitting Antenna
Muted AZIMUTH
MAIN BEAM
TOP VIEW
• At this point, it should not be necessary to find the side lobes along elevation – just to fine tune to the maximum received signal strength
• If the vertical angle is large, adjust the angle of elevation, possibly repeating azimuth panning before the maximum strength signal is established.
HORIZONTAL
SIDE VIEW
MAIN BEAM
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SPACE
MAIN
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Site B
Note: Space
Diversity antenna
SPACE
MAIN
SPACE
MAIN
MAIN
SPACE
SPACE
Site B – Space antenna
align toward Site A
SPACE
MAIN
only receiving
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• Final Control
• When all adjustments are performed check that the input level agrees with the one theoretically calculated. If the
input level is too low, adjust the antennas once more. Finally, ensure that all bolts, nuts and stays are properly
mounted and all hanger and standoff support are secured.
MAIN
MAIN
SPACE
SPACE
Site B
SPACE
MAIN
SPACE
MAIN
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Thank You
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1.40 V
TOP VIEW
1.40 V
SIDE VIEW
MAIN BEAM
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Indoor installation
Equipment Rack – 19” Standard
Agenda
• Equipment Rack Installation
• Receiving at site, Equipment presentation
• Transport considerations
• Tools required
• 19” Rack assembly
• Rack fixing: wall and floor
• Planning ahead for future installations
• Avoiding Electrostatic Discharges
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General Notes
Equipment Rack
145.5mm
609mm
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level surface 4
3
• Lightly strap or brace to keep stability
2
• Stack up to 10 racks high, only! 1
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• On poor road conditions adjust the position of the load on the truck flat bed or pick-up to
minimize vibration or shock to the equipment
• Be aware of the packing case contents – transport and handle with care
• Station drawings
• Customer instruction CERAGON
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Assembly and Installation Tools Recommended Assembly and Installation Tools Recommended
Minimum Tool Requirement Qty Minimum Tool Requirement Qty
Tape Measure and Pencil 1 Tool for Inserting for Cage Nut 1
PROTECTION
PACKING CASE
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Screw Shank
Proprietary and Confidential BASE OF RACK 287
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Description Quantity
TORX, T20 1
SCREWDRIVER or INSERT TOOL for CAGE NUT 1
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Description Quantity
TORX, T20 1
SCREWDRIVER or INSERT TOOL for CAGE NUT 1
Aluminium Profile
Earth termination frame and length to suit one or
bulkhead for feeder cable more racks
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Rack to
Aluminium Profile
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Aluminium Profile:
• To avoid unnecessary hand cutting and filing at site, the
• Aluminium Profile can be pre-cut at a workshop. If cut with a circular saw or disk cutter the
finish will be clean and square.
Typical disk cutter or
• The logistic staff can have these packaged into kits and shipped to site with the main circular saw suitable for
equipment. accurate batch cutting of
Aluminium Profile
Aluminium Angle Bracket:
• The same approach can be applied to Aluminium Angle Brackets.
• Pre-drilling the bracket ready for pop-rivets where the wall fabric is metal sheeting.
• When fixing to a metal/polystyrene composite wall the Aluminium Profile or Wall Mount,
Bracket can be secured by fixing the Aluminium Angles using Pop Rivets:
• Drill the Aluminium Angle bracket in 4 no. position using a Twist Drill
• Use Pop Rivet for secure fixing
Have drilling done in advance at a
workshop – generally more accurate and
reduces installation time at site
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SPLIT MOUNT
Loop excess cable
down inside the
rack frame then
vertically along
the frame back
Overhead Earth
Loop
Main Rack to
Overhead Earth
Loop
IFU / ODU Grounding
Rack to Termination
Bracket
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• When handling electronic components wear an ESD Wristband Electrostatic Discharge damages on
a MOS transistor Gate
Magnification: 192.000 X
• People will not normally detect static discharges below 3000 volt Horizontal Field Width: 1.55 µm
Voltage: 10 kV
FINALLY
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3
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5
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Agenda
• IF cable and connectors
• Cable Kits
• Assembly tools used
• Preparation of the connector
• Grounding with grounding kit
• Other cables and accessories used for Installation Projects
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Hacksaw, Junior 1
Knife 1
Scissors 1
File, fine 1
Connector Preparation
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E D C B A
Components
Description Code
Nut A
Washer B
Gasket C
Collar D
Body E
Inner Conductor
Bare Copper Clad Al
(BCCAL)
Dielectric
Aluminium foil shield
Tinned copper
braid
Polyethylene outer
jacket
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+ POS
IFU / ODU IO-Com
Connector broken
caused from over
tightening
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C B A
COLLAR
GASKET
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END OF INNER
CONDUCTOR CUT
SQUARE
INNER CONDUCTOR
NOT STRAIGHT
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Prevent Arcing !
• Before final assembly of the connector, check that no material bridges across between the inner conductor and
outer braid.
• Carefully remove any metallic swarf.
Connector Assembly
Carefully push the inner
conductor into the contact clip
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CABLE DRUM
CABLE COIL
Self sealing vulcanized tape The vulcanized tape must be Failure to follow every detail of the
weather kit should be applied overwrapped with PVC tape installation instructions will result
to the connector at the ODU tied off at the top and bottom with water damage to the connector
to make it fully water tight. with cable ties. and cable
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Min. BENDING
RADIUS 25mm (1”)
When securing cables with cable ties Avoid this method which is less
the method shown here can normally secure and will cause bending of
be achieved using a single tie. the cable
This method will keep the cable straight
and provide the best support
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Cable Grounding
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Slide free end of earth jumper through the Draw the jumper through to remove any
prepared loop looseness and ensure the loop makes a good
bonded contact with the braid.
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Use the crimp tool and crimp the ferrule to the The crimped ferrule will prevent the loop to
loop loosen
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Ensure 50%
overlap with each
turn of the tape
• Avoid stretching the tape tight for the final few turns as the tension will
cause the adhesive to fail.
• If needed a cable tie can be used to prevent the end of the tape detaching
should the adhesive fail.
Cable tie here
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Power cables
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PDU 2X63A/10X10A/48
Screw Washer Nut Cable Tie Connector N Ground bar Feeder/ Cable Clamps Marker and Marker Tie Butyl Rubber Tape, 24 in Grounding Cable
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LIGHTNING PROTECTOR N
TO N-TYPE FEMALE 2GHz
Flexible Waveguide
• Flexible WG is used between Antenna and the ODU in a Split Mount configuration
• The waveguide specifications are dependent on the Link Frequency.
• Flextwist used for RFU-C radio (metrical)
• General Part Number: Flx-WG-XFT-YY, X- Length of flextwist(3FT, 4FT ), YY- Freq.(L6GHz,…, 42GHz)
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• STM-1 SFP:
Marketing Model Marketing Description Description
SFP-STM-1-L1.1 SFP STM-1 Module Long Haul 1310nm XCVR,SFP,1310nm,OC3,SM,40km,W.DDM
SFP-STM-1-L1.2 SFP STM-1 Module Long Haul 1550nm XCVR,SFP,1550nm,OC3,SM,80km,W.DDM
SFP-STM-1-MM_1310 SFP STM-1 Module Multi Mode 1310nm XCVR,SFP,1310nm,OC3,MM,2km,W.DDM
SFP-STM-1-S1.1 SFP STM-1 Module Short Haul 1310nm XCVR,SFP,1310nm,OC3,SM,15km,W.DDM
SFP-STM-1-Elec-1.0/2.3-75ohm SFP STM-1 Module Elec, 1.0/2.3, 75ohm XCVR,SFP,STM1E-SFP 155Mbps 1.0/2.3
SFP-STM-1-L1.1
SFP-STM-1-Elec-1.0/2.3-75ohm
SFP-GE-LX-EXT-TEMP
• Ethernet SFP:
TCC redundancy cable 15P-PROT-CBL Cascading Cable RJ-45ETHCross cable FC Connector LC Connector SC Connector
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5
Thank You
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Agenda
• Types of Configurations
• All indoor configurations
• RFU-HP Radio
• Evolution Radios
• Split Mount Configurations:
• RFU-HP Radio
• RFU-C Radios
• Evolution Radios
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TX ch1/8
RX ch1/8
TX path
RX path
TX ch8/1
RX ch8/1
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CH1
1 2 8 7
CH2
CH3
3 4 6 5
CH4
5 6 4 3
CH5
7 8 2 1
CH6
CH7
CH8
SIDE A SIDE B
Proprietary and Confidential 365
Tx
Rx Space Diversity
Rx Main
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• Channel Bandwidth:
• 1500HP 2RX (6-11 GHz): 10-30 MHz
• 1500HP 2 RX (6 and 11 GHz wide option): 40 MHz
• 1500HP 1RX (11 GHz): 10-30 MHz
• 1500HP 1RX (11 GHz wide option): 40 MHz
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• Unprotected and Multi-Carrier N+0: 1+0 to 8+0 – Data is transmitted through N channels, without redundancy (protection).
Two types of branching options are available for all indoor configurations:
Using ICBs – Vertical assembly, up to 10 carriers per rack (five carriers per sub rack)
Using OCBs – Compact horizontal assembly, up to 2 carriers per sub rack
Branching Network
• Outdoor Circulator Block OCB
• The Tx and the Rx path circulate together to the main OCB port. When
chaining multiple OCBs, each Tx signal is chained to the OCB Rx signal
and so on (uses S-bend section).
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OCB components
• RF Filters - used for specific frequency channels and Tx/Rx separation. The filters are attached to the OCB, and each
RFU contains one Rx and one Tx filter. The filters can be replaced without removing the OCB.
• DCB (Diversity Circulator Block) - an external block which is added for IFC Space Diversity configurations. The DCB is
connected to the diversity port and can chain two OCBs.
• U Bend - connector that connects the chained DCB (Diversity Circulator Block) in N+1/N+0 configurations.
• S Bend - connector that connects the chained OCB (Outdoor Circulator Block) in N+1 /N+ 0 configurations.
• Pole Mount Kit – the system that can attach up to five OCBs and the RFUs to the pole. The kit enables fast and easy
pole mount installation.
RF Filters
Coupler Kit
S Bend
U Bend
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S-Bend
S-Bend
Space Diversity
DCB DCB
Antenna
U-Bend
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Installation Components
• Main components involved in the installation procedures.
Remote Dual Pole 4+0/4+4 Extender Twist Remote Mount for 4+0
Remote Mount
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Flex wave guide Remote Mount Added on remote mount 0.5 0.5 1.2 1.5 1.5
antenna configurations
1+0 Direct Mount Integrated antenna 0.2 0.2 0.4 0.5 0.5
1+1 HSB Main Path 1.6 1.6 1.8 1.8 1.8
Direct Mount
with asymmetrical coupler Secondary Path 6 6 6 6 6
2+0 DP (OMT) Direct Mount Integrated antenna 0.5 0.5 0.5 0.5 0.5
2+2 HSB (OMT) Main Path 1.9 1.9 2.1 2.1 2.1
Remote Mount
with asymmetrical coupler Secondary Path 6.5 6.5 6.5 6.5 6.5
Notes: The antenna interface is always the RFU-C interface. If other antennas are to be used, an adaptor
with a 0.1 dB loss should be considered.
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RFU-C Installation
Polarization is changed by switching 90°the radio
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H V
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H V
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• 2+0 Configuration
• 4+0 Configuration
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M
AI
N
S
P
A
C
E
Top view
CH1 CH3
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Thank You
IP-20N Overview
Ceragon Training Services
CeraOS 9.0
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Agenda
• IP-20N Product Highlights
• IP-20N Overview
• 1U and 2U chassis
• TCC – Traffic Control Card
• RMC – Radio Modem Cards
• ELIC – Ethernet Line Interface Cards & TDM Line cards
• IVM – Inventory Module
• PDC – Power Distribution Card & Fan Module and Air Filter
• RFU – Radio Frequency Units
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nd
Small Cells Access Access 1st Aggregation 1st Aggregation2 Aggregation Backbone
2nd Aggregation Backbone
IP-20E
IP-20
IP-20C
IP-20GX
Platform
IP-20G
IP-20LH 40
Proprietary and Confidential 8
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4
0
9
Hybrid All-IP
Product selection - band
Microwave Modular Multi-core
Hybrid All-IP
Sub-6GHz E-Band
Modular Multi-core
Microwave Hybrid All-IP
All-Indoor/Split
All Outdoor
mount
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FibeAir IP-20N
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• High capacity, scalability and spectral efficiency, High precision, flexible packet Synchronization solution
• Built for supporting resilient and adaptive multi-carrier links scaling to GE capacity
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• Complete SOAM(Service Operations Administration and Maintenance) and SLA assurance mechanisms
• MSTP
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Macro
E-Band
Fiber Aggregation
Network
PtMP Sub 6GHz
Macrocell Macro+
Backhaul Macro
Aggregation
Versatile deployment
Node
scenarios
Carrier Ethernet
MPLS-TP
IP/MPLS
DU
Macro-Site
C-RAN 60GHz Aggregation
Fronthaul High capacity &
Small
High capacity, low latency DU
Cells
interoperability
RU
Super Size
Macro Site
PtMP
Sub 6GHz
Small
DU
Cells
RU
Compressed CPRI
over license bands
Fiber
IP-20G Aggregation Core
Network
Network
IP-20C
IP-20S IP-20S
IP-20G
FibeAir IP-20S
Compact All-Outdoor IP-20G
Multi-Core IP-20G IP-20G
Aggregation Node
Up to 5/10 RFUs
FibeAir IP-20G Full redundancy
1RU Fixed Design, Cascadable
IP-20S IP-20G
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FibeAir IP-20N
1 RU Modular Chassis
IP-20N
Fiber
1RU
IP-20C IP-20N Aggregation
1RU
Network
IP-20C IP-20N 2RU
Tail/Edge Node IP-20N 1RU
Core Network
IP-20C
IP-20G
FibeAir IP-20S
Compact All-Outdoor IP-20G
Multi-Core IP-20G IP-20G
Aggregation Node
Up to 10 RFUs
FibeAir IP-20G Full redundancy
1RU Fixed Design, Cascadable
IP-20S IP-20G
Overview
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Filter tray
(optional)
11 12 50
7 8 9 10
3 4 5 6
1 2 51
2 x Slots for 10 x Universal slots for:
main traffic and control - Radio interface cards (RMC)
cards (TCC)
- TDM line cards (16x E1, 1x ch-STM1)
-Ethernet line cards (4x GE , 1x 10GE)*
3 4 5 6
1 2 51
1 x Slot for 5 x Universal slots for:
Main traffic and control
card (TCC) - Radio interface cards (RMC, RIC)
- TDM line cards (16x E1, 1x ch-STM1)
-Ethernet line cards (4x GE , 1x 10GE)*
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Slots Numbering
From Bottom Left to Right and Up
3 4 5 6
1 2 51
11 12 50
7 8 9 10
3 4 5 6
1 2 51
• Ethernet interfaces
• Ethernet Interface redundancy using LAG
• TDM interfaces
• 1x ch-STM1 card – full card and interface redundancy option (1+1 MSP)
• Power supply
• Fully distributed power supply architecture
• Dual power-feed
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11 • TCC
Proprietary and Confidential 426
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Reason - for certain features, connectivity is supported in the backplane between these slot pairs.
• E.G: 2+2 HSB SD with XPIC: user must configure the radio protection group in non-adjacent channels, e.g., slots 3 and 5 or slots 4 and 6
Reason - XPIC groups must be in adjacent slots. 2+0 XPIC configuration is not available for RMCs in slots 2 and 12. A valid
combination would be:
• XPIC Group #1: Slot 3 and 4
• XPIC Group #2: Slot 5 and 6
• Radio Protection Group #1: Slot 3 and 5 (recommendation for leaving XPIC slots available)
• Radio Protection Group #2: Slot 4 and 6 (recommendation for leaving XPIC slots available)
For TCC-B2-XG-MC (in 2.5 Gbps ) these 4 slots can only be used by RMC-B and LIC-STM1/OC3-RST cards that belong to a MC ABC
group:
• 1RU chassis – Slots 3, 4, 5, and 6.
• 2RU chassis – Slots 3, 4, 7, and 8.
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N(<=8)+0 Single Polarization or Dual Polarization XPIC Requires Multi-Carrier ABC or LAG.
4, 6, 8+0 IF Combining / IF combining and XPIC Requires Multi-Carrier ABC and 1500HP.
NOTES:
4+0 IF Combining and XPIC Requires Multi-Carrier ABC and 1500HP. • Multi-Carrier ABC configurations require
TCC-B-MC or TCC-B2-XG-MC, and RMC-
1+1 HSB Protection Not on Evolution IP20 LH Systems HSB Radio Protection B.
1+1 HSB Protection with BBS Space Diversity Requires Multi-Carrier ABC MC-ABC, Link Aggregation (LAG) • With TCC-B-MC, one Multi-Carrier ABC
group can be configured per unit with up to
2+2 HSB Protection Requires Multi-Carrier ABC MC-ABC, XPIC, Link Aggregation (LAG) 8 carriers aggregated in the group.
2+2 HSB Protection with BBS Space Diversity Requires Multi-Carrier ABC MC-ABC, IF Combining • With TCC-B2-XG-MC, up to four Multi-
Carrier ABC groups can be configured per
2+2 HSB Protection with XPIC Requires Multi-Carrier ABC MC-ABC, IF Combining, XPIC
unit.
2+2 HSB Protection with BBS Space Diversity and XPIC Requires Multi-Carrier ABC HSB Radio Protection • Multi-Carrier ABC configurations can be
combined with non-Multi-Carrier ABC
2+2 HSB Protection with IF Combining and XPIC Requires Multi-Carrier ABC and 1500HP HSB Radio Protection, MC-ABC configurations in the same unit. For
Requires TCC-B2-XG-MC, RMC-B, and Multi-Carrier example, a single IP-20N unit can support
2 X 2+0 Multi-Carrier ABC HSB Radio Protection, MC-ABC
ABC a 4+0 Multi-Carrier ABC group and, in
Requires TCC-B2-XG-MC, RMC-B, and Multi-Carrier addition, an N+0 or a 1+1 HSB protection
4 X 2+0 Multi Carrier ABC HSB Radio Protection, MC-ABC
ABC group that is not part of the Multi-Carrier
Requires TCC-B2-XG-MC, RMC-B, and Multi-Carrier ABC group.
2 X 1+1 HSB-SD HSB Radio Protection, MC-ABC, XPIC
ABC
Requires TCC-B2-XG-MC, RMC-B, and Multi-Carrier
4 X 1+1 HSB-SD HSB Radio Protection, MC-ABC, XPIC
ABC
Requires TCC-B2-XG-MC, RMC-B, and Multi-Carrier HSB Radio Protection, MC-ABC, IF
2 X 4+0 Multi-Carrier ABC
ABC Combining, XPIC
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Main Functions: 1
TCC connections 12
7 8 9 10
3 4 5 6
2
MNG Port 1
MNG port 1
MNG Port 2
CPU
1Gb SGMII / (2.5Gb) Radio Card
Ethernet Switch
16 ports –
10Gbps
1Gb SGMII / (2.5Gb)
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1
Handle
Combo Ports
NOTES:
Handle
Eth 1
Traffic or Handle
Handle
cascadin
g for
Hybrid
NOTES:
When using a TCC-B2 or TCC-B2-
XG-MC, you should avoid placing
any type of traffic cards (Ethernet
LIC, TDM LIC, and RMC) in certain
slots.
If you place a traffic card in one of
Serial Port these slots, some interfaces on the
TCC-B2 or TCC-B2-XGMC cannot
be used, table below.
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TCC Part No. Ethernet Traffic Interfaces Ethernet Management Interfaces Sync Ext Supports Multi-Carrier ABC
Interface Alarms
Type
TCC-B 24-T002-0 2 x GbE combo (optical or electrical) 2 x FE interfaces Yes Yes No
interfaces
TCC-B-MC 24-T004-0 2 x GbE combo (optical or electrical) 2 x FE interfaces Yes Yes Supports single Multi-Carrier ABC group
interfaces of up to 1 Gbps (8+0)
TCC-B2 24-T001-0 2 x GbE electrical interfaces 2 x FE interfaces, which connect to a single Yes Yes No
2 x GbE optical interfaces RJ-45 physical connector on the front panel
2 x dual mode electrical or cascading
interfaces
TCC-B2-XG-MC 24-T005-1 2 x GbE electrical interfaces 2 x FE interfaces, which connect to a single Yes Yes • From CeraOS 8.2.5, supports single
2 x GbE optical interfaces RJ-45 physical connector on the front panel Multi-Carrier ABC group and non MC-
2 x Dual Mode electrical or cascading ABC on the same unit: 1 x 8+0 MC-
interfaces ABC or 2.5Gbps
• From CeraOS 8.3.7, also supports
multiple Multi-Carrier ABC groups of
up to 1 Gbps per group.
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• TCC-B2 and TCC-B2-XG-MC contain two FE management interfaces, which connect to a single RJ-45 physical
connector on the front panel (MGMT) – special 2xFE cable to be ordered for both ports.
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• Supports up to 2048 QAM, XPIC and non XPIC (same Hardware) IP20
communication
• Supports Header De-Duplication Yes No No
with IP10 across a
link
• RMC-E
• For Evolution Transceivers
• Up to 1024 QAM with ACM
• Can include STM1-RST port
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Handle Handle
yellow OK, standby mode Minor or warning alarm Minor or warning alarm
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12
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2
Gigabit Electrical Ports Gigabit Optical Ports
Handle Handle
Color ACT Left LED for port Right LED for port SFP LED
Interface is disabled or Cable not connected, link
off No power Interface is disabled the interface operates at
100BaseT mode
not ok, interface is
disabled
Interface operates at
the interface is enabled Interface is enabled and
1000BaseT mode,
green OK, no alarms and link is OK (Blinking =
traffic activity)
Blinking means operates
link is OK, blinking means
traffic activity
at 10BaseT mode
LIC-X-E10
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Color ACT Sync Left LED for Sync Right LED for E1/DS1 LED STM1/OC3
port port
The interface is
The interface is The interface is The interface is
off No power disabled or no signal is
disabled disabled disabled
being received
Card failure or
red --------------------------- --------------------------- Any alarms Any alarms
hardware failure
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TDM LIC-STM-1/OC3-RST 7 8 9 10
3 4 5 6
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• The IVM stores information in a 8 KB (64 kb) EEPROM. A 2RU IP-20N IVM contains two EEPROMs. If a
redundant TCC configuration is used, each EEPROM is dedicated to a specific TCC
IVM
EEPROM EEPROM
TCC 2 TCC 1
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51
IP-20N receives a supply of -48V current via 1 or 2 Power Distribution Cards. Functions:
• Distributes power via the backplane to rest of modules
• Gets -48V signal and regulates it down for other cards.
• RFUs are powered from the PDC, via the RMC
51
• LED is red for under/over powered & green for normal operation
• Reversed polarity protection + -
• A diode bridge in the modules prevents power spikes and unstable power from the two power sources.
• The power source must be grounded
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• A 2RU IP-20N can use two PDC cards for redundancy -48V Input
from PDC 2
RMC / LIC
• A diode bridge in the modules prevents power spikes and
RMC / LIC
unstable power from the two power sources
RMC / LIC
PDC 1
TCC1
PDC 2
TCC2
FAN’s
IVM
Fan – 2RU Chassis 30W max (6W typical at 25°C) Kinetic energy.
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Chassis Management
FAN Tray
PDC (2 x PDC
option in 2RU
chassis).
System Backplane
TDM Sync Ethernet MC-ABC
RFU
Framer Modem IF RFU
Interface
TCC
Power Supply XPIC
Sync
In/Out Sync Unit RFU
Framer Modem IF RFU
Interface
FE Management
Interfaces (1 or 2)
CPU
Terminal Power Supply
Ethernet RMC
GE Traffic Ethernet Services
Interfaces Network
(2 to 6) Processor
STM-1 RST
Services Line Card
Engine STM-1 RST
Native TDM Service
TDM Cross Services STM-1 Interface
Connect
ABC Engine
E1 Line Card
TDM Pseudowire
Services TDM
16 x E1
Services Framer LIU
Interface
Processor
Power Supply
TDM Pseudowire
ch-STM-1 Line Card
Services
TDM
STM-1
Services Framer LIU
Interface
Processor
Power Supply
Power Supply
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System Backplane
TDM Sync Ethernet MC-ABC
Framer Modem IF
Power Supply
RFU
Sync
In/Out Sync Unit RFU
Framer Modem IF RFU
Interface
FE Management
Interfaces (1 or 2)
CPU
Terminal Power Supply
Ethernet RMC
GE Traffic Ethernet Services
Interfaces Network
(2 to 6) Processor
STM-1 RST
Services Line Card
Engine STM-1 RST
Native TDM Service
TDM Cross Services STM-1 Interface
Connect
ABC Engine
E1 Line Card
TCC 2 TDM Pseudowire
Services TDM
(Optional) Services Framer LIU
16 x E1
Interface
Processor
Power Supply
Sync
1588 OC/BC PPS
In/Out Sync Unit (Optional) ToO
GE Traffic
Ethernet Services
TDM Pseudowire
ch-STM-1 Line Card
Interfaces Network Services
TDM
(2 to 6) Processor STM-1
Services Framer LIU
Interface
Processor
Services
1588 OC/BC PPS
Engine
(Optional) ToO
Native TDM
TDM Cross Services
Power Supply
Connect
48V
PDC 2
(Optional) Ethernet Line Interface
Power Supply
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✓ IP-20N Overview
✓ 1U and 2U chassis
✓ TCC – Traffic Control Card
✓ RMC – Radio Modem Cards
✓ ELIC – Ethernet Line Interface Cards & TDM Line cards
✓ IVM – Inventory Module
✓ PDC – Power Distribution Card & Fan Module and Air Filter
✓ RFU – Radio Frequency Units
Thank You
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CeraOS 9.0
Agenda
• Radio Frequency units for IP-20N
• RFU Selection Guide
• RFU-C
• 1500HP / RFU – HP
• Split Mount Configuration and Branching
• New Outdoor Circulator Block OCB
• Split Mount Configurations
• Green mode
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High Power
• FibeAir 1500HP
• FibeAir RFU-HP
1500HP or RFU-HP
For split-mount configuration (IDU + RFU)
• FibeAir RFU-C (6–42 GHz)
• FibeAir 1500HP RFU-HP (6–11 GHz)
• RFU-HP (6–8 GHz)
• IDU to RFU connected by a coaxial cable RG-223 (N-type connector (male) on RFU and TNC connector on the RMC in chassis.
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?
(6 – 11 GHz) (6 – 42 GHz) (6 – 42 GHz)
Split Mount √ √ √
Installation Type
All-Indoor √
1+0/2+0/1+1/2+2 √ √ √
N+1 √
Configuration
N+0 ( N>2) √
SD support √ (IFC, BBS) √ (BBS) √ (BBS)
RFU-C
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• Premium RFU - Ce
• Support up to 2048 QAM modulation
• RMC-B is required
RFU-C Installation
Polarization is changed by switching 90° the radio
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RFU-HP / 1500HP
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TX
350MHz IF TX TX Pre-
PA
chain Amp
Controller and
FSK peripherals DC / CTRL
Quadplexer
C C TCXO
RF LPBK
o o
n n
-48V
PSU
n n
e e RX
c c RX
LNA Extention port
combiner chain RX Main
140MHz t t
o o
r r RX
RX
LNA
chain RX Diversity
10M
diplexer
XLO
XPIC SW
Antenna
VCO
Diversity
IF & controller Board
RX
Chassis
IDU XPIC source
(Ntype conn.) sharing \ RSL ind.
(TNC conn.)
Proprietary and Confidential 483
TX
350MHz IF TX TX FMM FLM
chain
Controller and
FSK peripherals DC / CTRL
Quadplexer
C C TXCO
RF LPBK
o o
n n
-48V
PSU
n n
e e RX
c c RX
LNA Extention port
chain RX Main
140MHz t t
o o
r r
10M
diplexer
XLO
XPIC SW
VCO
IF & controller Board
RX Board
Chassis
IDU XPIC source
(Ntype conn.) sharing \ RSL ind.
(TNC conn.)
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TX
350MHz IF
TX
TX Pre-
RFIC PA
chain Amp
C C
(BMA conn.)
o o
IDU
n n 40M
RF LPBK
e e
c c
sharing \ RSL
-48V
XPIC source
(BMA conn.)
PSU section t t
ind.
o o RX
RX
r r RX
RFIC chain LNA Extention port
140MHz
40M
diplexer
XLO
XPIC SW
VCO
PSC TRX
Chassis
XPIC source
sharing \ RSL ind.
(TNC conn.)
Channel
Up to 40 MHz Up to 40 MHz Up to 56 MHz
Spacing Support
Remote Mount
√ √ √
Antenna
Power Saving
-- -- √ Power consumption changes with TX power
Mode
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OCB Components
• RF Filters - are used for specific frequency channels and Tx/Rx separation. The filters are attached to the OCB, and each RFU contains one Rx and one Tx
filter. In a Space Diversity using IF combining configuration, each RFU contains two Rx filters (which combine the IF signals) and one Tx filter. The filters can
be replaced without removing the OCB. The RF filter is installed with every configuration.
• DCB - Diversity Circulator Block An external block which is added in Space Diversity configurations. DCB is connected to the diversity port and chains two
OCBs.
• Coupler Kit is used for 1+1 Hot Standby configurations. (loss 1.6 /6dB)
• Symmetrical Coupler Kit is used for: (loss of 3/3 dB) • When chaining adjacent channels (only 28/30 MHz) • 1+1 Hot Standby configurations with a
symmetrical loss of 3dB in each direction Note: CPLRs loss tolerance is ±0.7 dB
• U Bend The U Bend connects the chained DCB (Diversity Circulator Block) in N+1/N+0 configurations.
• S Bend The S Bend connects the chained OCB (Outdoor Circulator Block) in N+1/N+0 configurations.
• Pole Mount Kit The Pole Mount Kit is used to fasten up to five OCBs and the RFUs to the pole. The kit enables fast and easy installation.
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N+0/N+1 Configurations
247
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2+0 XPIC
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S-Bend
DCB DCB
S-Bend
U-Bend
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31dBm
80W
27dBm
56W
21dBm
41W
Monitore
Power Consumed
d TX
State power [W]
Power
HIGH 31dBm 80 Watt
MEDIUM 27dBm 56 Watt
LOW 21dBm 41 Watt
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5 dB
100
15 dB
RX: -41dBm
Reference level: -40dBm
155
100 dB
dB
RX: -52dBm
-37dBm
-42dBm
-47dBm
Green level: -50dBm
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15 dB
RX: -50dBm
-52dBm
Green level: -50dBm
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Thank You
CeraOS 9.0
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Agenda
• CLI and Web login
• General commands
• Get IP address
• Set IP address
• Set to default
TCC-B2 or TCC-
B2-XG-MC
2 Management
Interfaces
Management
Interfaces 510
510
Proprietary and Confidential
255
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• Press twice the TAB key for optional commands in actual directory. Use
the TAB key to auto-complete a syntax
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Web Management
In-band-management
Configuration
IP version Configuration
IP settings
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✓ General commands
✓ Get IP address
✓ Set IP address
✓ Set to default
✓ Web Management
Thank You
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CeraOS 9.0
Agenda
• Connecting to unit
• Slot Limitations
259
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Selection Area
260
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Configuration Area
Navigation Tree
Selection Area
1
2
5
4 3
261
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3 4 5 6
1 2 51
TDM – LIC-STM1/OC3-RST
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11 12 51
7 8 9 10
3 4 5 6
1 2 51
10 x Universal slots for:
- Radio interface cards
(RMC)
- TDM line cards: 16xE1
1xch-STM1, 1x STM1/RST
2 x Slots for - Ethernet line cards
Main traffic and control (4 x 1GbE), 1 x 10GbE*
cards (TCC)
Proprietary and Confidential 525
1 TCC
2,12 RMC
Ethernet – LIC-X-E4-Elec (4x GbE)
Ethernet – LIC-X-E4-Opt (4x GbE)
Ethernet – LIC-X-E10-Opt (1x10GE)
TDM – LIC-T16 (16x E1)
TDM – LIC-T155 (1x ch-STM-1)
3 - 10 RMC
TDM – LIC-T16 (16x E1)
TDM – LIC-T155 (1x ch-STM-1)
TDM – LIC-STM1/OC3-RST
11 TCC
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9 GbE5
10 GbE6
264
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11 12 51
7 8 9 10
3 4 5 6
1 2 51
• If 2 Multi-Carrier ABC groups are created, and assigned the names Group 1
and Group 2, any cards in slots 3 and 4 must be assigned to a Multi-Carrier
ABC group.
• Cards do not have to be assigned to the group that corresponds to the slot. For
example, card in slot 3 can be assigned to ABC Group 2.
1 3 3
2 4 4
3 7 5
4 8 6
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✓ Slot Limitations
Questions?
266
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Thank You
CeraOS 9.0
267
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Agenda
• Radio Link Parameters
• MRMC scripts
• LINK ID
• Monitoring
1. MRMC– Modem scripts (ACM or fixed capacity, 1. ACM and MSE– Mean Square Error [dB] (see MSE
channel & modulation, XPIC,MIIMO)
2. TX / RX frequencies – set on every carrier in radio PPS)
3. Link ID local / remote – must be the same on both 2. Monitored RSL – Actual Receive level [dBm]
ends 3. Monitored TSL – Actual Transmission level [dBm]
4. TX power or ATPC– ON / OFF – avoiding co- 4. XPI level – when XPIC is used [dB]
interferences caused by nearby antennas
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5
Proprietary and Confidential 3
7
What is MRMC?
• MRMC – Multi Rate Multi Constellation is language between two units. Both units need to speak with
the same language (it means modulation and bandwidth must be the same).
• Frequency is the general channel(spectrum) in which they are communicating.
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Power level
Center frequency
[dBm]
MODULATION + BW
Channel bandwidth (MHz)
512 QAM
512 QAM
256 QAM
256 QAM
2048QAM
2048QAM
128 QAM
128 QAM
64 QAM
64 QAM
32 QAM
32 QAM
16 QAM
16 QAM
8 QAM
8 QAM
QPSK
High
Priority
Traffic
54
Proprietary and Confidential 0 540
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5
Proprietary and Confidential 4
2
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N – normal script
X – XPIC script
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5
Proprietary and Confidential 4
5
Frequency settings
Tx(f1) Rx(f1)
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2
1
Frequency settings
TX level setting
Radio muted: Mute – ON(radio off) / OFF(radio on)
RSL Connector Source – for antenna alignment
Link ID – see next slides
Adaptive TX Power admin – can increase gain of
system as modulation comes down
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LINK ID
5
Proprietary and Confidential 4
9
D linkid #102
C linkid #102
B101 might be getting strong interference from
C102, because C102 is misaligned (probably with
a side lobe of another antenna).
Proprietary and Confidential 550
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LINK ID Setting
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Monitoring
5
Proprietary and Confidential 5
5
278
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TX level setting
Radio muted: Mute – ON(radio off) / OFF(radio on)
RSL Connector Source – for antenna alignment
Link ID – As was mentioned in Link ID slides
Adaptive TX Power admin – can increase gain of
system as modulation comes down
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✓ MRMC scripts
✓ LINK ID
✓ Monitoring
Site A
Site B
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Thank You
281