Title: T1T3 Applications and Subscriber Loop Carrier Systems
1Chapter 3
- T1/T3 Applications and Subscriber Loop Carrier
Systems
2Chapters Outline
- 1- T1/T3 Applications
- Channel banks
- Multiplexers
3- T1 Applications and Equipment
- T3 Applications and Equipment
4Introduction
- In this lecture, we will change gear from bits
and bytes to seeing the application of digital
transmission in the public telephone system - T1/T3 found their ways into customer applications
in addition to being integral parts of the
backbone networks - Selecting T1/T3 equipment require a good
understanding of the technical features as well
as the economic implications
5T1 Equipment and Applications
- Selecting T1 equipment can be complex - some of
the factors are - equipment growth limitations
- financial considerations
- ongoing maintenance and operation
- The dynamic of the market new companies entering
and others going out of business, less stable
companies are barely hanging on
6T1/T3 equipment selection criteria
- Price Initial cost is only a fraction of the
overall system price - Functions Functions of today may not be suitable
for future growth of the organization upgrading
from voice only service to voice and data for
example - Emotion It could become a problem if the user
become enamored with the bills and whistles of
a hardware vendor, or if the seller and buyer
become very close
7T1/T3 Selection Criteria
- End of life cycle often when a new product is
about to be introduced, old product are heavily
pushed. How long the old product will be
supported - Technological Changes As new features are
developed such as ISDN, broadband ISDN, ATM,
frame relay, and introduced, the hardware must be
able to grow with the technology. If not
limitations may exist for future uses of the
system and the network.
8T1/T3 Selection Criteria
- Standards Standards are constantly changing,
newer systems must be able to work with older
ones, and current systems must still work with
future ones
9Examples of T1 equipment
- Channel banks
- Multiplexers
- Network processors
- Digital Access Crossconnect Systems (DACS)
- Electronic Switching Systems
- LAN connectivity bridges
- WAN connectivity router and gateways
10Channel banks
- The first devices used by customers to interface
to a T1 circuit - Was initially designed customers using voice-only
services - Combined 24 voice signals onto a single DS1 bit
stream, transmitted either over a customers
private network or a carrier (public) network - Data transmission was handled using modems
11Channel Banks
- The evolution to a D4 (superframe) allowed voice
and data. A DSU (Data Service Unit) can be
plugged in the D4 channel bank cage to carry data
at up to 56 kbps digitally - D4 channel banks are the least expensive, from
2500 to 5000
12T1 Multiplexers
- They are the next step above channel banks
- They provide more flexibility
- channelized services (24 fixed time slot for each
DS1 stream) - non-channelized services
- Support multiple interfaces using a wide range of
plug-in cards for - superrates gt 64 kbps
- subrates lt 64 kbps
13T1 multiplexers
- General features
- Terminal Interface, unlike D4 channel bank where
configuration takes place by setting jumpers - T1
MUXs use a dumb terminal and an RS232
interface. The terminal is also used to run
diagnostic tests and on the fly changes. - Voice, Data, and Video Handling, It can handle
signals from different types of sources. It is
able to integrate serial bit streams into an
integrated bit stream (DS1). A video call may
require 384, a voice call may require 32 kbps.
14T1 Multiplexers
- Support for Different Standards, It is possible
to select companding laws U-law, and A-law, type
of modulation standard PCM, delta modulation, or
ADPCM - Vendor Specific Voice Compression, It may allow
high-compression rates voice multiplexing at 16
and 8 kbps. One 64 kbps timeslot can be used by 8
telephone users
15Channel Service Unit - CSU
- Although not a major expense, it provides the
interface between the the customer equipment and
the network - Older implementations had it as a
separate piece of equipment. Newer design
integrates into the MUX, PBX or other T1
equipment - Its functions are required by the FCC, and they
are
16Channel Service Unit - CSU
- Electrical isolation from the line
- Signal generation compatible with the line
- Assures 1s density, B8ZS or ZCS, if necessary
- Bipolar violation correction
- Responds to carrier (interface exchange carrier)
loopback requests - It has an interface for local loopback
- Collection of ESF data, if equipped
- Test pattern generation for error checking
- Framed 1s pattern sent if equipment failure
occurs
17The Digital Service Unit - DSU
- Its primary function is to
- convert a unipolar signal from customer data
terminal equipment (DTE) into a bipolar signal
for the network - and from bipolar to unipolar in the opposite
direction - ensures 1s density, bipolar signaling, extract
timing - New implementations integrates the CSU and DSU
into T1 equipment
18Digital Service Unit - DSU
19T1 - Equipment, Private Business Exchange
20T1 Equipment, private business exchange
- Will be discussed later in more detail
- It provides a direct termination of T1 line into
a digital a trunk interface - T1 in a PBX environment is typically a shelf. The
T1 line can interconnect two PBXs or connect a
PBX to a central office switch.
21T1 Equipment, PBX
- The PBX offers some features that are not
accessible the multiplexers such as - station message recording
- queuing a channel on a T1
- least cost routing
- redialing a busy number
- call transfer
- conferencing
- call forwarding
- hunting
- and others
22Digital Access Crossconnect System- DACS
- A switching system (mainly static), by using
time-division multiplexing scheme, switches or
crossconnects digital bit streams. - The number of inputs the number of outputs
- Non-blocking connectivity - for each input there
is a rout on the output side - Was initially designed to simplify the Telephone
Companys administration and testing procedures,
network grooming, and dynamic reconfiguration of
ports
23DACS
- Although was originally designed for use in the
carrier network, larger corporations have
implemented DACS configurations. - it allows drop and insert capabilities, drop some
channels off and insert new bit streams into
channels. - They can support very large amount of bandwidth,
up to 960 T3 ports.
24Digital Access Crossconnect System - DACS
25Digital Access Crossconnect System - DACS
26DACS in T3 Environment
- New generation DACS may include
- Digital services for customer or carrier
- network administration
- port-by-port, channel-by-channel reconfiguration
- changes to user networks on demand
- network recovery and switching
- local balancing
27Digital Access Crossconnect Systems - DACS
28Digital Access Crossconnect System - DACS