在150mhz IMTS中使用15khz第三信道

G. A. Arredondo, D. Gunn
{"title":"在150mhz IMTS中使用15khz第三信道","authors":"G. A. Arredondo, D. Gunn","doi":"10.1109/VTC.1977.1622428","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"The growth of the Land Mobile Radio Services has been so rapid that it has resulted in an ever increasing demand for additional channels. A channel split is an approach that nearly doubles the number of channels available. This paper presents the known factors that need to be considered in order to use channels spaced 15 kHz apart in IMTS systems where the current channel spacing is 30 kHz. One approach in using 15 kHz channels would be to replace all existing land and mobile equipment with new radios having narrower bandwidth and operating with lower frequency deviation. The approach considered here is economically more attractive. It makes use of current equipment with minor modifications, and retains the bandwidth and deviation in current use. The 15 kHz channels could be assigned to adjacent systems that could be located closer than co-channel systems, thereby providing some relief. Even greater relief is possible if the interstitial 15 KHz channels are operated at the same location as the current 30 KHz channels. The results presented here address this cosited case, but are applicable to adjacent systems as well. Consider first the base-to-mobile direction. In IMTS systems, a mobile unit scans through all equipped channels until it locks on the channel marked idle with a 2 kHz tone at full deviation (i.e., 5 kHz). The possibility exists that while scanning, the mobile unit may lock on the wrong channel by detecting the idle tone of an adjacent interstitial channel. It will be shown that the deviation of signaling tones may be reduced down to 2 kHz with no loss in signaling reliability. This lower deviation on idle tone, together with the current practice of transmitting an unmodulated low power carrier on channels not in use, essentially eliminates the false lock problem. The other problem in the base-to-mobile direction is the interference on a voice circuit produced by signaling tones or voice modulating the adjacent interstitial channel. It will be shown that the interfering signal must be 20 dB greater than the desired in order to seriously degrade a commercial call. By locating both transmitters together (not necessarily on the same antenna), the average power levels of the desired and interfering channels received at the mobile will be nearly equal regardless of the mobile's location. Thus, the interference to voice circuits in the base-to-mobile direction is not a serious problem. In the mobile-to-base direction, it is possible that the disconnect signal transmitted when a mobile terminates a call may be detected in a busy adjacent interstitial channel and falsely terminate the call on that channel. As with the \"false lock\" problem, this situation is alleviated by reducing the signaling deviation in the mobile. Since there may be many mobiles whose signaling deviations have not been reduced, say roamers, a modification can be made in the control terminal so that a test is made of the absence of RF carrier after detecting the disconnect signal before terminating a call. The most serious problem with the use of interstitial channels is the possible interference on voice circuits in the mobile-to-base direction. As given before, an interfering signal 20 dB or more above the desired signal could result in serious degradation. (Note that the effect of Rayleigh fading is included in the protection ratio of 20 dB.) Since there is no effective way of controlling the relative power levels received at a base station from mobiles on adjacent channels, a solution is to equip base receivers with an \"off-channel\" squelch circuit with a 20 dB threshold setting. There must be enough receiver sites such that all sections of the service area are covered by at least two receivers. With this arrangement, the occurrence of strong interference will cause the weaker signal to be switched to an alternate receiver. Thus, cosited interstitial channel operation is possible if the signaling deviation is reduced to approximately 2 kHz, base receivers are equipped with an \"off-channel\" squelch circuit, and a minor modification is made in the control terminal. It will be shown that the same modifications would be necessary to implement adjacent systems if the separation between systems is to be significantly less than the co-channel distance.","PeriodicalId":105804,"journal":{"name":"27th IEEE Vehicular Technology Conference","volume":"36 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"1900-01-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"On the use of 15 KHz tertiary channels in 150 MHz IMTS\",\"authors\":\"G. A. Arredondo, D. Gunn\",\"doi\":\"10.1109/VTC.1977.1622428\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"The growth of the Land Mobile Radio Services has been so rapid that it has resulted in an ever increasing demand for additional channels. A channel split is an approach that nearly doubles the number of channels available. This paper presents the known factors that need to be considered in order to use channels spaced 15 kHz apart in IMTS systems where the current channel spacing is 30 kHz. One approach in using 15 kHz channels would be to replace all existing land and mobile equipment with new radios having narrower bandwidth and operating with lower frequency deviation. The approach considered here is economically more attractive. It makes use of current equipment with minor modifications, and retains the bandwidth and deviation in current use. The 15 kHz channels could be assigned to adjacent systems that could be located closer than co-channel systems, thereby providing some relief. Even greater relief is possible if the interstitial 15 KHz channels are operated at the same location as the current 30 KHz channels. The results presented here address this cosited case, but are applicable to adjacent systems as well. Consider first the base-to-mobile direction. In IMTS systems, a mobile unit scans through all equipped channels until it locks on the channel marked idle with a 2 kHz tone at full deviation (i.e., 5 kHz). The possibility exists that while scanning, the mobile unit may lock on the wrong channel by detecting the idle tone of an adjacent interstitial channel. It will be shown that the deviation of signaling tones may be reduced down to 2 kHz with no loss in signaling reliability. This lower deviation on idle tone, together with the current practice of transmitting an unmodulated low power carrier on channels not in use, essentially eliminates the false lock problem. The other problem in the base-to-mobile direction is the interference on a voice circuit produced by signaling tones or voice modulating the adjacent interstitial channel. It will be shown that the interfering signal must be 20 dB greater than the desired in order to seriously degrade a commercial call. By locating both transmitters together (not necessarily on the same antenna), the average power levels of the desired and interfering channels received at the mobile will be nearly equal regardless of the mobile's location. Thus, the interference to voice circuits in the base-to-mobile direction is not a serious problem. In the mobile-to-base direction, it is possible that the disconnect signal transmitted when a mobile terminates a call may be detected in a busy adjacent interstitial channel and falsely terminate the call on that channel. As with the \\\"false lock\\\" problem, this situation is alleviated by reducing the signaling deviation in the mobile. Since there may be many mobiles whose signaling deviations have not been reduced, say roamers, a modification can be made in the control terminal so that a test is made of the absence of RF carrier after detecting the disconnect signal before terminating a call. The most serious problem with the use of interstitial channels is the possible interference on voice circuits in the mobile-to-base direction. As given before, an interfering signal 20 dB or more above the desired signal could result in serious degradation. (Note that the effect of Rayleigh fading is included in the protection ratio of 20 dB.) Since there is no effective way of controlling the relative power levels received at a base station from mobiles on adjacent channels, a solution is to equip base receivers with an \\\"off-channel\\\" squelch circuit with a 20 dB threshold setting. There must be enough receiver sites such that all sections of the service area are covered by at least two receivers. With this arrangement, the occurrence of strong interference will cause the weaker signal to be switched to an alternate receiver. Thus, cosited interstitial channel operation is possible if the signaling deviation is reduced to approximately 2 kHz, base receivers are equipped with an \\\"off-channel\\\" squelch circuit, and a minor modification is made in the control terminal. It will be shown that the same modifications would be necessary to implement adjacent systems if the separation between systems is to be significantly less than the co-channel distance.\",\"PeriodicalId\":105804,\"journal\":{\"name\":\"27th IEEE Vehicular Technology Conference\",\"volume\":\"36 1\",\"pages\":\"0\"},\"PeriodicalIF\":0.0000,\"publicationDate\":\"1900-01-01\",\"publicationTypes\":\"Journal Article\",\"fieldsOfStudy\":null,\"isOpenAccess\":false,\"openAccessPdf\":\"\",\"citationCount\":\"0\",\"resultStr\":null,\"platform\":\"Semanticscholar\",\"paperid\":null,\"PeriodicalName\":\"27th IEEE Vehicular Technology Conference\",\"FirstCategoryId\":\"1085\",\"ListUrlMain\":\"https://doi.org/10.1109/VTC.1977.1622428\",\"RegionNum\":0,\"RegionCategory\":null,\"ArticlePicture\":[],\"TitleCN\":null,\"AbstractTextCN\":null,\"PMCID\":null,\"EPubDate\":\"\",\"PubModel\":\"\",\"JCR\":\"\",\"JCRName\":\"\",\"Score\":null,\"Total\":0}","platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"27th IEEE Vehicular Technology Conference","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1109/VTC.1977.1622428","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0

摘要

陆地移动无线电业务的发展如此迅速,导致对额外信道的需求不断增加。通道分割是一种使可用通道数量几乎翻倍的方法。本文提出了需要考虑的已知因素,以便在当前信道间隔为30 kHz的IMTS系统中使用间隔为15 kHz的信道。使用15千赫频道的一个办法是用带宽较窄、频率偏差较低的新无线电设备取代所有现有的陆地和移动设备。这里考虑的方法在经济上更有吸引力。它利用现有的设备,稍加修改,并保留当前使用的带宽和偏差。15千赫信道可以分配给相邻的系统,这些系统可以比同信道系统位置更近,从而提供一些缓解。甚至更大的救济是可能的,如果间隙的15千赫频道操作在相同的位置作为目前的30千赫频道。这里给出的结果解决了这种复杂的情况,但也适用于相邻的系统。首先考虑从基地到移动的方向。在IMTS系统中,移动单元扫描所有配备的信道,直到锁定在全偏差(即5khz)下用2khz音调标记为空闲的信道。存在这样一种可能性,即在扫描时,移动单元可能通过检测相邻间隙信道的空闲音而锁定错误信道。结果表明,信号音调的偏差可以降低到2千赫,而不影响信号的可靠性。这种在空闲音上的较低偏差,加上目前在未使用的信道上传输未调制的低功率载波的做法,从根本上消除了假锁问题。基站到移动方向上的另一个问题是由相邻间隙信道的信令音调或语音调制产生的语音电路上的干扰。结果表明,干扰信号必须比期望的大20 dB,才能严重降低商业通话的质量。通过将两个发射机放在一起(不一定在同一天线上),无论手机的位置如何,手机接收到的期望信道和干扰信道的平均功率水平将几乎相等。因此,在基站到移动方向上对语音电路的干扰不是一个严重的问题。在移动到基地方向上,当移动端终止呼叫时传输的断开信号可能在相邻的繁忙间隙信道中被检测到,并且错误地终止该信道上的呼叫。与“假锁”问题一样,这种情况可以通过减少手机中的信令偏差来缓解。由于可能有许多移动设备的信号偏差没有减少,例如漫游者,因此可以在控制终端中进行修改,以便在检测到断开信号后在终止呼叫之前对RF载波的缺失进行测试。使用间隙信道最严重的问题是可能对移动到基地方向的语音电路产生干扰。如前所述,高于期望信号20db或更高的干扰信号可能导致严重的退化。(注意,20 dB的保护比中包含瑞利衰落的影响。)由于没有有效的方法来控制基站从相邻信道上的移动设备接收到的相对功率水平,一种解决方案是为基地接收器配备一个阈值设置为20 dB的“离信道”静噪电路。必须有足够的接收站点,使服务区域的所有部分至少有两个接收器覆盖。有了这种安排,强干扰的发生将导致较弱的信号被切换到备用接收器。因此,如果信号偏差减少到大约2千赫,基础接收器配备“离通道”静噪电路,并且在控制终端中进行轻微修改,则可以进行间隔通道操作。如果系统之间的距离要明显小于共信道距离,则需要同样的修改来实现相邻系统。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
On the use of 15 KHz tertiary channels in 150 MHz IMTS
The growth of the Land Mobile Radio Services has been so rapid that it has resulted in an ever increasing demand for additional channels. A channel split is an approach that nearly doubles the number of channels available. This paper presents the known factors that need to be considered in order to use channels spaced 15 kHz apart in IMTS systems where the current channel spacing is 30 kHz. One approach in using 15 kHz channels would be to replace all existing land and mobile equipment with new radios having narrower bandwidth and operating with lower frequency deviation. The approach considered here is economically more attractive. It makes use of current equipment with minor modifications, and retains the bandwidth and deviation in current use. The 15 kHz channels could be assigned to adjacent systems that could be located closer than co-channel systems, thereby providing some relief. Even greater relief is possible if the interstitial 15 KHz channels are operated at the same location as the current 30 KHz channels. The results presented here address this cosited case, but are applicable to adjacent systems as well. Consider first the base-to-mobile direction. In IMTS systems, a mobile unit scans through all equipped channels until it locks on the channel marked idle with a 2 kHz tone at full deviation (i.e., 5 kHz). The possibility exists that while scanning, the mobile unit may lock on the wrong channel by detecting the idle tone of an adjacent interstitial channel. It will be shown that the deviation of signaling tones may be reduced down to 2 kHz with no loss in signaling reliability. This lower deviation on idle tone, together with the current practice of transmitting an unmodulated low power carrier on channels not in use, essentially eliminates the false lock problem. The other problem in the base-to-mobile direction is the interference on a voice circuit produced by signaling tones or voice modulating the adjacent interstitial channel. It will be shown that the interfering signal must be 20 dB greater than the desired in order to seriously degrade a commercial call. By locating both transmitters together (not necessarily on the same antenna), the average power levels of the desired and interfering channels received at the mobile will be nearly equal regardless of the mobile's location. Thus, the interference to voice circuits in the base-to-mobile direction is not a serious problem. In the mobile-to-base direction, it is possible that the disconnect signal transmitted when a mobile terminates a call may be detected in a busy adjacent interstitial channel and falsely terminate the call on that channel. As with the "false lock" problem, this situation is alleviated by reducing the signaling deviation in the mobile. Since there may be many mobiles whose signaling deviations have not been reduced, say roamers, a modification can be made in the control terminal so that a test is made of the absence of RF carrier after detecting the disconnect signal before terminating a call. The most serious problem with the use of interstitial channels is the possible interference on voice circuits in the mobile-to-base direction. As given before, an interfering signal 20 dB or more above the desired signal could result in serious degradation. (Note that the effect of Rayleigh fading is included in the protection ratio of 20 dB.) Since there is no effective way of controlling the relative power levels received at a base station from mobiles on adjacent channels, a solution is to equip base receivers with an "off-channel" squelch circuit with a 20 dB threshold setting. There must be enough receiver sites such that all sections of the service area are covered by at least two receivers. With this arrangement, the occurrence of strong interference will cause the weaker signal to be switched to an alternate receiver. Thus, cosited interstitial channel operation is possible if the signaling deviation is reduced to approximately 2 kHz, base receivers are equipped with an "off-channel" squelch circuit, and a minor modification is made in the control terminal. It will be shown that the same modifications would be necessary to implement adjacent systems if the separation between systems is to be significantly less than the co-channel distance.
求助全文
通过发布文献求助,成功后即可免费获取论文全文。 去求助
来源期刊
自引率
0.00%
发文量
0
×
引用
GB/T 7714-2015
复制
MLA
复制
APA
复制
导出至
BibTeX EndNote RefMan NoteFirst NoteExpress
×
提示
您的信息不完整,为了账户安全,请先补充。
现在去补充
×
提示
您因"违规操作"
具体请查看互助需知
我知道了
×
提示
确定
请完成安全验证×
copy
已复制链接
快去分享给好友吧!
我知道了
右上角分享
点击右上角分享
0
联系我们:info@booksci.cn Book学术提供免费学术资源搜索服务,方便国内外学者检索中英文文献。致力于提供最便捷和优质的服务体验。 Copyright © 2023 布克学术 All rights reserved.
京ICP备2023020795号-1
ghs 京公网安备 11010802042870号
Book学术文献互助
Book学术文献互助群
群 号:604180095
Book学术官方微信