Basic Telephone: Telephone Subscriber Line CO (Local Exchange)
Basic Telephone: Telephone Subscriber Line CO (Local Exchange)
Telephone
Subscriber Line
CO (Local Exchange)
dial switch
cradle switch
off-hook on-hook
tip (+)
ear
R
mouth
DTMF
C ringer
SLIC
ring (-)
telephony
Slide 1
current detector
hybrid
-48 VDC
Processor
Call States
idle dialing calling ringing called on hook dialing in progress after dialing incoming call call in progress
telephony
Slide 2
PSTN Review
Analog voltage travels over copper wire end-to-end Voice signal arrives at destination severely attenuated and distorted Routing performed manually at exchanges office(s) Routing is expensive and lengthy operation Route is maintained for duration of call
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PSTN Review
Multiplexing
standard was 18 gauge, long distance even heavier two wires per loop to combat cross-talk needed method to place multiple conversations on a single trunk
channels
5 conversations on single trunk later extended to 12 (group) still later supergroups, master groups, supermaster groups
timeslots
T1 = 24 conversations per trunk later T3 = 28 T1s still later SDH rates with 1000s of conversations per trunk
t
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Cross-connect switch
Analog Crossbar switch
1 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Complexity increases rapidly with size 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
processor
2 1 5 4 3
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Slide 5
Basic TDM CO
DXC
PCM MUX
E1/T1
TDM port
TDM port
TDM port
DTMF decode
Processor
telephony
Slide 6
PSTN Review
PSTN Topology
local loop
Local Exchange
subscriber line
Local Exchange
Long distance network trunk circuit Local Exchange
Many local telephone exchanges had sprung up Bell Telephone acquired them and interconnected them for long distance
telephony Slide 7
PSTN Review
Old US PSTN
Class 1
Regional centers
Class 2
Class 3 Class 4 Class 5 Class 4
circuits,trunks
Class 2
Class 3 Class 3 Class 4 Class 5 Class 5
last mile
Sectional centers
Primary centers Toll (tandem) offices
Class 4 Class 5
Class 5
local loop
subscriber lines
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Slide 8
Numbering Plans
An E.164 International Number has the format : Country-Code Area-Code Exchange-Code Line-Number
MAXIMUM 15 DIGITS
EX:
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 : : : : : : : : :
972
588
9159
Country-Codes
N America (US, CA, Caribbean) 1 digit Africa 2 or 3 digits 20 Europe 2 or 3 digits 31 Europe 2 or 3 digits 44 S America 2 or 3 digits 54 Australia & S Pacific 2 or 3 digits 61 Russia 1 digit China & N Pacific 2 or 3 digits 86 Middle East 2 or 3 digits 90 Egypt 27 South Africa 235 Chad Netherlands 354 Iceland UK 49 Germany 420 Czech Republic Argentina 595 Paraguay Australia 675 Papua PR China 855 Cambodia Turkey 972 Israel
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Slide 9
PSTN Review
Signaling
PSTN with automatic switching requires signaling The present PSTN has thousands of features and all require signaling support Examples: On-hook / off-hook Pulse / Tone dialing Receiver off-hook Call waiting Caller number identification Call forwarding Hook-flash Fax transmission detect Inter-CO messaging Echo cancellation Voice mail Conference calls Coin-drop Billing
telephony Slide 10
PSTN Review
Signaling Methods
Analog voltage signaling loop-start, ground-start, E&M In-band signaling DTMF, MFR1, MFR2 Channel associated signaling (CAS) AB bits, ABCD bits Common channel signaling (CCS) SS7, QSIG Trunk Associated CCS
On/off hook DC current flow Dial-tone 350+440 continuous Pulse Dialing DTMF
L1 697 H1 1209 L2 770 H2 1336 L3 852 H3 1477 L4 941 H4 1633
off-hook
>100ms (60:40)
>700ms
make
break
Ring AC with cadence Ring-back 440+480 with 2:4 cadence Busy 480+620 with 1/2:1/2 cadence Trunk busy 480+620 but 0.2:0.3 cadence Receiver off-hook 1400+2060+2450+2600 with ).1:0.1 cadence
H1 L1 1 L2 4 L3 7 L4 *
H2 2 5 8 0
H3 3 6 9 #
H4 A B C D
announcement, SIT-tone
Hook-flash on-hook for 0.1 - 1 sec Echo suppressor disabler 2100 continuous
FAX CED 2100 2.6 - 4 sec Modem ANS 2100 with phase reversals every 450 ms for 3.3 s
ANSAM 2100 with phase reversals and 15 Hz AM modulation CNG FAX 1100 with 0.5:3 cadence Modem 1300 with 0.5:2 cadence Caller Line Identification (CLI/CND)
1200 bps FSK (V.23) data signal 1300 = 1 2100 = 0 Between 1st and 2nd rings
RING
>300 ms
CLI
> 475 ms
RING
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Supervision procedures
FXO/FXS Foreign Exchange Office / Foreign Exchange Subscriber FXS is like exchange - provides voltage, ringing, dialtone FXO is like a phone - requires voltage, detect ring, etc. When connecting PBX to CO, PBX is FXO, CO is FXS Analog loop start
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Slide 14
Interexchange Signaling
CAS - R2
CAS - R1
CCS - SS7
telephony
Slide 15
PSTN Review
Circuit switching (route is maintained for duration of call) Route set-up is an expensive operation, just as it was for manual switching Today, complex least cost routing algorithms are used Call duration consists of set-up, voice and tear-down phases
telephony Slide 16
PSTN Review
Analog voltages used throughout, but extensive Frequency Division Multiplexing Voice signal arrives at destination after amplification and filtering to 4 KHz Automatic routing Universal dial-tone Voltage and tone signaling Circuit switching (route is maintained for duration of call)
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PSTN Review
Better means
More efficient use of resources (e.g. more channels on trunks) Higher voice quality (less noise, less distortion) Added features
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PSTN Review
Timing
This timing information is essential because of the universal use of TDM the requirement of accurate playback (especially for fax/modem)
telephony
Slide 19
PSTN Review
subscriber line
PSTN Network
Analog voltages and copper wire used only in last mile, but core designed to mimic original situation Voice signal filtered to 4 KHz at input to digital network
Time Division Multiplexing of digital signals in the network Extensive use of fiber optic and wireless physical links T1/E1, PDH and SONET/SDH synchronous protocols Signaling can be channel/trunk associated or via separate network (SS7) Automatic routing Circuit switching (route is maintained for duration of call) Complex routing optimization algorithms (LP, Karmarkar, etc)
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PSTN Review
Nonvoice services
such as
FAX
VoP course
or
DATA
PSTN
These services disguise themselves as voice by using a modem Proper timing is essential Special signaling is required
turn off LEC
turn off call waiting service recognition capabilities negotiation mutual identification end of page/document modem recognition modem training data compression
telephony
Slide 21
PSTN Review
CPE
96 10 = 86
96 4 = 92
TR-08 multiplex 96 lines on: Mode 1: 4 T1s Mode 2: 2 T1s (2:1 concentration) GR303/V5.1/V5.2 multiplex up to 2048 lines
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