Loading of Telephone Cable Circuits
Loading of Telephone Cable Circuits
COMMUNICATION
CABLES
Loading of
Telephone Cable Circuits
Introduction
This leaflet is intended as a brief guide to the
selection and application of loading (the insertion, of coils as lumped inductance) to telephone
circuits to meet specified transmission requirements of attenuation, impedance and frequency
band.
The guide is sufficient only to illustrate the effect
of the amount of inductance added per unit
length of circuit in conjunction with the distance
between loading coils, variation of circuit capacitance, etc. Loading is, in general, confined to
voice-frequency circuits and the information in
this leaflet applies to these. However, special
loading is sometimes applied to carrier entrance
cables, to broadcast music circuits and to intermediate cables in open wire routes.
STCs Telephone Cable Division will be glad to
give further information and to advise on suitable
loading for any specific scheme.
Loading is normally applied for one or more of
three reasons.
R C
R 2C
=
2 L
4L
Cut-off Frequency
An effect of coil loading is to reduce the attenuation at low frequencies and to equalise the loss
over most of the voice frequency band. At the top
end of this band the approximate formula for attenuation is no longer valid and the effect of the
loading coils is that the attenuation rises steeply
to the so-called cut-off frequency where transmission over the circuit becomes impracticable.
This effect is shown in Fig. 3, as well as the advantage at the lower frequencies of loading.
A formula for the theoretical cut-off frequency (fc)
for a high quality loaded telephone cable is
fc =
LC
Impedance
Loading of a telephone line will normally increase
its characteristic impedance and, assuming a
loaded line of infinite length, the characteristic
impedance (Z0) is given approximately by the
following formula
Z0 =
L
C
Spacing
In determining the spacing to be employed (the
distance between loading coils on any pair), several factors must be considered, i.e.
Attenuation
Cut-off frequency
Impedance
Crosstalk
Cost
Code
Letter
A
B
C
D
E
F
H
K
M
R
W
Coil Spacing
Yards
233
1000
310
1500
1858
930
2000
2470
3000
3870
13870
Ft
700
3000
930
4500
5575
2790
6000
7400
9000
11600
41600
Metres
213
915
283
1372
1700
850
1830
2256
2745
3536
12680
e.g.
H-66 denotes 66 mH side circuit coils at 1830 m
spacing.
B-66-27 denotes 66 mH on side circuits, 27 mH
on phantom circuits, both at 915 m spacing.
CE-5-12 denotes side circuit loading of 5 mH at
283 m and phantom circuit loading of 12 mH at
1700 m.
Phantom loading
Loading of the phantom circuit in addition to the
two side circuits of a quad was a practice applied
for many years to Multiple Twin quads, when all
three circuits were employed directly for long
distance speech. Although still employed in some
areas, it is a practice which has been slowly dying since the introduction of the star-quad, where
the mutual capacitance of the phantom circuit is
high, and the phantom is often used for other
purposes in its non-loaded state. However,
where phantom loading is employed it takes the
form of a three coil unit arranged as shown in
Fig. 7.
This is a specialised, and at times complex, problem, each project being considered for its several
requirements. Coil spacings are often based on a
capacitance rather than a physical distance and
full particulars of each route are needed to enable a study to be made. Carrier loading is sometimes applied to entrance cables from open wire
carrier systems, or on similar systems where a
short intermediate cable replaces a section of
open-wire route. These are instances where
loading is primarily designed for impedance considerations rather than to attain a low attenuation.
Broadcast loading
On these circuits a light loading is normally employed with the object of attaining a degree of
equalisation over a wide frequency band. Since
the circuits have to cater for the transmission of
both speech and music a high cut-off is required,
necessitating both light loading and usually a
close spacing of the loading coils.
Coil size
Although the electrical qualities of loading coils
meet all the desired electrical characteristics, coil
winding techniques and core materials are under
constant development to achieve a physically
smaller and more economic coil.
A loading coil case for installation in a manhole
can contain up to 1040 voice-frequency coils,
whilst up to 104 individual coils, fixed to a simple
support frame, can be accommodated within the
sleeve of a main cable joint.
STC anticipate that future loading coils will be
even smaller enabling the same sized loading
coil case, or cable joint, to house an even greater
number of coils.