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Computer Networks/Networks




                    Notes          4.3.1 Digital Channel

                                   Original telephone networks were based on analog voice connections through manual
                                   switchboards. Gradually, digital switch technologies were used to connect digital circuits between
                                   exchanges with analog two-wire circuits to connect to most telephones. The basic digital circuit
                                   uses Digital Signal 0 (DS0) that is 64 kilobits per second channel to carry a typical phone call
                                   from a calling party to a called party. It uses 8-bit Pulse Code Modulation (PCM) with 8 kHz
                                   sample rate to digitize the audio sound ranging from 30 Hz to 3300 Hz. In addition to this a
                                   guard band of 70 Hz is used to keep the voice clean and clear. Thus, audio sound ranges from 0
                                   Hz to 4,000 Hz. According to sampling theorem, a sampling of twice of the audio signal is
                                   required to reproduce the sound. The sound signal is sampled at the rate of 8000 times per
                                   second.

                                   4.3.2 Trunk Lines

                                   The trunk lines in telecommunications that are always digital in nature provide high-speed
                                   connection between central offices in the PSTN system. The twisted pair wiring between central
                                   offices were prone to crosstalk and noise. The twisted pair was also expensive to lay from CO to
                                   CO. Gradually development in telecommunication field led to the development of TDM
                                   techniques to carry the data over the existing copper lines and subsequently on the optical fiber
                                   cables. The fiber cables uses statistical time-division multiplexing, synchronous digital hierarchy,
                                   coarse or dense wave division multiplexing and optical switching to further improve
                                   transmission speeds. The trunk lines therefore contain thousands of simultaneous calls that
                                   have been combined using TDM to carry them from one CO to another CO. A signaling protocol
                                   SS7 is used to transmit call from one telephone exchange to another. At CO, they are
                                   de-multiplexed and switched through digital access cross connecting switches to reach the proper
                                   exchange and local phone number. Some of the examples of trunk lines are T1, T3, DS1, DS3, Tie
                                   line, Tie trunk, etc.

                                   T1: A T1 that is considered a dedicated circuit is available as full T1, channelised T1 and fractional
                                   T1. A T1 circuit is composed of the local loop of the local service provider and the carrier circuit
                                   provided by the same company or different service providers. A full T1 service often referred to
                                   as a digital trunk line is usually available as a complete circuit of up to 1.544Mbps total speed
                                   either as data or voice but not both. A channelised T1 as it name indicates contains 24 individual
                                   channels which are capable of carrying voice or data. The full set of channels provides the same
                                   speed as a full T1. The individual channels may be divided into voice lines for telephone services
                                   or data lines for Internet services using a device called a Channel Service Unit/Data Service Unit
                                   or CSU/DSU. A fractional T1 is available less than a full T1’s bandwidth in which one or more
                                   channels bundled together. Similar to the channelised T1, individual channels can be voice or
                                   data and a CSU/DSU is used to split the channels. A T1 circuit always remains on and therefore
                                   is referred to as private lines or dedicated data line.

                                   DS1: Digital Signalling Level 1 (DS1) contains 24 voice TDM into 192-bit frames across single
                                   physical connection providing 1.544 Mbps data throughput across a T1 Physical Layer digital
                                   voice connection.

                                   DS3: Refers to a telecom circuit that carries multiple calls from one central office to another and
                                   also termed as tie trunks or tie lines. A DS3 contains the equivalent of 28 T1/DS1 circuits by
                                   decreasing the time slicle allotted for each sample of data and multiplexes the T1’s together to
                                   form the final DS3 data stream.









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