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(Page 3) Cellular Telephone Basics continued. . .
V. Cellular
frequency and channel discussion
American cell phone frequencies start at 824 MHz and end at
894 MHz. The band isn't continuous, though, it runs from 824
to 849MHz, and then from 869 to 894. Airphone, Nextel, SMR, and
public safety services use the bandwidth between the two cellular
blocks. Cellular takes up 50 megahertz total. Quite a chunk.
By comparison, the AM broadcast band takes up only 1.17 megahertz
of space. That band, however, provides only 107 frequencies to
broadcast on. Cellular may provide thousands of frequencies to
carry conversations and data. This large number of frequencies
and the large channel size required account for the large amount
of spectrum used.
Thanks to Will Galloway for corrections
The original analog American system, AT&T's Advanced Mobile
Phone Service or AMPS, now succeeded by its digital IS-136
service, uses 832 channels that are 30 kHz wide. Years
ago Motorola and Hughes each tried making more spectrum efficient
systems, cutting down on channel size or bandwidth, but these
never caught on. Motorola's analog system, NAMPS, standing for
Narrowband Advanced Mobile Service provided 2412 channels, using
channels 10 kHz wide instead of 30kHz. [See
NAMPS] While voice quality was
poor and technical problems abounded, NAMPS died because digital
and its inherent capacity gain came along, otherwise, as Mark
puts it, "We'd have all gone to NAMPS eventually, poor voice
quality or not."[NAMPS2]
I mentioned that a typical cell channel is 30 kilohertz wide
compared to the ten kHz allowed an AM radio station. How is it
possible, you might ask, that a one to three watt cellular phone
call can take up a path that is three times wider than a 50,000
watt broadcast station? Well, power does not necessarily relate
to bandwidth. A high powered signal might take up lots of room
or a high powered signal might be narrowly focused. A wider channel
helps with audio quality. An FM stereo station, for example,
uses a 150 kHz channel to provide the best quality sound. A 30
kHz channel for cellular gives you great sound almost automatically,
nearly on par with the normal telephone network.
Cellular runs in two blocks from, getting specific now, 824.04
MHz to 893. 97 MHz. In particular, cell phones or mobiles use
the frequencies from 824.04 MHz to 848.97 and the base stations
operate on 869.04 MHz to 893.97 MHz. These two frequencies in
turn make up a channel. 45 MHz separates each transmit and receive
frequency within a cell or sector, a part of a cell. That separation
keeps them from interfering with each other. Getting confusing?
Let's look at the frequencies of a single cell for a single carrier.
For this example, let's assume that this is one of 21 cells in
an AMPS system:
Cell#1 of 21 in Band A (The nonwireline carrier)
Channel 1 (333) Tx 879.990 Rx 834.990
Channel 2 (312) Tx 879.360 Rx 834.360
Channel 3 (291) Tx 878.730 Rx 833.730
Channel 4 (270) Tx 878.100 Rx 833.100
Channel 5 (249) Tx 877.470 Rx 832.470
Channel 6 (228) Tx 876.840 Rx 831.840
Channel 7 (207) Tx 876.210 Rx 831.210
Channel 8 (186) Tx 875.580 Rx 830.580 etc., etc.,
The number of channels within a cell or within an individual
sector of a cell varies greatly, depending on many factors. As
Mark van der Hoek writes, "A sector may have as few as 4
or as many as 80 channels. Sometimes more! For a special event
like the opening of a new race track, I've put 100 channels in
a temporary site. That's called a Cell On Wheels, or COW. Literally
a cell site in a truck."
Cellular network planners assign these frequency pairs or
channels carefully and in advance. It is exacting work. Adding
new channels later to increase capacity is even more difficult.
[See Adding channels]
Channel layout is confusing since the ordering is non-intuitive
and because there are so many numbers involved. Speaking of numbers,
check out the sidebar. Channels 800 to 832 are not labeled as
such. Cell channels go up to 799 in AMPS and then stop. Believe
it or not, the numbering begins again at 991 and then goes up
to 1023. That gives us 832. Why the confusion and the odd numbering?
The Bell System originally planned for 1000 channels but was
given only 666 by the FCC. When cellular proved popular the FCC
was again approached for more channels but granted only an extra
166. By this time the frequency spectrum and channel numbers
that should have gone to cellular had been assigned to other
radio services. So the numbering picks up at 991 instead of 800.
Arggh!
You might wonder why frequencies are offset at all. It's so
you can talk and listen at the same time, just like on a regular
telephone. Cellular is not like CB radio. Citizen's band uses
the same frequency to transmit and receive. What's called "push
to talk" since you must depress a microphone key or switch
each time you want to talk. Cellular, though, provides full duplex
communication. It's more expensive and complicated to do it this
way. That's since the mobile unit and the base station both need
circuitry to transmit on one frequency while receiving on another.
But it's the only way that permits a normal, back and forth,
talk when you want to, conversation. Take a look at the animated
.gif below to visualize full duplex communication. See how two
frequencies, a voice channel, lets you talk and listen at the
same time?
|

Full duplex communication example.
The two frequencies are paired and constitute a voice channel.
Paths indicate direction of flow.
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Derived from Marshal Brain's How Stuff
Works site (external link)
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- Notes:
-
- [Adding channels] "The
channels for a particular cell are assigned by a Radio Frequency
Engineer, and are fixed. The mobile switch assigns which of those
channels to use for a given call, but has no ability to assign
other channels. In a Motorola (and, I think, Ericsson) system,
changing those assigned channels requires manual re-tuning of
the hardware in the cell site. This takes several hours. Lucent
equipment allows for remote re-tuning via commands input at the
switch, but the assignment of those channels is still made by
the RF engineer, taking into account re-use and interference
issues. Re-tuning a site in a congested downtown area is not
trivial! An engineer may work for weeks on a frequency plan just
to add channels to one sector. It is not unusual to have to re-tune
a half dozen sites just to add 3 channels to one." Mark
van der Hoek. Personal correspondence.
(back to text)
[NAMPS] Macario, Raymond.
Cellular Radio: Principles and Design, McGraw Hill, Inc.,
New York 1997 90. A good but flawed book that's now in its second
edition. Explains several cellular systems such as GSM, JTACS,
etc. as well as AMPS and TDMA transmission. Details all the formats
of all the digital messages. Index is poor and has many mistakes.
(back to text)
[NAMPS2] "Only a
few cities ever went with NAMPS, and it didn't replace AMPS,
it was used in conjunction with AMPS. We looked at it for the
Los Angeles market (where I spent 7 years with PacTel/AirTouch)
but it just didn't measure up. The quality just wasn't good,
and the capacity gains were not the 3 to 1 as claimed by Motorola.
The reason is that you cannot re-use NAMPS channels as closely
as AMPS channels. Their signal to noise ratio requirements are
higher due to the reduced bandwidth. (We engineered to an 18dB
C/I ratio for AMPS, whereas we found that NAMPS required 22 dB.)
[See The Decibel for more
on carrier interference ratios,
ed.] Also, market penetration of NAMPS capable phones
was an issue. If only 30% of your customers can use it, does
it really provide capacity gains? The Las Vegas B carrier loved
NAMPS, though. At least, that's what Moto told us. . . though
even under the best of conditions NAMPS doesn't satisfy the average
customer, according to industry surveys. There's no free lunch,
and you can't get 30 kHz sound from 10 kHz. But the point is
moot - - NAMPS is dead." Mark van der Hoek. Personal correspondence.
(back to text)
[Adding channels] "The
channels for a particular cell are assigned by a Radio Frequency
Engineer, and are fixed. The mobile switch assigns which of those
channels to use for a given call, but has no ability to assign
other channels. In a Motorola (and, I think, Ericsson) system,
changing those assigned channels requires manual re-tuning of
the hardware in the cell site. This takes several hours. Lucent
equipment allows for remote re-tuning via commands input at the
switch, but the assignment of those channels is still made by
the RF engineer, taking into account re-use and interference
issues. Re-tuning a site in a congested downtown area is not
trivial! An engineer may work for weeks on a frequency plan just
to add channels to one sector. It is not unusual to have to re-tune
a half dozen sites just to add 3 channels to one." Mark
van der Hoek. Personal correspondence. (back
to text)
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