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Pages in This Article (1)(2)(3)(4)(5)(6)(7)(8)(9)(10)(11)(12)(13)(14) (More information) (Packets and switching)
- (Page Fourteen) Appendix: Cellular
Telephone Basics continued. . .
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- From A History of Engineering and Science in the Bell
System: Communications Sciences (1925 -- 1980)
The latter is responsible for the high voice quality and high
signaling reliability of the Advanced Mobile Phone Service.
In any given area, both the size of the cells and the distance
between cells using the same group of channels determine the
efficiency with which frequencies can be reused. When a system
is newly installed in an area (when large cells are serving only
a few customers), frequency reuse is unnecessary. Later, as the
service grows, a dense system will have many small cells and
many customers), a given channel in a large city could be serving
customers in twenty or more nonadjacent cells simultaneously.
The cellular plan permits staged growth. To progress from the
early to the more mature configuration over a period of years,
new cell sites can be added halfway between existing cell sites
in stages. Such a combination of newer, smaller cells and original,
larger cells is shown in Figure 11-36.
One cellular system is the Western Electric AUTOPLEX-100.
In this system, a mobile or portable unit in a given cell transmits
to and receives from a cell site, or base station, on a channel
assigned to that cell. In a mature system, these cell sites are
located at alternate corners of each of the hexagonal cells as
shown in Figure 11-36. Directional antennas at each cell site
point toward the centers of the cells, and each site is connected
by standard land transmission facilities to a 1AESS switching
system and system controller equipped for Advanced Mobile Phone
Service operation (called a mobile telecommunications switching
office, or MTSO). Start-up and small-city systems use a somewhat
more conventional configuration with a single cell site at the
center of each cell.
The efficient use of frequencies that results from the cellular
approach permits Advanced Mobile Phone Service customers to enjoy
a level of service almost unknown with present mobile telephone
service. Grades of service of P(0.02) are anticipated,compared
to today's all-too-common P(0.5) or worse. At the same time,
the number of customers in a large city can be increased from
a maximum of about one thousand for a conventional system to
several hundred thousand. Also, because of the stored-program
control capability of MTSOs equipped with the lAESS system, Custom
Calling Services and man other features can be offered, some
unique to mobile service. Other, smaller, switches provided by
Western Electric or other vendors are also available to serve
smaller cities and towns.
System Operation: Unlike the MJ and
MK systems, Advanced Mobile hone Service dedicates a special
subset of the 333 allocated channels solely to signaling and
control. Each mobile or portable unit is equipped with a frequency
synthesizer (to generate any one of the 333 channels) and a high
speed modem (10 kbps). When idle, a mobile unit chooses the "best
control channel to listen to (by measuring signal strength) and
reads the high-speed messages coming over this channel. The messages
include the identities of called mobiles, local general control
information, channel assignments for active mobiles and "filler"
words to maintain synchronism. These data are made highly redundant
to combat multi-path interference. A user is alerted to an incoming
call when the mobile unit recognizes its identity code in the
data message. From the user's standpoint, calls are initiated
and received as they would be from any business or residence
telephone.
As a mobile unit engaged in a call moves away from a cell
site and its signal weakens, the MTSO will automatically instruct
it to tune to a different frequency, one assigned to the newly
entered cell. This is called handoff. The MTSO determines when
handoff should occur by analyzing measurements of radio signal
strength made by the present controlling cell site and by its
neighbors. The returning instructions for handoff sent during
a call must use the voice channel. The data regarding the new
channel are sent rapidly (in about 50 milliseconds), and the
entire retuning process takes only about 300 milliseconds. In
addition to channel assignment, other MTSO functions include
maintaining a list of busy (that is, off-hook) mobile units and
paging mobile units for which incoming calls are intended.
Regulatory Picture. The FCC intends cellular service to be regulated
by competition, with two competing system providers in each large
city: a wire-line carrier and a radio common carrier. To prevent
any possible cross-subsidization or favoritism, the Bell operating
companies must offer their cellular service through separate
subsidiaries. These subsidiaries will be chiefly providers of
service and, in fact, are currently barred from leasing or selling
mobile or portable equipment. Such equipment will be sold by
nonaffiliated enterprises or by American Bell Inc.

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