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T1 Network Technology : Essentials for Successful Field Service Technicians


Introduction

The public wireless telephony business has gone through revolutionary changes since its large-scale commercial introduction in the early 1980’s.The service has evolved from analog systems to digital systems, and usage has expanded exponentially. The number of wireless network service providers has correspondingly expanded, as have consumer choices for their providers. In order to retain customers, communications network service providers are focusing on the quality of their network as a means of providing customer satisfaction and reducing churn. At the same time, wireless network operators are focussing on efficiency – increasing revenue while maintaining or lowering operating expenses.

The stakes are high. Network systems must perform reliably in the face of fierce competition - success or failure is directly dependent on customer satisfaction. Customer loyalty waivers with each dropped call or the next advertised service special.

In wireless telecommunications systems, the Base Transceiver Station (BTS) provides the key link between the consumer and the network. The link between the BTS and the Mobile Switching Center (MSC) is equally key in providing the connections between the nodes of the network. These "backhaul" links are generally based on wireline T1 technology.

T1 links can easily be classified as a "commodity" technology. However, BTS technicians are often more familiar with RF measurements and test equipment, and are not always widely experienced in troubleshooting T1 problems. In addition, wireless network operators often lease their T1 links from "wireline" telephone company (Telco) service providers. Identifying and troubleshooting problems can also require a collaborative effort between the BTS technicians and the Telco technicians. All of this leads to the importance of having advanced, easy-to-operate test tools in the hands of the people tasked with maintaining the wireless network.

This primer, along with its companion application note, "Troubleshooting T1 Lines with the NetTek YBT1 Circuit Tester" addresses the most common measurement challenges faced by technicians who maintain BTS stations wireline connections to the MSC. We begin with an overview of T1 technology, followed by a description of common T1 network topologies, and then introduce some key T1 measurement principles. The application note provides insight into troubleshooting some common problems seen on the backhaul lines in wireless networks.

T1 Technology

This section is a reasonably detailed overview of the basic principles of T1.You can use this as reference information to improve your understanding of how the technology is used. However, you do not need to be an expert at T1 technology to effectively troubleshoot T1 problems. The sections following this one are intended to aid you in being more effective in maintenance and troubleshooting.

You may notice throughout this primer that the terms T1 and DS1 are used somewhat interchangeably. This is by adopted convention of the telecom industry. Technically, however, there are different definitions for the DS1 and T1 terms. A DS1 – digital signal, level 1 – is a channel that carries data at 1.544 Mbps. It may be channelized, as in T1 or an unchannelized serial data stream, as in Frame Relay. A DS1 that is channelized into 24 digital voice/data channels, each channel at 64 kbps (called a DS0 – digital signal, level 0), is known as a T1 carrierI.

You may also find that throughout this document, T1 / DS1 circuits are referred to as T1 circuits, lines, links, spans, backhauls, or backhaul lines.These terms are common parlance in the telecomm industry and are used fairly interchangeably. "Backhaul" is more commonly referring to lines carrying signals from the Base Transceiver Station (BTS) sites "back" to the Mobile Switching Center (MSC) in the networks of wireless operators, the target audience for this application note.

In the DS1/T1 system, two pairs of copper wires are used. One twistedpair set carries data in one direction (the transmit side, or side 1), and the other pair, usually in a separate binder group, carries data in the opposite direction (the receive side, or side 2). T1 transmission is inherently a digital signal. The transmitted 1’s and 0’s correspond to either digitized voice or data signals. Historically, T1 (also known as T-carrier) transmission was designed around the need to transmit large quantities of voice traffic within the wired telephony networks. More recently, needs for data transmission has equaled the need for transmission of voice traffic.

Pulse Code Modulation and Time Division Multiplexing

To transmit voice over a digital channel, the analog voice signal needs to be sampled and digitized. The human voice can be sufficiently characterized within a bandwidth of approximately 300 Hz to 3.4 kHz. Shannon’s sampling theory states that the original signal can be successfully reproduced provided the sampling frequency is at least twice the signal bandwidth. Therefore, the basic sampling rate for voice communications was chosen to be 8000 samples per second, or 8 kHz. In Pulse Code Modulation (PCM) systems, the height of each sampled pulse is assigned a coded value to represent its value, as shown in Figure 1. This figure shows a linear coding scheme, where amplitude values are linearly assigned bit values – a linearly increasing signal will produce a linearly increasing code value.

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Figure 1: Sampling and PCM coding.

However, in order to keep the transmission bit rate to a minimum, the number of bits required for encoding must also be kept to a minimum. But limiting the number of bits used in the encoding limits the fidelity of the reproduced signal. So a non-linear coding scheme was devised that allows faithful reproduction of the original signal using only 8 bits. In North America, this scheme is µ -law ("Mu-law") encoding. It is also a form of pulse code modulation, or PCM.M.

A DS0 is a channel that transports customer information at 64 kb/s.Now you can understand where that rate came from: (8 bits for PCM encoding) x (8k samples/sec for sampling voice) = 64 kb/s. In T1 systems, there are 24 individual 8-bit DS0 samples grouped together into a frame, where each DS0 sample is assigned its own "time slot." The process of assigning channels to a time slot within a data stream is called Time Division Multiplexing, or TDM. This is explained in a bit more detail in the section on T1 framing.

The DS1 Signal

DS1 data is transmitted in digital format; that is, it is transmitted in the form of 1's and 0's. As the transmitted signal progresses down a cable, it degenerates due to losses in the cable. At the same time, noise from outside sources, such as adjacent cables, can couple onto the transmitted signal. To compensate for these negative effects, regenerative repeaters are deployed in the circuit to sample and recreate the original signal at periodic intervals along the link. Receivers (regenerators, NIUs, etc.) need to be able to recover the transmitted signal and distinguish the signal from the noise. In addition, they need to derive the sampling clock from the incoming signal. For these reasons, and a few others having to do with transmitting digital signals over copper wire cables, T1 links use line coding.

AMI Line Coding

The line coding used by T1 signals is called Alternate Mark Inversion (AMI). In this scheme, ones (also called "Marks") are transmitted in the shape of a pulse with a nominal amplitude of 3 volts, and zeros (also called "spaces") are transmitted with no pulse – as a straight line or zero volts. The AMI signal is bipolar – each subsequent mark is transmitted in the opposite polarity from the last one. So a data pattern of 11001 would be a signal with the shape of +3v, -3v, 0v, 0v, +3v, as shown in Figure 2II.

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Figure 2: AMI line coding.

The are a couple of advantages to this transmission coding. The bipolar signals allow for longer transmission distances over copper cable, as compared to unipolar transmission. In addition, the bipolar format provides a certain level of noise immunity – consecutive pulses with the same polarity constitute a "bipolar violation" or BPV. A BPV indicates that the signal has been corrupted by an external influence, like crosstalk from adjacent cables, or perhaps from a lightning strike somewhere in the system.

B8ZS Line Coding

The receivers in T1 systems need to recover the sample clock from the transmitted signal so that they can correctly recover the signal itself – they have to know when to sample the signal so they can determine if the incoming bit is a one or a zero. Receiver systems recover the clock by detecting the transitions on the signal, and locking an internal timing reference to those transitions. In this way, they maintain synchronization with the rest of the network and the clock that was used to transmit the signal. However, in order for this scheme to work, the receiver must see a sufficient number of transitions on the incoming signal. If it does not, it cannot maintain a lock on its clocking, and data may get sampled incorrectly, which can cause bit errors. Several methods have been devised to prevent this from happening.

Since zeros in the data stream result in no transitions on the transmitted signal, the devised methods all involve limiting the number of consecutive zeros that can be transmitted. All DS1 signals must meet specific requirements for ones density – a measure of the number of ones in relation to the total number of bit time slots transmitted. For DS1, a ones density of 12.5 percent must be maintained, on average, within a frame, or one mark for every seven zeros. Also, no more than 15 consecutive zeros can be transmitted in succession.

One of the most common methods used in T1 systems to maintain ones density is known as binary 8-zero substitution, or B8ZS. For the B8ZS scheme, any time eight consecutive zeros are detected in the data stream to be transmitted, the transmitter "substitutes" a fixed pattern of ones, zeros, and BPVs in place of those 8 zeros. This is a very specific pattern;each block of eight consecutive zeros is replaced with 000VB0VB, where B represents and inserted "1" bit, and V represents an inserted "1" that is a bipolar violationIII. Refer to Figure 3 to see how this works. Since this is a known pattern, the terminating receivers (line cards, CSUs, network muxes) can recognize this pattern and re-substitute the original string of 8 zeros back in place of the fixed pattern.

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Figure 3: Bipolar 8 zero substitution (B8SZ).

It is very important to note that B8ZS coding is imposed on an AMI line code. So B8ZS is actually an AMI encoded circuit that has the addition of a unique code whenever the transmitted signal contains eight zeros in a row.So, a B8ZS circuit will appear to be provisioned for AMI unless the data signal meets the eight consecutive zeros requirement. In other words, you have to have enough zeros in a row (eight) for the B8ZS pattern to be substituted, and for equipment to recognize that the line is actually provisioned for B8ZS. It all depends upon the data being transmitted whether the B8ZS substitution pattern actually needs to be inserted, and whether it will be detected by test equipment.

The T1 Frame and Why 1.544Mbps

The digitized voice signal and the data signals are collected together into a framed structure for transmission, as mentioned. Each individual signal, or DS0, is assigned its own time slot within the frame. This process is known as Time Division Multiplexing (TDM). The TDM employed in T1 communications divides the frame into 24 timeslots, and adds one framing bit, as shown in Figure 4.

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Figure 4: The T1 frame.

So each timeslot, or DS0, contains 8 bits of information. There are 24 DS0 timeslots in one T1 frame, giving us (24 * 8) 192 bits of data. Each frame also has a framing bit preceding the DS0s, giving a total of 193 bits of data per frame. Since we need to transmit each DS0 8000 times per second (because it was sampled at 8,000 samples per second), the frame transmission rate must be 8,000 frames per second. This results in a total data rate of :

193 bits/frame * 8,000 frames/sec = 1.544 Mbps

.

This data rate signal is also known as a DS1. Within the DS1, there is 1.536 Mbps of user data, or "payload" data in the DS0 time slots and 8 kbps of framing informationIV.

T1 Framing Formats

A T1 frame by itself is indistinguishable from the next frame. From the receiver's standpoint, looking at a stream of received bits, any one of the incoming bits could be the framing bit. So to allow the receivers the ability to identify the framing bits, multiple frames are concatenated together, and the framing bits are transmitted as a specific "framing pattern" of ones and zeros. Taking a somewhat simplified view, now the receivers only have to look for the framing pattern every 193rd bit in the data stream. Once they find the framing pattern in consecutive framing bits (with some more complex criteria), the framing is declared to be "in sync." Again, this is a simplified view of a complex framing synchronization process, but it should give you an understanding of why framing formats are used.

So the concatenated frames employing framing patterns in the transmitted framing bits are known as framing formats. There are several different types of framing formats used in T1 communications. Each type of framing format has its own benefits, and use is dependent upon the application. In the links used to connect the wireless network nodes together, however, there are two prevalent types of framing formats. D4 framing, otherwise known as Superframe format, and Extended Superframe Format, otherwise known as ESF.

Superframe (D4) Framing

A D4 Superframe consists of twelve consecutive frames, as shown in Figure 5. The D4 Superframe format is a structure in which the F (frame) bits are used for framing alignment only. In this format, the F bits are actually divided into two groups (refer to Table 1) V. The odd bits are called the terminal framing bits, or FT bits, and are used exclusively to identify frame boundaries. The even-numbered bits are called the signaling framing, or FS bits, and may be used to identify frames that carry signaling.However, it is beyond the scope of this application note to discuss signaling formats used in D4 framing – the T1s connected in wireless network operator backhauls are typically not provisioned for signaling such as robbed-bit signaling. The framing bits comprise an 8 kbps (8000 frames per second) overhead channel that cannot be used for transmitting user data.

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Figure 5: D4 Framing.

It is important to note that in D4 framing, though, maintenance signals such as network alarms and codes are sent "in-band" meaning that they can overwrite user data in the DS0s. Since the duration of these codes is usually short, typically this does not adversely affect voice or data traffic.However, in certain applications, maintenance signaling could be intrusive and can impact quality of service. For this reason, different framing methods were devised that can provide maintenance signaling without over-writing user data.

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Extended Superframe Format (ESF) Framing

An extended Superframe consists of twenty-four consecutive frames, as shown in Figure 6. The ESF format uses twice as many frames as the D4 format. But rather than simply doubling the number of bits used for maintaining frame alignment, the framing bits are separated into three categories. These provide capabilities that D4 framing does not have, allowing messages to be sent out-of-band so customer data is not overwritten, and equally important, providing a quality monitoring channel that allows monitoring network performance without taking the network out of service.

The three channels contained in the ESF framing bits are V:

The Framing Pattern Sequence (FPS) bits, which make up a 2 kbps channel, are used exclusively for maintaining frame alignment and indicating which frames may be used for signaling. As shown in Figure 6, the framing pattern bit sequence is 001011. ESF framing provides for enhanced signaling capabilities, but this area is beyond the scope of this application note.

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Figure 6: ESF framing format

The 2 kbps Cyclic Redundancy Check (CRC) channel bits carry a CRC-6 code. This is a field used to detect errors in blocks of data. It allows detection of bit errors in the transmitted data stream with about 98 percent accuracy.The CRC is calculated on a block of data (the previous 24 frames) and then the code word is sent in the next frame. The receiver makes the identical calculation on the incoming data, then compares this with the received CRC-6 code. If the codes match, then there were likely no bit errors in the previous block (ESF frame) of data. If they don’t match, then a CRC error is declared, indicating at least one error received in the previous block of data. In this way, the equipment can estimate the bit error rate without having to take the link out of service, insert a known data pattern, and make an explicit BER measurement.

The Facility Data Link (FDL) bits comprise a 4 kbps channel that is used for communicating maintenance signaling information such as performance information (Performance Report Messages, or PRMs) and control signals (network messages defined in the T1.403 standard) across the network. This link can be used for sending "out-of-band" maintenance signals to network equipment, such as loop codes, alarms codes, and protection switching, all without compromising user traffic in the DS0 channels. ESF framing also can support the use of in-band maintenance signals as are used in D4 framing. The FDL messages may be organized either as bit-patterned messages containing 16-bit codewords, or message-oriented signals encapsulated in a format such as LAPD protocol. When idle, the FDL channel contains continuous repetition of 01111110.

Common T1 Network Topologies for Wireless Operators

There are typically three or four basic components of the backhaul networks employed by wireless network operators. These are the Base Transceiver Station (BTS), the Base Station Controller (BSC) which is often co-located in the BTS, the Mobile Switching Center (MSC), and the Public Switched Telephone Network (PSTN) also referred to simply as "the network." You can see how these might be connected in Figure 7.

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Figure 7: Typical backhaul network

T1 circuits can actually take several different physical forms for wireless backhaul networks. Copper pair is usually the most prevalent in this application, however newer installations may use fiber, and remote locations may use microwave relays. Circuit configurations vary depending upon region, network operators, and base station location. Figure 8 shows several alternate circuit topologies. These are by no means complete examples, but they offer a view of how the circuits can vary simply from one BTS connection to the next.

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Figure 8: Some T1 backhaul examples

In most cases for wireless network operators, the T1 links themselves are leased from the local telephone company providers (Telcos), and the Telcos are responsible for servicing and maintaining these T1 links. The BTS and the MSC contain what is referred to as Customer Premises Equipment, or CPE. It is the responsibility of the customers, the wireless network operators in this case, to service and maintain the CPE. The Telco networks have a point of demarcation between their network and the CPE. At the BTS, this demarcation point is the Network Interface Unit, or NIU. All of these different backhaul circuit configurations have one thing in common: inside the BTS, the connection to the BTS controller itself is nearly always a T1-configured signal. Installations within the base station also vary by network operator, but a common configuration is shown in Figure 9.Each element is also described below.

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Figure 9: Example T1 connections at the BTS
NIU

Located between the T1 line and the CSU, the Network Interface Unit (NIU) is considered the demarcation point between the network and the customer premises. The primary functions of the NIU are to provide signal regeneration, DC isolation from the network to the customer premise, and loopback capabilities for network testing. It is often referred to as a "smartjack" because it provides loopback capabilities and can collect and return performance data to the Telco Central Office. The NIU may also incorporate some of the functions found in the CSU (described below) which enhance carrier maintenance operations by allowing the carrier remotely to sectionalize problems. Finally, the NIU loops the span current, used to power the repeaters in the span, back to the CO.

DSX

The Digital Cross-connect (DSX) panel is a manual cross-connect point that primarily serves as a test access point for DS1 signals and for substituting operational equipment when necessary. This is where technicians will usually connect their T1 test sets to verify the functioning of the T1 link. Using the connections at the monitor ports, the technician can:

- Monitor what the BTS line card is transmitting toward the CSU / Network

- Monitor what the CSU is transmitting towards the BTS line card

- Monitor what the CSU is transmitting towards the NIU / Network

- Monitor what the Network (BSC) is transmitting towards the CSU / BTS

Please refer also to page 14, "The Simplified DSX-1 Patch Panel" for more details on DSX-1 operation.

CSU

The Channel / Data Service Unit (CSU / DSU) provides framing, coding, and facility equalization functions, as well as performance monitoring and history reports on the T1 links in both transmit and receive directions. The CSU connects customer equipment (the BTS line card) to the Telco’s digital transmission equipment (the NIU) and is responsible for maintaining a high-quality, synchronized signal at either interface. The CSU has the following functions:

Provides loopback functions that permit testing of the entire circuit from one location.

- Provides alarm generation if the terminating equipment (BTS line card) fails or becomes disconnected. This keeps the network from losing synchronization.

- Provides T1 access and monitoring for both line and terminating equipment (although this is more commonly done at a DSX panel).

- Performance monitoring of the circuit.

- Some types of specialized CSU (called a "drop-insert" CSU) also allow the insertion of one or more DS0’s sourced from other equipment and services in the BTS, such as base station alarms and CDPD radios.

BTS Line Card

Otherwise known as the terminating equipment or TE, the BTS line card handles the command, control, voice, and data signals from the BTS system and the MSC. It is responsible for framing and formatting the DS0s into the T1 structure on the transmit side, and receiving the same.Also, it is important to note that many base stations may have more than one T1 link in the backhaul; however, the number of T1 circuits is dependent upon the traffic load of the site – the amount of traffic that must be carried back to the MSC.

Testing T1 Circuits

T1 testing is critical to maintaining the network so it can operate at maximum efficiency. Maintenance and monitoring testing can be categorized in either of two ways: in-service performance monitoring and out-of-service testing.

In-service Performance Monitoring

In-service monitoring allows you to take a measure of network performance while live-traffic data is still present on the T1 circuit. Once T1 spans are commissioned and begin carrying live traffic, there is usually great reluctance to interrupt revenue-generating traffic to send known test patterns to check circuit performance. If out-of-service testing is required, it is often scheduled to occur at off hours to minimize impact to customers, although burdening the technicians with late-night testing forays. Since in-service monitoring does not disturb the T1 traffic, it can be performed at any time, under any traffic conditions, and so this method is more widely used for routine maintenance and monitoring. It also allows measurements to be performed on the T1 spans under actual operating conditions. The downside to this method of testing is that the measurements may not be as precise as those available for out-of-service testing. Monitoring live data allows technicians to detect alarms, bipolar violations (BPVs), and frame errors. However, bit errors cannot be directly measured. Bit errors may be estimated by measuring CRC errors if the line is using ESF framing, or Frame errors can provide a very rough estimate of the bit error rate. As previously mentioned, the CRC block error estimation used in ESF framing format is about 98 percent accurate in detecting bit errors.

Out-of-Service Testing

Out-of-service testing is just as it sounds: you take the line out-of-service – removing live traffic from the T1 circuit – before testing can begin.Taking the line out of service generally requires coordination with network technicians as well as with MSC operators, both of whom will observe larms when you take the span "down." With the line out-of-service, a test instrument transmits specific data patterns in place of the live BTS traffic. A receiving instrument is programmed to receive the same bit pattern sequence being sent. The receiver looks at the incoming pattern and counts a bit error for every received bit that is different from the programmed bit pattern. The receiver also looks for other errors and alarms, which are described later in this application note.

There are several ways to perform out-of-service testing – either point-to-point with test instrumentation at both ends of the T1 span, or by creating a loopback at the far end of the span and using a single instrument to measure the round-trip performance of the T1 line. These two methods are depicted in Figure 10. For out-of-service testing, both point-to-point and loopback testing allow detailed performance measurements on any T1 circuit.

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Figure 10: Out-of-service testing methods

In general, point-to-point testing is considered to be a better practice, but it requires two test instruments and two operators – one at either end of the T1 circuit – to complete the testing. Loopback testing only requires a single test instrument and operator, so it is convenient and more efficient than point-to-point testing. However, the downside to loopback testing is that it can only analyze the combined performance of both the transmit and receive paths at the same time; it cannot easily distinguish on which side the problem exists.

Since communications paths cannot normally be taken out of service for an extended period when a problem appears, fast and accurate diagnostics are important. For leased lines, a rapid answer to the question of who is responsible for clearing the fault is also important. Out-of-service testing provides the best diagnostic capabilities for locating the nature of the problem. However, it should only be used when serious errors are discovered when performing in-service monitoring of live traffic, or when installing new circuits, because it requires you to interrupt revenuegenerating service for the duration of the testing.

Basic T1 Measurements

A few basic measurements are generally used for installation, maintenance, and troubleshooting T1 circuit problems. Some measurements are available in-service, while others are only available out-of-service.It is important to note which measurements are available in which testing method and to match those to the needs of your testing.

Frame Errors

This measurement indicates the number of times a wrong bit value is observed in a framing bit position (refer to “T1 Framing Formats” for more information), and can also provide a primitive indication of the bit error rate. Frame errors can be measured both in-service and out-of-service.When observed for a long period of time, frame errors can provide a reasonable approximation to the bit error rate. Measure frame errors only examining every 193rd bit, so the observation period is on the order of hours or days, not minutes, to get this approximation. Another problem with simply measuring frame errors is that some network equipment, notably DACS and multiplexers, corrects frame errors instead of passing them through. This allows frame errors to be isolated within sections of the overall link, but can prevent detection of end-to-end problems if this type of equipment is present in the link.

CRC Errors

CRC errors indicate the number of times the calculated CRC, based on the received data, does not match the CRC word sent from the transmitter on the far end. They provide a count of errors within a block (a 24-frame ESF block, in this case) of transmitted data, and therefore provide an approximate 98 percent accurate estimate of the bit error rate of the link. The CRC check can catch both single bit errors and burst errors.CRC errors can be monitored while the link is in-service, so you can do non-intrusive testing, without disturbing the live traffic. They may also be monitored in out-of-service testing. However, the CRC bits are only available when using ESF framing format, so if you have D4 framing on the line,you can’t make this measurement. And, as with frame errors, some network equipment re-calculates the CRC before passing the data along through the network, so CRC errors may not be visible in end-to-end testing.

Bipolar Violations (BPVs)

This measurement indicates the number of times the received signal violates the bipolar (alternating positive and negative pulses) rule; so the number of times that signals of the same polarity are consecutively received. BPVs may be monitored both in-service and out-of-service. The BPV count is valid for both AMI and B8ZS line coding; the "intentional" BPVs sent in B8ZS line coding are NOT counted in this measurement, as long as the testing device is set for B8ZS line coding. The BPV count provides yet another indication of bit error performance, and can be monitored in-service without disrupting live traffic. BPVs are a good indicator of line quality problems such as repeater issues or line balance problems. However, some network elements – specifically those that may change the physical transmission media, such as fiber and microwave elements – may remove BPVs before re-transmission, so BPVs are usually only useful when looking at copper transmission pairs.

Bit Errors

Bit errors provide a measurement of the number of times the received bit pattern does not match the transmitted bit pattern – errors representing incorrect data in the incoming bit stream, which affect quality-of-service. This measurement gives a definitive, accurate measure of the transmission quality. It gives the number of bit errors (also presented as a Bit Error Rate, or BER) received on the T1 link. However, in order to get an accurate measurement, you must take the line out-of-service so you can transmit a known bit pattern. The receiver must also know this bit pattern in order to measure the difference between transmitted and received bits.Different data patterns can stress different equipment along the line, so you may choose from a host of pre-defined bit patterns. These patterns, and their uses, are discussed in the next section. One shortcoming of BER testing, although a minor one, is that since you must take the line out of service, the measurement does not represent the error rate under actual live-traffic conditions. But if you have a problem that is affecting service, BER testing is the most effective troubleshooting tool.

Errored Seconds

Errored seconds are a measure of circuit performance that is often used as a quality of service metric for tariffed lines. An errored second is defined as a one-second period during which any of the above listed errors, such as Bit Errors, CRC Errors, BPVs, or Frame Errors, occurred.Telcos will typically have a limit defined for errored seconds within a particular time period that will qualify as trouble.

BER Stress Test Patterns

A number of pre-defined patterns – strings of ones and zeros – are available for out-of-service testing of T1 circuit performance. This section should help you understand which patterns to choose for your testing and may also help you understand why one pattern may show no errors while another pattern will fail with errors.

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The Simplified DSX-1 Patch Panel

The DSX-1, or digital cross-connect level 1, patch panel is a device that is commonly wired in-line in T1 links. It offers the technician easy access to patch in test equipment for either in-service or out-of service testing, without having to disturb the physical copper-pair wires. These panels are commonly used wherever T1 links are used, in COs, MSC switch bays, and BTS installations. The DSX-1 is depicted in Figure 11 below. There are several components that need description.

The wiring posts, depicted in Figure 11 as square-post terminals, are used for hard-wiring the connections through the panel, so when not used in a testing mode, signals pass through undisturbed. When testing plugs are inserted into the jacks, the "through" connection is broken, and the signal from the jack is connected instead, with the exception of the monitor jack, which does not disturb the through connection. These are "break-beforemake" connections when equipment is plugged into the jacks.

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Figure 11: The DSX-1 Patch Panel

The MON jack access allows in-service monitoring of the signals. This jack is isolated from the signal through resistors, so plugging in to this jack does not disturb the "through" signal. The resistors that isolate from the through signal also attenuate the signal by about 20 dB, so this is also referred to as the "20 dB down port." If properly wired, the Trace lamps will both illuminate when you plug in to either monitor jack, allowing you to locate the "other" side of the cross-connect.

The IN jack name may be somewhat confusing, since as you can see, the IN jack connects to the Rx port of the digital equipment on either side of the panel. However, when "patching in” test equipment, the tester Transmit output is connected to the IN jack to drive the digital equipment Rx, disconnecting the signal from the far-side digital equipment Transmitter.It’s easy to remember if you take the vantage point of the test equipment – the tester transmitter goes IN to the equipment Rx.

Likewise, the OUT jack name may be confusing. But again, from the test equipment perspective, the tester Rx gets the OUT signal from the digital equipment transmitter. Connecting into this jack connects the transmitter from the digital equipment OUT to the test equipment Rx.