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Radio Link SIAE IDU
Radio Link SIAE IDU
User manual
MN.00142.E - 009
Volume 1/1
Components
Section 1.
USER GUIDE
2.2
3
3.2
3.3
Section 2.
DESCRIPTIONS AND SPECIFICATION
13
LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS.........................................................................................13
5.2
5.3
APPLICATIONS .................................................................................................15
5.4
5.5
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
GENERAL.........................................................................................................29
TRAFFIC INTERFACE .........................................................................................29
7.2.1 2 Mbit/s Interface ...................................................................................29
7.2.2 Ethernet interface (optional).....................................................................30
7.3
MODULATOR/DEMODULATOR .............................................................................31
7.5
7.6
1+0/1+1 IDU...................................................................................................33
8.1.1 Line interface .........................................................................................33
8.1.2 Radio interface .......................................................................................34
8.1.3 Equipment controller ...............................................................................35
8.2
GENERAL.........................................................................................................54
10.2
GENERAL.........................................................................................................56
11.2
TRANSMIT SECTION..........................................................................................56
11.3
11.4
11.5
11.6
11.7
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
12.1
GENERAL.........................................................................................................63
12.2
12.3
Section 3.
INSTALLATION
67
GENERAL.........................................................................................................67
13.2
MECHANICAL INSTALLATION..............................................................................67
13.2.1 IDU installation.......................................................................................67
13.3
ELECTRICAL WIRING.........................................................................................68
13.4
14.2
16 INSTALLATION ONTO THE POLE OF THE ODU WITH SEPARATED ANTENNA .............80
16.1
16.2
16.3
16.4
GROUNDING ....................................................................................................82
17.2
17.3
17.4
GROUNDING ....................................................................................................96
18.2
18.3
18.4
18.5
18.6
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
19.2
19.3
19.4
19.5
19.6
20 INSTALLATION ONTO THE POLE OF THE 4 GHz ODU WITH SEPARATED ANTENNA
(KIT V32323).........................................................................................................136
20.1
20.2
20.3
Section 4.
LINE-UP
143
22 LINEUP OF ETHERNET TRAFFIC (FOR IDU WITH ETHERNET MODULE ONLY) ........146
22.1
GENERAL....................................................................................................... 146
22.2
22.3
LOCAL LAN1 PORT TO REMOTE LAN1 PORT (WITH VLANs) ................................ 151
22.4
22.5
22.6
3 TO 1 PORT CONNECTIONS, SETTINGS FOR TAGGED AND UNTAGGED TRAFFIC .... 157
22.7
Section 5.
MAINTENANCE
163
GENERAL....................................................................................................... 163
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
23.2
24 TROUBLESHOOTING...............................................................................................164
24.1
24.2
GENERAL....................................................................................................... 164
TROUBLESHOOTING PROCEDURE ..................................................................... 164
24.2.1 Loop facilities ....................................................................................... 164
24.2.2 Alarm messages processing.................................................................... 165
25.2
PROCEDURE................................................................................................... 166
25.2.1 General equipment configuration............................................................ 166
25.2.2 Addresses and routing table ................................................................... 167
25.2.3 Remote Element Table........................................................................... 168
26.2
26.3
Section 6.
PROGRAMMING AND SUPERVISION
171
GENERAL....................................................................................................... 171
Section 7.
COMPOSITION
173
GENERAL....................................................................................................... 173
28.2
28.3
GENERAL....................................................................................................... 175
29.2
29.3
AS ODU......................................................................................................... 175
Section 8.
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
LISTS AND
ASSISTANCE SERVICE
177
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
Section 1.
USER GUIDE
DECLARATION OF CONFORMITY
AL7
AL8
AL11
AL13
AL15
AL18
AL23
AL25
AL28
AL38
comply with the essential requirements of article 3 of the R&TTE Directive (1999/05/EC) and therefore is
marked CE.
The following standards apply:
EN 301 489-4 V.1.3.1 (2002-8): "Electromagnetic compatibility and radio spectrum Matters (ERM);
Electromagnetic Compatibility (EMC) standard for radio equipment and services; Part 4. Specific
conditions for fixed radio links and ancillary equipment and services"
ETSI EN 301 751 V.1.1. (2002-12): "Fixed Radio Systems; Point-to point equipment and antennas;
generic harmonized standard for point-to-point digital fixed radio systems and antennas covering the essential requirements under article 3.2 of the 1999/5/EC Directive".
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
2.1
Do not touch the patient with bare hands until the circuit has been opened. Open the circuit by switching off the line switches. If that is not possible protect yourself with dry material and free the patient
from the conductor.
2.1.1
Artificial respiration
It is important to start mouth resuscitation at once and to call a doctor immediately. Suggested procedure
for mouth to mouth resuscitation method is described in the Tab.1.
2.1.2
Treatment of burns
This treatment should be used after the patient has regained consciousness. It can also be employed while
artificial respiration is being applied (in this case there should be at least two persons present).
Warning
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
Description
Lay the patient on his back with his arms parallel to the
body. If the patient is laying on an inclined plane, make
sure that his stomach is slightly lower than his chest. Open
the patients mouth and check that there is no foreign matter in mouth (dentures, chewing gum, etc.).
Figure
Kneel beside the patient level with his head. Put an hand
under the patient's head and one under his neck.
Lift the patient's head and let it recline backwards as far
as possible.
Shift the hand from the patient's neck to his chin and his
mouth, the index along his jawbone, and keep the other
fingers closed together. While performing these operations
take a good supply of oxygen by taking deep breaths with
your mouth open.
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
2.2
SAFETY RULES
When the equipment units are provided with the plate, shown in Fig.1, it means that they contain components electrostatic charge sensitive.
Band
Elasticized
LASER
10
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
3.1
The purpose of this manual consists in providing the user with information which allows to operate and
maintain the ALC radio family.
Warning: This manual does not include information relevant to the SCT/LCT management program windows and relevant application. They will provided by the program itself as help-on line.
3.2
The following knowledge and skills are required to operate the equipment:
3.3
The manual is subdivided into sections each of them developing a specific topic entitling the section.
Each section consists of a set of chapters, enlarging the main subject master.
Section 3 - Installation
The mechanical installation procedures are herein set down as well as the user electrical connections.
The content of the tool kit (if supplied) is also listed.
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
11
Section 4 - Line-Up
Line-up procedures are described as well as checks to be carried out for the equipment correct operation.
The list of the instruments to be used and their characteristics are also set down.
Section 5 - Maintenance
The routine maintenance actions are described as well as fault location procedures in order to identify the
faulty unit and to re-establish the operation after its replacement with a spare one.
Section 7 - Composition
Position, part numbers of the components the equipment consist of, are shown in this section.
12
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
Section 2.
DESCRIPTIONS AND SPECIFICATION
LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS
AF
Assured Forwarding
ALC
ALC plus
AIS
ATPC
BB
Baseband
BBER
BER
DSCP
DSP
EMC/EMI
EOC
ERC
ESD
Electrostatic Discharge
FEC
FEM
HDLC
IDU
Indoor Unit
IF
Intermediate Frequency
IpToS
Type of Service IP
LAN
LAPS
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
13
14
LCT
LIM
LLF
LOF
Loss Of Frame
LOS
Loss Of Signal
MAC
MDI
MDIX
MIB
MMIC
MTBF
NE
Network Element
ODU
Outdoor Unit
OSI
PDH
PPI
PPP
PTOS
RIM
SCT
SNMP
TCP/IP
TOS
Type Of Service
VID
VLAN
Virtual LAN
WFQ
Wayside Traffic
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
SYSTEM PRESENTATION
5.1
5.1.1
General
AL is SIAE's PDH radio series for low-to-medium transmission capacities in frequency bands from 7 to 38
GHz.
Different hardware versions offer a range of tributaries traffic from 2xE1 to 32xE1, with or without Ethernet
traffic, on 4QAM, 16QAM and 32QAM modulation, with capacity up to 105 Mbit/s.
Reduced cost, high reliability, compact size, light weight and full programmability are the key features of
this radio series.
5.2
EN 300 019 environmental characteristics (Operation class 3.2 for IDU and class 4.1 for ODU; storage: class 1.2; transport: class 2.3)
5.3
APPLICATIONS
emergency links
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
15
5.4
SYSTEM ARCHITECTURE
the indoor unit (IDU) that houses tributary interfaces, Ethernet ports modem and controller
units
the outdoor unit (ODU) that converts IF signals into RF signals and vice versa.
The two units are interconnected via coaxial cable. Fig.5 and Fig.6 show a typical IDU/ODU layout whereas
Fig.7 and Fig.8 show the radio block diagram in 1+0 and 1+1 configuration respectively.
5.4.1
IDU
ALC
-
ALC plus
-
Ethernet module can be housed inside IDU, as option, for Ethernet traffic. ALC and ALC plus IDUs consist
of a single circuit board plugged into a wired shelf. Line interfaces house tributary connections and, through
a multiplexing/demultiplexing and bit insertion/extraction process, supply/receive the aggregate signal
to/from the modulator/demodulator.
Main difference between ALC IDU and ALC plus IDU is the increased capacity (up to 32E1 and up to 105
Mbit/s of total capacity) and the possibility to use the bandwidth of transmitted channel more efficiently:
5 E1 streams can be transmitted in the bandwidth previously used by 4 E1 only, 10 E1 streams can be
transmitted in the bandwidth previously used by 8 E1 only, 20 E1 streams can be transmitted in the bandwidth previously used by 16 E1 only.
Line interfaces carry out the digital processing for the QAM modulator and, in 1+1 configuration, duplicate
the main signals on the transmission side and perform the changeover on the receive side. Interfaces towards the ODU house the cable interface for bidirectional communication between ODU and IDU, and implement the IF section of the mo-demodulator.
IDU power supply units process battery voltage and supply power to IDU and ODU circuits. The controller
section of the radio houses service channels interfaces, stores IDU firmware, interfaces SIAE management systems though dedicated supervision ports, and routes external and internal alarms to relay
contacts.
5.4.2
ODU
The ODU houses the interface towards the IDU on one side, and towards the antenna flange on the other.
The ODU shifts the incoming QAM-modulated carrier to RF frequency through a double conversion. The
opposite occurs at the receive side, when the IF-converted carrier is sent to the IDU demodulator.
Antenna coupling in 1+1 systems is done through a balanced or unbalanced hybrid.
Two versions of ODU are available, ODU AL and ODU AS; they differ in output power.
16
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
5.5
MANAGEMENT SYSTEMS
AL radio can be controlled locally and remotely via SIAE supervision software:
SCT/LCT: a Windows-based management system for small networks (up to 100 NE)
NMS5-LX: a Linux-based management system for small-to-medium networks (up to 750 NE)
NMS5-UX: a Unix-based management system for large networks (up to 2500 NE)
These systems provide a friendly graphic interface complying with current standard use of keyboards,
mouse and windows.
5.5.1
Management ports
AL radio terminals connect to the supervision network via the following communication ports:
USB port
5.5.2
Protocols
SNMP along with IP or OSI protocol stacks are used to manage AL operation.
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
17
TXRX
1
2
Q3
LCT
TEST
R AL
TX RX
1
2
Q3/2
V11
Q3/1
RS232
LCT
USER IN/OUT
USER IN/OUT
DPLX
DPLX
LINK 2
LINK 3
ACT
ACT
10/100 BTX
TEST
R AL
DPLX
LINK 1
ACT
Trib. 1-8
Trib. 17-24
Trib. 9-16
Trib. 25-32
48V1
M 3.15A 250VAC
11
PS
1
2
PS2
2
48VDC
12
PS1
- 48VDC
10/100 BaseT
10
2
15
16
M 3.15A 250VAC
48V2
14
ACT LINK
DPX
13
18
+
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
19
SCT/LCT
Main traffic
Services
Services
Main traffic
DSP
DEM
DSP
DEM
DSP
MOD
MAIN
Controller Unit
ALARM
ODU CONTROL
IDU CONTROL
BE
BI
CONTROLLER
DEMUX
MUX
Line Interface
BATT.
INTERF.
MOD
48 V
BATT.
IDU
Radio Interface 2
ODU 2
CONTROLLER
IF
DEM
INTERF.
CABLE
Radio Interface 1
ODU 1
CONTROLLER
IF
MOD
48 V
IF
DEM
CABLE
IF
CABLE
CABLE
CABLE
INTERF.
2
CABLE
INTERF.
1
Rx2
Tx2
Rx1
Tx1
SW
CONTR.
SW
CONTR.
ODU 2
1.5/7.5 dB
4 dB
or
ODU 1
20
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
SCT/LCT
Main traffic
Services
Services
Main traffic
DSP
DEM
DS P
MOD
MAIN
ALARM
ODU CONTROL
IDU CONTROL
BE
BI
CONTROLLER
DEMUX
MUX
48 V
BATT.
ODU
CONTROLLER
DEM
IF
MOD
IF
IDU
INTERF.
CABLE
CABLE
CABLE
INTERF.
1
Rx1
Tx1
SW
CONTR.
ODU
6.1
TECHNICAL SPECIFICATION
Frequency range
-
7 GHz
8 GHz
11 GHz
13 GHz
15 GHz
18 GHz
23 GHz
25 GHz
28 GHz
38 GHz
37 to 39.5 GHz
RF channel arrangement
-
7 GHz
8 GHz
11 GHz
13 GHz
15 GHz
18 GHz
23 GHz
25 GHz
28 GHz
38 GHz
Go-return frequency
-
7 GHz
245/196/168/161/154 MHz
8 GHz
311.32 MHz
11 GHz
530 MHz
13 GHz
266 MHz
15 GHz
420/728 MHz
18 GHz
1010 MHz
23 GHz
1008/1232 MHz
25 GHz
1008 MHz
28 GHz
1008 MHz
38 GHz
1260 MHz
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
21
Transmission capacity
see Tab.2
Tab.2 Signal capacity
IDU type
Capacity
Configuration
ALC
1+0/1+1
ALC
1+0/1+1
ALC
1+0/1+1
ALC
1+0/1+1
ALC plus
1+0/1+1
ALC plus
1+0/1+1
ALC plus
1+0/1+1
ALC plus
1+0/1+1
Antenna configuration
Frequency accuracy
RF spurious emissions
Modulation
Modulation
4 Mbit/s
8 Mbit/s
16 Mbit/s
32 Mbit/s
64 Mbit/s
105 Mbit/s
4QAM
3.5 MHz
7 MHz
14 MHz
28 MHz
16QAM
3.5 MHz
7 MHz
14 MHz
28 MHz
28 MHz
Demodulation
coherent
refer to Tab.4
22
Capacity
4 dB 0.5 dB
Residual BER
1x10-11
-20 dBm
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
+27/30 dBm
+22/26 dBm
+20/n.a. dBm
+27/30 dBm
+22/26 dBm
+20/n.a. dBm
11
+25/29 dBm
+20/25 dBm
13
+25/29 dBm
+20/25 dBm
+20/n.a. dBm
15
+25/28 dBm
+20/24 dBm
+20/n.a. dBm
18
+20/24 dBm
+15/20 dBm
+15/20 dBm
23
+20/23 dBm
+15/19 dBm
+15/19 dBm
25
+20/23 dBm
+15/19 dBm
+15/19 dBm
28
+19/22 dBm
+14/18 dBm
+14/18 dBm
32
+17/20 dBm
+13/16 dBm
+13/16 dBm
38
+17/20 dBm
+13/16 dBm
+13/16 dBm
16QAM
2x2
4x2
2x2
4x2
10-6
10-3
10-6
10-3
10-6
10-3
10-6
10-3
-91
-93
-88
-90
-84
-86
-91
-93
-88
-90
-84
-85
11
-90.5
-92.5
-87.5
-89.5
-83.5
-85.5
13
-90.5
-92.5
-87.5
-89.5
-83.5
-85.5
15
-90.5
-92.5
-87.5
-89.5
-83.5
-85.5
18
-90
-92
-87
-89
-84
-86
23
-90
-92
-87
-89
-83
-85
25
-89.5
-91.5
-86.5
-88.5
-82.5
-84.5
28
-89
-91
-86
-88
-82
-84
38
-88
-90
-85
-88
-81
-83
8x2
16QAM
16x2
8x2
16x2
32QAM
32x2
100
106
103
106
103
106
103
106
103
106
103
106
103
85
87
82
84
81
83
78
80
75
77
72
74
85
87
82
84
81
83
78
80
n.a.
n.a.
n.a.
n.a.
11
84.5 86.5 81.5 83.5 80.5 82.5 77.5 79.5 74.5 76.5 71.5 73.5
13
84.5 86.5 81.5 83.5 80.5 82.5 77.5 79.5 74.5 76.5 71.5 73.5
15
84.5 86.5 81.5 83.5 80.5 82.5 77.5 79.5 74.5 76.5 71.5 73.5
18
84
86
81
83
80
82
77
79
74
76
71
73
23
84
86
81
83
80
82
77
79
73
75
70
72
25
83.5 85.5 80.5 82.5 79.5 81.5 76.5 78.5 72.5 74.5 69.5 71.5
28
83
85
80
82
79
81
76
78
72
74
69
71
32
-82
-84
-80
-81
-78
-80
-75
-77
-72
-74
-69
-71
38
82
84
80
81
78
80
75
77
71
73
68
70
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
23
Power consumption
Configuration
1+0
32W/34W
25W/34W
1+1
52W/62W
40W/62W
(refer to Tab.8)
Guaranteed consumption
f>15 GHz da 40.8 Vdc
1A
1 A
Fuse
Environmental conditions
5 C to +45 C
33 C to +55 C
10 C to +55 C
40 C to +60 C
95% at +35 C
Wind load
260 Km/h
Mechanical characteristics
-
Dimensions
refer to Tab.9
Tab.9 - IDU/ODU dimensions
Width
(mm)
Height
(mm)
Depth
(mm)
250/255
255/255
100/121
278/358
255/255
280/280
480
45
260
IDU 1+0/1+1
-
Weight
refer to Tab.10
Tab.10 - IDU/ODU weight
4.5/5.5 Kg
13.3/15.5 Kg
IDU 1+0/1+1
Panning system 1+0/1+1
24
3.5/3.7 Kg
4.4 Kg
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
Mechanical layout
Fig.13.
Trib. 1234
Q3
LCT
48V
USER IN/OUT
PS
TEST
R
AL
Trib. 5678
Trib. 1234
Q3
LCT
Trib. 9101112
48V2
48V1
USER IN/OUT
PS1
TX RX
TEST
R AL
2
Trib. 5678
Trib. 13141516
PS2
DPLX
LINK 1
ACT
TEST
R AL
TXRX
1
2
DPLX
DPLX
2
3
LINK
LINK
ACT
ACT
10/100 BTX
10
11
12
PS1
13
14
1
LCT
Q3
15
16
1
USER IN/OUT
48V1
PS2
48V2
+
V11
48VDC1
M 3.15A
250VAC
48VDC2
PS
1
Q3/2
Q3/1
LCT
USER IN/OUT
Trib. 1-8
Trib. 9-16
TX RX
Trib. 25-32
TEST
R AL
Trib. 17-24
RS232
M 3.15A
250VAC
Trib. 17-24
RS232
Trib. 25-32
DPX
2
1
TX RX
ACT LINK
10/100 BaseT
1
2
1
Q3/2
Q3/1
LCT
USER IN/OUT
Trib. 1-8
Trib. 9-16
M 3.15A
250VAC
TEST
R AL
- 48VDC
PS
1
2
2
48VDC
V11
M 3.15A
250VAC
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
25
Fig.14 - IDU 1+1 (up to 16x2 Mbit/s coax. conn.) + Ethernet module
26
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
27
28
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
7.1
GENERAL
The following IDU characteristics are guaranteed for the temperature range from 5 C to +45 C.
7.2
TRAFFIC INTERFACE
7.2.1
2 Mbit/s Interface
Input side
-
Bit rate
Line code
HDB3
Rated impedance
Rated level
Return loss
6 dB according to f trend
Accepted jitter
Transfer function
Connector type
SUB-D, 25 pins
Output side
-
Bit rate
Rated impedance
Rated level
Output jitter
Pulse shape
Connector type
SUB-D, 25 pins
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
29
7.2.2
RJ45 interface
-
LAN type
Connector
RJ45
Connection to LAN
Protocol
TCP/IP or IPoverOSI
7.3
7.3.1
Data interface
RS232
Electrical interface
Input speed
9600 baud
Control wires
7.3.2
Alarm interface
User output
-
Relay contacts
0.5 Ohm
100 V
1A
User input
-
7.3.3
30
Tolerance
100 ppm
Equipment side
contradirectional
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
Coding
Electrical interface
7.3.4
RJ45 interface
-
LAN type
Connector
RJ45
Connection to LAN
Protocol
TCP/IP or IPoverOSI
Electrical interface
Baud rate
1.5 Mbit/s
Protocol
PPP
Electronic interface
V.28
Protocol
PPP
7.4
-
MODULATOR/DEMODULATOR
Tx side
330 MHz
Rx side
140 MHz
Type of modulatioln
4QAM/16QAM
Spectrum shaping
versions
Equalization
5 tap
2.5 dB at 106
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
31
7.5
CABLE INTERFACE
Cable length
Rated impedance
50 Ohm
Tx nominal frequency
330 MHz
Rx nominal frequency
140 MHz
7.6
AVAILABLE LOOPS
32
Tributary loop
Baseband loop
IDU loop
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
8.1
1+0/1+1 IDU
The following functional description covers the versions the IDU consists of as shown in chapter "Equipment technical specifications".
The IDU is made up of a single motherboard that houses all the circuitry realizing the following functionalities:
Line interface
Radio interface
Equipment controller
IDU loops.
The different versions of IDU are pointed out in following description only if it is necessary.
8.1.1
Line interface
generation of the aggregate frame by aggregating multiplexed tributaries and service channel.
Tx side
Refer to Fig.19. The 2 Mbit/s input signal is code converted from HDB3 to NRZ format before being multiplexed. The multiplexing scheme depends on the number and the bit rate of the input tributaries. Attached
figures show different multiplexing scheme as follows:
Fig.20 2x2 Mbit/s multiplexing. The mux performs stuffing operation on each single tributary and
generates a proprietary frame embedding the two tributaries to be sent to the Bit Insertion. Opposite operation occurs at the Rx side.
Fig.21 4x2 Mbit/s multiplexing. The mux aggregates the four 2 Mbit/s tributaries generating a
8448 kbit/s frame as per Recc. G.742. The multiplexed signal is then sent to the Bit Insertion. Opposite operation occurs at the Rx side.
Fig.22 8x2 Mbit/s multiplexing. The eight 2 Mbit/s tributaries are grouped in two 4x2 Mbit/s groups
each of one generating a G742 frame structure at 8448 kbit/s to be sent to the next Bit Insertion.
Opposite operation occurs at the Rx side.
Fig.23 16x2 Mbit/s multiplexing. The sixteen 2 Mbit/s tributaries are grouped in four 4x2 Mbit/s
groups each of one generating a G.742 frame structure at 8448 kbit/s. A further multiplexing of the
achieved four 8448 kbit/s streams will generate a frame structure at 34368 kbit/s as per Recc.
G.751. This latter is to be sent to the Bit Insertion. Opposite operation occurs at the Rx side.
The multiplexed tributaries are then sent to the B.I. for aggregate frame generation.
The aggregate frame contains:
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
33
the EOC signals for supervision message propagation towards the remote terminal
All the synch. signals to perform multiplexing (demultiplexing) and BI (BE) process are achieved from a x0
at 40 MHz. The aggregate frame thus generates is sent to the QAM modulator.
Rx side
Refer to Fig.24.
At Rx side the Bit extraction separates the main multiplexed signal from the service signal and then after
a proper demultiplexing process (opposite to that previously described at the Tx side) sends them to the
output interfaces.
8.1.2
Radio interface
QAM modemodulation
telemetry IDU/ODU
cable interface
differential encoding
generation of the shaped modulating signals feeding the IF part of the QAM modulator.
The thus obtained 330 MHz QAM modulated carrier is then sent to the cable interface for connection with
ODU.
34
clock recovery
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
differential decoding
The aggregate signal is then sent to a frame alignment circuit and CRC analysis and then to the error corrector to achieve the BER extimate, the PM and HBER/LBER alarms.
Power supply
Refer to Fig.25. The 48 V battery voltage feeds the IDU and ODU circuitry. The service voltages for the
IDU feeding are achieved through a DC/DC converter for +3.6 V generation and a step down circuit for 5V.
Both voltages are protected against overvoltages and overcurrents. The power to the ODU is given by the
same battery running through the interconnection cable. A breaker protects the battery against cable failure.
Telemetry IDU/ODU
Refer to Fig.19 and Fig.25. The dialogue IDU/ODU is madeup by the main controller and associated peripherals within the ODU. Controls for ODU management and alarm reporting is performed making use of
a 388 kbit/s framed signals. The transport along the interconneting cable is performed via two FSK modulated carriers: 17.5 MHz from IDU to ODU; 5.5 MHZ from ODU to IDU.
Cable interface
Refer to Fig.25. This circuit permits to communicate to the far ODU through the interconnecting cable. It
is mainly made up of a set of filters that:
combine the 330 MHz, QAM modulated carrier/the 17.5 MHz carrier/the power supply
separate the 140 MHz QAM modulated carrier and the 5.5 MHz carrier
8.1.3
Equipment controller
receive external alarms and route them to relay contacts along with the internal alarms generated
by the equipment.
The equipment software permits to control and manage all the equipment functionality. It is distributed on
two hardware levels: main controller and ODU peripheral controller. The dialogue between main and peripheral controllers is shown in Fig.26.
Main controller
The activities executed by the main controller are the following:
Communication management: it makes use of SNMP as management protocol and IP or IP over OSI
as communication protocol stacks. See Fig.27 for details. The interface ports for the equipment
management are the following:
-
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
35
EOC embedded within the PDH radio frame for connection to the remote NEs
Login: the main controller manages the equipment or network login/logout by setting and then
controlling the users ID and relevant password.
Database (MIB): validation and storing in a nonvolatile memory of the equipment configuration
parameters.
Equipment configuration: distribution of the parameters stored in the MIB towards the peripheral
Ps for their attuation in addition to the controls from user not stored in the MIB (i.e. loops, manual
forcing etc...).
Alarm monitoring: acquisition, filtering and correlation of the alarms gathered from slaved Ps. Local logger and alarm sending to the connected managers: SCT/LCT NMS5UX. Management of the
alarm signalling on the LIM front panel.
Download: the main controller is equipped with two flash memory banks containing the running program (active bank) and the standby program (inactive bank). This permits to download a new software release to the inactive bank without distributing the traffic.
Bank switch enables the new release to be used.
Download activity is based on FTP protocol which downloads application programs, FPGA configuration, configuration files on main controller inactive bank or directly on the peripheral controllers.
Peripheral controllers
The peripheral controllers take place within the ODU and are slaved to main controller with the task of activating controls and alarm reporting of dedicated functionality.
8.2
IDU LOOPS
To control the IDU correct operation a set of local and remote loops are made available. The commands
are forwarded by the LCT/SCT program. Loop block diagram is shown by Fig.28.
8.2.1
Tributary loop
8.2.2
This kind of loop is only local and is activated at BI/BE level. Tx line is still on.
36
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
nx2
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
Code
converter
Code
converter
CK
NRZ
CK
NRZ
MUX
2x2/4x2
8x2/16x2
see
Fig. 8.2
through
Fig. 8.5
Frame
generator
BI:
main traffic
services
EOC
FEC
FAW
to/from main
controller
FSK mod/demod
388 frame
generator/receiver
X0 38.88 MHz
Aggregate frame
17.5 MHz
5.5 MHz
8.2.3
IDU loop
This kind of loop permits to check the full IDU digital operation.
37
Aggregate Ck
Ck
2x2 Mbit/s
MUX
proprietary
frame
B.I.
Tx data
Ck
2x2 Mbit/s
DEMUX
proprietary
frame
B.E.
Rx data
Aggregate Ck
4x2 Mbit/s
Ck
MUX 2 >8
G.742
4x2 Mbit/s
B.I.
Framed data
8448 Tx
Ck
DEMUX
2 >8
G.742
B.E.
Framed data
8448 Rx
38
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
Aggregate Ck
4x2 Mbit/s
Ck
MUX 2 >8
G.742
Data
B.I.
4x2 Mbit/s
MUX 2 >8
G.742
4x2 Mbit/s
Framed data
8448 Tx
Data
Ck 8448 kHz Tx
DEMUX
8 > 2
G.742
Data
B.E.
4x2 Mbit/s
DEMUX
8 > 2
G.742
Framed data
8448 Rx
Fig.22 - 8x2 Mbit/s multiplexing/demultiplexing
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
39
Aggregate Ck
4x2 Mbit/s
MUX
2 >8
G.742
B.I.
4x2 Mbit/s
MUX
2 >8
G.742
Ck 34368 kHz Tx
4x2 Mbit/s
MUX
2 >8
G.742
Ck 8448 kHz Tx
4x2 Mbit/s
MUX
8>34
G.751
MUX
2 >8
G.742
Framed data
8448 kbit/s Tx
Aggregate Ck
4x2 Mbit/s
DEMUX
8 >2
G.742
B.E.
4x2 Mbit/s
DEMUX
8 >2
G.742
Ck 34368 kHz
4x2 Mbit/s
DEMUX
8 >2
G.742
Ck 8448 kHz
4x2 Mbit/s
MUX
34>8
G.751
DEMUX
8 >2
G.742
Framed data
8448 kbit/s Tx
40
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
41
DEMUX
2/2x2/4x2
8x2/16x2
Code
converter
Code
converter
nx2
Mbit/s
42
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
to BE of line
interface
FEC
CRC
analysis
& aligner
DC
DEM
QAM
(IF part)
DC
17.5 MHz
5.5 MHz
330 MHz
Overcurrent
protect.
Ck recovery I&Q
D
Carrier lock
Equaliz. & filt.
Decision
Diff. decod.
S/P
battery
48 V
to line interface
QAM
MOD
(IF part)
S/P conversion
diff. encoding
modulating
signal generator
BER extimates
High BER
Low BER
EW
BER meas.
P.M.
Cable
equaliz.
Step
down
I/V
protect
5 V
+3.6 V
Cable
interface
EOC
ODU
338 kb/s
gen/rec.
388 kbit/s
FSK
modem
FSK
modem
388 kbit/s
generator
receiver
Main controller
Peripheral
controller
Alarm/
User Out
User In
USB
LAN
APPLICATION SOFTWARE
Applic./present.
session layers
SNMP
Transport
layer
TCP/UDP
IPoverOSI
Routing
layer
IP
ISIS
ISO 10589
Data link
layer
PPP
PPP
LLC
MAC
LAPD
Q921
LCC
MAC
Physical
layer
USB
EOC
Ethernet
LAN
EOC
Ethernet
LAN
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
43
44
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
Trib. OUT
Trib. IN
Trib. rem.
loop
DEMUX
MUX
BE
BI
IDU
BB
loop
DEM
MOD
IDU
loop
IF
combiner
The indoor unit can be provided with Ethernet module. In this way the equipment has both 2 Mbit/s and
Ethernet ports, and the bit rate assigned to Ethernet traffic is the nominal capacity of the radio minus enabled tributaries.
Description that follows covers Ethernet signal treatment, 2 Mbit/s signal treatment has been described in
previous chapter.
9.1
In the place of V11 or (V28 + RS232) board it is possible to have Ethernet Module.
In this way the IDU is equipped with the following interfaces:
16 E1 interfaces in ALC
total capacity from 4 to 64 Mbit/s (ALC) or from 4 to 105 Mbit/s (ALC plus)
LAPS Link Access Procedure SDH (ITU X.86) for concatenated 2 Mbit/s
bridge/switch between a local LAN port and the radio LAN port
MAC switching
virtual LAN as per IEEE 802.1q (anyone from 0 to 4095 VID for a maximum of 64 memory location)
(see Fig.30)
packet forwarding
A block diagram of IDU with Ethernet module can be found into Fig.29.
In the IDU with Ethernet module there is a "switch" with 3 external ports and 1internal ports. External ports
are electrical Ethernet 10/100BaseT interfaces placed on the front panel. Internal port is connected to radio
side stream.
Ethernet traffic coming from external ports goes to internal port radio side. The radio side port is connected
to streams group of concatenated 2 Mbit/s.
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
45
The concatenated 2 Mbit/s are assembled in a protocol called LAPS similar to HDLC.
In Tx side Ethernet traffic is packet into a protocol called LAPS similar to HDLC. The resulting stream is
divided into the used number of 2 Mbit/s streams. The 2 Mbit/s streams are then multiplexed, together
with 2 Mbit/s arriving from front panel, the resulting stream goes to the modulator, see Fig.29.
In Rx the stream arriving from the demodulator is divided into the 2 Mbit/s streams, then the 2 Mbit/s not
used into the front panel 2 Mbit/s are concatenated and sent to Ethernet circuits. Resulting stream, after
LAPS protocol control, is sent to switch internal port.
9.1.1
2 Mbit/s tributaries
Tributary channels at 2 Mbit/s (E1), connected to relevant connectors into front panel, are multiplexed as
into standard IDU, see previous chapter.
From 0 to 16 tributaries can be selected to be used via SCT/LCT program, all the other available 2 Mbit/s
are sent to switch internal port.
9.1.2
The electrical Ethernet/Fast Ethernet interfaces are type IEEE 802.3 10/100BaseT with RJ45 connector. For
input or output signals at RJ45 please refer to User connection chapter. Cable can be UTP (Unshielded
Twisted Pair) or STP (Shielded Twisted Pair) Category 5.
Standard coding:
EMC/EMI protection:
to reduce EMI every pin at RJ45 connector is terminated even if not used
two signal lines are equipped with low capacity secondary protection to sustain residuals of possible
electrostatic discharges (ESD).
9.1.3
LINK/ACT: color green, ON = link up without activity, OFF = link down, BLINKING = link with activity
on Rx and Tx.
9.1.4
Bridge/switch function
A radio link equipped with Ethernet module can operate like a bridge/switch between two or more separated LANs with the following advantags:
46
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
to connect two separated LANs at a distance even greater than the maximum limits of 2.5 km (for
Ethernet)
to keep separated the traffic into two LANs towards MAC filtering to get a total traffic greater than
traffic in a single LAN.
The bridge realized into Ethernet module is a transparent bridge (IEEE 802.1 part D) into the same Vlan
described by VLAN Configuration Table.
The bridge works at data link level, Layer 2 of OSI pile, and leave untouched Layer 3.
The bridge takes care to sendo traffic from a local LAN, to remote LAN. Routing is only on the basic of Level
2 addresses, sublevel MAC.
The operation of bridge is the following:
when a bridge interface receives a MAC frame, the bridge on the basis of destination address, decides which LAN to send it
if destination address is a known address (towards address learning procedure) and is present into
local address table the frame is sent only on destintion LAN (MAC switching)
otherwise the frame is sent to all ports with the same VLAN ID (flooding).
A bridge is very different from a repeater, which copies slavishly everything that receives from a line on
all the others. The bridge, in fact, acquires a frame, analyzes it, reconstruct it and routes it. The bridge
compensates also the different speeds of the interfaces, therefore an input can be at 100 Mbit/s and output
at 10 Mbit/s.
The mechanism is the following:
from the moment of its activation, the bridge examines all the frames that arrive it from different
LANs, and on these basis it builds its routing tables progressively.
In fact, every received frame allows the bridge to know on what LAN the sending station is located
(MAC address learning).
if the bridge has the destination address into the routing table, sends the frame only into the
corresponding LAN
otherwise the frame is sent to all the LANs except the originating (flooding)
as soon as the bridge increases its knowledge of different machines, the retransmission becomes
more and more selective (and therefore more efficient)
the routing tables are updated every some minutes (programmable), removing addresses not alive
in the last period (so, if a machine is moved, within a few minute it is addressed correctly) (MAC
address ageing).
The whole process of bridging is restricted to the ports which are members of the same Vlan as described
into Vlan Configuration Table.
9.1.5
The first realizations of the Ethernet network were on coaxial cable with the 10Base5 standard.
According to this standard Ethernet interfaces (e.g. PC) are connected to the coaxial cable in parallel and
are normally in receiving mode. Only one PC, at a certain time, transmits on the cable, the others are receiving, so this is half duplex mode, and only one PC uses the recived message.
Then the coaxial cable was progressively replaced by the pairs cable Unshielded Twisted Pair (UTP) as per
10BaseT standard. Normally there are four pairs into UTP Cat5 cable but two pairs are used with 10BaseT,
one for Tx one for Rx. Into 10Base5 and 10BaseT standards, network protocols are the same the difference
lays into the electrical interface. UTP cable is connected point to point betwen a hub and a Ethernet interface. Network structure is a star where the server is connected to a hub and from this a UTP cable is laid
down for each Ethernet interface starts.
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
47
The further step is to replace the hub with a more powerful equipment, e.g. a switch. In this case it is
possible to activate transmission on both pairs at the same time, on one twisted pair for one direction, on
the other pair for opposite direction. Thus we obtain full duplex transmission on UTP.
Activating full duplex transmission it is possible to obtain a theoretical increase of performance of nearly
100%. Full duplex mode can be activated into 10/100BaseT interfaces manually or with autonegotiation
100BaseFx operates always into full duplex mode.
9.1.6
9.1.7
MDI/MDIX crossover
The Ethernet electrical interface can be defined by SCT program as MDI or MDIX to crossover between
pairs so that external crossover cable is not required.
9.1.8
VLAN functionality
LIM Ethernet module works with IEEE 802.1q and 802.1p tag for VLANs and QoS see Fig.30.
The virtual LAN (VLAN) are logical separated subnets so that all the stations, into VLAN, seem to be into
the same physical LAN segment even if they are geographically separated.
The VLAN are used to separate traffic on the same physical LAN too. Station operating on the same physical
LAN but on different VLAN work in separated mode thus they do not share broadcast and multicast messages. This results in a reduction of broadcast generated traffic and above all we get more security thanks
to network separation.
Tag position and structure are shown into Fig.30.
Tag is made up with:
1 fixed bit
Switch crossconnections are based on Vlan Configuration Table where input and output ports or only output
ports should be defined for any used VID.
Vlan Configuration Table has 64 position for Vlan ID range from 1 to 4095.
9.1.9
For each input port it is possible to define where to route the incoming traffic; one or more of the 3 other
ports can be Enabled to exit the incoming traffic. It is possible, also, to route back the incoming traffic into
48
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
the same port. This type of connection are monodirectional. For a dibirectional connection between a generic Lan A and Lan B it is necessary to set the connection from Lan A to Lan B and from Lan B to Lan A.
The IDU with Ethernet module has 3 physical ports and one internal port, radio side. The internal switch
can connect two or more ports together.
Then MAC address bridging rules will be applied to this packet. It is possible to select that a packet follows
the description of Vlan Configuration Table for its Vlan ID.
Another selection is to follow only Vlan Configuration Table.
Packets can exit from a port as Unmodified or all Tagged either all Untagged. Unteggad packets will take
default tags.
For output operations there are 3 selections:
Unmodified: tagged packets keep their tag. Untagged packets remain untagged
Tagged: all the packets will exit tagged, tagged packets keep their tag, untagged packets take Default VID of incoming port.
9.1.10
Disable: all Tagged and Untagged packets can transit into the switch following setting of swicth organized by port.
Fallback: Untagged frames follow the rules of switch organized by port, Tagged frames with Vlan ID
described into the Vlan Configuration Table follow the rules of the table, Tagged frames with Vlan
ID not described into the Vlan Configuration Table follow the rules of switch organized by port.
Secure: Untagged frames cannot enter the switch, Tagged frames with Vlan ID described into the
Vlan Configuration Table follow the rules of the table, Tagged frames with Vlan ID not described into
the Vlan Configuration Table cannot enter the switch.
Operations at the input. At the input port the packet is received and a switching decision must be made.
The switch analyse the Vlan ID (if present) and decides whether and where to forward the frame. If the
received packet is untagged, the switch sends the packet to the port specified into incoming port "Lan per
port" settings. If the packet is tagged the switch check the other 3 destination ports to find at least one
with the same Vlan ID and put the packet into output port queue. If the Vlan ID is not listed into Vlan
Configuration Table the switch sends the packet to the port specified into incoming port "Lan per port" settings.
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
49
Enable unchanged: tagged packets keep their tag. Untagged packets remain untagged.
Enable tagged: all the packets will exit tagged with Vlan ID specified into Vlan Configuration Table,
tagged packets keep their tag, untagged packets take Default VID of incoming port.
9.1.11
Some services as voice overIP and videoconference have some time limits to work properly. A solution is
to increase the priority of time sensitive packets. In this case random crowding coming from other services
affects the delay of prioritized packets a lot less.
Into LIM Ethernet module different priority of incoming packets is managed using Tag defined into IEEE
802.1p (see Fig.30).
Every switch output port holds 4 output queues: queue 4 has highest priority, queue 0 has the lowest priority (see Fig.31).
Priority can be organized by incoming port or by incoming priority tag:
Priority by incoming port. For Untagged packets at each input ports it is decided to send the packets
to one of the 4 queues of output ports defining which is the Default Priority Queue: Queue = 0, 1,
2, 3. For Tagged packets it is necessary to Disable Priority so they will go in the same queue of
Untagged packets.
Priority by incoming priority. For tagged packets for each priority tag (3 bits = for 7 priority levels)
it is possible to define where to send the packets, into Queue from 0 to 3. Priority must be enable
on 802.1p mode only or IpToS mode only (see next paragraph) or first check 802.1p mode and
IpToS mode either first check IpToS mode only (see next paragraph) or first check 802.1p mode
and IpToS mode either first check IpToS mode and then 808.1q. For untagged packets the priority
is defined only by incoming port.
Outgoing packet policy at output ports can be WFQ (Wait Fair Queue) with fixed proportional output policy
8 packets from Queue 3, 4 from Queue 2, 4 from Queue 1, 1 from Queue 0.
50
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
2 Mbit/s
10/100BaseT
MUX
16x2
Mbit/s
MUX
16x2
Mbit/s
CONCATENATED 2 Mbit/s
10/100BaseT
10/100BaseT
10/100BaseT
016x2 Mbit/s
LAPS
PDH
radio
PDH RADIO
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
51
Source
Type/Length
Source
Type/Length
3 bit priority
field 802.1p Canonical
8100 h
2Bytes
3Bits
1Bit
12Bits
Queue 3
Queue 2
Input port
Queue 1
Output Port
Queue 0
52
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
Version
IHL
TOS
16
Total Length
Flags
Total Length
TTL
Protocol ID
Fragment Offset
Header Checksum
Source IP Address
Destination IP Address
Padding
Options
Data
MSB
0
LSB
1
DSCP
Not used
ToS
Not used
Fig.33 - ToS/DSCP
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
53
10
10.1
GENERAL
The following ODU characteristics are guaranteed for the temperature range from 33 C to +55 C.
10.2
54
TECHNICAL SPECIFICATION
see Tab.11
7 GHz
13 GHz
84 MHz
15 GHz
119 MHz
18 GHz
330 MHz
23 GHz
336 MHz
25 GHz/28 GHz
448 MHz
38 GHz
560 MHz
RF frequency agility
Duplex spacing
7 GHz
245/196/168/161/154 MHz
8 GHz
311,32 MHz
11 GHz
530 MHz
13 GHz
266 MHz
15 GHz
420/490/728 MHz
18 GHz
1010 MHz
23 GHz
1008/1232 MHz
25 GHz/28 GHz
1008 MHz
38 GHz
1260 MHz
40 dB
Transmitter shutdown
40 dB
7/8 GHz
PBR84 or UBR841
13 GHz
UDR120 or UBR140
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
15 GHz
UDR140 or UBR140
18/23/25 GHz
PBR220 or UBR220
28/38 GHz
PBR320 or UBR320
20 dBm
"N"
Telemetry
388 kbit/s
Telemetry carriers
Available loops
RF loop
Tab.11 - Nominal output power 1 dB tolerance
GHz
+27/30 dBm
+22/26 dBm
+20/n.a. dBm
+27/30 dBm
+22/26 dBm
+20/n.a. dBm
11
+25/29 dBm
+20/25 dBm
13
+25/29 dBm
+20/25 dBm
+20/n.a. dBm
15
+25/28 dBm
+20/24 dBm
+20/n.a. dBm
18
+20/24 dBm
+15/20 dBm
+15/20 dBm
23
+20/23 dBm
+15/19 dBm
+15/19 dBm
25
+20/23 dBm
+15/19 dBm
+15/19 dBm
28
+19/22 dBm
+14/18 dBm
+14/18 dBm
32
+17/20 dBm
+13/16 dBm
+13/16 dBm
38
+17/20 dBm
+13/16 dBm
+13/16 dBm
Note
In 1+1 hot standby version the output power decreases by the following values:
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
55
11
11.1
GENERAL
The 1+0 ODU (refer to Fig.34) consists of a two aluminium shell mechanical structure, one shell housing
all the ODU circuits, the other forming the covering plate.
Two ODU versions are available and are pointed out in the following description if it is necessary. The two
ODU versions differ in Tx power and dimensions.
On the ODU are accessible:
the "N" type connector for cable interfacing IDU and ODU
the "BNC" connector for connection to a multimeter with the purpose to measure the received field
strength
a ground bolt.
The 1+1 hot standby version (refer to Fig.35) consist of two 1+0 ODUs mechanically secured to a structure housing the hybrid for the antenna connection.
11.2
TRANSMIT SECTION
An RF coupler plus a detector and a shift oscillator made up the RF loop which is enabled upon receiving a
P control. The RF loop permits the Tx power to return back to receive side thus controlling the total local
radio terminal performance.
56
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
11.3
RECEIVE SECTION
The RF signal from the Rx bandpass filter is sent to a low noise amplifier that improves the receiver sensitivity.
The following downconverter translates the RF frequency to approximately 765 MHz.
The conversion mixer is SSB type. The sideband selection is given through a P control.
A second down converter generates the 140 MHz IF carrier to be sent to the demodulator within the IDU.
The level of the IF carrier is kept constant to 5 dBm thank to the IF amplifier stages, AGC controlled,
distributed in the IF chain. In addition the AGC gives a measure of the receive RF level.
Between two amplifiers a bandpass filter assures the required selectivity to the receiver. The filter is SAW
type and the bandwidth depends on the transmitted capacity.
11.4
CABLE INTERFACE
The cable interface permits to interface the cable interconnecting IDU to ODU and viceversa.
It receives/transmits the following signals:
The 17.5 MHz and 5.5 MHz FSK modulated carriers, carry the telemetry channel. This latter consists of two
388 kbit/s streams one from IDU to ODU with the information to manage the ODU (RF power, RF frequency, capacity, etc...) while the other, from ODU to IDU, sends back to IDU measurements and alarms of the
ODU. The ODU management is made by a P.
11.5
ATPC OPERATION
The ATPC regulates the RF output power of the local transmitter depending on the value of the RF level at
the remote terminal. This value has to be preset from the local terminal as threshold high and low. The
difference between the two thresholds must be equal or higher than 3 dB.
As soon as the received level crosses the preset threshold level low (see Fig.39) due to the increase of the
hop attenuation, a microP at the received side of the remote terminal sends back to the local terminal a
control to increase the transmitted power. The maximum ATPC range is 40 dB.
If the hop attenuation decreases and the threshold high is crossed then the control sent by the microP
causes the output power to decrease.
ATPC range can be reduced from the maximum value to 0 dB, by 1 dB step, consequently to a reduction
of the output maximum power through an adjusted attenuation.
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
57
11.6
1+1 Tx SYSTEM
The two ODUs are coupled to the antenna side via a balanced or unbalanced hybrid.
1+1 Tx switching occurs in the 1+1 hot standby 1 antenna or 2 antennas versions as shown in Fig.37 and
Fig.38.
The transmitter switchover is electromechanic type and consists of two ON/OFF switches within the two
ODUs that assure at least 40 dB insulation on the standby transmitter.
Transmit alarm priority is shown in Tab.12.
Tab.12 - Transmit alarm priority
Priority
Highest
Lowest
11.7
Levels
Definition
Priority 1
Priority 2
Manual forcing
Priority 3
Priority 3
Priority 3
Modulator Failure
Priority 3
Priority 3
Priority 3
IF Unit Alarm
Priority 3
Priority 3
Priority 4
Priority 5
Revertive Tx
(branch one preferential)
POWER SUPPLY
The battery voltage is dropped from the cable interface and then sent to a DC/DC converter to generate
three stabilized output voltages to be distributed to the ODU circuitry:
+3.5 V
a voltage comprised between +6.2 V and +8.2 V to power amplifiers operating at different frequency bands
58
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
N
BNC
Ground bolt
Fig.34 - 1+0 ODU version
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
59
60
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
PRx
meas.
BNC
N type
PRx meas
MOD
330
MHz
AGC
12 V
+6.2 to 8.2 V
+3.5 V
DEM
17.5
MH z
ctrl
variable bw
(capacity
depending)
388
kbit/s
control
Alarm
manag
MUX
&
DEMUX
Cable
equaliz.
388
kbit/s
INV
Step
up
140
MHz
REC
17.5
MHz
5.5
5.5
MHz MHz
17.5
MHz
Cable
interface
48 V
DC
DC
1 40
MHz
Alm
loops ctrl
comm
Rx
unit
IF LO
Tx
AGC
approx.
765
MHz
ctrl
IF Tx
PTx att.
control
0 to 40 dB
Tx
Rx
RF LO
unit
ctrl
LNA
MMIC
RF
loop
antenna
side
Tx side
SW control
Rx side
Antenna
side
Tx side
SW control
Rx side
Tx side
SW control
First
antenna
Rx side
Tx side
SW control
Second
antenna
Rx side
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
61
RemotePRx
dBm
Local
Thresh High
Remote
Rx
Tx
PTxactuation
Thresh Low
Rx
Transmission
PRx recording
level
P
PTx control
Tx
of PTx control
PTx min.
62
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
12
12.1
GENERAL
The 24/48V DC/DC converter D52089 is a unit which converts the voltage of 24 Vdc in 48 Vdc.
This unit is housed in a subrack 1 RU unit G52004 with two D52089 units (1+1 version). For 1+0 version
the subrack is G52003 with one D52089 unit and the remaining half front panel has a cover.
These subracks have a free air gap for cooling purpose.
The DC/DC converter unit D52089 is shown in Fig.40.
Fuse 6.3 A
Green LED
24Vdc
IN
ON
M6,3A
250V
ALARM
48Vdc
OUT
2A
CM2 connector
12.2
ENVIRONMENTAL CONDITIONS
Operational range
-10 50 C
Storage range
-40 80 C
Operational humidity
12.3
ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS
Vinput
Voutput
52 Vdc
4.5 A
90 W
75 W
200 mVpp
Conducted immunity
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
63
Conducted emission
Electromagnetic compatibility
EN 300 086
Safety
EN 60950-1
Protections against
Visual indication
Fuse
Fig.41 shows connection from IDU 1+0 AL compact version to 24/48 V converter with cable F03489.
Fig.42 shows connections from IDU 1+1 AL compact version to 24/48 V converter with cables F03489 and
F03278.
Warning: connect only 24 Vdc to primary input 24 Vdc IN.
Warning: power supply from 48 Vdc must be connected directly to ALC IDU.
64
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
AL
Q3
LCT
USER IN/OUT
Trib. 5678
TEST
Trib. 1234
6,3A
M
250V
Fuse 6.3 A
ON
48V
PS
IN
24Vdc
24 Vdc IN
G52003
F03489
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
+
+
65
2A
OUT
48Vdc
ALARM
AL
TX RX
Q3
LCT
USER IN/OUT
24Vdc
IN
Trib. 5678
Trib. 1234
48Vdc
2A
OUT
TEST
ON
6,3A
M
250V
24 Vdc IN
ALARM
Trib. 13141516
Trib. 9101112
6,3A
M
250V
Fuse 6.3 A
F03278
ON
48V1
PS2
PS1
24Vdc
IN
24 Vdc IN
66
Fuse 6.3 A
48V2
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
F03489
48Vdc
OUT
2A
ALARM
Section 3.
INSTALLATION
13
13.1
GENERAL
The equipment consists of IDU and ODU(s) units and is mechanically made up of a wired 19" subrack (IDU)
and a weather proof metallic container (ODU). The two units are shipped together in an appropriate cardboard box.
After unpacking, mechanical installation takes place followed by electrical connections as described in the
following paragraphs.
Different versions of IDUs and ODUs are pointed out in the following procedures if different steps are requested during installation.
13.2
13.2.1
MECHANICAL INSTALLATION
IDU installation
The front side of the IDU mechanical structure is provided with holes at the sides. This allows to fasten the
subrack to a 19" rack by means of four M6 screws.
If two or more IDUs are to be mounted, leave at least 1/2 rack unit space (22 mm) between two IDUs to
avoid overheating problems.
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
67
13.3
ELECTRICAL WIRING
The electrical wiring must be done using appropriate cables thus assuring the equipment complies with
electromagnetic compatibility standards.
The cable terminates to flying connectors which have to be connected to the corresponding connectors on
the equipment front.
Position and pinout of the equipment connectors are available in this section.
Tab.13 shows the characteristics of the cables to be used and the flying connector types.
Battery
68
Tributary signals
a.
Type of cable/conductor
Interconnecting points
LCT
USB connector
USB connector
GND
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
13.4
GROUNDING CONNECTION
Fig.43 and annexed legend show how to perform the grounding connections.
Indoor
ODU
unit
1
IDU
unit
(+) ()
Station
ground
Local
ground
ground
rack
Legend
1. IDU grounding point, faston type. The cross section area of the cable used must be 4 mm2. The
faston is available on both sides of the IDU.
2. ODU grounding bolt. The cross section area of the cable used must be 16 mm2.
3. IDUODU interconnection cable type Celflex CUH 1/4" terminated with Ntype male connectors at
both sides.
4. Grounding kit type Cabel Metal or similar to connect the shield of interconnection cable.
5. Matching cable (tail) terminated with SMA male and N female connectors.
6. Battery grounding point of IDU to be connected to earth by means of a cable with a section area
2.5 mm2. Length 10 m.
7. Grounding cords connected to a real earth inside the station. The cross section area of the cable
must be = 16 mm2.
Fig.43 - Grounding connections
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
69
14
14.1
User connections are performed through connectors on the IDU front panel modules (see Fig.44). The connectors are the following:
Trib IN/OUT: 75 or 120 25pin SUBD male connector. For SUBD connector details Fig.44.
LCT: USB connector B type "Receptacle". For connector detail see USB standard.
Trib. 1234
Q3
LCT
Trib. 9101112
48V1
USER IN/OUT
48V2
PS1
TX RX
TEST
R AL
1
2
PS2
Trib. 13141516
Trib. 5678
70
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
14.2
75 Ohm impedancea
Pin
14
14
Ground
15
15
Ground
16
16
Ground
Ground
17
17
Ground
18
18
Ground
19
19
Ground
Ground
20
20
Ground
21
21
Ground
22
22
Ground
10
10
Ground
11
11
23
23
Ground
24
24
Ground
25
25
12
12
Ground
13
Ground
13
Ground
Ground
a. The 75 Ohm impedance tributary connector pinout is referred to the flying connectors to be connected
to the equipment connectors.
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
71
Description
Tx+
Tx-
Rx+
--
--
Rx-
--
--
Description
D-V11-Tx
D+V11-Tx
C-V11-Tx
C+V11-Tx
D-V11-Rx
D+V11-Rx
C-V11-Rx
C+V11-Rx
72
Pin
Description
RTS
TD
DTR
DSR
GND
RD
CTS
DCD
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
Description
DCD
RD
TD
DTR
GND
DSR
RTS
CTS
NC
Description
relay contact
User input 01
User input 02
GND
NC
User input 03
User input 04
NC
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
73
15
15.1
User connections are performed through connectors on the IDU front panel modules (see Fig.45 and
Fig.46). The connectors are the following:
Trib IN/OUT: 75 and 120 50-pin female connector: for SCSI connector details Tab.20, Tab.21
LCT: USB connector B type receptable. For connector details see USB standard.
Trib: 17-24
Q3/2
Q3/1
A
LCT
RS232
Trib: 25-32
IDU ODU
R
REM TEST
USER IN/OUT
Trib: 9-16
FAIL
Trib: 1-8
WAY
SIDE
CH1
CH2
2Mb/s
USER IN/OUT
IDU ODU
WAY
SIDE
R
REM
TEST
CH1
CH2
2Mb/s
Q3/1
A
RS232
Q3/2
LCT
FAIL
Trib: 1-8
Trib: 9-16
Trib: 17-24
Trib: 25-32
FAIL
Trib: 33-40
Trib: 41-48
Trib: 49-53
74
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
75 Ohm
48
Ground A
23
50
Ground A
25
47
Ground A
22
45
Ground A
20
42
Ground A
17
43
Ground A
18
40
Ground A
15
39
Ground A
14
36
Ground B
11
37
Ground B
12
34
Ground B
33
Ground B
29
Ground B
31
Ground B
28
Ground B
26
Ground B
Note: Join pin 44 with ground A pins, join pin 32 with ground B pins.
25
.........................
.........................
50
26
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
75
76
Pin
120 Ohm
49
23
44
Ground A
24
25
44
Ground A
21
22
44
Ground A
46
20
44
Ground A
16
17
44
Ground A
19
18
44
Ground A
41
15
44
Ground A
13
14
44
Ground A
10
11
32
Ground B
38
12
32
Ground B
35
32
Ground B
32
Ground B
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
32
Ground B
30
32
Ground B
27
32
Ground B
32
Ground B
Tab.22 - Q3/1 and Q3/2 100BaseT connector pin-out for 10/100BaseT Ethernet connection
Pin
Description
Tx+
Tx-
Rx+
--
--
Rx-
--
--
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
Pin
Description
DCD (IN)
RD (IN)
TD (OUT)
DTR (OUT)
GND
Not connected
RTS (OUT)
CTS (IN)
Not connected
77
Tab.24 - CH1 connector pin-out for 9600 bit/s synchronous V.24 interface
Pin
Description
CKTx
TD
DTR
DSR
GND
RD9600
CKRx
DCD
Tab.25 - CH1 connector pin-out for 9600 bit/s asynchronous V.24 interface
Pin
Description
--
TxD
DTR
DSR
GND
RxD
--
DCD
78
Pin
Description
D-V11-Tx
D+V11-Tx
C-V11-Tx
C+V11-Tx
D-V11-Tx
D+V11-Tx
C-V11-Tx
C+V11-Tx
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
Pin
Description
User input 01
User input 02
User input 03
User input 04
Ground
79
16
16.1
INSTALLATION KIT
Following installation kits are supplied with the equipment depending on different versions:
16.2
80
supporting plate plus 60114 mm pole fixing bracket and relevant nuts and bolts (see Fig.49)
adapting tools and relevant bolts and nuts for 219 mm pole (see Fig.50)
1+1 version
-
supporting plate plus pole fixing bracket and relevant nuts and bolts (see Fig.49)
adapting tools and relevant bolts and nuts for 219 mm pole (see Fig.50)
N. 1 3 mm Allen wrench
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
N. 1 7 mm torque wrench
16.3
INSTALLATION PROCEDURE
ODU grounding
Screw
Tool
Torque
from 18 to 38 GHz
Allen screw M3
1 Nm
up to 15 GHz
Allen screw M4
Allen key 3 mm
2 Nm
Fig.51 Fix the antenna side flange to the support with ODU fast locking mechanism. The flange can be mounted
horizontally (as shown in Fig.51) or vertically as function of convenience.
Fig.52 Fix the support with ODU fast locking mechanism to the supporting plate making use of available bolts
and nuts. Fig.52 shows three possible positions.
Tightening torque must be 18 Nm.
1+0 Bandit
In case of 1+0 ODU installation, a bandit pole mounting kit can be used: through slots (see Fig.53) on the
supporting plate two metallic bands secure the plate on the pole by means of clips (use Bandit fastening tool).
Band characteristics are:
thickness 0.76 mm
width 19 mm
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
81
Fig.51 Fix the flexible waveguide to the antenna side flange. Four fixing screws are available the dimensions of
which depend on the waveguide type. Tighten progressively and alternatively the four screws with the following
torque (see Tab.28).
Screw
Tool
Torque
from 18 to 38 GHz
Allen screw M3
1 Nm
fino a 15 GHz
Allen screw M4
Allen key 3 mm
2 Nm
Warning: It is advisable to shape the waveguide flexible trunk, connecting ODU flange with antenna flange as shown
in Fig.57. This avoids possible condensate to be channelled towards the ODU flange.
16.4
GROUNDING
82
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
7 mm spanner or
Phillips screwdriver
Plastic blocks
Antisliding strip
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
83
Use 17 mm wrench
(32Nm torque)
Supporting plate
Use 15 mm wrench
(32Nm torque)
84
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
85
3 mm Allen key
Reference tooth
Reference tooth
1
1
13 mm wrench
6 Nm torque
Position of antenna
side flange
86
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
13 mm wrench
(18 Nm torque)
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
87
88
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
Use 13 mm wrench
(18 Nm torque)
Reference tooth
Reference tooth
1
1
RT1
RT2
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
89
Vertical
Horizontal
Fig.55 - Position of the ODU body depending on the polarisation for 1+0. For 1+1 the polarisation is always vertical: handle at the left side.
90
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
Reference tooth
Oring
ODU side flange
BNC
Ground bolt
Fig.56 - ODU body reference tooth
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
91
92
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
13 mm torque wrench
(6 Nm torque)
1
2
3
4
5
1. Bolt
2. Spring washer
3. Flat washer
4. Earth cable collar
5. Flat washer
Fig.58 - ODU grounding
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
93
17
17.1
INSTALLATION KIT
Following installation kits are supplied with the equipment depending on different versions:
17.2
94
1+0 version
-
wall supporting plate with additional contact surface extension plates (see Fig.59)
1+1 version
-
supporting plate with additional contact surface extension tools (see Fig.59)
N. 1 15 mm torque wrench
N. 1 17 mm torque wrench
N. 1 3 mm Allen wrench
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
17.3
INSTALLATION PROCEDURE
ODU grounding
Screw
Tool
Torque
from 18 to 38 GHz
Allen screw M3
1 Nm
up to 15 GHz
Allen screw M4
Allen key 3 mm
2 Nm
Fig.60 Fix the antenna side flange to the support with ODU fast locking mechanism. The flange can be
mounted horizontally (as shown in Fig.60) or vertically as function of convenience.
Fig.61 Fix the support with ODU fast locking mechanism to the supporting plate making use of available
bolts and nuts. Fig.61 shows three possible positions. Tightening torque must be 18 Nm.
Screw
Tool
Torque
from 18 to 38 GHz
Allen screw M3
1 Nm
up to 15 GHz
Allen screw M4
Allen key 3 mm
2 Nm
Warning: It is advisable to shape the waveguide flexible trunk, connecting ODU flange with antenna flange
as shown in Fig.65. This avoids possible condensate to be channelled towards the ODU flange.
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
95
17.4
GROUNDING
96
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
Extension plate
13 mm wrench
Supporting plate
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
97
Reference tooth
Reference tooth
1
1
13 mm wrench
6 Nm torque
Position of antenna
side flange
98
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
99
Use 13 mm wrench
(18 Nm torque)
Reference tooth
Reference tooth
1
1
RT1
RT2
100
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
Vertical
Horizontal
Fig.63 - Position of the ODU body depending on the polarisation for 1+0. For 1+1 the polarisation is always vertical: handle at the left side.
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
101
Reference tooth
Oring
ODU side flange
BNC
Ground bolt
Fig.64 - ODU body reference tooth
102
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
103
1
2
3
4
5
1. Bolt
2. Spring washer
3. Flat washer
4. Earth cable collar
5. Flat washer
Fig.66 - ODU grounding
104
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
18
18.1
FOREWORD
The installation onto the pole of the ODU with integrated antenna concerns both 1+0 and 1+1 versions.
18.2
INSTALLATION KIT
Following installation kits are supplied with the equipment depending on different versions:
1+0 version
1+1 version
18.3
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
105
18.4
INSTALLATION PROCEDURE
1+0 version
1. installation onto the pole of the support system
2. installation of the antenna
3. installation of ODU
4. antenna aiming
5. ODU grounding
1+1 version
1. installation onto the pole of the support system
2. installation of the antenna
3. installation of hybrid circuit
4. installation of the two ODUs
5. antenna aiming
6. ODU grounding
18.4.1
Installation onto the pole of the support system and the antenna
Fig.67 Set the antenna in such a position as to be able to operate on its rear side. Locate the five threaded
holes around antenna flange. Mount centering ring onto antenna flange and tight it with 3 calibrated bolts.
Caution: centering ring should be mounted so that the screws do not stick out.
Define if the antenna will be mounted with vertical or horizontal polarization. Check that free drain holes
stay at bottom side. Mount bolt type M10x30, in position A leaving it loose of 2 cm approx. With horizontal
polarization mount bolt type M10x30 in position D, leaving it loose of 2 cm approx.
Fig.68 Mount antislide strip onto the pole. Place blocks as in Fig.68 following antenna aiming direction.
Tighten the strip with screwdriver.
Fig.69 Mount pole supporting system with relevant pole fixing brackets following antenna aiming direction as indicated by arrow. Antislide strip should result at the center of supporting plate. Supporting system
should lean against antislide clamp with the tooth as in Fig.70.
Position the antenna in such a way that bolt in position A or D of Fig.67 cross through hole E of Fig.71.
Secure the support system to the pole by means of the pole fixing brackets and relevant fixing bolts.
Fig.72 Rotate the antenna body until the remainder three antenna holes coincide with the three support
holes. Secure the antenna to the support by thightening the relevant passing through bolts.
106
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
18.4.2
Installation of ODU
1+0 version
1. Apply silicon grease e.g. RHODOSIL PATE 4" to the Oring (4) of Fig.75 by protecting finger hands
with gloves.
2. Bring the ODU with the two hands and position the ODU handle at the bottom side. The ODU handle
can assume position of Fig.73 depending on the polarization.
3. Position the ODU body near the support system and align ODU side flange to antenna side flange
(see Fig.74). With respect to the flange alignment, turn the ODU body approx. 30 anticlockwise
and then insert the ODU body into the support and search for alignment between reference tooth
on the support (see Fig.74) and ODU body reference tooth (see detail of Fig.75).
4. When alignment is achieved, turn the ODU body clockwise until "clack" is heard and the ODU rotation stops. Fig.76 and Fig.77 show ODU housing final position for vertical and horizontal polarization
respectively.
5. Secure ODU body on the support system by tightening bolts (1) of Fig.74.
1+1 version
Fig.78 Apply silicon grease, type "RHODOSIL PATE 4" to Orings (1). Insert Orings (1) and (6) into twist
polarization disk (2).
Vertical polarization
Fix the disk on hybrid flange placing marker (4), on disk, close to V mark.
Horizontal polarization
Fix the disk on hybrid flange placing reference (4), on disk, close to H mark.
Caution: Twist disk has two planes. Take care of position marker (4) on twist disk. The position of marker
(4) plane should be in contact to hybrid like in figure. Tighten progressively and alternatively four screws
(7) with four spring washers (8) with the following torque:
Tab.32
Frequencies
Screw
Tool
Torque
from 18 to 38 GHz
Allen screw M3
1 Nm
up to 15 GHz
Allen screw M4
Allen key 3 mm
2 Nm
Fig.79 Fix hybrid to support system with four bolts (1) taking care of RT1/RT2 position shown by labels
of Fig.79. Tighten progressively and alternatively four bolts (1).
18.4.3
ODU installation
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
107
4. When alignment is achieved, turn the ODU body clockwise until "clack" is heard and the ODU rotation stops. Fig.76 and Fig.77 show ODU housing final position for vertical and horizontal polarization
respectively for 1+0 version. Fig.80 shows ODU housing final position for 1+1 version.
5. Secure ODU body on the support system by tightening bolts (1) of Fig.74.
18.5
ANTENNA AIMING
Antenna aiming for 1+0 version and 1+1 version is the same. The antenna aiming devices allow to perform
the following adjustments with respect to the starting aiming position:
Horizontal
15 operating on the nut (3) shown in Fig.81, only after having loosen the
nuts (7), (8), (9), (10) of Fig.82.
Vertical
For vertical adjustment some markers, every 10, are available on support. The bigger marker gives 0
starting aiming position. Once the optimum aiming position is obtained, tighten firmly the four nuts (1),
(2), (11) of Fig.82 and (4) of Fig.81 for vertical adjustment and the four nuts (7), (8), (9), (10) of Fig.82
for horizontal adjustment. Tighten with 15 mm wrench and 32 Nm torque.
18.6
GROUNDING
See Fig.83. On ODU grounding can be connected with the available bolt spring washer and flat washers as
shown.
108
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
Vertical polarization
Horizontal polarization
3 mm Allen key
2,5 Nm torque
2
3
A
C
1. Antenna
2. Calibrated Allen screw
3. Centering ring
Fig.67 - Centering ring position
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
109
1. Steel belt
2. Plastic blocks
Fig.68 - Antislide strip
110
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
2
Antenna aiming direction
15 mm wrench
32 Nm torque
3
1
3
3
1. Pole fixing brackets
2. Tooth
3. Bolt
4. Pole support system
Fig.69 - Support mount on pole
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
111
1. Tooth
Fig.70 - Supporting plate position
Fig.71 - E hole
112
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
D
15 mm wrench
32 Nm torque
A, B, C, D: Bolt slots
Fig.72 - Antenna installation on pole support
Vertical
Horizontal
Fig.73 - Position of the ODU handle depending on the polarisation for 1+0.
For 1+1 the polarisation is always horizontal. Handle at the right side.
Vertical Horizontal
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
113
13 mm wrench
6 Nm torque
H
H
H
H
1
1
H
H
H
H
H: Reference tooth
Fig.74 - Support system for ODU housing and reference tooth in evidence
114
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
Reference tooth
Oring
ODU side flange
BNC
Ground bolt
Fig.75 - ODU body reference tooth
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
115
30
116
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
30
30
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
117
7
8
1
2
4
1. Oring
2. Polarization twist disk
3. Hybrid mechanical body
4. Position marker of twist disk
5. Reference label for twist disk
6. Oring
7. Allen screws
8. Spring washer
Fig.78 - Hybrid and twist disk
118
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
1
RT1
2
1
RT2
13 mm wrench
18 Nm torque
1. Bolts
2. Spring washer
Fig.79 - Hybrid mount on pole support
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
119
120
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
3
Chiave da 13 mm
1
2
Chiave da 13 mm
Chiave da 15 mm
Coppia 32 Nm
1. Marker
2. Vertical adjustment
3. Horizontal adjustment
4. Bolt
Fig.81 - Vertical and horizontal adjustments
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
121
15 mm wrench
32 Nm torque
15 mm wrench
32 Nm torque
11
10
9
5
15 mm wrench
32 Nm torque
15 mm wrench
32 Nm torque
122
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
1
2
3
4
5
1. Bolt
2. Spring washer
3. Flat washer
4. Earth cable collar
5. Flat washer
Fig.83 - ODU grounding
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123
19
19.1
FOREWORD
The description concerns pole mounting of ODU, in 1+0 and 1+1 version, using following installation kits:
-
V32307
V32308
V32309
Differences regard the dimensions and the presence of the centring ring (see Fig.84):
-
V32307
V32308
V32309
19.2
INSTALLATION KIT
Following installation kits are supplied with the equipment depending on different versions.
1+0 version
pole support system plus antenna (already assembled) and pole fixing brackets
1+1 version
124
pole support system plus antenna (already assembled) and pole fixing brackets
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19.3
N.1 13 mm spanner
N.2 17 mm spanner.
19.4
INSTALLATION PROCEDURE
1+0 version
1. antenna polarization
2. installation of the centring ring on the antenna
3. installation of 1+0 ODU support
4. installation onto the pole of the assembled structure
5. installation of ODU
6. antenna aiming
7. ODU grounding
1+1 version
1. antenna polarization
2. installation of the centring ring on the antenna
3. installation of 1+0 ODU support
4. installation onto the pole of the assembled structure
5. installation of hybrid
6. installation of ODUs
7. antenna aiming
8. ODU grounding.
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125
19.5
19.5.1
Fig.84 Set the antenna in such a position to operate on its rear side. Locate the four 2.5 mm
Allen screws around the antenna flange. Unscrew them (use 2.5 mm Allen wrench) and position the antenna flange according on: horizontal wave guide vertical polarization, vertical wave guide horizontal polarization. Screw again the four Allen screws (torque = 1Nm).
19.5.2
Fig.84 - Set the antenna in such a position to operate on its rear side. Locate the three holes around the
antenna flange. Mount the centring ring onto antenna flange and tight it with the 3 Allen screws M4 (use
3mm Allen wrench, torque = 2Nm) .
19.5.3
Fig.84 - Mount the support onto assembled structure (pole support system plus antenna) using the four 6
mm Allen screws (use 6 mm Allen wrench, torque = 18Nm). Two of the four screws, diagonally opposed,
must be mounted with the two bushes around.
19.5.4
Fig.84 - Mount the assembled structure on the pole using the two pole fixing brackets and the four 17 mm
screws (use 17 mm spanner, torque = 13Nm); the heads of the screws are inserted on the antenna side,
the four nuts and the springs between nut and brackets are inserted on bracket side.
19.5.5
Fig.85 - Apply silicon grease (e.g. RHODOSIL PATE 4") on the Oring by protecting fingers with gloves.
Fig.86 - Bring the ODU with the two hands and position the ODU handle at the bottom side.
The handle can assume the positions shown in the figure depending on the polarization. Position the ODU
body near the support and align the wave guide of the ODU to the Wave guide of the antenna: respect to
the position of wave guide alignment, turn the ODU body approx. 30 counterclockwise and then insert
the ODU body into the support and search for matching between reference tooth on the support (see
Fig.87) and reference tooth on the ODU body.
Fig.88 - When alignment of the references teeth is achieved, turn the ODU body clockwise until "clack" is
heard and rotation is stopped. In figure are shown ODU final position for both polarizations.
Fig.87 - When ODU positioning is over, secure ODU body on the support by tightening bolts (use 17mm
spanner, torque = 6Nm).
126
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19.5.6
Antenna aiming
Antenna aiming procedure for 1+0 version or 1+1 version is the same.
Horizontal aiming: 5 operating on the 17 mm nut shown in Fig.89 with a 17 mm spanner, only after
having loosen the two 17 mm nut on the pivot.
Vertical aiming: 20 operating on the 13 mm nut shown in Fig.89 with a 13 mm spanner, only after having
loosen the three 13 mm nut on the pole support.
Once optimum position is obtained, tighten firmly all the nuts previously loosen.
19.5.7
ODU grounding
as shown in Fig.90.
19.6
In further page are explained all the mounting step not already discussed in " 1+0 MOUNTING PROCEDURES"
19.6.1
Installation of Hybrid
Fig.91 The polarization twist disk must be always fixed on hybrid flange.
Apply silicon grease (e.g. RHODOSIL PATE 4") on the Orings by protecting fingers with gloves. Bring the
polarization twist disk with the position marker down. Insert the Oring into polarization twist disk.
Vertical polarization: fix the twist disk on hybrid flange placing the marker of the disk towards V mark.
Horizontal polarization: fix the twist disk on hybrid flange placing the marker of the disk towards H mark.
Tighten progressively and alternatively the four screws and spring washer with following torque:
Tab.33
Frequencies
Screw
Tool
Torque
from 18 to 38 GHz
Allen screw M3
1 Nm
up to 15 GHz
Allen screw M4
Allen key 3 mm
2 Nm
Fig.92 - Fix hybrid body to 1+0 support with four 13 mm bolts (use 13 mm spanner, torque = 18 Nm),
tighten progressively and alternatively the bolts.
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127
19.6.2
128
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Four 13mm
screws
Centring ring
(not present in V32309)
Three 3mm Allen screws
(not present in V32309)
Antenna
1+0 support
Two bushes
Fig.84 - 1+0 pole mounting
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129
Reference tooth
Oring
ODU wave guide
N
BNC
Ground bolt
Fig.85 - ODU body reference tooth
130
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Vertical
Horizontal
Fig.86 - Position of the ODU handle depending on the polarisation for 1+0.
For 1+1 the polarisation is always horizontal. Handle at the right side.
3
1
2
1
5
4
4
1
5
1
2
3
1. 6 mm Allen screw
2. Bush (diagonally placed)
3. 17 mm Tightening bolts (max torque = 6 Nm)
4. Reference point for horizontal polarization
5. Reference point for vertical polarization
Fig.87 - 1+0 support
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131
132
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1
2
3
4
5
1. Bolt
2. Spring washer
3. Flat washer
4. Earth cable collar
5. Flat washer
Fig.90 - ODU grounding
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133
7
8
1
2
4
1. Oring
2. Polarization twist disk
3. Hybrid mechanical body
4. Position marker of twist disk
5. Reference label for twist disk
6. Oring
7. Allen screws
8. Spring washer
Fig.91 - Hybrid and twist disk
134
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135
20
20.1
INSTALLATION KIT
1+0 version
Antisliding bracket
1+0 version
Antisliding bracket
20.2
N.2 13 mm spanner
N.1 15 mm spanner
N.1 17 mm spanner.
20.3
INSTALLATION PROCEDURE
ODU grounding and connection of the cables to the hybrid and antenna
136
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Hook the support to the plastic blocks by means of the hooking pin. Insert to the four screws (4) in the
relevant holes, set the two brackets (5) and clamp them around the pole tightening the four nuts (6) (tightening torque = 32 Nm).
Cover the projecting bits of the screws using the relevant red covers (7). The two holes (8) house the two
tightening screws of the hybrid (only for 1+1 version).
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137
7
6
5
2
7
6
3
1
5
8
4
4
Fig.94 - Pole installation of the support
138
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4
4
Fig.95 - Installation of the hybrid on the pole support (only for 1+1 version)
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139
1
3
140
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RT2
1
RT1
Fig.97 - ODU grounding and connection of the cables to hybrid and antenna
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141
142
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Section 4.
LINE-UP
21
21.1
on site radio terminal installation (perform user connections and ODU installation as described in
the relevant chapters)
check measurements.
21.1.1
adjust antenna pointing as soon as the maximum AGC voltage value is achieved.
The relationship between AGC voltage and received field is shown by Fig.98.
The received field level has a tolerance of 4 dB in the full temperature range.
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143
21.1.2
A factory default address is assigned to each network element that must normally be reconfigured on site
following the network administrator rules.
To this purpose it is required to connect the PC, where the SCT/LCT program has been installed, to the
network interfaces.
This has to be done via USB or Ethernet cable.
Warning: the checks that follow require a good knowledge of the program use.
The description of each menu and relevant windows are given by the program itself as help on line.
Run the program and perform the connection to equipment by choosing from menu "Option" the connection made via USB cable.
Perform the login to the equipment by entering:
Equipment IP address4
IP Address: select menu Equipment from the menu bar and then Communication Setup Port
Configuration. Enter the required port addresses in the available communication ports. Press ? for
details.
Routing Table and Default Gateway: select menu Equipment from the menu bar and then Communication Setup Routing table: enter the routes or default gateway if necessary. Press ? for
details.
Warning: the routing policy depends on the routing type: manual IP/OSPF/ISIS. The relevant routing rules must be normally given by network administrator.
Remote Element Table: select menu Tools from menu bar and then Subnetwork Configuration
Wizard. Station name and remote element table must be assigned following description of the contextual help online (?).
Agent IP Address: select menu Equipment and then Properties. Assign the address in accordance
to the address of the remote element you want to reach.
21.1.3
Radio checks
It is advisable to perform the following measurements to check the correct operation of the radio hop:
Transmitted power
Received power
RF frequency
BER measurement
Run SCT/LCT program and then perform the connection to the equipment you want to check.
Make double click on the select equipment until main RADIO PDHAL window is shown.
On top of the window Tx/Rx power and frequency values are displayed. In case of Tx power and
frequency setup proceed to Branch 1/2 and Power/Frequencies submenus.
BER measurement
-
144
Run SCT/LCT program and then perform the connection to the equipment you want to check.
If the connection is made via USB cable, the IP address is automatically achieved.
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
Make double click on the selected equipment until main RADIO PDHAL window is shown.
On the left side select BER1/2 measure. In alternative it is possible to use the PRBS function if
one or 2 Mbit/s line is free.
Perform the BER measurement and check that values comply with the requirements.
V
3
2,625
2,25
1,875
1,5
1,125
0,75
dBm
0
100
80 70 60 50 40 30 20
Fig.98 - Detected voltage versus Rf received signal
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145
22
22.1
GENERAL
This paragraph deals with lineup of V12252 Ethernet module with details of SCT/LCT program related only
to Ethernet application.
Assuming that the radio link is already in service, with correct frequency, output power and correct antenna
alignment, the line up procedure for different kinds of connection set up of a radio link AL, equipped with
LIM Ethernet/2 Mbit/s module, is hereafter described:
1. Local Lan1 port to remote Lan1 port connection LAN per port, see Fig.99
2. Local Lan1 port to remote Lan1 port connection with only VLANs
3. 3 to 1 port connections, see Fig.111.
Settings here below are intended to be done both into local and remote radio equipment.
22.2
switch
switch
port 1
Lan1
Lan2
Lan1
port 1
Radio
Lan2
Radio
Lan3
Lan3
Nx2
Mbit/s
Nx2
Mbit/s
Local
Remote
146
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147
Link Loss
Forwarding
Histeresys
Output policy
for Tagged
packets: Level
2 priority, if
used, defined
for all the ports
for incoming
packets
already Tagged
148
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Incoming
Untagged
packets at
Lan1 are sent
into output part
queue following
this selection.
In this example
packets are
inserted into
queue 0.
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149
With Priority disabled no check is done into 802.1p priority Tag. All types of packets go into Default Priority
Queue.
150
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22.3
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151
Tagged incoming packet can be treated with FIFO policy or on the basis of their 802.1p priority tag and
ToS/DSCP value for IP packets. There are 4 queue at each output port. The decision about to which output
queue to send a packet is defined into Ethernet switch window selections for 802.1p tag. Into Ethernet
switch window it is possible to select ToS/DSCP button to open window ToS/DSCP, in this window each
incoming ToS/DSCP value is associated with an output queue so it is possible to change the priority of the
incoming packet.
When no info on priority is available, the packet is sent to Default Priority Queue using FIFO policy.
Into Lan1 window select Priority (802.1q), into priority box there are some selections: with "Disable"
switch doesnt look at priority tag; with 802.1p switch looks at Tag 802.1p only; with IpToS for IP packets
only switch looks to ToS/DSCP identifier (into IP frame) only; with 802.1p IpToS switch looks first to
802.1p tag and secondly to ToS/DSCP, see Fig.110; with IpToS802.1p switch looks first to ToS/DSCP and
secondly to Tag 802.1p.
Note: with IpToS switch looks to IP packet and ToS/DSCP doesnt matter if the packets are tagged with
802.1p or not.
In this example incoming tagged are tagged and it is necessary to transfer the packets with no change so
they must exit from output ports tagged, see Fig.109 and Fig.110.
152
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Fig.109 - Add a new Vlan ID to Vlan Configuration Table with output tagged
Incoming
Untagged
packets at
Lan1 are sent
into output part
queue following
this selection.
In this example
packets are
inserted into
queue 0.
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153
22.4
3 TO 1 PORT CONNECTIONS
switch
switch
port 1
Lan1
Lan2
AL
radio
Lan3
Lan1
port 1
Lan2
AL
radio
Lan3
Nx2
Mbit/s
Nx2
Mbit/s
Remote
Local
Fig.111 - 3 to 1 port connections
In this example 3 local port must communicate with corresponding remote ports. All the ports share the
same radio channel but traffic originated and directed to Lan1 should be kept separated from traffic from
Lan2 and Lan3 and viceversa.
Lan1 to Lan1 connection should transfer tagged packets with Vlan 1, 701, 760 and untagged packets.
Unspecified tagged packets must be stopped. Lan2 and Lan3 have the same requirements. For all connections IP packets with high priority TOS should transferred at minimum delay.
22.5
The lineup of Ethernet traffic is made with the help of LCT/SCT. Please refer to Fig.99.
First selection is Ethernet throughput and modulation scheme, in this example we select 16 Mbit/s and
modulation 16QAM (max throughput and modulation scheme depend on terms of licence provided by Siae
Microelettronica). Select configuration 1+0 or 1+1 according system requirements.
Inside LCT, select Tributary window.
If 2 Mbit/s tributaries are needed, inside the tributary window it is possible to activate a 2 Mbit/s input/output on the front panel. When the activation of required 2 Mbit/s tributaries is completed, all the others 2
Mbit/s streams are automatically used for the Ethernet traffic. For instance with a 8x2 Mbit/s capacity if
we use two 2 Mbit/s the capacity assigned to Ethernet circuits is automatically set to 6x2 = 12 Mbit/s full
duplex.
Vlan Configuration Table will be defined in order to group traffic from Lan1, Lan2, Lan3 to Port1. All the
used ports must be Enabled.
Untagged traffic transits only if the selection for Ingress Filtering Check is disabled at each input port and
a separated Vlan for Untagged traffic is set up for each port. See Fig.101, Fig.102, Fig.111, Fig.112 and
Fig.113.
Each port of the switch must be associated with a different Default VLAN ID in order to maintain the traffic
coming from different separated LANs, Lan1 with default VID 3301, Lan2 with default VID 3302, Lan3
with default VID 3303, for Lan1 see Fig.113 and Fig.114.
The correct Cable Crossover arrangement must be selected too.
154
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
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155
156
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
22.6
If we want VLAN with Tag 701, 702 and 703 to transit between Lan1 and Port1 it is necessary to define
Port 1 and Lan 1 as members of VLAN1, 701, 760 (see Fig.116 for VLAN 701 and do the same for VLAN1,
760).
The VLAN Configuration Table will look like Fig.117.
For Lan2 and Lan3 we cannot use the same Vlan if we want to maintain traffic from Lan 1, 2, 3 separated.
We must change the number of incoming Vlan for instance of 1, 701, 760 use 2001, 2701, 2760 for Lan
2 and 3001, 3701, 3760 for Lan3. Connected equipment to Lan2 port should be reprogrammed to use
Vlan 2001, 2701, 2760.
Connected equipment to Lan3 port should be reprogrammed to use Vlan 3001, 3701, 3760.
To prioritize Ip packets with high ToS/DSCP value it is possible to open PToS/DSCP window from Ethernet
switch window and select the values of ToS for which the packet is sent to high priority Queue 3, see
Fig.115. The same should be done inside the remote equipment.
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157
22.7
Example 1: To assign to Lan1 and Lan3 low priority and to Lan2 high priority, while wanting Tagged
and Untagged to be treated in a fair manner on each queue do as follow: select Priority Disable for Lan1,
Lan2 and Lan3; select Default Priority Queue equal to Queue 0 for lan1 and Lan3 (see Fig.104). Select
Default Priority Queue equal to Queue 3 for Lan2 (as in Fig.118).
Outgoing Untagged packets will take priority tag defined into input port, in this case 0. Tagged frames keep
their tag.
Example 2: Wanting tagged frames to be treated according their actual priority and untagged packets with
low priority, all inputs should be configured as in Fig.Fig.119.
Layer 2 Priority assignment is not modified if inside the second folder of the LanX (1, 2, 3) configuration
window Untagged Frame Egress Mode = Unmodified is selected as in Fig. Fig.120.
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AL - MN.00142.E - 009
Impostando questa cartella, i pacchetti senza tag arrivati alla Lan2 sono
trasmessi alle Code Porte di output. In questo esempio tutti i pacchetti entranti
nella Lan2 vengono inseriti nella Coda di output 3 delle porte di output.
Priorit di Input: quando non selezionato Disable, le trame con tag sono
trasmesse alle code 0,1,2,3 secondo il valore di priorit porta di destinazione;
con Disable selezionato per questa porta la commutazione usa la Default
Priority Queue per trame con tag e senza tag, e senza modifica reale di tag
nelle trame entranti con tag.
Fig.118 - Queue selection
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159
160
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Fig.120 - Incoming packets at Lan1 will exit to other ports unchanged according their incoming status.
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161
162
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Section 5.
MAINTENANCE
23
PERIODICAL CHECKS
23.1
GENERAL
Periodical checks are used to check correct operation of the radio equipment without the presence of any
alarm condition.
The SCT/LCT programs running on the PC are used for the purpose.
23.2
check of the received field strength (the reading must match the value resulting from hop calculations);
For checking procedures, please refer to SCT/LCT program and relevant helpon line.
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163
24
TROUBLESHOOTING
24.1
GENERAL
IDU
ODU
Purpose of the troubleshooting is to pinpoint the faulty part and replace it with spare.
Warning: the replacement of a faulty IDU with spare causes the spare IDU to be reprogrammed. To the
purpose refer to chapter 19 for the relevant procedure.
24.2
TROUBLESHOOTING PROCEDURE
Troubleshooting starts as soon as one of the following alarm condition: IDU/ODU/REM is switched ON on
the IDU panel from (see Fig.121) or alarm messages are displayed by managers SCT/LCT.
Two methods are used to troubleshoot the cause of fault:
loop facilities
24.2.1
Loop facilities
The equipment is provided with different loops that help locate the faulty part.
Warning: the majority of loops causes the traffic to be lost.
The available loops are the following:
164
local tributary loops: usually used to test the cables interfacing the equipment upstreams
remote tributary loops: usually used to test the two direction link performance making use of an
unused 2 Mbit/s signal.
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24.2.2
When an alarm condition occurs, the equipment generates a number of alarm messages that appear on
the SCT windows ie: log history area and equipment view current alarm. Investigation on the alarm message meaning permits to troubleshoot the faulty module.
COMMON alarms which are not related to a specific part of the equipment but relevant to the link
as EOC radio link alarm or link telemetry fail. If these alarms are ON the link is lost. Investigation
must be made on a possible bad propagation or equipment failure. See the condition of the others
alarm grouping.
LIM This grouping may generate alarms for the following causes:
RIM This grouping may generate alarms for the following causes:
external fault: demodulator fail alarm and local ODU alarm are generated when the ODU becomes faulty.
RIM failure power supply alarm along with cable short/open alarms or modulator/demodulator
alarms are activated.
external fault: Rx power low alarm is generated given by a bad propagation or by a faulty remote
terminal.
ODU failure: PSU fail alarm or RF VCO alarm or RT IF alarm is activated. If this happens, replace
the ODU.
UNIT This grouping generates alarms when one of the units, the equipment consists of, is faulty
or does not respond to the controller polling. Replace the faulty unit.
CONTROLLER There is not an alarm message relevant to a controller module failure. An alarm
condition causes Led IDU to steady lights up.
Trib. 1234
Q3
LCT
48V
USER IN/OUT
PS
TEST
R
AL
Trib. 5678
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165
25
25.1
SCOPE
25.2
PROCEDURE
To configure the spare IDU the following must be uploaded/saved on the file/downloaded:
To do it, run the SCT/LCT program (see relevant documentation available on line) until "Subnetwork Craft
Terminal" application window is displayed.
25.2.1
166
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
5. Select the equipment you wish to upload a configuration file from (normally the local equipment)
by activating the relevant box.
6. Press OK.
The system displays the Communication Status window where is pointed out:
-
errors area: where error messages relevant to possible abort of the operation are displayed.
At the end of the operation by pressing OK, the system displays, the uploaded equipment parameters present into the Configuration Wizard window.
7. Save the uploaded configuration into a file by selecting Save File As command from File Save
Save File As.
The system will display Save This Config. File.
Type the file name into the proper box (with "cfg" extension) and set the path to be used to save
the file.
8. Press Save push button to finish.
Download
After having installed the spare IDU proceed as follows:
1. Select Open File from Tools menu following this path: Tools menu Equipment Configuration
Wizard File Open Open File.
The system will display Select a Config. File window.
2. Select the wanted file and open it by pushing Open push button. The system will display the file
content.
3. Press Download push button and select Configure Equipment as Current File.
4. Activate the box relevant to the equipment you wish to download configuration file to (normally the
local equipment) and select Configure Equipment as Current File.
5. Press OK.
The system displays the Communication Status window where is pointed out:
-
errors area: where error messages relevant to possible abort of operation are displayed.
6. Press OK to finish.
25.2.2
errors area: where error messages relavant to possible abort of the operation are displayed.
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167
At the end of the operation, the system displays, the equipment parameter present into the Configuration Wizard window.
5. Save the uploaded configuration into a file by selecting Save File As command from File Save
Save File As
The system will display the Save This Config. File window. Into the proper boxes type the file name
(with "cfg" extension) and set the path to be used to save the file.
6. Press Save push button to finish.
Download
1. Select Open File command from Tools menu following this path: Tools Equipment Configuration
Wizard File Open Open File.
The system will display Select a Config. File window.
2. Select the wanted file and open it by pushing Open push button. The system will display the parameters contained into the file.
3. Press Download push button and select Configure Equipment as Current File.
4. Activate the box relevant to the equipment you wish to download configuration file to (normally the
local equipment).
5. Press OK.
The system will display Download Type Selection window. Activate boxes IP port addresses configuration e Routing table . If OSPF facility is enabled, you can only select Standard (IP/Communication/OSPF) Settings.
6. Press OK.
The system will show a warning indicating the possibility to procede the download or not.
7. Press OK.
The system will show the Download in progress.
8. At the end of the download will be shown the file content.
25.2.3
Download
1. Select Subnetwork Configuration Wizard from menu Tool.
2. Press Read from file and then select the desired file (with Rel extension).
3. Press Open push button and then the system will show the file content into the New Configuration
Area.
4. Select into the Actual configuration area the equipment you desire to download, the list of the remote element included the local.
5. Press Send to send the list.
168
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26
26.1
SCOPE
This chapter describes the procedure to back up the full equipment configuration.
This allows to recover the original equipment configuration in case of faulty IDU replacement with spare.
26.2
CONFIGURATION UPLOAD
Foreword: it is advisable to upload the configuration during the first installation. Proceed as follows:
1. Select Equipment Configuration Wizard from menu Tools; Equipment Configuration Wizard window will be displayed.
2. Select Upload and then Backup Full Equipment Configuration; Template Selection window will
be displayed.
3. Select the correct equipment template (in case of uncorrected choice the backup will be aborted).
4. Press OK and then select the equipment to be uploaded from Upload Configuration File window.
5. Press OK and then edit the file name from Save backup as window.
6. Press Save; Equipment Configuration Wizard: Complete Backup window will appear.
The window shows dynamically the backup procedure. If everything is OK, at the end of the upload
will appear the word done showing the procedure success.
7. Press OK to finish.
26.3
CONFIGURATION DOWNLOAD
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169
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Section 6.
PROGRAMMING AND SUPERVISION
27
27.1
GENERAL
SCT Subnetwork Craft Terminal + LCT Local Craft Terminal. They are used for remote and local control of a subnetwork consisted of a maximum of 100 ALC radio equipment.
NMS5UX Network Management. It is used for the remote control of an entire network consisted of
different SIAE equipment including ALC family radio equipment.
For details refer to relevant documentation. SCT/LCT documentation is available as help online.
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
171
172
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Section 7.
COMPOSITION
28
28.1
GENERAL
ALC IDU
28.2
The IDU is available in different versions, each of one identified by a specific part number. This P/N is shown
on a label attached on the IDU mechanical structure, top left side.
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173
Letter/number
Meaning
AL family
4 to 7
0069
0073
0076
0078
0079
0080
0081
0084
0085
0086
0087
0088
0089
0090
0091
Indoor installation
16x2 - 75 Ohm - 1+1
16x2 - 75 Ohm - 1+1EOW
16x2 - 75 Ohm - 1+0
16x2 - coax - 1+0
8x2 - 75 - 1+0
8x2 - 120 - 1+0
8x2 - 120 - 1+1
16x2 - 120 - 1+1
8x2 - 75 - 1+1
16x2 - 120 - 1+0
8x2 - 120 - 1+0 EOW
8x2 - 120 - 1+1 EOW
4x2 - 120 - 1+0 V28
4x2 - 120 - 1+1 V28
16x2 - CX - 1+1 Eth
This part number together with unit serial number is printed on a label, SIAE or custom, positioned on unit
cover.
28.3
IDU Plus Compact is available in different versions; each of them is identified by a Part Number code. This
P/N is shown on a label attached to the IDU mechanical structure, on the left top.
P/N code is composed by seven digits with the following meaning:
Tab.35 - P/N meaning
Digit
Letter/number
Meaning
AL family
Indoor installation
4 to 7
0118
0119
0120
0121
0127
0128
16E1
16E1
32E1
32E1
32E1
32E1
1+0
1+1
1+0
1+1
1+0 + 3 Ethernet
1+1 + 3 Ethernet
The P/N and serial number of the unit is printed on the label placed on the unit coverplate.
174
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
29
29.1
GENERAL
29.2
AL ODU
The AL ODU consists of a mechanical structure that houses all the transceiver circuitry. In 1+1 version the
connection to the antenna is performed through a passive hybrid. Both transceiver and hybrid are offered
in different versions depending on the operating bands, the antenna configuration etc...
A label attached on the ODU structure shows the most significant parameters as:
operating band
part number
serial number
duplexer frequency
A further label is positioned on the hybrid body and shows the number of each transceiver and type of
hybrid, balanced or unbalanced.
29.3
AS ODU
The ODU AS consists of mechanical structure formed by two shells. One shell houses the transceiver module, the other houses the branching module.
Both the transceiver and the branching are available in different versions depending on the operating band,
the antenna configuration, the channel filters etc.....
To the purpose on the branching mechanical structure is available a label showing the ODU most significant
parameters and the P/N of the whole unit.
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
175
176
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
Section 8.
LISTS AND
ASSISTANCE SERVICE
30
LIST OF FIGURES
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
177
178
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
179
180
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
31
LIST OF TABLES
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
181
182
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
32
ASSISTANCE SERVICE
The assistance service provided by Siae Microelettronica will be in compliance, if stipulated, to what specified in the Agreement of Software Maintenance.
To exploit this service, fill in all its parts the Module for the notification of bad SW operation
(RQ.00961) and send it to the following address:
SIAE Microelettronica S.p.A
via Michelangelo Buonarroti, 21
20093 Cologno Monzese
Milano - Italy
www.siaemic.it
Fax + (39) 02 25391585
e-mail siaemi@siaemic.it
32.1
RQ.00961 MODULE
SIAE product name. Identifier or SIAE code of the product whose bad operation has been detected.
Version. Version of the sw product whose bad operation has been detected
Documentation Type. Identifier of the document where the problem has been detected.
Revision. Revision of the document where the problem has been detected.
Volume N. Number of the volume of the document where the problem has been detected.
Page N. Number of the page, into the volume, where the problem has been detected.
Disturbing, if occasionally and in difficultly reproducible conditions, it prevents the use of a main
functionality of the product;
Minor, if very seldom it prevents the use of a secondary functionality without important consequences;
Suggestion, if no functionality of the product is damaged but some aspects (e.g.: user interface)
can be improved.
Recurrent. Possibility (Yes) or not (No) to cause the bad operation after the same sequence of inputs
given to the product.
Repeatable. Possibility (Yes) or not (No) to reproduce the detected bad operation.
Annexes. Possibility (Yes) or not (No) of annexed to the NM and their possible number.
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
183
184
Description. Clear and concise description of the bad operation, comprehensive of the edge conditions and, when possible and applicable, of the reference to the test (identifier and version of the
technical documentation, test identifier).
AL - MN.00142.E - 009
Software
Documentation
Number
Hardware
TROUBLE NOTIFIED BY
Siae Operator Name
_______________________________
Date
_______________________________
Date
_______________________________
Tel
_______________________________
Company/Dept.
_______________________________
_______________________________
Contract N
_______________________________
Address
TROUBLE IDENTIFICATION
SW/FW failures
SIAE product name
___________________________________________________
Version
______
Documentation type
___________________________________________________
Revision
______
Volume N.
___________________________________________________
Documentation
Page N.
Typology
Critical
Important
Recurrent
Yes
No
Repeatable
Yes
No
Annexes
Yes: N
No
Disturbing
Minor
Suggestion
Title:
Description (including enviranmental conditions):
Accepted_Open
Reasons
Rejected
Notes
Analysis performed by
Date
Date
Approved by
FIXED
VALIDATION
MANAGER
Executed by
MN
Closed
Open
Verified by
Date
Notes
Issued by
Terzo L.
Approved by
Gaviraghi S.
Document Ref.
RQ.00961
Date
24/09/02
Page
1/1
Rev/Ver
003