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Uplink RSSI is referred as the uplink Received Signal Strength Indicator of the
totalwideband received power within the entire channel bandwidth. Having too
low or toohigh UL RSSI will contribute to poor quality in the network. Too low
RSSI could simplymean the cell is “deaf” and cannot “listen” to any UE. Possible
reasons arecomponents failure, incorrect parameter settings, incorrect
equipment installation, etc.On the other hand, too high RSSI is equally
undesirable. This case is more often seen.Due to the high noise interference, it
could likely lead to frequent drop calls, call setupfailure and poor voice quality.
Cells with UL RSSI > -90 dBm can be considered ashaving high UL interference.
I have experienced a small cluster of area got inteferred by RF signal jammer from a prison. All 3G/2G
network providers to suffer from it.
Especially on 3G where I am working on, the indication of having too high UL RSSI level and poort
retainabilities (mainly) rates have been observed, beside RRC.
the followings are my workaround which give me nothing to recover the performances:
- change the UARFCN to another value (the operator has more than 1 carrier) --> no impact
- reduce the idle and dedicated coverage by means of p-cpich, qrxlev, qqualmin, minpwrmax,
interpwrmax, maxpwrmax --> no impact
2nd
Quite an interesting problem. Jammers are fairly simple devices but as you are finding out they can
cause big problems. They usually cover the whole band e.g 2100 MHz, 900Mhz, 1800Mhz which explains
why changing the UARFCN didn't accomplish much.
Have you done an RF survey of the area? Is the jamming signal fairly well contained within the prison? If
it is, then the UL RSSI is degraded due to the handsets in the prison trying to access the network using
ever increasing power.
As the RACH uses open loop power control they will keep ramping their power according to the step
sizes and number of attempts you have dictated as the network operator.
If I was you I would have a look at the RACH related parameters and lower them so the handsets don't
power up as much during access attempts. You can also limit the max power UEs can transmit as well
(usually this is set to 21dBm).
Depending on your vendor you might be able to apply these changes on a per cell basis which will be
ideal as you don't want to change your whole RNC parameter design just because of this jammer.
In some countries, the use of jammers is illegal (as the operator has paid to be able to use that part of
the spectrum exclusively) so you might want to explore that aspect as well.
3rd
Try to change the max preamble cycle to 4, preamble retransmax to 8. I am sure this will
not help in anyway the signals from the jammers..but you should see a decent improvement
in accessibility.
As the previous poster had mentioned, make sure that Jammers are legal in your
state..over here it is totally illegal to use jammers and you can bring in the legal
department to take care of it.
There won't be any change if you change frequencies as jammers support many bands at
the same time.