Subscribe to our Newsletter
| Keep informed of femtocell developments with our free monthly newsletter and articles. Sign up and receive a free eBook. Your email address will not be shared with 3rd parties. View past editions |
RSS Feed
Blog updates via RSS
or emailed to your inbox
| Outdoor Cellsite Installation |
| Written by David Chambers |
| Thursday, 17 April 2008 19:21 |
|
Once candidate cellsites have been identified, teams on the ground negotiate with potential landlords to take options on agreements for site rental and come back with usually a shortlist of nearby/alternative sites. One is selected, a site is built including installing power, equipment and transmission back to the operator’s network. Radio parameters are computed which include maximum transmission power, frequency, hopping (for 2G), coding sequence (for 3G), tilt (ie angle of the transmission antenna which can sometimes be set electronically) and a list of neighbour cellsites to handover to/from. Project management systems will track the rollout or upgrade of each cellsite, and at each stage the status will be updated. The transmission network connects the cellsite back into the core network of the operator, and the connection may be routed via leased lines, microwave links or high capacity SDH fibre owned by the operator (often a combination of all three). These are concentrated into an RNC (Radio Network Controller for 3G) or BSC (Base Station Controller for 2G). The transmission planners will allocate capacity from the cellsite to the central switching centre, including the port mappings for each input and output across every transmission hub. These are actively configured at the appropriate point in the cellsite rollout. All basestations and RNCs are managed by a central Network Management System (NMS), which is used to configure and manage the equipment. Radio configuration parameters are downloaded into the basestations via the NMS. Operators often perform these configuration updates on a daily basis, overnight to ensure synchronised reconfiguration across the network, although more rapid online configuration is possible. Fault management systems, such as IBM Tivoli Netcool or HP Temip, are used to capture, collate and analyse alarms and fault indications from the network equipment. They can correlate multiple alarms to filter out the root cause of a storm of error messages. Performance management systems are used to monitor the capacity and overall throughput of the systems, and ensure maximum utilisation of the network. This information is used to identify where additional capacity or coverage is required, for example by tracking where large numbers of dropped calls or failed call attempts occur.
Bookmark
Email this
Hits: 1941 Comments (0)
![]() Write comment
|
| Last Updated on Thursday, 17 April 2008 21:47 |
Keep informed of femtocell thinking. Signup to our FREE monthly newsletter and articles and get a FREE ebook!





