M00002834
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TIA TSB-32 Revision A, December 1, 1998 Overall Transmission Plan Aspects for Telephony in a Private Network
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Description / Abstract:
This Document applies to transmission within private networks
and the interconnection of private networks with oter - mainly
public - networks. It should be considered as a tutorial and
illustration for the planning of private networks with respect to
the voice transmission quality of narrowband 3.1 kHz real time
telephony via handsets. networks designed according to this
document will also provide sufficiently high speech quality for the
transmission of announcements and stored speech.
This document does not address the transmission of non-voice
signals such as Fax- and Modem transmission and wholly digital data
transmission.
The main application of this document is to medium and large
private networks consisting of several interconnected MLTS. The
terms "Corporate Network" or "Enterprise Network" are sometimes
used to describe a large private network; in some countries this
term is used in a legal sense for a group of interconnected private
networks. From the point of view of transmission planning, there is
no difference between a large private network and several smaller
interconnected networks. Therefore only the term "Private Network"
will be used in this document.
The document addresses only scenarios where a "private network"
functions as a terminating network (one to which terminal equipment
is connected). Scenarios wherein a private network provides transit
connections between other networks are outside the scope of this
document, as are the following issues:
• who owns and runs the network
• who is responsible for transmission quality
• to whom services are provided
Notwithstanding these limitations in the scope, the principles
and the information described in this document may be applied to
other end-to-end connections.
For the purposes of this guide, there are no restrictions on the
private network with respect to size, configuration, hierarchy,
technology used, and network components. The transmission media may
be cable, fiber or radio.
The discussion in this document addresses primarily the use of
digital interfaces between the private and the public network
(nearly universal in Europe) but also allows for analog
private-to-public network connections. The signal transmission
within the private network may be analog or digital.
The prevalence of digital signal transmission media and digital
signal handling in switching equipment impacts the relative
importance of various transmission parameters to be considered in
planning. For the benefit of simplification, parameters with only
minor impairments in a digital environment, such as the frequency
shape of cables, circuit noise, crosstalk, variations of loss with
level or time etc., are not subect to the planning guidelines in
this document. More emphasis is placed on parameters such as echo,
return loss, delay, signal processing equipment impairments, and
acoustic characteristics of terminals.
This document does not contain transmission requirements for
specific network elements such as telephone sets, switching
equipment (PBXs) or transmission equipment. It is assumed that the
design of such elements conforms to applicable regional standards
or regulations.