Cisco Systems ISM-BTS-R2 ISM band BTS with 17 dBi Panel Antenna User Manual Appendix Pt 2 40 00047 09 F I C TTA
Cisco Systems, Inc ISM band BTS with 17 dBi Panel Antenna Appendix Pt 2 40 00047 09 F I C TTA
Contents
Appendix 2
Navini Networks, Inc. Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide Appendix O: RFS System Test (Cable Sweeps) Introduction Before installing the Base Station at a site, the RFS and the associated cables must be tested, and the results of the tests documented. This procedure applies to the full RFS sub-assembly and associated cables: data/power cable, RF cables, and the RFS unit. All results are recorded in the RFS System Test Form P/N 40-00093-00. Procedures – Combo & Split Chassis Base Stations RFS Data/Power Cable (Combo and Split BTS Configurations Only) This test will check the integrity of the data/power cable. The cable being tested consists of six twisted pairs of conductors. The conductors will be tested for continuity, opens, and shorts. Male connectors are on both ends of the cable. Each connector is wired the same. You will need to check all cables – the main cable from the RFS to the data/power cable surge protector, and the jumper cable from the data/power cable surge protector to the BTS. The pin layout is shown in Figure O1, looking at the connector face. Table O1 provides the pin layout details. Figure O1: Pin Layout Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 181 Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide Navini Networks, Inc. Table O1: Pin layout Details Circular Connector(s) POWER CABLE PIN OUT Wire Color Wire Color Signal Name RED BLACK BROWN DRAIN BLACK WHITE BLUE BLACK BLACK GREEN BLACK YELLOW +12V A +12V A RTN Heater GND (Shield Wire) RX_EN_BRX_EN_B+ RX_EN_A+ RX_EN_ADiagbusDiagbus+ +12V B Return +12V B PAIR PAIR PAIR PAIR PAIR Perform the continuity test with both the Volt Ohm Meter (VOM) and the power/data cable tester. If the power/data cable tester is not available, perform the continuity test with the VOM. Required Equipment ?? VOM – Continuity tester ?? Jumper for shorting pins ?? RFS power/data cable tester Continuity Test With VOM Step 1. On one end of the cable, short a pair of conductors using a shorting device. Step 2. Using a VOM/Digital Volt Meter (DVM) set to ohms, verify a short is present on the pair at the other end. Step 3. Leaving one probe on one of the paired pins, contact all of the other pins with the other probe, ensuring an open connection. Step 4. Check all 6 pairs of wires in the same manner. Step 5. Verify continuity from the connector case to the drain wire (pin D) on each end of the cable and between each connector case. Step 6. Verify an open circuit from the connector case to each individual wire, except to the drain wire. 182 Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 Navini Networks, Inc. Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide Continuity Test With Power/Data Cable Tester Step 1. Connect one end of the power/data cable to the connector on the power/data cable tester. Step 2. Using a VOM/DVM set to ohms, check resistance to ground on the other end of the cable. Resistance is checked from the case of the connector to the individual pin. Resistance readings (+/– 10 percent ) are shown in Table O2. Table O2: Resistance to Ground Pin Resistance 1K ohms 2K ohms 3.3K ohms 5.1K ohms Pin Resistance 6.2K ohms 8.2K ohms 10K ohms 12K ohms Step 3. Using a VOM/DVM set to ohms, check resistance between the pairs on the other end of the cable. Resistance should be the sum of the resistance of the two pairs, +/– 10 percent. Refer to Table O3. Table O3: Resistance of Two Pairs Pins A&B E&F Resistance 3K ohms 8.4K ohms Pins G&H L&M Resistance 14.4K ohms 22K ohms Step 4. Remove the power/data cable tester from the power/data cable. Sweep Test of RF Cables & RFS Sweep testing of the RF cables and the RFS is performed in three separate steps. ?? Sweep of the cables ?? Sweep of the RFS ?? Sweep of the cables and the RFS together All results will be entered in the RFS System Test Form, P/N 40-00093-00. The total of the insertion loss for the cables and the RFS will be equal to the insertion loss of both parts swept together. Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 183 Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide Navini Networks, Inc. Equipment Required ?? ?? ?? ?? ?? ?? Signal Generator - Agilent 8648C, or suitable alternative, tunable to the RFS center frequency Spectrum Analyzer - Agilent E4402B, or equivalent Signal Generator cable and Spectrum Analyzer cable – Gender can be changed using a barrel connector Male and Female barrel connectors for Signal Generator cable and Spectrum Analyzer cable connections Power/data test cable Navini RFS Test Box Equipment Settings Spectrum Analyzer: ?? Span – 5 MHz ?? RBW – 100 KHz ?? VBW – 100 KHz ?? Sweep Time – Auto ?? Frequency (Provided in Table O4) Signal Generator: ?? Amplitude – 0 dB ?? Frequency (Provided in Table O4) Test Setup When performing each type of sweep, the sweep has to be performed at certain frequency intervals (Table C5). Perform the complete test at the first frequency. Go to the next frequency and recalibrate the test setup. Perform the complete test again. Do the same for the third frequency. Refer to Figure O2. Table O4: Sweep Frequencies System 2.3 GHz High band 2.3 GHz Low band 2.4 GHz 2.5 GHz 2.6 GHz 2.6 GHz EFGH 184 Sweep 1 Sweep 2 Sweep 3 2348.25 2307.50 2400.00 2500.00 2602.00 2602.00 2352.50 2312.50 2440.00 2548.00 2620.00 2641.00 2357.50 2316.75 2473.50 2596.00 2641.00 2683.00 Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 Navini Networks, Inc. Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide 1. Connect the Signal Generator cable to the Signal Generator. 2. Connect the Spectrum Analyzer cable to the Spectrum Analyzer. 3. Connect the other end of the cables together. Use a barrel connector if needed. Figure O2: Test Setup Signal Generator Spectrum Analyzer Signal Generator Cable Spectrum Analyzer Cable Barrel Connector (if needed) Test Procedure The following procedures are for the Agilent E4402B Spectrum Analyzer. If alternative equipment is used, refer to the manufacturer’s calibration procedures. The key point is to make accurate microwave frequency power measurements. Step 1. Turn the Signal Generator and Spectrum Analyzer on. Allow the equipment to warm up for 15 minutes for the output to stabilize. Step 2. Set the Signal Generator frequency to the desired test frequency (Table O4) of the RFS under test. Step 3. Set the Signal Generator output amplitude to 0 dBm. Step 4. Set the center frequency of the Spectrum Analyzer to the center frequency of the RFS under test. Step 5. Set the Spectrum Analyzer to Span = 5 MHz and Resolution Bandwidth = 100 kHz. Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 185 Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide Step 6. Navini Networks, Inc. Take a marker measurement on the Spectrum Analyzer by using the ‘marker to peak’ or the ‘peak search’ function. The screen on the Spectrum Analyzer should look similar to that shown in Figure O3. Figure O3: Sweep Test Marker Measurement Example If the marker measurement doesn’t read 0.0 dBm, adjust the amplitude on the Signal Generator until the Spectrum Analyzer marker reads 0.0 dBm, or as close to 0.0 dBm as possible. This will remove all losses associated with the test cables. All measurement data should be recorded one digit to the right of the decimal point, for example, 31.5dB. Once the test setup is calibrated, these cables will remain in place and will be used throughout the whole test. If the test cables are removed or changed, incorrect readings will result. RF Cable Insertion Loss This test is performed on all RF cables that are installed in the system. This includes the eight antenna cables, the system calibration cable, and all jumper cables. Follow the procedures for either the cables on the ground or cables run up the tower. Test Procedure For RF Cables on the Ground Step 1. Ensure calibration of the test setup has been performed each time the test frequency is changed. Step 2. If present, remove the barrel connector from between the Signal Generator and Spectrum Analyzer cables. Step 3. Connect the cable from the Signal Generator to one end of the cable. Use a barrel connector to change the gender, if required. Step 4. Connect the cable from the Spectrum Analyzer to the other end of the cable. Use a barrel connector to change the gender, if required. 186 Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 Navini Networks, Inc. Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide Step 5. Take a marker measurement on the Spectrum Analyzer by using the ‘marker to peak’ or the ‘peak search’ function. The screen on the Spectrum Analyzer should look similar to the one shown in Figure O4. Figure O4: Insertion Loss (Cables on Ground) Marker Measurement Example Step 6. The result should be within +/– 0.5 dB of the calculated value. If the insertion loss results do not agree with the manufacturer’s data, check the connectors for proper connection to the cable, and check for kinks in the cable. If the Spectrum Analyzer has a distance to fault (DTF) function, it can be used to help troubleshoot kinks in the cable. CAUTION! Cables with results greater than the specified limits (i.e., 2 or 3 dB high) should not be installed, as a potential hardware fault exists. Step 7. Record the data in the RFS System Test Form under “MAIN FEEDER LOSS” or “JUMPER LOSS”. Ensure that the information is recorded under the channel number that is on the cable label. Step 8. Repeat steps 3 through 7 for all remaining cables and jumpers. Step 9. Change the frequency to the next test frequency (refer back to the Test Setup section of these procedures). Perform steps 1 through 8 until all cables have been successfully tested at the frequencies shown in Table O4. Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 187 Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide Navini Networks, Inc. Test Procedure For RF Cables Already Run Up the Tower Step 1. Ensure calibration of the test setup has been performed each time the test frequency is changed. Step 2. If present, remove the barrel connector from between the Signal Generator and Spectrum Analyzer cables. Step 3. Have a member of the tower crew positioned on the tower, at the upper end of the cables, connect the calibration cable to antenna cable 1 with a barrel connector. Step 4. At the lower end of the RF cables, connect the cable from the Signal Generator to the calibration cable. Use a barrel connector to change the gender, if required. Step 5. Connect the cable from the Spectrum Analyzer to antenna cable 1. Use a barrel connector to change the gender, if required. Step 6. Calculate the marker using the following formula: (the length of BOTH the calibration cable and the antenna cable) x (loss per foot at the RFS center frequency for the type of cable used). Step 7. Take a marker measurement on the Spectrum Analyzer by using the ‘marker to peak’ or the ‘peak search’ function. The screen on the Spectrum Analyzer should look similar to the one shown in Figure O5. Figure O5: Insertion Loss (Cables on Tower) Marker Measurement Example Step 8. The result should be within +/– 0.5 dB of the calculated value. If the insertion loss results do not agree with the manufacturer’s data, check the cable connectors for proper connection to the cable, and check for kinks in the cable. If the Spectrum Analyzer has a distance to fault (DTF) function, this can be used to help troubleshoot kinks in the cable. 188 Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 Navini Networks, Inc. Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide Step 9. Divide this value in half and assign the result to the calibration cable and to the antenna cable. Caution: Cables with results greater than the specified limits (i.e., 2 or 3 dB high) should not be installed, as a potential hardware fault exists. Step 10. Record the data in the RFS System Test Form under “MAIN FEEDER LOSS”. Ensure that the information is recorded under the channel number that is on the cable label. Step 11. Repeat steps 3 through 10 for antenna cables 2 through 8. Step 12. When finished, take the average of the eight values obtained for the calibration cable. Use this value for the insertion loss of the calibration cable. Step 13. Change the frequency to the next test frequency (refer back to Test Setup). Perform steps 1 through 12 until all cables have been successfully tested at the frequencies given in Table O4. Step 14. Check the value of the nine jumpers at all three frequencies, per the procedure for cables on the ground. Record the data in the RFS System Test Form under “JUMPER LOSS”. Ensure that the information is recorded under the channel number that is on the cable label. RFS Test Box Setup Step 1. For RFS only testing, connect the power/data test cable to the data connector on the RFS and to the RFS Test Box. - OR - For RFS and cable testing, connect the installation power/data cable to the data connector on the RFS and to the RFS Test Box. Refer to Figure O6. Step 2. Connect the RFS Test Box power supply to the RFS Test Box. Step 3. Plug the RFS Test Box power supply into a 110 VAC outlet. Figure O6: RFS Only Testing Setup Power/Data cable connected to the RFS RFS Test Box power supply Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 RFS Test Box 189 Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide Navini Networks, Inc. RFS Only Transmit Verification Ensure that the calibration of the test setup and RFS Test Box setup for RFS Only has been performed each time the test frequency is changed. Refer to Figure O7. Step 1. Switch the RFS Test Box to the transmit (Tx) mode. Step 2. Connect the cable from the Spectrum Analyzer to the RFS cal connector. Use a barrel connector to change the gender, if required. Step 3. Connect the cable from the Signal Generator to the RFS antenna input number 1. Use a barrel connector to change the gender, if required. Figure O7: RFS Only Tx Verification Barrel connector Signal Generator cable to RFS antenna 1 connector Spectrum Analyzer cable to RFS cal connector Note: The position of the RFS will vary the sweep results due to reflections from the test surface. Step 4. Take a marker measurement on the Spectrum Analyzer by using the ‘marker to peak’ or the ‘peak search’ function. The screen on the Spectrum Analyzer should look similar to the one shown in Figure O8. 190 Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 Navini Networks, Inc. Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide Figure O8: RFS Only Tx Marker Measurement Example Step 5. The marker value should be equal to the RFS Only Tx insertion loss within +/– 2.0 dB, per the manufacturer’s data. If the insertion loss results do not agree with the manufacturer’s data, check the test setup. Caution: An RFS with results greater than the +/– 2.0 dB limits should not be installed, as a potential hardware fault exists. Contact Navini Networks Technical Support. Step 6. Record the data in the RFS System Test Form under “RFS TX PATH LOSS (RFS ONLY)”. Ensure that the information is recorded under the channel number of the RFS antenna that is being tested. Step 7. Repeat steps 5 and 6 for the remaining seven antenna inputs on the RFS. Step 8. Change to the next test frequency (refer back to Test Setup). Perform steps 1 through 8 until the RFS has been successfully tested at the frequencies shown in Table O4. RFS Only Receive Verification Step 1. Ensure calibration of the test setup and RFS Test Box setup for RFS Only has been performed each time the test frequency is changed. Step 2. Switch the RFS Test Box to the Receive (Rx) mode. Step 3. Connect the cable from the Signal Generator to the RFS cal connector. Use a barrel connector to change the gender, if required. Step 4. Connect the cable from the Spectrum Analyzer to the RFS antenna input number 1. Use a barrel connector to change the gender, if required. See Figure O9. Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 191 Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide Navini Networks, Inc. Figure O9: RFS Only Rx Verification Signal Generator cable to RFS cal connector Barrel connector Spectrum Analyzer cable to RFS antenna 1 connector Note: The position of the RFS will vary the sweep results due to reflections from the test surface. Step 5. Take a marker measurement on the Spectrum Analyzer by using the ‘marker to peak’ or the ‘peak search’ function. The screen on the Spectrum Analyzer should look similar to the one shown in Figure O10. Figure O10: RFS Only Rx Marker Measurement Example 192 Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 Navini Networks, Inc. Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide Step 6. The marker value should be equal to the RFS Only Rx insertion loss within +/– 2.0 dB, per the manufacturer’s data. If the insertion loss results do not agree with the manufacturer’s data, check the test setup. Caution: An RFS with results greater than the +/– 2.0 dB limits should not be installed, as a potential hardware fault exists. Contact Navini Networks Technical Support. Step 7. Record the data in the RFS System Test Form under “RFS RX PATH LOSS (RFS ONLY)”. Ensure that the information is recorded under the channel number that is on the RFS antenna that is being tested. Step 8. Repeat steps 5 through 7 for the remaining seven antenna inputs on the RFS. Step 9. Change the frequency to the next test frequency (refer back to Test Setup). Perform steps 1 through 8 until the RFS has been successfully tested at the frequencies shown in Table O4. RFS & Cables Transmit Verification This test is performed after the RFS is installed and the antenna cables, calibration cable, and power/data cable are connected to the inputs on the RFS. Step 1. Ensure calibration of the test setup and RFS Test Box setup for RFS and cables has been performed each time the test frequency is changed. Step 2. Switch the RFS Test Box to the Transmit (Tx) mode. Step 3. Connect the cable from the Spectrum Analyzer to the RFS calibration cable connector. Use a barrel connector to change the gender, if required. Step 4. Connect the cable from the Signal Generator to the RFS antenna cable number 1 connector. Use a barrel connector to change the gender, if required. Step 5. Take a marker measurement on the Spectrum Analyzer by using the ‘marker to peak’ or the ‘peak search’ function. The screen on the Spectrum Analyzer should look similar to the one shown in Figure O11. Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 193 Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide Navini Networks, Inc. Figure O11: RFS & Cables Tx Marker Measurement Example Step 6. The marker value should be equal to the RFS Only Tx insertion loss + calibration cable loss + antenna cable loss + antenna cable jumper loss. Transmit insertion loss should be within +/– 2.0 dB of the sum of the parts. If the insertion loss results do not agree with the manufacturer’s data, check the test setup and the cable connections. Caution: If RFS & cables test results are greater than the +/– 2.0 dB limits, they should not be installed on a tower, as a potential hardware fault exists. Verify the connections and contact Navini Networks Technical Support. Step 7. Record the data in the RFS System Test Form under “TOTAL TX PATH LOSS (CABLE-RFS)”. Ensure that the information is recorded under the channel number that is on the cable label. Step 8. Repeat steps 5 through 7 for the remaining seven antenna cable inputs on the RFS. Step 9. Change the frequency to the next test frequency (refer to Test Setup). Perform steps 1 through 8 until the RFS has been successfully tested at the frequencies shown in Table O4. 194 Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 Navini Networks, Inc. Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide RFS & Cables Receive Verification This test is performed after the RFS is installed and the antenna cables, calibration cable, and power/data cable are connected to the inputs on the RFS. Step 1. Ensure that the calibration of the test setup and RFS Test Box setup for RFS and cables has been performed each time the test frequency is changed. Step 2. Switch the RFS Test Box to the Receive (Rx) mode. Step 3. If present, remove the barrel connector from between the Signal Generator and Spectrum Analyzer cables. Step 4. Connect the cable from the Signal Generator to the RFS calibration cable connector. Use a barrel connector to change the gender, if required. Step 5. Connect the cable from the Spectrum Analyzer to the RFS antenna cable number 1 connector. Use a barrel connector to change the gender, if required. Take a marker measurement on the Spectrum Analyzer by using the ‘marker to peak’ or the ‘peak search’ function. The screen on the Spectrum Analyzer should look similar to the one shown in Figure O12. Figure O12: RFS & Cables Rx Marker Measurement Example The marker value should be equal to the RFS Only RX Insertion Loss + Calibration Cable Loss + Antenna Cable Loss + Antenna Cable Jumper Loss. RX Insertion Loss should be within +/– 2.0 dB of the sum of the parts. If the Insertion Loss results do not agree with the manufacturers data, check the test setup and the cable connections. Caution: If RFS & cables test results are greater than the +/– 2.0 dB limits, they should not be installed on a tower, as a potential hardware fault exists. Verify connections and contact Navini Networks Technical Support. Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 195 Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide Navini Networks, Inc. Record the data in the RFS System Test Form under “TOTAL RX PATH LOSS (CABLERFS)”. Ensure that the information is recorded under the channel number that is on the cable label. Repeat steps 5 through 8 for the remaining seven antenna cable inputs on the RFS. Change the frequency to the next test frequency (refer to Test Setup). Perform steps 1 through 9 until the RFS has been successfully tested at the frequencies given in Table O4. Procedures – TTA Base Station Equipment Required ?? Signal Generator - Agilent 8648D, or suitable alternative, tunable to the RFS center frequency ?? Spectrum Analyzer - Agilent E4404B, or equivalent ?? QMA female to SMA Female adapter ?? SMA male to N-type male test cable (Note: The cable can be changed but additional adapters will be required.) ?? RFS test box for RFS tests only (not required for cable tests) – see Figure O13 Figure O13: RFS & RFC Test Box ?? JP1 - Cable port to be connected to the RFC or the RFS. ?? M1/M2 - RFC DC output test points. ?? Load Button - Tests RFC full Current load. Used in conjunction with Power LED by JP1. ?? RX/TX switch - Supplies power to the RX or RX circuit in the RFS. ?? RFC/RFS switch - Moved to the RFS for testing of the RFS and to the RFC for testing of the RFC. ?? 10.7MHz - Test point to measure the 10.7 MHz signal output of the RFC. ?? J1 - External control of switches. (Engineering use only) ?? P1 - DC power supply connection. (Used for RFS testing only) ?? JP2 - Connection point for test equipment (DC blocked port) 196 Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 Navini Networks, Inc. Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide Equipment Set-up ?? Spectrum Analyzer - connected to the test cable / QMA adapter on BTS end Center Frequency: Set to frequency to be tested Span: 10 MHz Resolution Bandwidth: 100 KHz Video Bandwidth: 100 KHz Sweep Time: Auto ?? Signal Generator - connected to the RFS cable end Frequency: Set to frequency to be tested Signal Level: 0 dB Equipment Calibration Refer to Figure O14 to calibrate the test equipment. Step 1. Perform “Equipment Set-Up”. Step 2. Connect the test cable from the “RF Output” of the Signal Generator to the “RF input” of the Spectrum Analyzer. Step 3. Turn on the RF output of the Signal Generator. Step 4. Perform a “peak search” on the Spectrum Analyzer. Step 5. Set a Delta point. The Delta sets a zero point on the Spectrum Analyzer so that when any additional cable or equipment is added to the link the new loss reading can be recorded. (Note: If the Spectrum Analyzer does not have a Delta function, increase the output of the Signal Generator until there is a 0 dB reading on the Spectrum Analyzer.) Figure O14: Calibrate Test Equipment Signal Generator Spectrum Analyzer Test cable Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 197 Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide Navini Networks, Inc. RF Cable Sweeps Procedure This section provides step-by-step procedures for calibrating the test equipment and performing insertion loss measurements of the RF cable. Refer to Figure O15. Step 1. Calibrate the test equipment. Step 2. Connect Signal Generator to cable 1 on the RFS side to the RF cable. Step 3. Connect spectrum analyzer to cable 1 on BTS side of RF cable. This will be done with the test cable and the QMA/SMA adapter. Step 4. Enable the RF on the signal generator. Step 5. From the Delta marker found in Step 1 take the loss reading in db. Record the results. Step 6. Perform steps 2 through 5 for all cables. Figure O15: RF Cable Test BTS End RFS End QMA N-Type RF Cable RFS Test Procedure This procedure is performed twice for an installation. The first sweep is performed prior to mounting the RFS on the tower. This test verifies that all the equipment is in tact from shipment. These sweeps will need to be compared to the factory sweeps that are shipped with the RFS. The second sweep is performed after the RFS has been mounted on the tower and the RF cables have been connected. This sweep verifies that no damage was done to the RFS when hoisting it, and that the RF cables are properly connected to the RFS. Step 1. Perform the “Equipment Set-up”. Note: When performing the transmit (TX) side tests on the RFS, the signal level from the Signal Generator needs to be lowered to at least –20 dB. The RFS has protection circuits built in and will disable the PAs in the RFS if the incoming signal is too high. Step 2. Perform the “Equipment Calibration”. Step 3. Configure the test equipment as shown in Figure O16. ?? Spectrum Analyzer to the Cal Port ?? Signal Generator to the test equipment port of the test box. ?? Test box RFC/RFS port to the antenna 198 Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 Navini Networks, Inc. Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide Figure O16: Transmit Side Signal Generator Spectrum Analyzer RFS 84 7 3 Test cable 6 2 5 1 Test cable Test cable Step 4. Set the test box to RFS and TX. Step 5. From the Delta marker established during the calibration, record the insertion loss dB level. Step 6. Perform Step 5 for all eight antennas. Step 7. Set the Signal Generator output level to 0 dB and recalibrate the test equipment. Step 8. Configure the test equipment as shown in Figure O17. ?? Signal Generator to the Cal Port ?? Spectrum Analyzer to the test equipment port of the test box. ?? Test box RFC/RFS port to the antenna Figure O17: Receive Side Spectrum Analyzer Signal Generator RFS Test cable 8 4 73 6 2 5 1 Test cable Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 Test cable 199 Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide Step 9. Navini Networks, Inc. Set the test box to RX. Step 10. From the Delta maker set on calibration, record the insertion loss value from the Spectrum Analyzer. Step 11. Repeat Step 10 for all eight antennas. Compare all recorded TX and RX values with the factory sweep results that are shipped with the RFS. If there is a mismatch, contact Navini Technical Support. 200 Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 Navini Networks, Inc. Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide 2.4 RFS System Test Form (Combo & Split Chassis) 2.4 GHz RFS INSTALL TEST RESULT FORM RFS SN NAME DATE MEASUREMENT DESCRIPTION RFS TX RFS TX RFS TX RFS TX RFS TX RFS TX RFS TX RFS TX RFS RX RFS RX RFS RX RFS RX RFS RX RFS RX RFS RX RFS RX PATH LOSS (RFS ONLY) PATH LOSS (RFS ONLY) PATH LOSS (RFS ONLY) PATH LOSS (RFS ONLY) PATH LOSS (RFS ONLY) PATH LOSS (RFS ONLY) PATH LOSS (RFS ONLY) PATH LOSS (RFS ONLY) PATH LOSS (RFS ONLY) PATH LOSS (RFS ONLY) PATH LOSS (RFS ONLY) PATH LOSS (RFS ONLY) PATH LOSS (RFS ONLY) PATH LOSS (RFS ONLY) PATH LOSS (RFS ONLY) PATH LOSS (RFS ONLY) JUMPER LOSS JUMPER LOSS JUMPER LOSS JUMPER LOSS JUMPER LOSS JUMPER LOSS JUMPER LOSS JUMPER LOSS JUMPER LOSS MAIN FEEDER LOSS MAIN FEEDER LOSS MAIN FEEDER LOSS MAIN FEEDER LOSS MAIN FEEDER LOSS MAIN FEEDER LOSS MAIN FEEDER LOSS MAIN FEEDER LOSS MAIN FEEDER LOSS TOTAL CABLE RUN LOSS TOTAL CABLE RUN LOSS TOTAL CABLE RUN LOSS TOTAL CABLE RUN LOSS TOTAL CABLE RUN LOSS TOTAL CABLE RUN LOSS TOTAL CABLE RUN LOSS TOTAL CABLE RUN LOSS TOTAL CABLE RUN LOSS TOTAL TX PATH LOSS (CABLE-RFS) TOTAL TX PATH LOSS (CABLE-RFS) TOTAL TX PATH LOSS (CABLE-RFS) TOTAL TX PATH LOSS (CABLE-RFS) TOTAL TX PATH LOSS (CABLE-RFS) TOTAL TX PATH LOSS (CABLE-RFS) TOTAL TX PATH LOSS (CABLE-RFS) TOTAL TX PATH LOSS (CABLE-RFS) TOTAL RX PATH LOSS (CABLE-RFS) TOTAL RX PATH LOSS (CABLE-RFS) TOTAL RX PATH LOSS (CABLE-RFS) TOTAL RX PATH LOSS (CABLE-RFS) TOTAL RX PATH LOSS (CABLE-RFS) Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 CHANNEL CAL CAL CAL 2400MHz 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 2440MHz 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 2473MHz 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 AVERAGE 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 201 Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide Navini Networks, Inc. 2.6 RFS System Test Form 2.6 GHz RFS INSTALL TEST RESULT FORM RFS SN NAME DATE MEASUREMENT DESCRIPTION RFS TX PATH LOSS (RFS ONLY) RFS TX PATH LOSS (RFS ONLY) RFS TX PATH LOSS (RFS ONLY) RFS TX PATH LOSS (RFS ONLY) RFS TX PATH LOSS (RFS ONLY) RFS TX PATH LOSS (RFS ONLY) RFS TX PATH LOSS (RFS ONLY) RFS TX PATH LOSS (RFS ONLY) RFS RX PATH LOSS (RFS ONLY) RFS RX PATH LOSS (RFS ONLY) RFS RX PATH LOSS (RFS ONLY) RFS RX PATH LOSS (RFS ONLY) RFS RX PATH LOSS (RFS ONLY) RFS RX PATH LOSS (RFS ONLY) RFS RX PATH LOSS (RFS ONLY) RFS RX PATH LOSS (RFS ONLY) JUMPER LOSS (Measured) JUMPER LOSS (Measured) JUMPER LOSS (Measured) JUMPER LOSS (Measured) JUMPER LOSS (Measured) JUMPER LOSS (Measured) JUMPER LOSS (Measured) JUMPER LOSS (Measured) JUMPER LOSS (Measured) MAIN FEEDER LOSS (Measured) MAIN FEEDER LOSS (Measured) MAIN FEEDER LOSS (Measured) MAIN FEEDER LOSS (Measured) MAIN FEEDER LOSS (Measured) MAIN FEEDER LOSS (Measured) MAIN FEEDER LOSS (Measured) MAIN FEEDER LOSS (Measured) MAIN FEEDER LOSS (Measured) TOTAL CABLE RUN LOSS (Measured) TOTAL CABLE RUN LOSS (Measured) TOTAL CABLE RUN LOSS (Measured) TOTAL CABLE RUN LOSS (Measured) TOTAL CABLE RUN LOSS (Measured) TOTAL CABLE RUN LOSS (Measured) TOTAL CABLE RUN LOSS (Measured) TOTAL CABLE RUN LOSS (Measured) TOTAL CABLE RUN LOSS (Measured) TOTAL TX PATH LOSS (CABLE-RFS) TOTAL TX PATH LOSS (CABLE-RFS) TOTAL TX PATH LOSS (CABLE-RFS) TOTAL TX PATH LOSS (CABLE-RFS) TOTAL TX PATH LOSS (CABLE-RFS) TOTAL TX PATH LOSS (CABLE-RFS) TOTAL TX PATH LOSS (CABLE-RFS) TOTAL TX PATH LOSS (CABLE-RFS) TOTAL RX PATH LOSS (CABLE-RFS) TOTAL RX PATH LOSS (CABLE-RFS) TOTAL RX PATH LOSS (CABLE-RFS) TOTAL RX PATH LOSS (CABLE-RFS) TOTAL RX PATH LOSS (CABLE-RFS) 202 CHANNEL CAL CAL CAL AVERAGE 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 0.00 Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 Navini Networks, Inc. Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide Appendix P: Chassis Alarms The chassis contains two connectors that are used to send alarm indications to the BTS. One of the connectors, labeled CABINET ALARM, is used to trigger alarm conditions that occur within the external chassis. The second connector, labeled BBU, is used to process alarms from the battery backup unit. Both connectors contain six pins, which are numbered as shown in Figure P1. This figure also shows the CAL and GPS-B connectors for size reference. Figure P1: Pin Orientation Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 203 Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide Navini Networks, Inc. The alarm connector uses only four of the six pins. The pin names can be found in Table P1. Table P1: Pin Names Pin Name General Fail Alarm Ground reference for General Fail Alarm Door Open Alarm Ground reference for Door Open Alarm Not Connected Not Connected The first pin of the alarm connector is the General Fail Alarm. This signal should be left open to indicate an alarm condition from the HMC module located in the outdoor chassis. If no alarm condition exists, this pin should be driven low. Pin 2 is used as the ground reference for this alarm. The second alarm sent to the chassis is located on pin 3, Door Open Alarm. This signal should be driven low when the door is closed. To indicate that the door of the outdoor chassis is open, this signal should be left open. The associated ground reference for this signal is taken from pin 4. The BBU connector contains four alarm signals. These signal names are listed in Table P2. Table P2: BBU Signal Names Pin Name Digital Ground Reference BBU Battery Low BBU Rectifier Fail BBU AC Line Fail BBU Charge Fail Analog Ground Reference The first alarm signal is located on pin 2, BBU Battery Low. If the BBUs battery is running low, the signal on pin 2 should be left open. BBU Rectifier Fail alarm is the next alarm and is located on pin 3. This signal should be left open to indicate a failure on the Battery Backup Unit’s rectifier. The next alarm condition occurs if the AC Line to the BBU fails. In this condition, signal BBU AC Line Fail on pin 4 should be left open. If the BBU is unable to hold a charge, then the BBU Charge Fail signal on pin 5 should be left open. For non-alarm conditions (normal operation), these signals should be driven low. The digital ground reference for these signals is located on pin 3. The analog ground reference should be located on pin 4. 204 Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 Navini Networks, Inc. Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide Appendix Q: Sample Tri-sector BTS Grounding Refer to the Regulatory Information in Chapter 1, Page 8, regarding UL and NEC/CEC compliance. Same Centerpoise ground system <5 ohm Power System Distribution Panel (Will vary per Manufacture) Navini RFS POWER RACK SPACE AND CONFIGURATION WILL VARY PER VENDOR Power / Data Cable Lightning Protectors Building steel, Centerpoise ground, or tower structure APPROXIMATE GROUND LINE LUG TYPE AND QUANTITY #6AWG 1 HOLE = 12 #6AWG 2 HOLE = 20 #2AWG 2 HOLE = 2+ Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 205 Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide 206 Navini Networks, Inc. Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 Navini Networks, Inc. Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide Appendix R: Sample Tri-sector BTS Power Refer to the Regulatory Information in Chapter 1, Page 8, regarding UL and NEC/CEC compliance. REQUIRED DC BREAKER AMPERAGE AND QUANTITY 3 X 50A - FOR RF SHELF 3 X 20A FOR DIGITAL SHELF APROXIMATE DC LINE LUG TYPE AND QUANTITY #6AWG 1 HOLE = 12 #6AWG 2 HOLE = 12 POWER RACK SPACE AND CONFIGURATION WILL VARY PER VENDOR Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 207 Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide 208 Navini Networks, Inc. Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 Navini Networks, Inc. Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide Appendix S: Single Antenna Test Procedure Objective The object of the RFS Single Antenna Test Procedure is to verify the functionality of each antenna element in the Ripwave Radio Frequency Subsystem (RFS). The 8 antenna elements work together to create the beamforming that results from using a Smart Antenna - Phased Array technology. Using 8 combined single antenna elements creates the beamed radiation that is part of what constitutes the gain of up to 18 dB during transmission of data. Each antenna element has an associated (and hard cabled) RF/Power Amplifier (PA) card in the Base Transceiver Station (BTS). In order to verify the correct beamforming and that each single antenna is working properly, we have to turn off the individual PA that controls each antenna element, one at a time. The Single Antenna Test should be performed after completing an equipment check and after performing the Base Station Calibration Verification* procedure described in the Ripwave Base Station Installation & Commissioning Guide. This test is necessary since an equipment check does not check the functionality of the RFS, and the Calibration Verification only sweeps for losses in the RFS, not RFS functionality. *Note: The Calibration Verification, where you check both transmit power and receive sensitivity, is also sometimes referred to as the RF Sanity test. More specifically, the Single Antenna Test checks the following: 1. Low Noise Amplifier (LNA) at the RFS. LNAs are an integral part of the smart antenna technology. 2. Power Amplifiers. Each PA is a module in the BTS RF shelf that creates the RF transmission. With one per element, there are a total of 8 PAs in the shelf. The transmission is measured in dBm. This is what makes possible the transfer of data overthe-air. 3. Modulations. As each antenna element is checked, the variable modulations are tested. The higher the modulation, the higher the power and the better the data rate. The test ensures that all modulations possible, i.e., QPSK, 8PSK, and QAM16, are working properly. Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 209 Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide Navini Networks, Inc. Panel Procedure Overview Assuming the equipment has been installed and you have performed the calibration verification, if the results were erroneous this Single Antenna Test will not be valid. It is important to complete those two steps successfully before continuing. For this test you will need two people. One person will verify the reception (Rx) of each antenna using the Constellation Debugger Tool and a Modem. The following summarizes what will happen during this test: 1. Person A will stay where the BTS or EMS is located. This person will control each PA in the BTS to be tested. 2. Person B will be in the field. This person will pick a complete Line of Sight (LOS) test point to the RFS (antenna). Person B will use the Constellation Debugger software supplied by Navini. This software allows the tester to verify functionality. 3. Once the two people are in place, start by turning all antennas off except for Antenna #1. NOTE: It does not matter which antenna you start with as long as the tester can keep track of which ones have been tested and each one’s results. 4. With only one antenna powered on, Person B verifies the transmission, modulation, and signal strength of the single antenna. Person B verifies this information for at least 30 seconds. 5. When the first antenna is checked, Person A saves the file and waits for Person B to power on Antenna #2. 6. Steps 3 through 5 are repeated for each antenna element. Details The following provides more detail for each step, and includes snapshots of what to change and what to measure. Step 1. 210 After calibration verifications are successful, in EMS click on the BTS tab and highlight the specific BTS. Go to Air Interface > Layer 1, and click on the Antenna Table tab (Figure S1). This window will show all antennas and their PA status. Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 Navini Networks, Inc. Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide Figure S1: Antenna Tab Step 2. After checking that all PAs are up and running, next click on Configure (Figure S2). This function will take you to the configuration mode of this particular window. Figure S2: Configure Antenna Table Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 211 Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide Step 3. Navini Networks, Inc. Click on the button, Modify All. This function will allow you to modify all antennas and PAs at the same time. Notice that this window allows you to configure any column shown here. For our purpose we will only use the second column, Admin Status (Figure S3). This column shows the state of each PA that controls each antenna in the RFS. “Up” means the antenna and PA are on and functioning. “Down” means the antenna and PA are off and not transmitting. Figure S3: Modify All Step 4. 212 Next, turn off (no transmission) all of the antennas and PAs except for Antenna #1. This begins the verification of this antenna. Refer to Figure S4. When only Antenna #1 is powered up and transmitting, the second person will verify at the other end that the antenna is actually transmitting information to the Modem. This can be completed by doing a Ping at the Modem side. Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 Navini Networks, Inc. Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide Figure S4: Antenna #1 On Step 5. Start a Ping with the Modem and PC performing the test, observing the Constellation Debugger tool. Look for the following values: ?? ?? ?? ACC Signal Strength Absolute Sync Signal Processed Sync Signal These values, an example of which is shown in Figure S5, give you an indication if there is something wrong with the antenna. If the values are too low or you do not see a response from your Ping, it means that the antenna and/or the PA are not functioning properly. Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 213 Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide Navini Networks, Inc. Figure S5: Constellation Debugger Values Step 6. 214 Repeat Steps 4 and 5 to verify each one of the antennas and the PAs. The verification of each antenna concludes the testing procedure. Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 Navini Networks, Inc. Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide Comments & Suggestions 1. Navini Smart Antenna technology uses all the 8 antenna elements for the optimum performance of the system. It is recommended that all antennas are verified and working properly. If one of the antennas or PAs malfunctions or it breaks, the RFS will still work. It will not work at its optimum operation, but it will still be functioning equipment. It is recommended that you change or swap the bad board or equipment. 2. For the testing of each antenna it is recommended that you pick only one spot to measure the Rx side of the RFS. This spot must to be at a distance of 2-3 km with clear line-ofsight. 3. A difference of more than 2 dB between the Absolute and Processed SYNC Signal strength, typically indicates the presence of multipath in the environment. Omni ProcedurePart #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 215 Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide 216 Navini Networks, Inc. Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 Navini Networks, Inc. Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide Appendix T: Base Station Installation Certification COMPANY SITE NAME SITE NO LOCATION BTS SITE COMPLETION CERTIFICATION SITE TYPE ANTENNA TYPE MONOPOLE OMNI CO-LOCATE SECTORIZED 2.3GHz 2.4GHz OTHER ANTENNA AZIMUTH FREQUENCY BAND BTS CENTER FREQUENCY 0 Degree 2 Degree RFS ELECTRICAL DOWNTILT RFS MECHANICAL TILT RFS OVERALL DOWNTILT BTS ENCLOSURE INDOOR OUTDOOR 2.5GHz 2.6GHz 4 Degree 6 Degree Uptilt Downtilt OTHER YES NO YES YES YES NO NO NO YES NO YES YES YES NO NO NO YES NO YES YES YES YES NO NO NO NO N/A N/A N/A N/A YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A Equipment Installed in Building Equipment Installed and Secured Per Plan Roof/Ceiling/Wall Penetrations Patched, Sealed and Painted Penetration(s) Inspected by Landowner Representative N/A N/A N/A Equipment Installed on Roof Equipment Installed and Secured Per Plan Structural Upgrades to Roof Installed Per Plan Equipment Support Frame Installed N/A N/A N/A Equipment Installed on Grade Equipment Installed and Secured Per Plan Special Inspection for Foundation Steel Complete Concrete Placed and Vibrated Concrete Break Test Report Complete Civil/Site Work Fencing Complete (Tie-In to Ground System) Per Plan Gravel/Crushed Rock Placed over Weed Barrier Above Ground Conduits Installed Plumb Landscaping/ Erosion Control Complete Per Plan Access Road Complete Per Plan All Trash and Debris Hauled Off Site Site Area restored to Original Condition Unistruts, iron angles and Rods properly cold galvanized RF Safety Signage Installed where Required Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 217 Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 218 Navini Networks, Inc. Monopole/Tower Monopole/Tower Plumb, Torqued and Free of Visible Defects Orientation of Monopole/Tower Per Plan Safety Climb Installed and Tensioned per Manufacturer Spec. Weep Hole Free of Obstructions Step Bolts Installed/ Removed Below 30 feet Monopole/Tower Tie-In to Ground Ring Complete YES YES YES YES YES YES NO NO NO NO NO NO N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A Grounding Monopole/Tower Grounding Installed Ground Wire Types and Size meet construction Specs Lightning Rod Provided and Installed Per Plan 5 Ohm Megger Ground Resistance Test Complete Buss Bars Installed Per Plan Surge Protector Installed Between RFS Antenna and Cable Coax Ground Kits Installed at RFS Antenna Per Plan Coax Ground Kits Installed at Tower Base Per Plan Coax Ground Kits Installed at Buss Bar Prior to BTS Per Plan Double Lug Connectors Used at All Buss Bar Attachments Cable Tray/Ice Bridge Bonded and Grounded to Buss Bar Surge Protectors Mounted and Secured on ground Buss Bar Master Ground Buss Bar Tied-In to Ground Ring Equipment Rack Ground Per Plan Power Supply/UPS, Rectifier Ground Per Plan Meter and Telco box Ground Per Plan Fence Work Grounded Per Plan Additional Equipment Tied-In to BTS properly Grounded Electrical, Telco and Network Power and Telco Conduits Installed Per Plan Conduits Are Labeled and Pull Strings are Provided Meter and Telco Box are Installed Per Plan Circuit Breakers Installed and Properly Labeled UPS Installed and All Internal Connections Made Rectifier Installed, Output and Wiring to BTS Checked Telco Tie-In to Source, Tested and Complete Network/Telco Tie-In to BTS, Tested and Complete EMS Installed and Connected to Network Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 Navini Networks, Inc. BTS System Cabinet is Positioned, Secured and Leveled Per Plan Cabinet Outer Surfaces Free from scratches, dents, corrosion All Hardware Connections within BTS are tightened/secured RF/GPS Coax Connectors Securely Connected to BTS Signal/Power Cable Securely Connected to BTS Ethernet/T1 cables Dressed and Secured to BTS Documents, License are Stored or Posted on BTS YES YES YES YES YES YES YES NO NO NO NO NO NO NO N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES YES NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A Antenna and Feeder System 10 11 Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide RFS Antenna Height and Orientation Per Plan RFS Antenna Mount Plumb Per Axis GPS Antenna Mounted Per Plan Zinc Cold Galvanizing compound used everywhere Coaxial Cables Run Straight (Not Exceeding Bend Radius) Coaxial Cables Tagged and Color Coded Per Plan Connectors and Jumpers Installed and Weatherproofed Cable Hangers, Bands or Ties Spaced up every 3 Feet Antenna Power and Data Cable Continuity Tested Antenna System Sweep Test Performed and Passed SW and Hard Copy of Antenna Sweep Test Results Provided NOTES Printed Name Signature / Date Company Phone No. Printed Name Signature / Date Company Phone No. Printed Name Signature / Date Company Phone No. Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 219 Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide Navini Networks, Inc. COMPANY SITE NAME SITE NO LOCATION BTS SN 220 PA8 CC1 PA7 CC2 MDM2 MDM1 RFS SN RF SHELF PA1 PA2 PA3 PA4 PA5 PA6 CHP2 CHP1 IF2 IF1 SYN2 SYN1 PA5 PA4 PA3 PA2 PA1 Please write all Card Serial Numbers in the Spreadsheet Below Note : DIGITAL SHELF SYN1 SYN2 IF1 IF2 CHP1 Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 Navini Networks, Inc. Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide Appendix U: Excel Configuration Form The configuration forms are used to plan and design the operating parameters for the system. The parameters for every system element are defined in the EMS Server. ********** EMS Configuration Data Form (To configure EMS Servers & Clients in the Ripwave System) Company:__________________________________________________________ Your Name:______________________________________ Date:_____________ NOTE 1: Field Values in gray rows indicate data that ordinarily should not be changed or that is populated automatically by the system. NOTE 2: Default Field Values are underlined. Field Name EMS Id Alarm AutoAck Server Ip Address Database Schema Version Mib Version BTS/CPE SW Directory Values True 01 (example) 1.19.01 (example) loads (example) Description Unique identifier for this EMS. True or False. If True, the EMS will automatically acknowledge all alarms except alarms with a severity level of Warning (blue). An Alarm Engineer will only see current alarms on the system. However, all alarm activity is logged to an alarm file. IP address of the EMS Server. Version of the EMS server database schema. Version of the BTS Management Information Base (MIB). Directory where BTS and CPE software loads are stored. Used by the EMS to obtain the location of the software loads during downloads. Copy BTS and CPE software loads to this directory during initial installations or upgrades. Otherwise, the EMS cannot download the software to the BTS. This field is used in conjunction with the FTP Server Root Path field by the EMS to obtain the software loads. The full path the EMS searches for software loads is \ . Example - C:\naviniems \ftp\loads. continued… Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 221 Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide Field Name Navini Networks, Inc. Values FTP Server Root Path Network ID Server Name EMS Version Idl Build Number 1.19.01 (example) 1.18.09 (example) BTS/CPE SW Ftp User Name BTS/CPE SW Ftp Password Confirm Password CPE AutoProvisioning 222 Disabled Description The Root directory where BTS and CPE software loads are stored. This field must match what is configured in the FTP Daemon. Otherwise, the EMS will not be able to download BTS and CPE software loads to the BTS. This path is used by the EMS to obtain the location of the software loads during downloads. Copy BTS and CPE software loads to this root directory during initial installations or upgrades. This field is used in conjunction with the BTS/CPE SW Directory field by the EMS to obtain the software loads. The full path the EMS searches for software loads is \ . Example - C:\naviniems \ftp\loads. Unique identifier for this Service Provider’s wireless network. Intended to ensure other Service Providers’ CPEs cannot operate in the identified network. A CPE with a different BTS network ID cannot be provided service by that BTS. Host name of the EMS Server machine. Version of the EMS Server software. CORBA networking software IDL version used by the EMS Server. User name for downloading BTS and CPE software from the EMS. This field must match what is configured in the FTP Daemon. Otherwise, the EMS cannot download BTS and CPE software loads to the BTS. Password used when downloading BTS and CPE software. This field must match what is configured in the FTP Daemon. Otherwise, the EMS cannot download BTS and CPE software loads to the BTS. Password must be re-entered for security purposes. Enable or Disable. Determines if the EMS is in AutoProvision mode during CPE registration. If enabled, the EMS will allow unprovisioned CPEs to access the system with minimum bandwidth for a short period of time. The minimum bandwidth is defined by the first entry in the CPE Descriptor table. Once the CPE is allowed limited access to the system, it can connect to a default web site to enter billing information and the CPE can be provisioned automatically with the EMS. If disabled, the EMS will NOT allow an unprovisioned CPE to access the system. Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 Navini Networks, Inc. Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide BTS Configuration Form Company:_________________________________________________________ Your Name:______________________________________ Date:____________ BTS ID/NAME:____________________________________________________ NOTE 1: Field Values in gray rows indicate data that ordinarily should not be changed or that is populated automatically by the system. NOTE 2: Default Field Values are underlined. General Parameters Status Field Name Values RF Admin Status Up or Down Connected Status True or False Provisioned Status Provisioned or Unprovisioned Description Determines if the BTS is transmitting Radio Frequency (RF). Up means transmitting. Down means not transmitting. To bring the RF Admin Status Up, execute the Enable action. To bring it Down, execute the Disable action. Display only. The user cannot set this field. Indicates if the EMS can communicate with the BTS. The EMS Server sends a message to the BTS periodically. If the BTS responds, the EMS sets this field to True. If the BTS does not respond in a reasonable amount of time, the EMS changes the Connected Status to false. If the Connected Status is False, the EMS will not send any configuration messages to the BTS because it cannot communicate. If Provisioned, the BTS has been configured and is ready for use. IP Field Name BTS IP Address EMS Server IP Address BTS Default Gateway BTS Subnet Mask Street Address City State Zip Values Description Unique IP address for each BTS. Space bar used to remove or skip existing digits. Unique IP address for an EMS. Defaults to the IP on which the EMS Server is running. Space bar used to remove or skip existing digits. Default Gateway used to route IP packets for a BTS. Subnet Mask used to route IP packets for a BTS. Physical location of this BTS. City in which BTS is located. State in which BTS is located. Zip code for location in which BTS is located continued… Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 223 Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide Field Name Navini Networks, Inc. Values BTS ID BTS Name Suppress Alarms TRUE or FALSE Suppress CPE Registration TRUE or FALSE Calibration Interval (hours) Bridge Aging Timer (minutes) 1 - 24 Enable PVC Loopback TRUE or FALSE 1 - 60 BTS Contact Personnel BTS Configuration Source EMS or BTS Interface Type BTS Profile Type Ethernet or ATM Unlicensed 2.4 GHz MMDS 2.6 GHz Frequency 2.305 GHz - 2.359 GHz 2.40 GHz - 2.473 GHz 2.50 GHz - 2.595 GHz 2.602 - 2.686 GHz Description Unique numeric identification number for this BTS. Cannot be changed once the BTS is created in the system. Unique name given to this BTS. No two BTSs can have the same name. To suppress alarms from BTS to EMS, set to TRUE until problem is resolved. Useful if BTS is flooding EMS and affecting its performance. To allow alarms to be sent, set to FALSE. Determines if BTS can send CPE Registration messages to EMS. Useful if BTS is flooding EMS and affecting its performance. To allow messages to be sent, set to FALSE. The interval of hours by which on-line calibration occurs. BTS Bridge Table timer that controls how long a PVC is assigned to an EID (CPE). The PVC to EID association is removed when no user traffic is received for the timer interval. Applicable only when dynamic PVC assignment is used. Determines if any PVC on this BTS can perform loopback test. Textual identification of a contact person for this BTS and how to contact them. Determines where the BTS obtains its configuration data when reset. If provisioning BTS for first time, set to EMS. After successful reset, defaults to BTS. Indicates the backhaul to which the BTS is connected. Select the correct system. 2.4 GHz is the only unlicensed frequency. Any other system, 2.3, 2.5, and 2.6, select MMDS. Scroll bar that allows you to set the center frequency for the BTS operation. The range depends on the type of system, i.e., 2.3 GHz, 2.4 GHz, 2.5 GHz, 2.6 GHz. The field is operated by dragging the slider of the center frequency scroll bar left or right. The center frequency of an MMDS band BTS must match what is hard-wired on the RFS. During installation, the installers should check that the configured center frequency is identical to the center frequency labeled on the Channel Filter component of the RFS. CAUTION: Changing an MMDS BTS center frequency may result in destruction of the PAs. 224 Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 Navini Networks, Inc. Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide Diagnostics Field Name Values Enable Const Display True or False Max Beamform Displays 0-9 User Name Password ems Enable Spec Analyzer Display Confirm Password True or False Description Determines if the BTS Constellation Display application can be logged into and used on this BTS. If set to True, this BTS can be logged into and its Constellation Display viewed. The maximum number of CPEs that can be viewed simultaneously using the BTS Beamforming diagnostic display. Authorized user of all diagnostic tools. The password used to authenticate the login to all diagnostic tools. Determines if the BTS Spectrum Analyzer (frequency) application can be logged into and used on this BTS. Confirms that the correct password is entered. Performance Field Name Values Perf Log Server IP Address Perf Log Storage Directory Upload Interval (minutes or hours) Collection Interval (minutes or hours) Perf Log FTP User Name Perf Log FTP Password Description IP address of the performance log collection server. Disable, 15 minutes, 30 minutes, 1 hour, 2 hours, etc. Disable, 15 minutes, 30 minutes, 1 hour Confirm Password Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 The name of the directory at the Performance Log server where the performance logs are to be sent. Note: The location of the log directory is “ \ ”. Example: If the FTP root directory is set to “d:\naviniems \ftp” and the pm data directory is set to “performance”, the location of the log directory will be “d:\naviniems \ftp\performance”. Therefore, when configuring the FTP Daemon, set the FTP root directory to “ \ftp”. The interval that the BTS uploads performance data to the EMS. The interval that the BTS collects the performance logs. The FTP user name set in the FTP Daemon running on the server where performance logs are captured. The FTP password set in the FTP Daemon running on the server capturing performance logs. Re-enter password to confirm authorized access. 225 Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide Navini Networks, Inc. GPS Field Name GPS Latitude GPS Longitude Values Description North or South 0 (deg) 0 (min) 0 (sec) The latitude of the BTS in degrees, minutes, and seconds. East or West The longitude of the BTS in degrees, minutes, and seconds. 0 (deg) 0 (min) 0 (sec) GPS Height (cm) GPS Gmt Offset (min) -360 The height of the BTS in centimeters. The difference in time (minutes) between Greenwich Mean Time (GMT), which is zero, and the time zone where the BTS is located. For example, if the BTS is located in Dallas, Texas, the local time is 6 hours earlier than GMT. In this example, you would enter -360, which is 6 hrs x 60 min. If the local time is ahead of GMT, you would enter a + in front of the number. Neighbor BTS Frequency List Field Name Center Frequency (Scroll Bar) Values Description 2.305 GHz - 2.359 GHz The frequency at which the neighboring BTS is transmitting. 2.40 GHz - 2.473 GHz 2.50 GHz - 2.595 GHz 2.602 - 2.686 GHz Co-located Checkmark or blank Click to place a checkmark indicating that the neighboring BTS is located on the same tower as the current BTS. CPE Ping Table Field Name Ping Sequence IP Address Display String 226 Values 0, 1, 2, 3, etc. Alphanumeric (up to 30 characters) Description Order in which the element with this IP address is pinged. IP address of the element being added to the Ping Table. User-assigned designation (name/string) for this element. Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 Navini Networks, Inc. Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide Air Interface Parameters Layer 1 - General Field Name RFS Gps Offset Values Active or Passive Sync Scale 0.1125 Acc Scale Tcc Scale Max Scale 0.0557 0.0197 0.2516 Rx Sensitivity (–dBm) 100.0 Antenna Power (dBm) Cal Cable Loss (dB) 30.0 Cal Backplane Loss (dB) Cal Total Loss (dB) 5.0 0.0 0.0 Synthesizer Tx Gain Synthesizer Rx Gain Synthesizer Sc Gain Synthesizer Level Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 Description Specifies whether the RFS has active or passive circuitry. This is the GPS timing offset to apply to the BTS in order of chips (2.5us). The GPS offset must be different for each BTS sharing the same frequency so they do not interfere with each other. The scale setting applied to the transmitted synchronization signal. The scale setting applied to the Access Channel. The scale setting applied to the Traffic Channel. The maximum allowable scale setting for each of the above scales: Sync, ACC, TCC. The target Receiver sensitivity for each antenna. This target is used during full calibration. If it is changed, full calibration must be performed for it to take effect. The target antenna power for each antenna. This target is used during full calibration. Entered in the EMS during commissioning as one of several inputs for performing full calibration. This value is the measured calibration cable loss. If it is changed, full calibration must be performed for it to take effect. Calibration Backplane Loss (dB) Displays the total calibration loss, calculated from the values in Cal Cable Loss and Cal Backplane Loss fields. Displays the Transmitter gain setting for the Synthesizer used during calibration. This field is a result that is automatically returned from full calibration. Displays the Receiver gain setting for the Synthesizer used during calibration. This field is a result that is automatically returned from full calibration. Displays the Loopback gain setting for the Synthesizer used during calibration. This field is a result that is automatically returned from full calibration. Displays the power level of the Synthesizer. 227 Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide Navini Networks, Inc. Layer 1 - Antenna Table Field Name Antenna Index 1-8 Values Admin Status Up or Down The number of the antenna (1-8) that maps to a specific antenna element in the RFS. Determines if the antenna is transmitting RF. Up means transmitting; Down means not transmitting. The real element of the calibrator board characteristics that is found in the RFS. This information captures the loss and phase information of the board. The Power Splitter data is unique to each RFS. An RFS Configuration CD ships with the equipment. It provides an RFS script and instructions for selecting the correct value to match the specific RFS that is physically installed with the BTS. The imaginary element of the calibrator board that is found in the RFS. This information captures the loss & amplitude information of the board. The Power Splitter data is unique to each RFS. An RFS Configuration CD ships with the equipment. It provides an RFS script and instructions for selecting the correct value to match the specific RFS that is physically installed with the BTS. The Transmit gains for each antenna element, ranging from 0-255, with 0 being the lowest gain. This data is returned as a result of full calibration. The Receive gains for each antenna element, ranging from 0-255, with 0 being the lowest gain. This data is returned as a result of full calibration. Power Splitter_I Power Splitter_Q RF Tx Gain 0-255 RF Rx Gain 0-255 Description Layer 1 - w0 Table Field Name Sub Carrier Id Antenna Index W0 Weight_I W0 Weight_Q 228 Values 1-5 1-8 Description The number (ordinal) of the subcarrier pair. The number of the antenna element. Real elements of the vector used to control ACC spatial pattern. Imaginary elements of the vector used to control ACC spatial pattern. Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 Navini Networks, Inc. Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide Layer 1 - Calibration Table Field Name Sub Carrier Id Antenna Index Tx Weight_I Values 1-10 1-8 Description The number (ordinal) of the subcarrier. The number of the antenna element. Real elements of the vector used while transmitting to control ACC spatial pattern. This data is returned as a result of any of the calibration modes. Imaginary elements of the vector used while transmitting to control ACC spatial pattern. This data is returned as a result of any of the calibration modes. Real elements of the vector used during Receive to control ACC spatial pattern. This data is returned as a result of any of the calibration modes. Imaginary elements of the vector used during Receive to control ACC spatial pattern. This data is returned as a result of any of the calibration modes. Tx Weight_Q Rx Weight_I Rx Weight_Q Layer 2 - Carrier Data Field Name Sub Carrier Number / Sub Carrier Values 1-2, 3-4, 5-6, 7-8, 9-10 Access Channel Checkmark or blank Broadcast Channel Checkmark or blank TDD Symmetry Ratio Symmetric or Asymmetric Repeat Uplink Pkts Checkmark or blank Frequency 2.305 GHz - 2.359 GHz Description These two fields identify the 10 subcarriers. You can click on the pair of subcarriers to be enabled for this BTS. Subcarriers are assigned in pairs. Access Code Channels: The ACC Channel occupies the Code Channel with Walsh Index 0 configured on a specified subcarrier frequency. Each checkbox indicates which pair of subcarriers contains an Access Channel. Broadcast Code Channel (BCC): If the box is checked, then a BCC will be transmitted in each pair of subcarriers that already contains an ACC. The BCCs are used to broadcast software upgrades to the Modems. Symmetric Ratio is 1:1. Asymmetric Ratio is 1:3. This parameter determines the variable uplink and downlink ratio in a TDD frame. If set to Asymmetric, the downlink will have 3 times more bandwidth than the uplink. This is sometimes desired due to the types of users on the system, i.e., downloading files off the Internet. If the box is checked, the Modems will repeat uplink packets. Indicates the center frequency of the BTS transmit signal. (Scroll Bar) 2.40 GHz - 2.473 GHz 2.50 GHz - 2.595 GHz 2.602 - 2.686 GHz Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 229 Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide Navini Networks, Inc. Layer 2 - Bandwidth Field Name Values Underload Threshold (%) 80% Overload Threshold (%) 85% Positive Access Overload Threshold (%) 90% Negative Access Overload Threshold (%) 95% Reserved Channels for Accesses CPE Inactive Time (min) 12 Bandwidth Adjust Interval (10ms) 20 Realtime Session Hold Time (10ms) 250 Non-realtime Session Hold Time (10ms) 250 Non RT PreRelease BW (Kbps) 0 - 2,048 Default is 32 Denied Req Number Average LCC Q LEN Factor Exponential For Average Average Burst Time (ms) Max Bts Power (TCC Power) 320 DL ACC Power Per Channel (TCC Power) TCC Initial Setup Power (%) Average Exponential Factor TCC Power per Channel Range (dB) Min Realtime Data Bandwidth (Kbps) 15 50 25% 19 0 - 2,048 Default is 32 Description The threshold crossing in which a BTS changes its load congestion state from Overload (either Positive Access Overload or Negative Access Overload) to Underload. The threshold crossing in which a BTS changes its load congestion state from Underload to Positive Access Overload. The threshold crossing in which a BTS changes its load congestion state from Negative Access Overload to Positive Access Overload. The threshold crossing in which a BTS changes its load congestion state from either Underload or Positive Access Overload. Number of channels reserved for access when in the Underload state. When a CPE has not communicated with a BTS for the set Inactive Time, the status of the CPE changes from active to inactive, as expressed in minutes. A user’s bandwidth (uplink or downlink) is adjusted every Adjust Time if needed when on TCC. Expressed in units of 10 milliseconds. The length of time a user with realtime data holds RF resources after the incoming packet queue is empty. Expressed in units of 10 milliseconds. The length of time a user with non-realtime data holds RF resources after the incoming packet queue is empty. Expressed in units of 10 milliseconds. The bandwidth a user is assigned while in Non-realtime Session Hold Time. The Non RT PreRelease BW is in units of MAC packets. The number of consecutive times a user’s access request fails due to lack of RF resources before access is denied. Factor used to determine the average LLC queue length. Average exponent for all statistical variables but power. Average time for a data burst, expressed in units of 10 milliseconds. Maximum RF power a BTS has. It is in units of maximum TCC power per channel. This field is not configurable. Downlink ACC RF power per channel. It is expressed in units of maximum TCC power per channel. Initial setup power of a TCC channel. Expressed in units of the percentage of the max. TCC power per channel. Average exponent for average power. Number of decibels the downlink TCC power per channel can vary. The minimum bandwidth a user with realtime data holds that is not used for acknowledgement. Expressed in units of MAC packets (data rate). continued… 230 Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 Navini Networks, Inc. Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide Field Name Supported Modulations Total Priority Level Num. Max Bandwidth for Priority 1-8 (%) Values QAM4 QAM4 QAM8 QAM4 QAM16 QAM4 QAM8 QAM16 1 default 85% 2 default 10% 3 default 5% 4-8 default 0% Description The highest QAM Rank the BTS can process. The total number of QoS classes the BTS can maintain. Each class is associated with a priority. The percentage of the total bandwidth a QoS class associated with a certain priority is entitled to. Layer 2 - WAN Congestion Control Field Name Values Average Queue Size Weight (%) 100.0 Max Queue Size (KB) 512 Min to Max Drop Probability (%) 10 Realtime Min Drop Threshold (%) 100 High Priority Min Drop Threshold (%) 100 Low Priority Min Drop Threshold (%) 100 Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 Description For downlink, this value - expressed as a percentage indicates how much the current queue size contributes to the calculation of the average queue size. The average queue size is used by the BTS Resource Management software to determine how many Code Channels to give a CPE. The greater the weight, the greater influence the current queue size has on the average queue size. The lower the weight, the more the queue size is an actual average of the current queue size over time. For downlink, the maximum queue size - in kilobytes for each priority queue (high, low, voice). Once the queue is full (at Min Drop Threshold) all packets are dropped. For downlink, the probability of a packet being dropped when the Min Threshold has been reached. The higher this number, the more likely a packet will be dropped between the Min Threshold and the Max Threshold. NOTE: All packets are dropped at the Max Threshold. For downlink, the minimum queue size in which voice priority packets are considered for being dropped. For example, if set to 10%, once the queue size reaches 11% or more, voice priority packets may be dropped. The Max Drop Probability field determines if a packet is dropped once the Min Threshold is exceeded. For downlink, the minimum queue size in which high priority packets are considered for being dropped. For example, if set to 10%, once the queue size reaches 11% or more, high priority packets may be dropped. The Max Drop Probability field determines if a packet is dropped once the Min Threshold is exceeded. For downlink, the minimum queue size in which low priority packets are considered for being dropped. For example, if set to 10%, once the queue size reaches 11% or more, high priority packets may be dropped. The Max Drop Probability field determines if a packet is dropped once the Min Threshold is exceeded. 231 Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide Navini Networks, Inc. Layer 2 - CPE Uplink Congestion Control Field Name Values Avg Queue Size Weight (%) 100.0 Max Queue Size (KB) 512 Min to Max Drop Probability (%) 10 Realtime Min Drop Threshold (%) 100 High Priority Min Drop Threshold (%) 100 Low Priority Min Drop Threshold (%) 100 232 Description For the uplink, this value - expressed as a percentage indicates how much the current queue size contributes to the calculation of average queue size. The average queue size is used by the BTS Resource Management software to determine how many Code Channels to give a CPE. The greater the weight, the greater influence the current queue size has on the average queue size. The lower the weight, the more the average queue size is an actual average of the current queue size over time. For the uplink, the maximum queue size for each priority queue (high, low, voice). Once the queue is full (at Min Drop Threshold) all packets are dropped. For the uplink, the probability of a packet being dropped when the Min threshold has been reached. The higher this number, the more likely a packet will be dropped between the Min Threshold and Max Threshold. Note: All packets are dropped at the Max Threshold. For the uplink, the minimum queue size in which voice priority packets are considered for being dropped. For example, if set to 10% once the queue size reaches 11% or more, voice priority packets may be dropped. The Max Drop Probability field determines if a packet is dropped once the Min Threshold is exceeded. For the uplink, the minimum queue size in which high priority packets are considered for being dropped. For example, if set to 10% once the queue size reaches 11% or more, high priority packets may be dropped. The Max Drop Probability field determines if a packet is dropped once the Min Threshold is exceeded. For the uplink, the minimum queue size in which low priority packets are considered for being dropped. For example, if set to 10% once the queue size reaches 11% or more, low priority packets may be dropped. The Max Drop Probability field determines if a packet is dropped once the Min Threshold is exceeded. Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 Navini Networks, Inc. Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide Backhaul Interface Parameters T1 Field Name Values Description Admin Status Up Line Type Send Code ESF or D4 Send line code, Send No Code, Send Payload Code, Send Reset Code Signal Mode Up or Down. Display only. The administrative (operational) status of this T1. If Down, no traffic is able to go through this interface. This field is not configurable. Framing format Selection of codes used for far-end loopback tests Always None None Line Length (foot) Fdl Line Status Change Trap Line Index Line Coding Circuit Identifier Transmit Clock Source 5000 None, Att54016, AnsiT1403 Enabled or Disabled B8ZS or AMI Loop timing or Local Timing Channelization Length of T1 cables from BTS to terminating equipment Facility Data Link (FDL) signaling type Enables generation of traps based on changes to the line status The ATM IF index that this T1 is associated with Type of coding used to encode bits on the line Vendor’s transmission circuit identifier Source of the framer Transmit clock Always Disabled (clear channel) Disabled IMA Groups Field Name Values Admin Status Up Symmetry Symmetric operation, Symmetric & Asymmetric, or Asymmetric Min Num Rx Links Tx Ima Id Description Up or Down. This is the administration (operational) status of the IMA group. If Down, no traffic is able to go through this interface. Three options for the relationship of the Transmit and Receive link throughput: ?? Symmetric operation - all links should be configured in both directions. Tx and Rx must both be active to use the disk. ?? Symmetric and Asymmetric operation - all links should be configured in both directions. Transmitting is allowed when Tx is active and Rx is not active. ?? Asymmetric operation - not required to configure the IMA links in both Tx and Rx directions. Minimum number of active Receive links that is necessary for the IMA group to be active. Near-end (Transmit) IMA ID. continued… Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 233 Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide Field Name Navini Networks, Inc. Values Alpha Value Gamma Value Index IMA group 2 Min Num Tx Links Ne Tx Clk Mode Tx Frame Length ITC M128 Beta Value Description Used to specify the number of consecutive valid ICP cells to be detected before moving to the IMA hunt state from the IMA sync state. Used to specify the number of consecutive valid ICP cells to be detected before moving to the IMA sync state from the IMA pre-sync state. IMA Group 1 or 2. Unique sequence number of the IMA group. Minimum number of Transmission links that have to be active for the IMA group to be active. Near-end Transmit clock mode. Length of IMA frame being transmitted. It is defined as M consecutive cells. Used to specify the number of consecutive ICP cells with errors to be detected before moving to the IMA hunt state from the IMA sync state. Add T1s to IMA Groups IMA Group T1s Associated With this IMA Group Notes IMA 1 IMA 2 ATM Field Name Values If Index Max Vccs Max Active Vci Bits T1-1 (first T1 ID) 1001 Max Vpcs Max Active Vpi Bits 234 Description Interface (IF) Index associated with this ATM interface. Maximum Virtual Channel Circuits for this interface. The number of bits for Virtual Channel Identifier (VCI). Determines the maximum VCI value allowed for this interface. The Max Value is calculated by 2^ (max active vci bits). Maximum Virtual Private Circuits for this interface. The number of bits for Virtual Private Identifier. Determines the maximum VPI value allowed for this interface. The max value is calculated by 2^ (max active vpi bits). Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 Navini Networks, Inc. Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide PVC Field Name Values if Index Vpi (start and end) T1-1 Vci (start and end) Tr/Re Traffic Descr Indexes AAL5 CPCS Tx SDU Size (Byte) AAL5 CPCS Rx SDU Size (Byte) Admin Status AAL Type AAL5 (1-5) AAL5 Encap Type LLC encapsulation Cast Type Conn Kind P2P PVC 1528 1528 Up Description The ATM IF index that this PVC is associated with. Virtual Path Identifier. The VPI + VCI are in the cell header and identify the next destination of a cell as it passes through a series of ATM switches. Virtual Channel Identifier. The VPI + VCI are in the cell header and identify the next destination of a cell as it passes through a series of ATM switches. Index of the ATM Descriptor that applies to this PVC. The Transmit and Receive Descriptors are the same. The maximum AAL5 CPCS SDU size, in bytes, that is supported in the Transmit direction. The maximum AAL5 CPCS SDU size, in bytes, that is supported in the Receive direction. Up or Down. The administrative (operational) state of the PVC. If it is Down, this PVC may not be used for traffic. The type of ATM Adaptation Layer (AAL) used on this PVC: AAL1, AAL2, AAL3, AAL4, or AAL5. The type of data encapsulation used over the AAL5 SSCS layer. The connection topology type. The type of VCL. This is always PVC. Assign CPE to PVC Field Name PVC CPE Data Values T1-1-1-100 (example) Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 Description Identifies the PVC to be assigned to the specified CPE. CPE assigned to specified PVC. Denotes what type of PVC to assign. 235 Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide Navini Networks, Inc. Global Parameters Configuration Form Company:__________________________________________________________ Your Name:______________________________________Date:______________ NOTE 1: Field Values in gray rows indicate data that ordinarily should not be changed or that is populated automatically by the system. NOTE 2: Default Field Values are underlined. ATM Descriptor Field Name Index Type Category Frame Discard Param1 - Param5 CBR Parameters: PCR RTVBR Parameters: PCR SCR MBS NRTVBR Parameters: PCR SCR MBS ABR Parameters: PCR MCR ICR RDF RIF CDF UBR Parameters: PCR 236 Values NOCLPNOSCR, NOCLPSCR, CLPNOTAGGINGSCR, CLPTAGGINGSCR, CLPNOTAGGINGMCR, CLPTRANSPARENTNOSCR, CLPTRANSPARENTSCR, NOCLPTAGGINGNOSCR CBR, RTVBR, NRTVBR, ABR, UBR True Description Identifier for this ATM Descriptor Type of ATM Category of this ATM (see parameters, below) True or False. If set to True, enables the ability to discard ATM frames. Described below Peak Cell Rate Peak Cell Rate Sustainable Cell Rate Maximum Burst Size Peak Cell Rate Sustainable Cell Rate Maximum Burst Size Peak Cell Rate Minimum Cell Rate Initial Cell Rate Rate Decrease Factor Rate Increase Factor Cutoff Decrease Factor Peak Cell Rate Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 Navini Networks, Inc. Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide CPE Descriptor Field Name Values Name Index Priority 1 (1-8) UL Max Bandwidth (Kbps) 0, 32, 64, 96, 128, 160, 192, 224, etc. UL Min Bandwidth (Kbps) 0, 32, 64, 96, 128, 160, 192, 224, etc. DL Max Bandwidth (Kbps) 0, 32, 64, 96, 128, 160, 192, 224, etc. DL Min Bandwidth (Kbps) 0, 32, 64, 96, 128, 160, 192, 224, etc. Avg Queue Size Weight (%) 100.0 Max Queue Size (KB) 512 Min to Max Drop Probability (%) 10 Realtime Min Drop Threshold (% ) 100 High Priority Min Drop Threshold (%) 100 Description Name given to this CPE Descriptor. Unique index identifier for this CPE Descriptor. The priority that a CPE with this assigned Descriptor will receive from the BTS Resource Manager software when requesting RF resources. This field maps to the Layer 2 > Bandwidth Data component in the BTS. Maximum uplink bandwidth allowable for a CPE with this Descriptor. The maximum number of code channels allocated for a CPE is directly related to this field. Minimum uplink bandwidth allowable for a CPE. This field determines the number of code channels allocated when a CPE begins a data session. The larger this value, the more code channels allocated at session startup. Maximum downlink bandwidth allowable for a CPE. The maximum number of code channels allocated for a CPE is directly related to this field. Minimum downlink bandwidth allowable for a CPE. This field determines the number of code channels allocated when a CPE begins a data session. The larger this value, the more code channels allocated at session startup. How much the current queue size contributes to the calculation of average queue size. The average queue size is used by the BTS Resource Manager to determine how many resources (code channels) to give a CPE. The greater the weight, the greater influence the current queue size has on the average queue size. The lower the weight, the more the average queue size is an actual average of the current queue size over time. Maximum queue size for each priority queue (high, low, voice). Once full (Max Threshold) all packets are dropped. The probability of a packet being dropped when the Min Threshold has been reached. The higher this number, the more likely a packet will be dropped between the Min and Max Threshold. All packets are dropped at Max Threshold. The minimum queue size at which voice-priority packets are considered for being dropped. For example, if set to 10% once the queue size reaches 11% or more, voice priority packets may be dropped. The Max Threshold Probability field determines if a packet is dropped once the Min Threshold is exceeded. The minimum queue size at which high-priority packets are considered for being dropped. For example, if set to 10%, once the queue size reaches 11% or more, high priority packets may be dropped. The Max Threshold Probability field determines if a packet is dropped once the Min Threshold is exceeded. continued… Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 237 Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide Field Name Navini Networks, Inc. Values Low Priority Min Drop Threshold (%) 100 Description The minimum queue size at which low-priority packets are considered for being dropped. For example, if set to 10%, once the queue size reaches 11% or more, low priority packets may be dropped. The Max Threshold Probability field determines if a packet is dropped once the Min Threshold is exceeded. DiffServ Field Name Code Point Values Description Unique index (bit) to be mapped to a defined Differentiated Service. The code point is structured as follows: +---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+ DSCP | CU +---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+ DSCP: Differentiated Services Code Point CU: Currently Unused Priority Low, High, Voice The Type of Service (ToS) bits are included in the DSCP. Low, High, or Voice. This is the priority given to data packets associated with this Code Point/Service. The BTS processes data packets with Voice, then High priority before Low priority packets. DHCP Relay Field Name Values Relay Config Enabled (Checkbox) Free Address Low Agent Threshold Free Address High Agent Threshold Relay Config MaxDhcp Size Option 82 Tagging 80 Remote Id (Checkbox) Description Enable or Disable. Clicking on the checkbox enables the DHCP Relay feature. 100 1488 (Checkbox) Enable or Disable. Clicking on the checkbox enables the inclusion of one or more of the following Relay Information sub-options. If checked (enabled), include the Modem EID as the Remote ID Relay Information sub-option. It will be formatted as a 6 octet string “0000 ”. This format is often used in cable modem scenarios. continued… 238 Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 Navini Networks, Inc. Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide Field Name Values Circuit Id (Checkbox) VPN Id (Checkbox) Subnet Selection/Addr (Checkbox) DOCSIS Device/Class (Checkbox) Description If checked (enabled), include the BTS ID as the Circuit ID Relay Information sub-option. It will be formatted as a 4-octet string “ ”. This format is often used in cable modem scenarios. If checked (enabled), include the Modem EID as the VPN ID Relay Information sub-option. It will be formatted as a text string “navini ”. This format is often used in DSL scenarios. If checked (enabled), include the specified Subnet Address as the Subnet Selection Relay Information suboption. If checked (enabled), include the specified DOCSIS Device Class as the DOCSIS Device Relay Information sub-option. ARP Proxy Field Name ARP Ingress Proxy Values (Checkbox) ARP Egress Proxy (Checkbox) Description If clicked, this enables the BTS to respond to ARP messages coming from the CPEs/Modems to the BTS. If clicked, this enables the BTS to respond to ARP messages coming from the network (backhaul) to the BTS on behalf of the CPEs/Modems. Layer 3 Filter Field Name Dynamic Acl (Checkbox) Values Egress Broadcast Filter (Checkbox) Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 Description If clicked, this enables the Dynamic Access Control List. It provides the filtering rules for DHCP Relay - where a BTS configured with these capabilities may add learned addresses to the Modem’s Authenticated IP List (the Modem’s Ingress Filter). When BTSs and Modems are configured for this feature, any packet whose MAC address cannot be found in the current Modem’s Authenticated IP List will be discarded. If clicked, this enables configured BTSs to drop all Ethernet Broadcast packets. 239 Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide Navini Networks, Inc. CPE Configuration Data Form Company:__________________________________________________________ Your Name:______________________________________Date:______________ NOTE 1: Field Values in gray rows indicate data that ordinarily should not be changed or that is populated automatically by the system. NOTE 2: Default Field Values are underlined. Add CPE Field Name Values EID (hex) Descriptor Name CPE Descriptor-1 Collect Perf Data True Nomadic Disabled Admin Status Active 240 Description Equipment Identifier unique to each CPE. This value is determined during the manufacturing process and is displayed on the case of the CPE hardware, as well as entered and displayed as a hexadecimal number in this field. The name of the CPE Descriptor to be used with this CPE. The CPE Descriptor level affects Quality-ofService (QoS) for this CPE’s data packets. True or False. Collect Performance Data. If True, this CPE sends performance metrics to the BTS at the set interval. The BTS then uploads the performance data to the EMS at set intervals. The interval setting for collection and upload from the BTS to the EMS is set in the Performance fields for the BTS. Enabled or Disabled. If Enabled, this CPE can access any BTS in the network that is defined in its Available Home BTS list at the bottom of the screen. When enabled, the Current Home BTS list is ignored. If disabled, this CPE can only access a BTS in its Available Home BTS list. Active or Suspended. If suspended, the CPE cannot access any BTS. A Service Provider may decide to make the CPE suspended due to late service payments, security concerns, etc., rather than deleting the CPE from the system database. Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 Navini Networks, Inc. Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide Home BTS Field Name Values Description Available Home BTS Add or Remove BTS Names. A list of available BTSs to include in the Current Home BTS list for this CPE. Add or Remove BTS Names. If Nomadic is disabled, these are the only BTSs this CPE can access. If Nomadic is enabled, this list is ignored. Current Home BTS Layer 3 Field Name Values Ingress Acl (Checkbox) Ingress Broadcast (Checkbox) Description If checkbox is clicked “on” any incoming packet whose MAC address cannot be found in the current CPE Authenticated IP List will be discarded. If checkbox is clicked “on” any incoming MAC broadcast message will be discarded. DHCP Relay Field Name Free Address High Drop Policy Max Address Number Values Drop most recently leased or Drop least recently leased Drop most recently leased or Drop least recently leased Description Drop the most recently leased or least recently leased IP addresses Drop the most recently leased or least recently leased IP addresses IP Address Field Name Values Static Client IP Address 0.0.0.0 Hardware Address 0:0:0:0:0:0 Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 Description Use static, rather than dynamic, IP addressing for this device. If static IP assignment is being made, add this IP address to the Ingress Filter Authenticated IP List. Otherwise, leave zeroes. Enter the Ethernet address of the host computer to which the CPE is connected and that corresponds to the above Client IP Address. 241 Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide 242 Navini Networks, Inc. Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 Navini Networks, Inc. Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide Appendix V: Base Station Calibration Verification Objective The objective of this procedure is to verify the transmit power and noise figure of the Base Station using a Modem. Test Equipment Required ?? ?? ?? ?? Installed Base Station, powered on and calibrated Navini Drive Test Box PC with Beamforming Display tool installed 4 Fixed Attenuators: two at 30 dB, two at 10 dB. Low power attenuator acceptable. ?? RF cables and adaptors (3 ft or more) ?? N type Terminator for GPS Test Procedure Step 1. If not already done, calibrate the Base Station. Verify a successful calibration by monitoring the console with “caldebugon”. Verify that the cal error equals zero. If cal errors are not zero, troubleshoot the system before starting. Step 2. Prepare the setup that is shown in Figure V1. Step 3. Connect approximately 30-40 dB of attenuation to one end of the calibration cable. Connect a 3-6 ft RF cable to the other end of the attenuation. Connect 40 dB of attenuation to the end of that cable. Connect the attenuators to the Navini Drive Test box. Step 4. Put the Drive Test box as far away from the Base Station as possible. Terminate the GPS connector. Calculate the path loss from the Drive Test box to the Cal cable. In the EMS disable carriers 1-2, 3-4, and 9-10, leaving 5-6 and 7-8 enabled. Also verify that the ACC for 5-6 is selected. This is found by clicking on the BTS tab, highlighting the specific BTS, then selecting Air Interface > Layer 2 > Carrier data. Refer to Figure V2. Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 243 Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide Navini Networks, Inc. Figure V1: Test Setup Attenuation -40 dB –40 dB Cal Cable RF Cables Internet Turn on one PA at a time EMS Server Attenuation -30 to -40 dB EMS Client (CAM) GPS antenna port Switch 25 26 Cable and RFS performance 27 Cable Loss 28 29 Cable Low Md High Avg. loss 30 31 -6.0 -6.0 -6.0 -6.0 -6.0 -6.0 -6.0 -6.0 32 -6.0 -6.0 -6.0 -6.0 33 34 -6.0 -6.0 -6.0 -6.0 -6.0 -6.0 -6.0 -6.0 35 -6.0 -6.0 -6.0 -6.0 36 37 38 39 40 41 -6.0 -6.0 cal -6.0 -6.0 -6.0 -6.0 -6.0 -6.0 -6.0 -6.0 -6.0 -6.0 Insertion loss thru cal cable and RFS 42 43 44 45 TXpath RX path Low Md High -40.0 -18.0 -40.0 -18.0 -40.0 -18.0 Calpathloss (calculated) Average -40.0 -18.0 TXpath -40.0 -40.0 -40.0 -40.0 -31.0 RX path TXpath -18.0 -40.0 -18.0 -40.0 -18.0 -40.0 -18.0 -40.0 -31.0 RX path -18.0 -18.0 -18.0 -18.0 TXpath RX path -40.0 -18.0 -40.0 -18.0 -40.0 -18.0 -40.0 -18.0 49 50 51 -31.0 52 53 TXpath RX path -40.0 -18.0 -40.0 -18.0 -40.0 -18.0 -40.0 -18.0 -31.0 54 TXpath -40.0 -40.0 -40.0 -40.0 -31.0 55 56 RX path TXpath -18.0 -40.0 -18.0 -40.0 -18.0 -40.0 -18.0 -40.0 -31.0 57 58 RX path TXpath -18.0 -40.0 -18.0 -40.0 -18.0 -40.0 -18.0 -40.0 -31.0 RX path -18.0 -18.0 -18.0 -18.0 59 60 64 65 LNAgain (calculated) -31.0 46 47 48 22.0 22.0 22.0 22.0 22.0 22.0 22.0 22.0 22.0 22.0 22.0 22.0 22.0 22.0 22.0 22.0 22.0 22.0 22.0 22.0 22.0 22.0 22.0 22.0 GPS (not used) Receiverperformance 66 67 Power splitter loss UL Tcc Power 0.0316 0.0316 -8.00 -8.00 Absolute Signal strength ULSNR RX Gain NoiseLevel Noise Figure (DAC word) -126.05 -126.05 5.95 5.95 145 145 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 12.00 12.00 -114.05 -114.05 0.0316 0.0316 -8.00 -8.00 12.00 12.00 -114.05 -114.05 -126.05 -126.05 5.95 5.95 145 145 0.0316 -8.00 12.00 -114.05 -126.05 5.95 145 0.0316 0.0316 -8.00 -8.00 12.00 12.00 -114.05 -114.05 -126.05 -126.05 5.95 5.95 145 145 0.0316 -8.00 12.00 -114.05 -126.05 5.95 145 78 79 80 Transmitter Performance 81 82 P out Transceiver Absolute 83 SyncLevel 84 85 -80.0 Power Power (RMS) (peak) 36.0 45.49 Power at antenna (RMS) 30.0 Radiated power TX Gain (DAC (RMS) word) 48.0 200 86 87 -80.0 -80.0 36.0 36.0 45.49 45.49 30.0 30.0 48.0 48.0 200 200 88 -80.0 36.0 45.49 30.0 48.0 200 89 90 -80.0 -80.0 36.0 36.0 45.49 45.49 30.0 30.0 48.0 48.0 200 200 91 92 -80.0 -80.0 36.0 36.0 45.49 45.49 30.0 30.0 48.0 48.0 200 200 93 Power 9 4 deviation 0.0 0.0 0.0 Beamforming Display Laptop creating traffic through FTP or pinging continuously Spreadsheet Drive Test Tool AC power DC power (cigarette lighter) NOTE: The EMS Client (CAM) and the Beamforming Display may be run from the same laptop Figure V2: Configure Carrier Data Window 244 Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 Navini Networks, Inc. Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide Step 5. Connect approximately 20-40 dB of attenuation to the end of the calibration cable. Connect a 3-6 ft RF cable to the other end of the attenuation. Connect the remaining attenuation to the end of that cable. Connect the attenuators to the Navini Drive Test box. Step 6. Put the Drive Test box as far away from the Base Station as possible. Terminate the GPS connector. Calculate the path loss from the Drive Test box to the Cal cable. In the EMS disable carriers 1-2, 3-4, and 9-10, leaving 5-6 and 7-8 enabled. Also verify that the ACC for 5-6 is selected. This is found by clicking on the BTS tab, highlighting the specific BTS, then selecting Air Interface > Layer 2 > Carrier data. Refer to Figure V2. Step 7. Disable all PAs except PA #1. Step 8. From the Beamforming, verify that the Receive Sync from the Drive Test Tool is approximately –80 dBm. If not, adjust the value of the attenuators accordingly. Step 9. Start an upload of a large file or ping continuously with packets 3,000 bytes or greater. You need to acquire at least 20 code channels in one sub-carrier. If the number of code channels is less than 20, start an additional ping sessions. ping –l 3200 –t Step 10. Capture the following parameters from the BTS Beam-forming display. Refer to Figure V3: Downlink: SYNC Recv Sgl Strength (dBm) Uplink: SNR (dB) Uplink: TCC Recv Sgl Strength (dBm) Step 11. Capture the same parameters as in Step 10 for each of the remaining PAs, one by one. That is, with PA #2 turned on and all other PAs turned off ; then with PA #3 turned on and all other PAs turned off; etc. Step 12. Use the spreadsheet and input all the captured parameters to calculate the Tx power and Noise figure. Step 13. Measure and record attenuation value. Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 245 Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide Navini Networks, Inc. Figure V3: BTS Beamforming Display Window Number Numberofofchannels channels assigned assignedtotoTCC TCC SYNC SYNCRecv RecvSgl SglStrength Strength(dBm) (dBm ) SNR SNR(dB) (dB) TCC TCCRecv RecvSgl SglStrength Strength(dBm) (dBm) Other Parameters to Capture The following parameters should also be captured: ?? ?? ?? ?? 246 Calibration Sensitivity (set in EMS) Path Loss (to be measured) Cal Cable Loss (set in EMS) Power Splitter Loss (set in EMS) Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 Navini Networks, Inc. Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide Results Using the Base Station Calibration Verification form (Figure V4), submit your results to Navini Networks for evaluation and sign-off. Figure V4: Base Station Calibration Verification Form 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 General information Data input by user Date Site Name BTS ID Frequency (MHz) Software release Personnel 9/28/2003 Cal cable loss Attenuation Total Path loss RX sensitivity (set in EMS) Antenna power (in EMS) Antenna gain -6.0 70.0 -76.0 -90.0 30.0 18.0 High -6.0 -6.0 -6.0 -6.0 -6.0 -6.0 -6.0 -6.0 -6.0 Avg. loss -6.0 -6.0 -6.0 -6.0 -6.0 -6.0 -6.0 -6.0 -6.0 Mid -40.0 -18.0 -40.0 -18.0 -40.0 -18.0 -40.0 -18.0 -40.0 -18.0 -40.0 -18.0 -40.0 -18.0 -40.0 -18.0 High -40.0 -18.0 -40.0 -18.0 -40.0 -18.0 -40.0 -18.0 -40.0 -18.0 -40.0 -18.0 -40.0 -18.0 -40.0 -18.0 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 Cable and RFS performance Cable cal Cable Loss Low -6.0 -6.0 -6.0 -6.0 -6.0 -6.0 -6.0 -6.0 -6.0 Mid -6.0 -6.0 -6.0 -6.0 -6.0 -6.0 -6.0 -6.0 -6.0 Insertion loss thru cal cable and RFS TX path RX path TX path RX path TX path RX path TX path RX path TX path RX path TX path RX path TX path RX path TX path RX path Low -40.0 -18.0 -40.0 -18.0 -40.0 -18.0 -40.0 -18.0 -40.0 -18.0 -40.0 -18.0 -40.0 -18.0 -40.0 -18.0 Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 Average -40.0 -18.0 -40.0 -18.0 -40.0 -18.0 -40.0 -18.0 -40.0 -18.0 -40.0 -18.0 -40.0 -18.0 -40.0 -18.0 Cal path loss (calculated) -31.0 LNA gain (calculated) 22.0 22.0 22.0 22.0 22.0 22.0 22.0 22.0 22.0 22.0 22.0 22.0 22.0 22.0 22.0 22.0 22.0 22.0 22.0 22.0 22.0 22.0 22.0 22.0 -31.0 -31.0 -31.0 -31.0 -31.0 -31.0 -31.0 247 Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide Navini Networks, Inc. 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 Receiver performance Power splitter loss UL Tcc Power 0.0316 0.0316 0.0316 0.0316 0.0316 0.0316 0.0316 0.0316 -8.00 -8.00 -8.00 -8.00 -8.00 -8.00 -8.00 -8.00 UL SNR Absolute Signal strength Noise Level Noise Figure RX Gain (DAC word) 12.00 12.00 12.00 12.00 12.00 12.00 12.00 12.00 -114.05 -114.05 -114.05 -114.05 -114.05 -114.05 -114.05 -114.05 -126.05 -126.05 -126.05 -126.05 -126.05 -126.05 -126.05 -126.05 5.95 5.95 5.95 5.95 5.95 5.95 5.95 5.95 145 145 145 145 145 145 145 145 Transmitter Performance P out Transceiver Absolute Sync Level Power (RMS) -80.0 -80.0 -80.0 -80.0 -80.0 -80.0 -80.0 -80.0 36.0 36.0 36.0 36.0 36.0 36.0 36.0 36.0 Power deviation Power (peak) 45.49 45.49 45.49 45.49 45.49 45.49 45.49 45.49 0.0 Power at antenna (RMS) Radiated power (RMS) TX Gain (DAC word) 30.0 30.0 30.0 30.0 30.0 30.0 30.0 30.0 48.0 48.0 48.0 48.0 48.0 48.0 48.0 48.0 200 200 200 200 200 200 200 200 0.0 0.0 Test Form Instructions These instructions explain how and what to enter into the Base Station Calibration Verification spreadsheet, as well as define each cell’s function. The cells that need an entry are shown in green on the spreadsheet. This document and form are to be used in conjunction with the Base Station Installation & commissioning Guide P/N 40-00047-00. I. 248 Section 1: General Information A. Date (D4) Excel will enter the current date. B. SITE NAME (D5) Enter site name or customer designation. C. BTS ID (D6) Enter BTS identification number or customer description. D. Frequency (D7) Enter the system operating frequency that the customer has determined to use. E. Software Release (D8) Enter the release number of the software load being used. F. Name (D9) Enter your name. G. Cal cable loss (D12) Excel will enter averaged value of calibration cable loss from cell E38. Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 Navini Networks, Inc. Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide H. Attenuation (D13) Enter the attenuation value inserted into calibration path. I. Total Path loss (D14) Excel will enter the calculated value of the total path loss. J. Receiver sensitivity (in EMS) (D15) Enter the same number entered in the EMS under Air Interface > Layer 1 > General tab > RX sensitivity. K. Antenna power (in EMS) (D16) Enter the same number entered in the EMS under Air Interface > Layer 1 > General tab > Antenna power. L. Antenna gain (D17) Enter gain value of antenna elements. II. Section 2: Cable and RFS performance A. Cable loss (B30-D38) Enter the values measured during the cable sweeps. Include the minus sign on all entries. Include jumpers and surge protectors. B. Insertion loss through cal cable and RFS (C44-E59) Enter values measured during the RF sweeps of the cables and the RFS. Include the minus sign for all entries. C. Cal path loss (calculated) (H44-H58) Calculated value based on absolute loss measured during RF sweeps. The measured cable loss for antenna 1 plus 3dB for inherent loss in RFS (internal cables and LNA loss) is subtracted from the measured TX path loss to give absolute calibration path loss. It is important to check this value to ensure that it does not exceed –45 dB. D. LNA gain (calculated) (J45-L59) Calculated value based on absolute loss measured during RF sweeps. The absolute value of the difference between TX path loss and RX path loss equals LNA gain for each antenna path. III. Section 3: Receiver Performance A. Power splitter loss (in EMS) (A69-A76) Before calibrating, the script must have been run to enter the decimal values of the calibration board loss for each path. Enter those same values here. B. UL TCC power (C69-C76) From Beamforming Display, enter the value from the "Tcc receive signal strength" field. There should be only one carrier active. This is the relative power per code channel, referenced to RX sensitivity, of that carrier, being received by the Base Station. C. UL SNR (E69-E76) Enter the value from the Beamforming Display. This value can be found just above the TCC value in the same carrier column. D. Absolute Signal strength (G69-G76) Calculated signal strength of the receive signal converted to 5 MHz BW. TCC power per code channel is converted to absolute by adding RX sensitivity and then subtracting spreading gain. Multiple antenna gain is then added to show receive Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 249 Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide Navini Networks, Inc. signal strength at each antenna. (RX sensitivity + UL TCC power - 10*LOG10(320) + 9). E. Noise level (I69-I76) Calculated digital noise floor of the system measured in a 5 MHz BW. F. Noise Figure (K69-K76) Calculated by adding the spreading gain of the individual carriers back in and subtracting the thermal noise floor (KTB) in a 500 KHz BW. G. RX gain (DAC word) (M69-M76) The data word generated during calibration for the receiver gain DAC that controls the IF attenuator. It is found in the EMS under Air interface > Layer 1 > Show configuration > Antenna tab. IV. Section 4: Transmitter Performance A. Analyzer Readings (A90-B97) 1. Peak The peak amplitude of the sync signal measured on the spectrum analyzer. The measurement is taken with the spectrum analyzer in the time domain (0 Hz span) and RBW set for 5 MHz. Sweep time is typically between 10 and 20 ms. When taking the measurement, the sync signal will have peaks and valleys associated with it. Make sure to measure the absolute peak. 2. RMS This is a calculated value based on measurements taken on several occasions, comparing peak power to RMS power on a Rhode & Schwartz spectrum analyzer. It has been determined that the correction factor for peak to average on a standard spectrum analyzer is 9.5 dB. This correction factor is the default entry in this section. If it is possible to make the RMS measurement with the proper equipment then that is the preferred method. The calculation is very straightforward: peak power minus 9.5 dB = Power RMS. B. P out transceiver (D90-E97) Power peak and Power RMS are calculated values using the value from the spectrum analyzer readings and the value entered for coupler/test cable loss (Cell H31). C. Power at antenna (RMS) (G90-G97) Calculated value using the Output Power (Pout ) of the transceivers and the Cable Loss plus the inherent loss of the RFS. D. Radiated Power (RMS) (I90-I97) Calculated value using Power at the antenna and the value entered for antenna gain (Cell H32). E. TX Gain (DAC word) The hex data generated during calibration for the transmit gain DAC that controls the IF attenuator. This is found in the EMS under Air interface > Layer 1 > Show configuration > Antenna tab. F. Max power deviation across all antennae (E99, G99, I99) Calculated value showing the deviation between the lowest power antenna and the highest power antenna for each column. 250 Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 Navini Networks, Inc. Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide Appendix W: Local Modem Tests Objective Local Wired Modem Testing (then Over-The-Air Modem Testing) will verify that the Base Station is working and able to transmit and receive data. Data rates are not being checked at this time. Refer to Figure W1 when setting up and performing the Wired Modem procedures. Wired Modem Test Equipment Required ?? ?? ?? Modem PC - Laptop with CPE debug tool. Connect to CPE with an Ethernet cable Attenuator - 70dB fixed attenuation, plus 40 adjustable range with 1dB resolution (cascade multiple attenuators) Shielding box - Need to provide 80 dB isolation. Shielding box may not be needed if the Modem cannot sync to BTS over-the-air at the test location. ?? Figure W1: Wired Modem Setup Calibration cable BTS Attenuator Modem CPE Shielding box PC Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 251 Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide Navini Networks, Inc. Equipment Settings Part of the Test Procedures below. Test Procedure Setup Set up the test procedures, per the following. Step 1. Calibrate the BTS and perform the Calibration Verification procedure. Connect the Modem and the attenuators. The combined attenuation should be set roughly as follows: Total attenuation = PTX - 30 + 18 – Cal cable loss + 80 Where PTX is the Tx output power at antenna input port that is set in EMS during calibration. Cal cable loss is the loss of the calibration cable. The total attenuation should be partitioned between fixed and adjustable attenuators in such a way that the adjustable attenuator is set to about 10 dB. Disconnect the calibration cable from the back of the BTS shelf and connect it to the attenuator as shown in the drawing Ping the BTS continuously from the Modem. Check the sync level at the CPE debug tool. The level should be about –80 dBm. Test Procedure - Check Modem Sensitivity & Output Power Follow the steps in the procedure below. Step 1. Record the downlink TCC power level and SNR reading on the CPE debug tool. Step 2. Calculate the effective noise floor: NF= SNRTCC – LevelTCC. Where SNRTCC is the TCC SNR and LevelTCC is the received downlink TCC level. NF should be close to –127 ±5. Step 3. Check Modem output power cap difference. It should be greater than 0. Step 4. Increase the attenuation by 10 dB (increase the attenuation of the adjustable attenuator). Step 5. Measure the effective noise floor and the output power cap difference gain. Step 6. Increase the attenuation by another 10 dB and take the measurements again (if the link is broken when the attenuation increases 10 dB, back off the attenuation by 10 dB and then increase the attenuation with 1 dB steps until the link is broken. Then reduce the attenuation by 4 dB). 252 Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 Navini Networks, Inc. Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide Step 7. Calculate the maximum path allowed as follows: Max loss = Attenuation total + Cal cable loss + 30 Where Attenuation total is the total attenuation of all attenuators (fixed + adjustable). Test Procedure - Check BTS Sensitivity (Individual Antenna) Step 1. Set the attenuation of the attenuator so the total attenuation is about PTX – 30 – Cal cable loss + 80. Step 2. Activate antenna #1 only. Step 3. Record the uplink TCC power level and SNR reading on the BTS debug tool. Step 4. Calculate the effective noise floor: NF = SNRTCC – LevelTCC. Where SNRTCC is the TCC SNR and LevelTCC is the received downlink TCC level. NF should be close to: SNR – BTS Sensitivity + 25 ±?5. Where BTS sensitivity is the BTS sensitivity setting during calibration. Step 5. Record the Modem output power. Step 6. Increase the attenuation by 10 dB (increase the attenuation of the adjustable attenuator). Step 7. Measure BTS effective noise floor and Modem output power again. Step 8. Increase the attenuation by another 10 dB and take the measurements again (if the link is broken when the attenuation increases 10 dB, back off the attenuation by 10 dB and then increase the attenuation with 1 dB steps until the link is broken. Then reduce the attenuation by 4 dB. The same attenuation will be used for all antenna tests). Step 9. Calculate the maximum path allowed as follows: Max loss = Attenuation total + Cal cable loss + 30 Where Attenuation total is the total attenuation of all attenuators (fixed + adjustable). Step 10. Repeat the steps for antennas 2 through 8. Step 11. Average the Modem output power over antennas 1 through 8 for each attenuation setting. Test Procedure - Check BTS Sensitivity (Antenna Array) Step 1. Set the initial attenuation the same as in the individual antenna testing procedure. Step 2. Activate all antennas. Step 3. Record the uplink TCC power level and SNR reading on BTS debug tool. Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 253 Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide Navini Networks, Inc. Step 4. Calculate the effective noise floor: NF = SNRTCC – LevelTCC. Where SNRTCC is the TCC SNR and LevelTCC is the received uplink TCC level. NF should be close to SNR – BTS Sensitivity + 25 ±?5. Where BTS sensitivity is the BTS sensitivity setting during calibration. Step 5. Record the CPE output power. Step 6. Increase the attenuation by 10 dB (increase the attenuation of the adjustable attenuator). Step 7. Measure BTS effective noise floor and Modem output power again. Step 8. Increase the attenuation by the same amount as in individual antenna tests and measure the BTS effective noise floor and Modem output power. Step 9. For each attenuation setting, the Modem output power should be 9 dB less compared to those (average) in individual antenna tests. Step 10. Increase the attenuation by another 18 dB. The link should be on. Step 11. Calculate the maximum path allowed as follows: Max loss = Attenuation total + Cal cable loss + 30 Where Attenuation total is the total attenuation of all attenuators (fixed + adjustable). Test Procedure - Data Rate Step 1. Set the attenuation of the attenuator so the total attenuation is about PTX – 30 +18 – Cal cable loss + 80. Step 2. Activate all antennas. Step 3. FTP a file with size greater than 10 Mbps from Modem to BTS (uplink). Step 4. Check the uplink data rate. It should be approximately 1 Mbps. Step 5. FTP a file with size greater than 20 Mbps from BTS to Modem (downlink). Step 6. Check the downlink data rate. It should be approximately 2 Mbps. After the test is completed, reconnect the calibration cable back to the BTS and run the calibration. The new calibration table should be the same as before (the changes in Tx and Rx AGC should be within 2 bits). 254 Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 Navini Networks, Inc. Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide Over-The-Air Modem Test Equipment Required Same as for Wired Modem Test. Equipment Settings Included in the Test Procedure. Test Procedure To set up a Modem for local over-the-air testing, follow the steps below. Step 1. Connect a Modem to a test computer. Reference the Ripwave Modem User Guide, P/N 40-00026-00 for Modem setup procedures. The location of the test computer setup needs to be close to the Base Station, within its coverage range. Step 2. Ensure that the Modem is registered in the EMS. Refer to Ripwave Configuration Guide for Modem registration procedures. Step 3. Using FTP software, transfer a 2 Mb file over-the-air from the test computer to the BTS. This is a system uplink transfer. Step 4. Using FTP software, transfer a 10 Mb file over-the-air from the BTS to the test computer. This is a system downlink transfer. Step 5. Ensure that both files transferred during testing. Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 255 Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide 256 Navini Networks, Inc. Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 Navini Networks, Inc. Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide Appendix X: Drive Study Overview The Drive Study is performed to confirm Base Station coverage. It is used to validate that the Base Station can be “seen” by a Modem throughout its predicted coverage area. The RF coverage analysis displays areas of coverage from “good” to “bad” by the use of colorcoding. An RF coverage analysis and its legend may be seen in Figure X1. The legend on the left displays the decibel strength for a given area, with red designating ‘good coverage’ and white designating ‘bad coverage’. The RF coverage analysis is used to map out the Drive Study route (Figure X2), along with geographic areas of concern. You should pay particular attention to null (white) areas and the cell edges. Figure X1: RF Coverage Analysis Example Good coverage area Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 Medium coverage area Bad coverage area 257 Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide Navini Networks, Inc. Figure X2: Drive Study Route Example Equipment Required ?? ?? ?? ?? ?? ?? ?? ?? Omni-directional antenna mounted outside vehicle GPS with serial cable Modem Ethernet Cable Modem power supply DC to AC power converter Laptop computer Drive Study Form Drive Test Procedure While driving you will collect statistics to validate the coverage plot. The application takes a reading every second and records the data in comma delimited file format. It is important to ensure that the GPS is on and that you can see the GPS coordinates in the application. Since the Ripwave system is not a mobile system, do not exceed 10 mph during the Drive Study. Going any faster will negate the adaptive beamforming, as the vehicle will not be in the exact position calculated by the Base Station. 258 Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 Navini Networks, Inc. Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide Step 1. Ensure that the Base Station has successfully completed calibration and RF sanity measurements at the frequency and TX/RX signal levels that were determined during the site survey. Ensure that the Base Station is powered on and able to TX/RX data. Step 2. Create a CPE Descriptor, and assign it to the Modems to be used for the Drive Study: CPE Descriptor Parameters Name: Drive Study Index: Next available number Priority: 1 UpLink Max Bandwidth: 64 UpLink Min Bandwidth: 32 DownLink Max Bandwidth: 96 DownLink Min Bandwidth: 64 Other parameters: Use defaults. Step 3. Mount an omni-directional antenna on the roof of the vehicle. This will serve as the antenna for the Modem. Step 4. Bring the RF cable from the omni-directional antenna into the vehicle through the window. Attach the antenna to the antenna input of the Modem. The rotating upright antenna on the Modem needs to be removed to perform this step. You will also need to disconnect the patch antennas inside (Figure X3). Figure X3: Patch Antennas Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 259 Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide Navini Networks, Inc. Step 5. Connect the DC to AC power converter to the power port in the vehicle. Step 6. If applicable, place the external antenna on the top of the vehicle. Step 7. Connect the Modem power supply to the Modem and to the DC to AC power converter. Step 8. Connect the Ethernet cable to the Ethernet port on the laptop computer and to the Ethernet port on the Modem. Step 9. Connect the GPS to the serial port on the laptop computer. Step 10. Optional: Connect the laptop power supply to the DC to AC power converter. (The laptop can be run off of its battery.) Step 11. Power on the GPS and the laptop computer. Step 12. On the laptop computer, start the Navini Networks Drive Study application. Step 13. Verify that the GPS location (latitude and longitude) and the GPS time are seen in the application. Step 14. Power on the Modem. Step 15. Enter a memo into the log file comment field of the Constellation Debugger about the route of the Drive Study being performed. When finished, click the log comment button. Step 16. Start driving along the Drive Study route determined during the RF coverage analysis. Do not exceed 10 - 15 mph. Step 17. When testing is completed, prepare the file(s) to be sent back to Navini for postprocessing and analysis. 260 Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 Navini Networks, Inc. Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide Drive Study Form Navini Networks Drive Test Check list Specify the following items before the drive test Drive test area name Date of Drive Test Drive Tester Name Standard Vehicle Name and Type CPE EID Frequency Band (ISM, MMDS) CPE test device RF cable loss (dB) CPE Test device Antenna gain (calibrated) Drive Route (Map attached) Drive test file name BTS Transmit Power Fill the site configuration BTS ID BTS antenna height BTS antenna Omni/Patch Mounted on the top or side Antenna Azimuth Antenna downtilt Drive Test Route Plan Yes / No Typical Clutter Height High Density Urban Covered Commercial/Industrial Residential with Trees Residential with Few Trees Paved Areas Grass/Agriculture Open Area Forested Areas Water Airports Others Things to pay attention to: 1. Make sure that the GPS data on the constellation debugger is updating all the time during the drive test. 2. Make sure that the antenna only selects the omni port all the time. 3. Make sure that the CPE is locked to the correct BTS by checking the BTS ID and frequency. 4. Make sure that the RF connections are good all the time. Check this by observing the stability of the RF signal strength in the LO 5. Please make proper log information in certain important locations. Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 261 Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide 262 Navini Networks, Inc. Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 Navini Networks, Inc. Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide Appendix Y: Location (FTP) Tests Introduction The Location, or FTP, Test is performed to check the Ripwave system operation through file transfers between the Base Station and the Modem. The test measures the data rate performance at various locations within the coverage area. Data throughput is measured by executing file transfers using the FTP protocol for both upstream and downstream links. A file server must be in place on the same subnet with the BTS to accurately perform the file transfer, and the CPE User computer must be loaded with an FTP Client. As the file transfer is running, a data file is captured by the Modem tool. Data rates are captured by the FTP program. Data is recorded in a spreadsheet format. The spreadsheet lists the location, GPS, and other information. As data rates are captured, the results are entered manually. An average SNR and sync RSSI can be read from the debug tool, and recorded, for quick comparison to the acceptable criteria (see “Acceptable Criteria” section of this appendix). For NLOS indoor locations, tests are performed both outside the building and inside, so that the obstruction loss for the building can be determined. Unless the customer can provide indoor access, all results will be LOS or Near NLOS. Planning the Locations Before the actual testing is conducted, you will need to select the locations for the testing to occur. The sites should meet specific criteria and include a mixture of the following environments: ?? ?? ?? ?? ?? ?? High Power (A), low clutter; close in, residential High Power (A), high clutter; close in, commercial Medium Power (B), low clutter; mid-range, residential Medium Power (B), high clutter; mid-range, commercial Low Power (C), low clutter; distant, residential Lower Power (C), high clutter; distant, commercial Where: (A) High Power = Sync Value greater than –70 dBm (B) Medium Power = Sync Value between –70 dBm and –85 dBm (C) Low Power = Sync Value between –85 dBm, and –95 dBm Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 263 Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide Navini Networks, Inc. At least 5 test points for each type are attempted. This may be difficult, depending upon the actual deployment scenario. Results may yield a very large percentage in one of the categories. For selecting an even spread across a 120-degree sector for a panel antenna installation, divide the 120 degrees into 6 even slices of 20 degrees each. Then divide each slice into 2 Km segments. This spaces each location at an approximate even distance throughout the complete sector and yields 36 test sites. To select an even spread across a 360-degree cell for an omni antenna installation, divide the 360-degree cell into 12 even slices of 30 degrees each. Next, divide each slice into segments based on distance (1 Km or 2 Km, depending upon propagation). This will approximately space each location an even distance from each other throughout the complete cell, yielding approximately 48 test sites (based on a 4 Km cell radius). To do this, split the cell into 4 quadrants. Using the RF coverage analysis, select up to 16 locations per quadrant (Figure H1). Pay particular attention to null areas and the cell edges. At these locations you will perform a file transfer to measure the data rates available. The FTP/Location Test Tool program and the BTS Beamforming Display tool will be used to record RF parameters during each test. Figures Y1 and Y2 provide examples of simple guidelines for selecting an even spread across a cell area. Figure Y1: Example of a 3-sector Site 264 Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 Navini Networks, Inc. Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide Figure Y2: Example of 120° of an Omni Site A6 A5 A4 A3 A2 A1 Acceptable Criteria In order to evaluate the test results, several criteria are reviewed. These criteria are valid for both LOS and NLOS measurements. Processed Sync Signal Strength: For a given test location, ± 2 dB variation during FTP Absolute Sync Signal Strength – Processed Sync Signal Strength: not greater than 2 dB variation during FTP ?? SNR values consistent during the FTP for all carriers used: a. QPSK: at least 11 dB b. 8 PSK: at least 14 dB c. QAM16: at least 17 dB ?? UL and DL Packet Error Rates (PER) not greater than 1%. This will vary according to interference levels, but may not render the system inoperable. ?? Uplink Beamforming Gain: between 16 dB and 21 dB. Perform a comparison of UL and DL, Beamforming Gain differences should be not greater than 3 dB. ?? ?? Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 265 Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide Navini Networks, Inc. ?? Modem Transmit Power < 25 dBm; BTS Transmit Power < 0 dBm per code channel with power control ?? Sync vs. Data Rate: Absolute Sync (dBm) (A) –55 to –70 (B) –70 to –85 (C) –85 to –95 UL Data Rate (Mbps) 0.6 to 1.0 0.5 to 1.0 0.10 to 0.5 DL Data Rate (Mbps) 1.5 to 2.0 1.2 to 2.0 0.3 to 1.0 Process The recommended process for performing the Location (FTP) tests is described below. First: Verify that a single Modem transmits and receives data at expected rates, as indicated previously. Second: Verify that multiple Modems simultaneously transmit and receive data at acceptable rates, and the parameters listed above are being met. NOTE: The exact number of Modems is determined by field conditions. The minimum is two. Third: Verify operation at the full range of the system*. Include LOS Location Tests at cell edges. The height of Modem and uplink and downlink data rates are recorded for each site. Data rates are to be compared with expected results, as seen in the last item (Sync vs. Data Rate) of Acceptance Criteria. For example: *2.6 GHz : *2.4 GHz: ~12 Km ~ 3 Km Equipment Required ?? ?? ?? ?? ?? ?? ?? ?? 266 Laptop computer GPS with serial cable FTP/Location Test Tool application BTS Beamforming diagnostic tool Modem Modem power supply DC to AC power converter Ethernet Cable Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 Navini Networks, Inc. Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide Location (FTP) Test Procedure Two people are needed to perform this procedure. One will be in the car performing the location test, and the other will be at the Base Station checking the operation using the BTS Beamforming diagnostic tool. 1. Ensure that the Base Station has successfully completed calibration, RF sanity measurements, and the Drive Study at the frequency and TX/RX signal levels that were determined by the cell site survey. Also ensure that the Base Station is powered on and is able to transmit and receive data. 2. Connect the DC to AC power converter to the power port in the vehicle. 3. Connect the Modem power supply to the CPE and to the DC to AC power converter. 4. Connect the Ethernet cable to the Ethernet port on the laptop computer and to the Ethernet port on the Modem. 5. Connect the GPS to the serial port on the laptop computer. 6. Drive to one of the locations selected on the RF coverage analysis. Stop and turn off the vehicle. 7. Power on the GPS, the Modem, and the laptop computer. Place the Modem on the roof of the vehicle. 8. Start the Navini Networks FTP/Location Test Tool program. 9. Verify that the Base Station is transmitting and that the Modem establishes sync and can communicate with the Base Station. Ping a device address on the network side of the Base Station, and verify that a reply is received. While monitoring the Constellation Debugger, position the Modem to reduce the difference between absolute sync and processed sync levels to 2 or less. 10. Enter a memo into the comment field about which link of the test is being performed. 11. Verify that the GPS input is seen in the application. 12. Put the location number/site identifier into the comment field of the Navini Networks Constellation Debugger, and press the Enter key. This will identify the site location. 13. On the EMS connected to the Base Station, start the BTS Beamforming diagnostic tool. 14. From the laptop computer with the Modem connected to it, start a downlink FTP file transfer. Record the results on the site page or in the log. 15. On the EMS connected to the Base Station, using the BTS Beamforming diagnostic tool verify the strength and direction of the beam during the file transfer. Record the results on the site page or in the log. 16. Repeat the file transfer three times, stopping and starting the Debugger and Beamforming tool for each transfer 17. Repeat steps 14-15, this time performing an uplink FTP transfer. Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 267 Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide Navini Networks, Inc. 18. When finished, remove the Modem from the roof and secure equipment for travel. 19. Drive to the next location selected on the RF coverage analysis. Stop, and turn off the vehicle. 20. Repeat steps 7 to 19 until all locations are tested. At this point send this data to the RF Engineers to analyze, or continue until each quadrant in the cell is complete. When you send the results depends upon the schedule or results from the file transfers. 268 Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 Navini Networks, Inc. Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide Location (FTP) Test Form The form for recording the Location (FTP) test results is an Excel spreadsheet. Shown in Table Y1, the actual column headers go across the top of the form, but are broken into two sections here for readability. Table Y1: Location (FTP) Test Form BTS ID Site name File name; CPE File name; BTS Sector Software Release Distance CPE w/ (Km) LOS NLOS CPE ext FTP Data Rate FTP Data Downlink Rate Uplink (Kbps) (Kbps) Absolute Sync (dB) Remarks data rate Mbps 288 0.9 0.8 0.7 0.6 0.5 0.4 0.3 0.2 0.1 Downlink Uplink 0.2 0.4 0.6 0.8 distance Km Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 269 Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide 270 Navini Networks, Inc. Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 Navini Networks, Inc. Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide Appendix Z: Site Installation Close-out Documentation List of Documents When performing a Ripwave Base Station installation, a number of tasks and forms are completed during the process. The following is a list and a brief description of each of the closing documents that are either required or optional for completing the Customer Acceptance of the system once it is commissioned. If the item is designated as REQUIRED it must be sent back to Navini Technical Services. If a required document cannot be obtained, you must retain approval in advance from the Manager, Navini Technical Services. _____ 1. _____ 2. _____ 3. _____ 4. _____ 5. _____ 6. _____ 7. _____ 8. _____ 9. _____ 10. Customer Contact List. REQUIRED (Project Manager & Customer) Site Candidate Evaluation Form. REQUIRED Drawings/pictures from site. Drive Instructions & Map to location. REQUIRED Network Diagram. Optional. Antenna Power and Cable Selection REQUIRED Bill of Materials (BoM). REQUIRED This is a list of the physical materials and their associated quantities that are used to build the site. This list includes but is not limited to RF cable type and size, RF cable connectors, grounding, racks, power supplies, RF cable hangers, RFS mounts, and so forth. Excel Configuration Forms. REQUIRED These forms are created in Excel spreadsheets and used to plan the system configuration parameters that must be in place as part of the installation and commissioning of the system. The forms are filled out according to how the EMS, BTS, Modems, and Global Parameters are to be configured for this customer site. RF Plot REQUIRED Interference Data. Optional. Interference Analysis Report. REQUIRED if Interfere Data Collected (RF Planning) Above information is required before departing to site _____ 11. _____ 12. _____ 13. RFS System Test Form. REQUIRED This form contains the data that is captured during the RF sweeps on the Ripwave RFS antenna and RF cables. Base Station Installation Certification Form. REQUIRED This form represents the close of a key milestone, the physical installation of the BTS and RFS. It includes RFS antenna height, azimuth, downtilt, grounding, weatherproofing, and other information about the site. Export BTS Data. REQUIRED This is not a form that needs to be completed; rather, it is data that is captured from the EMS once the Base Station and Modems have been provisioned. This step should be completed prior to the Drive Study, and then again prior to the Location (FTP) tests. Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 271 Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide _____ 14. _____ 15. _____ 16. _____ 17. _____ 18. _____ 19. _____ 20. _____ 21. Navini Networks, Inc. Export EMS Data. REQUIRED Export CpeDescriptors (all). Optional. Base Station Calibration Verification Form. REQUIRED Calibration Verification is sometimes referred to as the Sanity Test. The form contains the operational results of the Base Station transmit and receive tests after the physical installation has been completed and the BTS has been turned on. Drive Study Form & Data. REQUIRED Also referred to as Drive Test. The form contains results of driving the coverage area of the installed Base Station site and capturing sync data on a laptop. The information is provided to Navini Networks to help tune the RF coverage model. Need Data Constellation Display. RF Plot Tuned Model. REQUIRED Location (FTP) Test Form. REQUIRED This form contains data rate information that is captured during RF throughput testing. The data is captured at both the EMS and at the Modem location on a laptop. The number of points to capture is determined by Navini Networks and the customer. Need BTS Beamforming and Constellation Display. RMAs. REQUIRED if replaced cards from original shipment Backup of Customer Deployed EMS Server. REQUIRED List of Pictures The following is a list and description of the REQUIRED pictures that Navini Networks recommends capturing during the installation project. Additional pictures are acceptable. 272 _____ 1. RFS antenna mounted on the tower or rooftop _____ 2. Weatherproofed connectors on the back of the RFS antenna _____ 3. Cable Bend radius on the tower to the RFS _____ 4. Jumper cable to RF main feeder connections weatherproofed _____ 5. RF cable strap ground kit installation in all places as required for installation. RF main feeder runs. _____ 6. Lower buss bar with lightning protectors (weatherproofed if outside the shelter) _____ 7. Main feeder to BTS jumper connections _____ 8. BTS jumper connections to BTS _____ 9. RFS antenna grounding connections _____ 10. BTS grounding connections at BTS and buss bar _____ 11. Power connections to the BTS Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 Navini Networks, Inc. Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide _____ 12. BTS split chassis cabling _____ 13. Ground connections to earth ground or building steel _____ 14. Tower or mount connections to ground Checklist This checklist should be completed and sent to Navini Networks along with the forms and data. Closeout Documents Completed Date File Name Completed Date File Name 1. Customer Contact List 2. Site Candidate Evaluation Form completed 3. Drive Instructions & Map 4. Network Diagram (optional) 5. Antenna Power & Cable Selection 6. Bill of Materials 7. Excel Configuration Forms 8. RF Plot 9. Interference Data (optional) 10. Interference Analysis Report 11. RFS System Test Form 12. Base Station Installation Certification Form 13. Exported BTS Data 14. Exported EMS Data 15. Exported CPE Descriptor Data (optional) 16. Base Station Calibration Verification Form 17. Drive Study Form & Data 18. RF Plot Tuned Model 19. Location (FTP) Test Form 20. RMAs 21. Backup from EMS Closeout Pictures 1. RFS mounted 2. Weatherproofed connectors on RFS 3. Cable Bend radius 4. Jumper cable to RF main feeder 5. Cable ground kits if needed 6. Shelter bus bar with lightning arrestors 7. Main feeder to BTS jumpers 8. BTS Jumpers to BTS 9. RFS grounded 10. BTS grounding at BTS/buss bar Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 273 Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide Navini Networks, Inc. 11. Power connected to BTS 12. Split chassis cabling 13. Ground connections to earth ground 14. Tower or mount connections to ground 274 Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 Navini Networks, Inc. Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide Appendix AA: Customer Acceptance Form Base Station Installation & Commissioning Services Customer Acceptance Form Customer Name: Customer’s Authorized Representative: Job Title: Office Address: Email Address: Office Phone: Cell Phone or Pager: Site Name: Site Description: ________ Site Physical Address: INSTALLATION SECTION: Date Installation Started: Customer Acceptance By: _____________________ __________ COMMISSIONING SECTION: Date Commissioning Started: Customer Acceptance By: _____________________ ______________________________ TEST ACCEPTANCE SECTION: Date Testing Started: Customer Acceptance By: _____________________ Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003 Completed: ________ Title: ________________Date: Completed: _________ Title: ________________Date: Completed: Title: ________________Date: ______________________________ 275 Ripwave Base Station I&C Guide Navini Networks, Inc. This Customer Acceptance Form is subject to and governed by all of the terms and conditions set forth in the Master Supply Agreement between the parties. The Customer acknowledges, understands and agrees that when it’s Authorized Representative signs-off the Test Acceptance Section of this Form, Customer has thoroughly inspected the installation and commissioning services, and Customer’s sign-off means that completion of on-site verification that the Equipment installed by Seller performs in accordance with the Acceptance Criteria set forth in the Master Supply Agreement between the parties. The completed Navini Networks’ Site Installation and Commissioning Documents referenced below and attached hereto are incorporated by reference into this Customer Acceptance Form for all purposes. Navini Networks Site Installation and Commissioning Documents (double-click on the box to check or de-select a checkmark when completing the form): Site Candidate Evaluation Report Site Materials BoM Site Drawings Site Construction Specific Tests, as required – Grounding System Test Results, Concrete Break Test Results, Tower Guy Tensioning Test Results, etc. Site Specific Digital Photographs, as Required RFS System Tests Base Station Installation Certification Base Station Calibration Verification Location (FTP) Tests Drive Studies Coverage Predictions Maps Soft Copies of Test Results, if Requested 276 Part #40-00047-00 Rev F v1.0 (TTA) October 23, 2003
Source Exif Data:
File Type : PDF File Type Extension : pdf MIME Type : application/pdf PDF Version : 1.2 Linearized : No Page Count : 96 Creator : (Appendix Pt 2) 40-00047-09 (F) I&C (TTA) (Read-Only) - Microsoft Word Create Date : 2003:12:09 16:13:04 Title : _Appendix Pt 2_ 40-00047-09 _F_ I&C _TTA_.PDF Author : DOaks Producer : Acrobat PDFWriter 4.0 for Windows NTEXIF Metadata provided by EXIF.tools