Selex ES F567DHDE-H RBS ECOS-D VHF A2T 4W 48V User Manual
Selex ES SPA RBS ECOS-D VHF A2T 4W 48V
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User Manual
ECOS-D Digital Simulcast Technology Radio Base Station Guide Installation, configuration and maintenance REVISION TABLE Date Revision 13/09/2010 Comment First issue Information contained in this document may not be used, applied or reproduced for any purpose unless agreed by SELEX Communications S.p.A. in writing. SELEX Communications S.p.A. reserves the right to alter without notice the specification, design or conditions of supply of any product or service. SELEX Communications logo is a trademark of SELEX Communications S.p.A. Printed in Italy. © SELEX Communications S.p.A. All Rights reserved. SELEX Communications July 2010 Information contained in this document may not be used, applied or reproduced for any purpose unless agreed by SELEX Communications S.p.A. in writing Summary 1. Scope ............................................................................................................................................................... 5 2. First aid for electrical shock and safety rules................................................................................................ 5 2.1 First aid for electrical shock ................................................................................................................. 5 2.1.1 Artificial respiration ........................................................................................................................ 5 2.1.2 Treatment of burns........................................................................................................................... 5 2.2 Product Safety and RF Exposure Compliance.................................................................................... 7 2.2.1 RF Exposure Compliance ................................................................................................................ 7 2.2.2 Electrostatic protection .................................................................................................................... 7 3. Technical/Environmental Specification ........................................................................................................ 8 4. Device Assembly and composition ................................................................................................................. 9 4.1 5. Connector positions ............................................................................................................................. 12 Installation.................................................................................................................................................... 13 5.1 Overview............................................................................................................................................... 13 5.1.1 Installation Pre-requisites .............................................................................................................. 13 5.1.2 Unpack........................................................................................................................................... 14 5.1.3 Mechanical installation.................................................................................................................. 14 5.1.4 Electrical wiring ............................................................................................................................ 16 5.1.5 Unit grounding............................................................................................................................... 16 5.1.6 48 Vdc input .................................................................................................................................. 17 5.2 Radio Interfaces................................................................................................................................... 18 5.2.1 TX N type connector ..................................................................................................................... 18 5.2.2 RX N type connector ..................................................................................................................... 19 5.3 Line interfaces...................................................................................................................................... 20 5.3.1 4W and 4W+E/M Link .................................................................................................................. 20 5.3.2 AF in/out........................................................................................................................................ 27 5.4 Syncronization Interfaces ................................................................................................................... 31 5.4.1 5.5 Main GPS Interface ....................................................................................................................... 31 Other Interfaces................................................................................................................................... 32 5.5.1 Door break-in................................................................................................................................. 32 SELEX Communications July 2010 Information contained in this document may not be used, applied or reproduced for any purpose unless agreed by SELEX Communications S.p.A. in writing 5.5.2 LAN Interface................................................................................................................................ 33 5.5.3 Serial Interface............................................................................................................................... 35 5.5.4 Auxiliary Serial Interface .............................................................................................................. 37 5.5.5 Digital Input/Output Interface ....................................................................................................... 40 5.5.6 Local Microphone Interface .......................................................................................................... 42 6. Configuration ............................................................................................................................................... 44 7. Maintenance ................................................................................................................................................. 44 7.1 Module features, alarms and troubleshooting................................................................................... 44 7.1.1 CORE module ............................................................................................................................... 44 7.1.2 4 Lines Interface module - LIF ...................................................................................................... 46 7.1.3 SWITCH module........................................................................................................................... 47 7.1.4 DC/DC module .............................................................................................................................. 48 7.1.5 Synchronization module - SYNC .................................................................................................. 48 7.1.6 Radio Receiver and Transmitter module - RTX ............................................................................ 50 7.1.7 Power Amplifier module - PA....................................................................................................... 51 7.2 Power modules maintenance precaution ........................................................................................... 53 7.3 Module removal ................................................................................................................................... 54 7.4 Back card removal............................................................................................................................... 55 7.5 Local Maintenance Interface .............................................................................................................. 56 7.6 Local Test AF Interface ...................................................................................................................... 58 7.7 Remote Maintenance Interface .......................................................................................................... 59 SELEX Communications July 2010 Information contained in this document may not be used, applied or reproduced for any purpose unless agreed by SELEX Communications S.p.A. in writing 1. Scope This manual provides experienced technicians familiar with similar types of equipment with information which permit the installation and maintenance of the described product, whose characteristics are described in the Technical specification Section. This document does not contain information of the maintenance and configuration software that are provided with the software itself. Information contained in this document are valid only for the described RBS ECOS-D VHF A2T 4W 48V (FCCID: X5YF567DHDE-H) of the ECOS-D Family of products, optional cards and ancillaries included. The technicians must use only the part of information related to the RBS really shipped. 2. First aid for electrical shock and safety rules 2.1 First aid for electrical shock Do not touch the patient with bare hands until the circuit has been opened. pen the circuit by switching off the line switches. If that is not possible protect yourself with dry material and free the patient from the conductor. 2.1.1 Artificial respiration It is important to start mouth resuscitation at once and to call a doctor immediately. Suggested procedure for mouth to mouth resuscitation method is described in Table 1. 2.1.2 Treatment of burns This treatment should be used after the patient has regained consciousness. It can also be employed while artificial respiration is being applied (in this case there should be at least two persons present). Warning • Do not attempt to remove clothing from burnt sections • Apply dry gauze on the burns • Do not apply ointments or other oily substances. SELEX Communications July 2010 Information contained in this document may not be used, applied or reproduced for any purpose unless agreed by SELEX Communications S.p.A. in writing Table 1 First aid SELEX Communications July 2010 Information contained in this document may not be used, applied or reproduced for any purpose unless agreed by SELEX Communications S.p.A. in writing 2.2 Product Safety and RF Exposure Compliance 2.2.1 RF Exposure Compliance The described product is intended for use in occupational/controlled conditions, where users have full knowledge of their exposure and can exercise control over their exposure to meet FCC limits. This RBS is NOT authorized for any other use. 2.2.2 Electrostatic protection When the equipment units are provided with the plate, shown in Figure 1 it means that they contain components electrostatic charge sensitive. Figure 1 Electrostatic sensitive equipment In order to prevent the units from being damaged while handling, it is advisable to wear an elasticised band (Figure 2) around the wrist ground connected through coiled cord (Figure 3) to the appropriate point on the RBS (Figure 4) Figure 2 Antistatic band Figure 3 Coiled Cord Antistatic contact point Figure 4 Antistatic contact point SELEX Communications July 2010 Information contained in this document may not be used, applied or reproduced for any purpose unless agreed by SELEX Communications S.p.A. in writing 3. Technical/Environmental Specification The main characteristic of the device are: Radio Frequency: Frequency range 136 – 174 MHz (150 – 174 MHz for US Market) Channel Spacing 12,5 – 20 – 25 kHz Channel step 5 kHz – 6,25 kHz RF Power 2 – 25 Watt (step 0,1 dB) Modulation type Dual mode Analog FM/PM (EN 300 086 – EN 300 113) 11K0F3E/11K0G3E 16K0F3E/16K0G3E Digital 4FSK (TS 102 361-1,2,3) 7K60FXD/7K60FXE C4FM 8K10F1D/8K10F1E CTCSS 67 – 254.1 Hz (step 0,1 Hz) DCS yes Antenna connector 50 Ohm Emission mode Duplex/Simplex Receiver sensitivity Analog FM (12,5 kHz): ≤ -112 dBm @ 20 dB SINAD psofo -2 Digital 4FSK: ≤ -118 dBm @ BER = 5x10 -2 Digital C4FM: ≤ -118 dBm @ BER = 5x10 Power supply: Input voltage 48 Vdc (35 ÷ 75 Vdc - galvanically insulated) Environmental condition: Operating temperature -30 - +60 °C (-22 - +140 °F) This is the temperature measured in close proximity to the device. If the device is mounted in a cabinet, the temperature within the cabinet is measured. SELEX Communications July 2010 Information contained in this document may not be used, applied or reproduced for any purpose unless agreed by SELEX Communications S.p.A. in writing Humidity should not exceed 90% relative humidity @ 50°C (122°F) non condensating Air Quality no particular requirements due to the fact there is not any rotating/mobile part in the equipment Equipment Ventilation a minimum of ½ RU (4,4 cm – 0,8 inches) must be left among devices installed in the same cabinet SELEX Communications July 2010 Information contained in this document may not be used, applied or reproduced for any purpose unless agreed by SELEX Communications S.p.A. in writing 4. Device Assembly and composition SELEX Communications July 2010 Information contained in this document may not be used, applied or reproduced for any purpose unless agreed by SELEX Communications S.p.A. in writing 10 SELEX Communications July 2010 Information contained in this document may not be used, applied or reproduced for any purpose unless agreed by SELEX Communications S.p.A. in writing 11 4.1 Connector positions Main Power on/off switch Loudspeaker Microphone/AF test Antistatic contact Power on/off switch 48V DC input Door Alarm LAN port RF TX antenna 4W(+E/M) local port RF RX antenna I/O port AUX Serial port SELEX Communications July 2010 GPS antenna 4x4W(+E/M) link ports Main Serial port Information contained in this document may not be used, applied or reproduced for any purpose unless agreed by SELEX Communications S.p.A. in writing 12 5. Installation 5.1 Overview The device can be shipped preinstalled in a cabinet or not. If it is not shipped preinstalled in a cabinet, after unpacking, mechanical installation takes place, followed by electrical connections as described in this document. The device may be installed in any location suitable for electronic communications equipment, provided that the environmental conditions do not exceed the equipment specifications for temperature, humidity, and air quality and that the access to that location is restricted as described below: • access can only be gained by service persons or by users who have been instructed about the reasons for the restrictions applied to the location and about any precautions that be taken; and • access is through the use of a tool or lock and key, or other means of security, and is controlled by the authority responsible for the location 5.1.1 Installation Pre-requisites To ensures the best possible performance and reliability of the described equipment pre-installation planning is required. This includes considering the mounting location of the repeater in relation to input power and antennas. Also to be considered are site environment conditions, the particular mounting method and required tools and equipment. To plan the installation, please pay particular attention to environmental condition at the site, ventilation requirements, and grounding and lightning protection as described in this manual. After that, following the instruction given in this manual: • Unpack and inspect the equipment. • Mechanical install the equipment at the site. • Make necessary electrical wiring: Unit Grounding DC input cabling Coaxial cables to transmit and receive antennas • Perform a post-installation function checkout test of the equipment to verify proper installation. • Proceed to customize the repeater parameters per customer specifications (e.g. operating frequency, PL, codes, color code, etc.) SELEX Communications July 2010 Information contained in this document may not be used, applied or reproduced for any purpose unless agreed by SELEX Communications S.p.A. in writing 13 5.1.2 Unpack Inspect the equipment for damage immediately after unpacking and make a report of the extent of any damage to the transportation company and to SELEX Communications S.p.A. The following items are packed together: • ECOS-D A2T Radio Base Station • DC power cable • This manual 5.1.3 Mechanical installation The device is shipped in a box. Upon delivery, the equipment must be removed from the container (see Unpack section) and transferred to a rack or cabinet if not provided. If supplied, the metallic cabinet is a 6 RU 19” metallic cabinet. The cabinet is provided with 4 feet and it is stackable up to three cabinets. The cabinet is provided with two lateral handles to be used only for handling it during the installation process. The Cabinet is provided with front and rear metallic doors with locks. Refer to this manual for all the installation requirements even if the device is supplied with a cabinet. If the device is supplied without a cabinet it is designed to be fitted in a 19” cabinet using 3 RU of space. SELEX Communications July 2010 Information contained in this document may not be used, applied or reproduced for any purpose unless agreed by SELEX Communications S.p.A. in writing 14 M6 screws Customer-supplied cabinets and racks must have mounting rail and hole spacing compatible with EIA Universal 48.3 cm (19 inches) specifications. Cabinets must provide adequate ventilation and must meet the following criteria: • 45.0 cm (17.71 inches) deep • 48.3 cm (19 inches) wide • 13.4 cm (5.25 inches) high • Two mounting rails 5 cm (2 inches) from front cabinet with front mounting holes 5.7 cm (2.25 inches) apart (center to center). The front of the device is provided with four holes for M6 screws. This permits to fasten the device to a 19” rack by means of 4 M6 screws. If several devices are installed in a single cabinet, be sure equipment have to be spaced at least by 1/2 RU (2,2 cm, 0,8 inches).to allow for adequate cooling. Cabinets must have a least 15 cm (6 inches) of open space between the air vents and any wall or other cabinets. This allows adequate air flow. When multiple cabinets (each equipped with several repeaters) are installed in an enclosed area, ensure appropriate ventilation and consider air conditioning or other climate control equipment to satisfy the temperature requirements. SELEX Communications July 2010 Information contained in this document may not be used, applied or reproduced for any purpose unless agreed by SELEX Communications S.p.A. in writing 15 5.1.4 Electrical wiring The electrical wiring must be done using appropriate cables thus assuring the equipment responds to the electromagnetic compatibility standards. The cable terminates to flying connectors which have to be connected to the corresponding connectors on the equipment front. Position and pin–out of the equipment connectors are available in the appropriate section in the following of this document. 5.1.5 Unit grounding The device is equipped with a ground nut located on the rear panel of the device and identified by a label. This nut must be used for a direct connection of the device to the site grounding, even if the device is included in a cabinet. All antenna cables and DC power cabling should be properly grounded and lightning protected. Failure to provide proper lightning protection may result in permanent damage to the radio equipment. Ground connector Figure 5 Ground connector Interconnecting points Ground SELEX Communications July 2010 Type of connector terminating Type of cable/conductor the cable M6 nut Section area ≥ 6 sq. mm Information contained in this document may not be used, applied or reproduced for any purpose unless agreed by SELEX Communications S.p.A. in writing 16 5.1.6 48 Vdc input Use the connector marked in red to connect RBS to the output of the 48 VDC power supply. Each level must be connected separately the 48 VDC power supply. The SRB is galvanically insulated.. Interconnecting points Power supply 35 – 75 Vdc Type of cable/conductor Type of connector terminating the cable Polarised SUB–D 3W3 female Section of each wire ≥ 4 sq.mm. connector (for length < 6 m) D-SUB 3W3 female pinout PIN A1 A2 A3 Negative voltage Not used Positive voltage (soldering side view) Hereafter the power cable supplied with the 48 Vdc powered device is shown. The cable is provided with D-SUB 3W3 female connector and a 30A fuse. SELEX Communications July 2010 Information contained in this document may not be used, applied or reproduced for any purpose unless agreed by SELEX Communications S.p.A. in writing 17 5.2 Radio Interfaces 5.2.1 TX N type connector In RBS without branching and using duplex mode of operation connect the transmitter cable to the “TX OUT” connector as shown in the following figure. Interconnecting points TX Antenna SELEX Communications July 2010 Type of connector terminating Type of cable/conductor the cable N male connector 50 ohm coaxial cable with double shield Information contained in this document may not be used, applied or reproduced for any purpose unless agreed by SELEX Communications S.p.A. in writing 18 5.2.2 RX N type connector In RBS without branching and using duplex mode of operation connect the transmitter cable to the “RX IN” connector as shown in the following figure. Interconnecting points Antenna SELEX Communications July 2010 Type of connector terminating Type of cable/conductor the cable N male connector 50 ohm coaxial cable with double shield Information contained in this document may not be used, applied or reproduced for any purpose unless agreed by SELEX Communications S.p.A. in writing 19 5.3 Line interfaces 5.3.1 4W and 4W+E/M Link If the RBS is equipped with a LIF module on the rear panel 4 4W+E/M connectors are present. The following figure shows the rear panel of the LIF module. Configuration of the feature of this four links is out of the scope of this manual. The electrical interface is described in this section. Usually these AF links are used to establish RBS to RBS links or RBS to RNFE links. 4x 4W or 4W(+E/M) Interconnecting points 4W or 4W+E/M Link port SELEX Communications July 2010 Type of connector terminating Type of cable/conductor the cable RJ45 male connector AWG 24 Category 5 Information contained in this document may not be used, applied or reproduced for any purpose unless agreed by SELEX Communications S.p.A. in writing 20 4W+E/M line RJ45 female pinout PIN Mouth (M+) Mouth (M-) Ear (E+) AF_OUT (-) AF_OUT (+) Ear (E-) AF_IN (-) AF_IN (+) PIN M (+) M (-) E (+) AF_OUT (-) AF_OUT (+) E (-) AF_IN (-) AF_IN (+) PIN SELEX Communications July 2010 4W+E/M and 4W line usage 4W+E/M 4W Mouth signal + not connected Mouth signal not connected Ear Signal + not connected 600 Ohm Balanced OUT AF 600 Ohm Balanced OUT AF 600 Ohm Balanced OUT AF 600 Ohm Balanced OUT AF Ear Signal not connected 600 Ohm Balanced IN AF 600 Ohm Balanced IN AF 600 Ohm Balanced IN AF 600 Ohm Balanced IN AF M (+) M (-) E (+) E (-) E/M pin usage Balanced Mouth signal + Mouth signal Ear Signal + Ear Signal - Unbalanced Mouth signal not connected Ear Signal not connected Information contained in this document may not be used, applied or reproduced for any purpose unless agreed by SELEX Communications S.p.A. in writing 21 4W cabling example: link between RBS A and RBS B RJ-45, RBS A side RJ-45, RBS B side M (+) Not connected Not connected M (+) M (-) Not connected Not connected M (-) E (+) Not connected Not connected E (+) AF_OUT (-) White-blue White-orange AF_OUT (-) AF_OUT (+) Blue Orange AF_OUT (+) E (-) Not connected Not connected E (-) AF_IN (-) White-orange White-blue AF_IN (-) AF_IN (+) Orange Blue AF_IN (+) E/M Hardware Line settings All the E/M signals share a common voltage reference. The four Mouth signals may be hardware configured independently. The four Ear signals share the same hardware configuration in couple of lines. For unbalanced settings connect the two communicating entities to the same ground. E/M Type I Interface Model E/M Type I is the original E/M lead signaling arrangement and it is the most common interface type in North America. The following diagram displays the sent signal states for active/not active signaling. The RBS grounds its M−lead to signal a seizure. The other device applies battery to its M−lead to signal a seizure. Prod-El SRB expects to see active conditions on the E−lead and signal active to the remote device on M−lead. SRB side E/M Type II Interface Model E/M Type II provides a four−wire fully−looped arrangement that provides full isolation between the trunks and signaling units. The following table displays the sent signal states for active/not active signaling. The RBS grounds its M−lead to signal a seizure. The other device applies battery to its M−lead to signal a seizure. Prod-El SRB expects to see active conditions on the E−lead and signal active to the remote device on M−lead. SELEX Communications July 2010 Information contained in this document may not be used, applied or reproduced for any purpose unless agreed by SELEX Communications S.p.A. in writing 22 M+ M- E+ ESRB side E/M Type V Interface Model E/M Type V interface is a symmetrical two−wire lead arrangement that signals in both directions by means of open for not active and ground for active signalling. The following table displays the sent signal states for active/not active signaling. The RBS grounds its M−lead to signal a seizure. The other device applies battery to its M−lead to signal a seizure. Prod-El SRB expects to see active conditions on the E−lead and signal active to the remote device on M−lead. SRB side E/M Proprietary Type Interface Model E/M Proprietary Type provides a four−wire fully−looped arrangement that provides full isolation between the trunks and signaling units. The following table displays the sent signal states for active/not active signaling. The RBS grounds its M−lead to signal a seizure. The other device applies battery to its M−lead to signal a seizure. Prod-El SRB expects to see active conditions on the E−lead and signal active to the remote device on M−lead. M+ M- E+ E- +48v SRB side SELEX Communications July 2010 Information contained in this document may not be used, applied or reproduced for any purpose unless agreed by SELEX Communications S.p.A. in writing 23 IP3 1 IP5 1 IP6 1 IP7 1 IP8 1 voltage reference E line 3&4 E line 1&2 M line 2 M line 1 M line 4 M line 3 E/M Hardware settings Type I Type II Type V (Unbalanced) (Balanced) (Unbalanced) ON OFF OFF ON OFF OFF OFF ON ON OFF ON ON ON OFF ON ON OFF ON ON OFF ON ON OFF ON ON OFF ON ON OFF ON proprietary (Balanced) ON ON OFF OFF OFF OFF OFF OFF OFF OFF IP3 IP5 IP6 IP7 IP8 Back card deep switch positioning Where, in the equipment described in this document, a 4 wires interface towards a common communication network is used, it is mandatory to use 4 (four) different copper pairs: two of them are SELEX Communications July 2010 Information contained in this document may not be used, applied or reproduced for any purpose unless agreed by SELEX Communications S.p.A. in writing 24 used to transfer from one to the other RBS the user payload and two of them are optionally used to transfer E and M criteria. All the signals are exchanged using a balanced type of connection, avoiding any ground reference. For the two copper pairs used for exchanging the user payload, the impedance of the interface is 600 Ohm. The characteristics of the pairs must be as follows: Amplitude: Amplitude characteristic of the media must comply with FIGURE 2/G.712 (ITU-T Rec.G.712 page 8). The mask is shown below. Anyway in the audio band from 300 Hz to 3400 Hz the response must be +/- 1,5 dB with respect to the nominal level of –10 dBm. dB 1.8 Loss 0.9 (see Note) 0.5 –0.5 0 200 300 1020 2400 Frequency (f ) 3000 3400 3600 Hz T1511850-02 NOTE – In some applications in which several PCM channels may be connected in tandem, it may be necessary to extend the +0.5 dB limit from 2400 Hz to 3000 Hz. Group delay: Group delay characteristic of the media must comply with FIGURE 6/G.712 (ITU-T Rec.G.712 page 10). The mask is shown below. Group delay distortion ms 1.50 0.75 0.25 500 600 1000 2600 2800 Hz Frequency (f) T1511890-02 Insertion loss: SELEX Communications July 2010 Information contained in this document may not be used, applied or reproduced for any purpose unless agreed by SELEX Communications S.p.A. in writing 25 The insertion loss must be 0dB +/- 3 dB. This must be true also with regard to the aging of the media physically used. Noise: The characteristic of the media must comply with prescriptions contained in chapter 9 (noise) of book III.4-Rec.G.792 page 4 and following. Diaphony: The pairs of the media used to transport the user payload must have a diaphony attenuation greater than 40 dB. E/M time response: The response time of E/M criteria must be less than 100 msec. SELEX Communications July 2010 Information contained in this document may not be used, applied or reproduced for any purpose unless agreed by SELEX Communications S.p.A. in writing 26 5.3.2 AF in/out If the RBS is equipped with a CORE back card module a 4W+E/M link if available. The following figure shows the rear panel of the CORE module. Configuration of this AF link is out of the scope of this manual. Usually it is used to provide an AF signal to a third party audio device. Link to external AF Interconnecting points 4W or 4W+E/M Link Type of connector terminating Type of cable/conductor the cable RJ45 male connector AWG 24 Category 5 AF 4W+E/M line RJ45 female pinout PIN Mouth (M+) Mouth (M-) Ear (E+) AF_OUT (-) AF_OUT (+) Ear (E-) AF_IN (-) AF_IN (+) SELEX Communications July 2010 Information contained in this document may not be used, applied or reproduced for any purpose unless agreed by SELEX Communications S.p.A. in writing 27 PIN PIN 4W+E/M line usage 4W+E/M M (+) Mouth signal + M (-) Mouth signal E (+) Ear Signal + AF_OUT (-) 600 Ohm Balanced OUT AF AF_OUT (+) 600 Ohm Balanced OUT AF E (-) Ear Signal AF_IN (-) 600 Ohm Balanced IN AF AF_IN (+) 600 Ohm Balanced IN AF M (+) M (-) E (+) E (-) E/M pin usage Balanced Mouth signal + Mouth signal Ear Signal + Ear Signal - Unbalanced Mouth signal not connected Ear Signal not connected E/M Hardware Line settings The four Mouth signals share the same hardware configuration. The four Ear signals share the same hardware configuration. For unbalanced settings connect the two communicating entities to the same ground. E/M Type I Interface Model E/M Type I is the original E/M lead signaling arrangement and it is the most common interface type in North America. The following diagram displays the sent signal states for active/not active signaling. The RBS grounds its M−lead to signal a seizure. The other device applies battery to its M−lead to signal a seizure. Prod-El SRB expect to see active conditions on the E−lead and signal active to the remote device on M−lead. SRB side E/M Type II Interface Model SELEX Communications July 2010 Information contained in this document may not be used, applied or reproduced for any purpose unless agreed by SELEX Communications S.p.A. in writing 28 E/M Type II provides a four−wire fully−looped arrangement that provides full isolation between the trunks and signaling units. The following table displays the sent signal states for active/not active signaling. The RBS grounds its M−lead to signal a seizure. The other device applies battery to its M−lead to signal a seizure. Prod-El SRB expect to see active conditions on the E−lead and signal active to the remote device on M−lead. M+ M- E+ ESRB side E/M Type V Interface Model E/M Type V interface is a symmetrical two−wire lead arrangement that signals in both directions by means of open for not active and ground for active signalling. The following table displays the sent signal states for active/not active signaling. The RBS grounds its M−lead to signal a seizure. The other device applies battery to its M−lead to signal a seizure. Prod-El SRB expect to see active conditions on the E−lead and signal active to the remote device on M−lead. SRB side E/M Proprietary Type Interface Model E/M Proprietary Type provides a four−wire fully−looped arrangement that provides full isolation between the trunks and signaling units. The following table displays the sent signal states for active/not active signaling. The RBS grounds its M−lead to signal a seizure. The other device applies battery to its M−lead to signal a seizure. Prod-El SRB expect to see active conditions on the E−lead and signal active to the remote device on M−lead. SELEX Communications July 2010 Information contained in this document may not be used, applied or reproduced for any purpose unless agreed by SELEX Communications S.p.A. in writing 29 M+ M- E+ E- +48v SRB side IP1 IP2 IP3 Type I (Unbalanced) ON ON OFF OFF OFF ON E/M Hardware settings Type II Type V (Balanced) (Unbalanced) OFF OFF OFF OFF ON ON ON ON OFF OFF OFF ON proprietary (Balanced) ON ON OFF OFF OFF OFF IP1 IP2 IP3 Back card deep switch positioning SELEX Communications July 2010 Information contained in this document may not be used, applied or reproduced for any purpose unless agreed by SELEX Communications S.p.A. in writing 30 5.4 Syncronization Interfaces 5.4.1 Main GPS Interface In order to connect the Main GPS antenna to the RBS, connect the GPS antenna to the SMA-BNC “Main GPS” connector shown in the following figure. GPS Antenna Interconnecting points GPS SELEX Communications July 2010 Type of connector terminating Type of cable/conductor the cable SMA male connector 50 ohm coaxial cable with double shield Information contained in this document may not be used, applied or reproduced for any purpose unless agreed by SELEX Communications S.p.A. in writing 31 5.5 Other Interfaces 5.5.1 Door break-in Insert the connector in the front or rear door break-in connector shown in the following figure. Front Door Break-in Rear Door Break-in Connect the three devices to the cable coming from the door as shown in the following figure. SELEX Communications July 2010 Information contained in this document may not be used, applied or reproduced for any purpose unless agreed by SELEX Communications S.p.A. in writing 32 5.5.2 LAN Interface The LAN Interface is a 10BASE-T 100BASE-TX autosensing Ethernet interface with a standard RJ45 connector. Connect it to a hub/switch to provide LAN access to the feature of the RBS. Available features depend on the settings of the RBS. LAN port Interconnecting points LAN SELEX Communications July 2010 Type of connector terminating Type of cable/conductor the cable RJ45 male connector AWG 24 Category 5 Information contained in this document may not be used, applied or reproduced for any purpose unless agreed by SELEX Communications S.p.A. in writing 33 LAN RJ45 female pinout PIN PIN RX+ Receive Data + RX- Receive Data TX+ Transmit Data + not used not used TX- Transmit Data not used not used EIA/TIA 568A TX+ White/Green TX- Green RX+ White/Orange Blue White/Blue RX- Orange White/Brown Brown LAN RJ45 male cabling EIA/TIA 568B White/Orange Orange White/Green Blue White/Blue Green White/Brown Brown To connect the RBS to an Ethernet hub/switch use a straight cable (EIA/TIA 568A or EIA/TIA 568B on both ends). To connect the RBS directly to an Ethernet host use a cross cable (EIA/TIA 568A on one end and EIA/TIA 568B on the other end). SELEX Communications July 2010 Information contained in this document may not be used, applied or reproduced for any purpose unless agreed by SELEX Communications S.p.A. in writing 34 5.5.3 Serial Interface The Serial Interface is an RS232 interface with a standard female type D DCE connector. Connect it to a DTE to provide serial access to the RBS. Available features depend on the settings of the RBS. Serial Interface Interconnecting points RS232 SELEX Communications July 2010 Type of connector terminating Type of cable/conductor the cable Male type D connector with 9 9 conductor cable with double pins and shielded holder brass sheath type interconductor Information contained in this document may not be used, applied or reproduced for any purpose unless agreed by SELEX Communications S.p.A. in writing 35 RS232 RS232 standards are defined by EIA/TIA (Electronic Industries Alliance /Telecommunications Industry Association). RS232 defines both the physical and electrical characteristics of the interface. RS232 is an Active LOW voltage driven interface and operates at +12V to -12V. RS232 is a serial interface for the transmission of point to point digital data. Description of the connector’s pins is from DTE to DCE. The RBS acts as a DCE. RS232 female pinout PIN PIN Mean RX TX GND RTS CTS Complete RS232 female pinout (only on request) Mean RX TX DTR GND DSR RTS CTS SELEX Communications July 2010 not used Data from DCE to DTE Data from DTE to DCE not used Ground not used Ready To Send (from DTE) Clear To Send (to DTE) not used not used Data from DCE to DTE Data from DTE to DCE Data Terminal Ready (from DTE) Ground Data Set Ready (to DTE) Ready To Send (from DTE) Clear To Send (to DTE) not used Information contained in this document may not be used, applied or reproduced for any purpose unless agreed by SELEX Communications S.p.A. in writing 36 5.5.4 Auxiliary Serial Interface The Auxiliary Serial Interface is an optional RS232, RS422 or RS485 interface with a standard female type D DCE connector. Connect it to a DTE to provide serial access to the RBS. Available features depend on the settings of the RBS. AUX Serial Interface Interconnecting points RS232 RS422 RS485 Type of connector terminating Type of cable/conductor the cable Male type D connector with 9 9 conductor cable with double pins and shielded holder brass sheath type interconductor Pinout of the three tipes of serial interface are described below. SELEX Communications July 2010 Information contained in this document may not be used, applied or reproduced for any purpose unless agreed by SELEX Communications S.p.A. in writing 37 RS232 RS232 standards are defined by EIA/TIA (Electronic Industries Alliance /Telecommunications Industry Association). RS232 defines both the physical and electrical characteristics of the interface. RS232 is an Active LOW voltage driven interface and operates at +12V to -12V. RS232 is a serial interface for the transmission of point to point digital data. Description of the connector’s pins is from DTE to DCE. The RBS acts as a DCE. RS232 female pinout PIN Mean RX TX GND RTS CTS not used Data from DCE to DTE Data from DTE to DCE not used Ground not used Ready To Send (from DTE) Clear To Send (to DTE) not used RS422 RS422 is a balanced serial interface for the transmission of point to point digital data. The advantage of a balanced signal is the greater immunity to noise. The EIA describes RS422 as a DTE to DCE interface for point-to-point connections. Description of the connector’s pins is from DTE to DCE. The RBS acts as a DCE. PIN RS422 female pinout (only on request) Mean GND TX + RX + GND TX RX - SELEX Communications July 2010 Ground Data from DTE to DCE not used Data from DCE to DTE Ground not used Data from DTE to DCE not used Data from DCE to DTE Information contained in this document may not be used, applied or reproduced for any purpose unless agreed by SELEX Communications S.p.A. in writing 38 RS485 RS485 is a balanced serial interface for the transmission of digital data. The advantage of a balanced signal is the greater immunity to noise. Point to point or multi-point behaviour of this serial interface is software dependent and is out of the scope of this manual. Description of the connector’s pins is from DTE to DCE. The RBS acts as a DCE. PIN 2 RTX + 5 GND 7 RTX 8 SELEX Communications July 2010 RS485 female pinout (only on request) Mean not used Data not used not used Ground not used Data not used not used Information contained in this document may not be used, applied or reproduced for any purpose unless agreed by SELEX Communications S.p.A. in writing 39 5.5.5 Digital Input/Output Interface The RBS manages 4 digital outputs. The connector is located on the rear of the RBS and is shown in red in the following figure. I/O Interface Interconnecting points User I/O SELEX Communications July 2010 Type of connector terminating Type of cable/conductor the cable Socket block B2L 3.5/20LH Section of each wire ≤ 1 sq.mm. (AWG 18) Information contained in this document may not be used, applied or reproduced for any purpose unless agreed by SELEX Communications S.p.A. in writing 40 I/O Socket block B2L male pinout type out out out out in in in in in in contact A1 A2 power supply alarm (*) temperature alarm (*) synchronization alarm (*) RF power alarm (*) not used not used not used not used not used not used (*) The meaning of the digital outputs depends on the firmware release of the RBS. In the shown example the meaning is as follows: Output 1: power supply alarm. When the RBS is supplied from battery the output is closed. Output 2: RBS temperature alarm. When the temperature is over a defined maximum value the output is closed. Output 3: RBS synchronization alarm. When the RBS loses synchronisation the output is closed. Output 4: RF power alarm. When the PA transmitting power is 3 dB below the right power level the output is closed. SELEX Communications July 2010 Information contained in this document may not be used, applied or reproduced for any purpose unless agreed by SELEX Communications S.p.A. in writing 41 5.5.6 Local Microphone Interface The local microphone interface permits to connect a microphone to the RBS. Features related with PTT press and the AF of the microphone are out of the scope of this manual. Local Microphone Interface Interconnecting points Microphone Type of connector terminating Type of cable/conductor the cable Male type D high density Section of each wire ≤ 1 sq.mm. connector with 15 pins (AWG 18) Microphone SELEX Communications July 2010 Information contained in this document may not be used, applied or reproduced for any purpose unless agreed by SELEX Communications S.p.A. in writing 42 PIN 10 11 12 13 14 15 D-SUB HD 15 female pinout Mean GND AF in PTT DGND Ground not used not used not used not used Audio Frequency input to RBS not used not used not used not used Push To Talk input to RBS not used Digital Ground not used (soldering side view) VDD SELEX Communications July 2010 Information contained in this document may not be used, applied or reproduced for any purpose unless agreed by SELEX Communications S.p.A. in writing 43 6. Configuration The hardware configuration, where applicable, is described in the installation section of this manual. Hardware configuration is limited only to hardware related characteristics such as electrical interfaces. A parameter configuration must be done to adjust each device to the user need. This procedure is described in the manual of the configuration software. Please refers to it for more information. A list of values for each parameter for each device is provided in a separate document on demand. Please refer to it to set the proper value for each parameter. To connect the PC with the configuration software to the RBS follow the procedure described in the Local Maintenance Interface section. 7. Maintenance 7.1 Module features, alarms and troubleshooting 7.1.1 CORE module The CORE module, for its versatility and potentiality, is the core of ECOS-D RBS. This module is equipped with devices for numerical computation (DSP, FPGA) and control (microprocessor). The primary functionalities of the Core Module are: • MMI (Man Machine Interface) to allow an operator to interact with the device • Main Simulcast Management, implementing the voting algorithm, equalization and a matrix of AF signals. • local and remote management of the device. The CORE MMI makes available to a technical operator the following functionalities. • Radio frequencies settings (RX e TX); • RF transmission power settings (Hi / Low); • Enable / disable of input/output lines (radio and wired); • Speak and listen on selectable interfaces; • Measures: power supply (V); RSSI (dBm); RF transmit power (dBm); SELEX Communications July 2010 Information contained in this document may not be used, applied or reproduced for any purpose unless agreed by SELEX Communications S.p.A. in writing 44 • voted signal; • Selection and management of Audio Frequency (AF) signals for test purposes; • Lock / unlock of voice in local speaker (radio squelch or criterions); • Speaker volume setting; • Display brightness setting; • Menu language setting; The MMI is composed by a 8 characters display (each character is 5 x 7 pixels) and a Keypad The keypad is composed by 16 buttons: SQ (Squelch), Fn (Function), +, -, ↵, C (cancel) and 0 ÷ 9. In the following a brief summary of their use is given. SQ Use it to open/close the analog squelch of the device Fn Use it to switch between stand-by mode and menu mode. +/- These are multi-function buttons: they are used for navigation in menu, to up and down speaker volume and display brightness. ↵ in menu mode use it to confirm the choice. In menu mode use it to go back to previous menu. 0÷9 In menu mode use them to insert the value of parameters where required The menu tree is described in the following table. 1. Settings 1. Radio 2. Display 2. Spk/Lstn RTX LIF DIF RRX 3. Commands SELEX Communications July 2010 CORE 1. Inhibit Menu level 1. View Freq. RTX 2. RF Power PA 1. Brightn. 2. Language 1. Freq.RX 2. Freq.TX 1. Low 2. Hi Italiano English 1. L1 2. L2 3. L3 4. L4 1. L1 2. L2 3. L3 4. L4 1. RRXa 2. RRXb RTX 1. RX ON Information contained in this document may not be used, applied or reproduced for any purpose unless agreed by SELEX Communications S.p.A. in writing 45 1 Menu level 2. TX RRX 1. RXa 2. RXb LIF L1 L2 L3 L4 4. Measure 2. Voice 1. Digital 1. RSSI 2. Analog RTX RRX 2. DC 3. Voter 4. RF Power RTX LIF 5. AF Test OFF ON OFF ON OFF ON OFF ON OFF ON OFF ON OFF ON OFF 1. TS 1 2. TS 2 RRXa RRXb PA 1. L1 2. L2 3. L3 4. L4 7.1.2 4 Lines Interface module - LIF The "4 Lines Interface” (LIF) module is the module that is able to manage up to 4 lines with 4W interface + (E&M). This module is equipped with devices for numerical computation (DSP, FPGA) and control (microprocessor) combined with the electrical interfaces for the 4 wires lines. The “Line Interface” (LIF) module is also able to manage redounded links over the 4 wires interfaces. 4 wires interfaces are used by the device to connect this Radio Base Station to up to other 4 Radio Base Stations to build a Simulcast network. The front panel is provided with bi-color leds to help in troubleshooting the system. The table below describes the meaning of the leds: LED Color Label Description Green Line 1 RX Line 1 on RX SELEX Communications July 2010 Information contained in this document may not be used, applied or reproduced for any purpose unless agreed by SELEX Communications S.p.A. in writing 46 2 Red Line 1 TX Line 1 on TX Green Line 2 RX Line 2 on RX Red Line 2 TX Line 2 on TX Green Line 3 RX Line 3 on RX Red Line 3 TX Line 3 on TX Green Line 4 RX Line 4 on RX Red Line 4 TX Line 4 on TX Green Status1 Red DATA bus fail Green Status2 Red Logic fail µP and DSP not communicate Green CTRL bus busy Activity on Control Bus Red CTRL bus fail failure of BUS µP Green Upload Ongoing download code Red Upload Fail Download code KO failure MTCH of DSP 7.1.3 SWITCH module The Switch module realizes a "solid state" switch (MOSFET) device for the distribution of the power necessary for the proper working of all the modules of the ECOS-D RBS. In particular its primary task is to distribute the 12 Vdc nominal voltage (Master voltage) and 7 Vdc nominal voltage (Slave voltage). The 7 Vdc Slave voltage is used by all the other modules to power their logic. It is generated by the switch module for direct conversion from the 12 Vdc Master voltage. The switch module provides: • ON / OFF of all the modules on the same RBS • Protection against Extra Current (short circuit or overload > 22 A ± 5%) • Protection against Extra voltage (maximum input voltage equal to 30 Vdc ± 5%) • Protection against voltages outside the guaranteed operating range [10.8 ÷ 15.6 Vdc]. • Protection against reverse polarity input voltage. • Protection against over temperature inside the module itself (≥ 100 ° C ± 1%). The front panel is provided with bi-color leds to help in troubleshooting the system. The table below describes the meaning of the leds: LED Color Label Description Green Vin OK Normally operating SELEX Communications July 2010 Information contained in this document may not be used, applied or reproduced for any purpose unless agreed by SELEX Communications S.p.A. in writing 47 2 Red Vin fail Input voltage out of range Green Vout ok RBS internal voltage levels are correct Red Vout fail RBS internal voltage failure Green Control bus busy Activity on the control bus Red Control bus fail control bus among the modules is in failure Red blink Control bus fail Bad message received Green Upload Firmware upload in progress Red Upload fail Firmware upload failed 7.1.4 DC/DC module The DC/DC module is a continue power voltage converter from an external power source to the internal power level of ECOS-D devices. The converter, other than the power voltage conversion, is able to galvanically insulate (1500Vrms) the internal 12Vdc power distribution from the external power source and a 28Vdc power distribution to the 110W PA module. 7.1.5 Synchronization module - SYNC The "Synchronization” (SYNC) module is the module that is able to manage network synchronisation for ECOS-D equipment. This module is equipped with devices for numerical computation (DSP, FPGA) and control (microprocessor) combined with the electrical interfaces to the GPS antenna. The extreme versatility of this module allows you to synchronize the ECOS-D RBS using different reference sources. The module is able to receive the input reference source from multiple clock signals: • Internal GPS receiver • AF tone (eg, tone at 3400 Hz via from an external source through LIF or DIF module) SELEX Communications July 2010 Information contained in this document may not be used, applied or reproduced for any purpose unless agreed by SELEX Communications S.p.A. in writing 48 • 2,048 MHz (G.703) The choice of input clock signal is performed according to a configurable logic that normally assigns higher priority to the GPS signal. The module provides as its output the following clock signals to all the other modules of the RBS: • RBS main reference clock (26 MHz) • PPS main and / or spare The front panel is provided with bi-color leds to help in troubleshooting the system. The table below describes the meaning of the leds: LED Color Label Description Green slow blink Main PPS Main GPS receiver available and 2d or 3d fix Green fast blink Main PPS Main GPS receiver available but not in fix Red Main GPS fail Main GPS receiver failure Green slow blink Spare PPS Spare GPS receiver available and 2d or 3d fix Green fast blink Spare PPS Spare GPS receiver available but not in fix Red Spare GPS fail Spare GPS receiver failure Green blink Status 1 External PPS Sync lock Green Status 1 Free Running OCXO … Red OCXO unlock active OCXO unlock Red blink OCXO unlock active OCXO failure Green Status 2 External sync is used as sync source Red EXT ref fail External sync source enabled but missing Green Status 3 3400 Hz Audio tone from LIF is used as sync source Red Data bus fail The multichannel data bus is out of frame sync Green Status 4 E1 link from DIF is used as sync source SELEX Communications July 2010 Information contained in this document may not be used, applied or reproduced for any purpose unless agreed by SELEX Communications S.p.A. in writing 49 7 Red Logic fail One of the these error is present: - DSP/uP communication failure - logic PLL unlock Red blink Logic fail One of the these error is present: - boot failure - EEPROM failure Green Control bus busy Activity on the control bus Red Control bus fail control bus among the modules is in failure Red blink Control bus fail Bad message received Green Upload Firmware upload in progress Red Upload fail Firmware upload failed 7.1.6 Radio Receiver and Transmitter module - RTX The “Radio Receiver and Transmitter” (RTX) module is the module that realizes a full duplex radio in the frequency bands commonly used by in the LMR/PMR market (136 - 174 MHz). It is able to operate with channel spacing of 12.5 kHz, 20 kHz and 25 kHz. Limitation on usable RF bands and channel spacing may apply due to local regulations. This module is equipped with devices for numerical computation (DSP, FPGA) and control (microprocessor) combined with the radio receiver front-end and the transmitter driver. The RTX module main functionalities are: • Dynamic Dual mode radio operations with support of digital and analog modulation • Synchronization from external reference via SYNC module • Temperature control. • VHF band: 136 – 174 MHz The front panel is provided with bi-color leds to help in troubleshooting the system. The table below describes the meaning of the leds: LED Color Label Description Green RX busy RF signal present at the receiver Red RX fail Receiver PLL unlock Red blink RX fail RX Equalizer failure Green TX on RF exciter correctly On Air SELEX Communications July 2010 Information contained in this document may not be used, applied or reproduced for any purpose unless agreed by SELEX Communications S.p.A. in writing 50 3 Red TX fail RF exciter failure: - bad power out - ACP failure - Exciter PLL unlock Red blink TX fail TX dynamic equalizer failure Green Status 1 RF signal with analog modulation present at the receiver Red RX inhibit Receiver is in inhibited state Green Status 2 RF exciter correctly On Air with digital modulation Red Tx inhibit Exciter is in inhibited state Green Status 3 Reserved Red Data bus fail The multichannel data bus is out of frame sync Green Status 4 Reserved Red Logic fail One of the these error is present: - DSP/uP communication failure - logic PLL unlock Red blink Logic fail One of the these error is present: - boot failure - EEPROM failure Green Control bus busy Activity on the control bus Red Control bus fail control bus among the modules is in failure Red blink Control bus fail Bad message received Green Upload Firmware upload in progress Red Upload fail Firmware upload failed 7.1.7 Power Amplifier module - PA The “Power Amplifier” (PA) module is a wide band RF amplifier in VHF (136 - 170 MHz). Their time of TX ramp up/down is less than 1200 µsec. This makes the module compatible with the stringent demands of digital transmission. Thanks to a microprocessor mounted on board, the module is able to implement the PUFF technology (Powerful Universal Forming Function) for the shaping of transient power in order to obtain compliance with the rapid transient rules of ACP (Adjacent Channel Power). The microprocessor also manages completely the operation of the module: this would remove any calibration procedures. All configuration changes are performed via software. SELEX Communications July 2010 Information contained in this document may not be used, applied or reproduced for any purpose unless agreed by SELEX Communications S.p.A. in writing 51 Other main functionalities are: • continuous transmitter’s operations (100% duty cycle). • Output power selectable between two values (Phi and Plo), each of which can be SW set to a nominal value between 2 and 25 Watts. • final stage protected against excessive mismatching output power. In the case that VSWR remains above a set threshold (eg ReturnLoss = 5dB) for more than a fixed time, the module is able to send an alert and the output power will not exceed a safety value (eg ≤ 10watt). • temperature threshold alarm: if the temperature remains above a set value for more than a fixed time, the module is able to send an alert and will ensure that the RF output power will not exceed a predetermined safe value. The front panel is provided with bi-color leds to help in troubleshooting the system. The table below describes the meaning of the leds: LED Color Label Description Green PWR High High Power level selected and correctly On Air Red PWR fail Emitted power less than a FW configured threshold (3 dB typical) Green PWR low Low Power level selected and correctly On Air Red VSWR On Air and VSWR level is greater than FW configured threshold Green Control bus busy Activity on the control bus Red Control bus fail control bus among the modules is in failure Red blink Control bus fail Bad message received Green Upload Firmware upload in progress Red Upload fail Firmware upload failed SELEX Communications July 2010 Information contained in this document may not be used, applied or reproduced for any purpose unless agreed by SELEX Communications S.p.A. in writing 52 7.2 Power modules maintenance precaution Before maintenance operations involving power supply modules the power cable must be removed. If the purpose of the maintenance is the replacement of the SWITCH or DC/DC modules the following procedure must be followed: 48 Vdc powered devices: • Switch off the device moving to the lower position the Main Power and Power switch. Main Power on/off switch Power on/off switch • unplug the 48Vdc D-SUB 3W3 connector 48V DC input • Remove the module as described in section 7.2. SELEX Communications July 2010 Information contained in this document may not be used, applied or reproduced for any purpose unless agreed by SELEX Communications S.p.A. in writing 53 7.3 Module removal To remove a module from the RBS follows the procedure described below. 1 – Unscrew the two (or four) screws marked in red on the front panel of the module Module locking screws 2 – From the front side of the RBS using the handle marked in blue pull the module out. Module handles SELEX Communications July 2010 Information contained in this document may not be used, applied or reproduced for any purpose unless agreed by SELEX Communications S.p.A. in writing 54 7.4 Back card removal To remove a back card from the RBS follows the procedure described below. 1 – Unlock the two (or four) knobs marked in red on the panel of the back card 2 – From the rear side of the RBS using the same knobs pull the back card out. SELEX Communications July 2010 Information contained in this document may not be used, applied or reproduced for any purpose unless agreed by SELEX Communications S.p.A. in writing 55 7.5 Local Maintenance Interface The local maintenance interface is located on the front panel of the RBS on the CORE module. Local Maintenance Interface To perform local Maintenance and local configuration of the RBS, connect a PC to this connector using the appropriate LAN adapter. Maintenance LAN Adapter SELEX Communications July 2010 Information contained in this document may not be used, applied or reproduced for any purpose unless agreed by SELEX Communications S.p.A. in writing 56 D-SUB HD 15 female pinout PIN 10 11 12 13 14 15 Mean not used not used not used not used TXTransmit Data not used RXReceive Data not used TX+ Transmit Data + not used not used RX+ Receive Data + DGND Digital Ground FLP Front LAN Presence not used (soldering side view) LAN RJ45 female pinout PIN SELEX Communications July 2010 RX+ Receive Data + RX- Receive Data TX+ Transmit Data + not used not used TX- Transmit Data not used not used Information contained in this document may not be used, applied or reproduced for any purpose unless agreed by SELEX Communications S.p.A. in writing 57 7.6 Local Test AF Interface The local Audio Frequency interface is located on the front panel of the RBS on the CORE module. Use this interface to test the AF performance of the RBS. Local Maintenance Interface Interconnecting points Microphone SELEX Communications July 2010 Type of connector terminating Type of cable/conductor the cable Male type D high density Section of each wire ≤ 1 sq.mm. connector with 15 pins (AWG 18) Information contained in this document may not be used, applied or reproduced for any purpose unless agreed by SELEX Communications S.p.A. in writing 58 PIN 10 11 12 13 14 15 D-SUB HD 15 female pinout Mean GND AF FO AF out AF in AF out + PTT DGND Ground Audio Frequency Output (no volume) not used Audio Frequency output from RBS not used Audio Frequency input to RBS not used not used not used Audio Frequency output from RBS Push To Talk input to RBS not used Digital Ground not used (soldering side view) VDD 7.7 Remote Maintenance Interface The Remote maintenance interface may be accessible directly or not on each RBS depending on the configuration of the system. If the RBS is configured to be remotely controlled via the LAN interface, see the LAN interface section to correctly connect the RBS. For more information about the remote maintenance procedure see the Network Management System (NMS) Manual, where supplied. SELEX Communications July 2010 Information contained in this document may not be used, applied or reproduced for any purpose unless agreed by SELEX Communications S.p.A. in writing 59 Information contained in this document may not be used, applied or reproduced for any purpose unless agreed by SELEX Communications S.p.A. in writing. SELEX Communications S.p.A. reserves the right to alter without notice the specification, design or conditions of supply of any product or service. SELEX Communications logo is a trademark of SELEX Communications S.p.A. Printed in Italy. © SELEX Communications S.p.A. All Rights reserved. SELEX Communications July 2010 Information contained in this document may not be used, applied or reproduced for any purpose unless agreed by SELEX Communications S.p.A. in writing 60
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