Industrial Data Communications 4th Edition

Chapter 7 - Wide Area Networks: WAN Digital Lines

A wide area network (WAN) is commonly understood to be one that serves geographically
separated areas. One of the best examples is the public telephone network. There are also
wide area data networks. IEEE 802.6 standardizes Metropolitan Area Networks, which, in
turn, can be connected together as WANs. Intercity links are usually 1.544 Mbps, the T1
carrier data rate, which has become the standard telco channel. Subscriber rates are available
as fractional rates such as 56 Kbps, 64 Kbps, and so on.

Telephone Lines As Media

There are two problems with the bandwidth of the analog telephone line even at its best: (1)
frequency selective amplitude distortion and (2) frequency selective delay (phase distortion).
Since the ear is most vulnerable to amplitude distortion, most phone lines are corrected for
the ear. However, because the ear is not very sensitive to delay distortion, many of the techniques
used to reduce amplitude distortion increase delay distortion. For digital transmission,
these conditions are corrected as much as possible through extra features called “conditioning,”
which may be focused in the line, in the modem, or possibly in both.

Higher-speed modems also have automatic conditioning that is based on pilot tones or bit
error rate (BER). Rather than adding conditioning to analog lines, a subscriber can purchase
or lease digital lines. For years, telephone operating companies have been selling digital
lines to customers by leasing a line, a data service unit (DSU), and channel service unit
(CSU). The DSU may be customer owned, but the rest of the transmission is the phone
company’s worry.

The source of data-ready lines is typically fractional T1 lines (explained later in this section).
Remember, digital data will not transmit on analog telephone lines because it has a DC
component, which is caused by successive ones or zeros. Most analog telephone lines have
numerous transformers in the different terminations and couplings, so a frequency translator,
such as a modem, must be used to put digital data onto these lines and recover it at
the distant end. Optionally, the transformers (or more correctly the line-impedance
matching devices) may be bypassed and the copper accessed directly. The typical modern
voice-grade line by itself is capable (through differing techniques) of transmitting digital
data at speeds above 56 Kbps for limited distances. Digital lines will support baseband
digital. However, there should be some provision, either in the hardware or in the DSU, for
eliminating long strings of one state or the other so that enough transitions take place to
prevent loss of synchronization.

 

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