Practical IP and Telecom For Broadcast Engineering and Operations

One of the major points of confusion, both inside and outside the Telecom industry is the misunderstanding and misuse of channel interface and multiplex rate terms. In publication after publication, the PDH hierarchy is explained by simply calling out the various multiplex levels or signal rates without delineating the difference between the rates that specify channel rates through the network, and the rates resulting from multiplexing.
Channel rates apply to channel interface, which is the point of network access and egress. Table 4-1 shows most of the PDH multiplex aggregate rates and channel rates covered by global and national standards. Basically, the standards are structured toward use in three regions: Europe and the rest of world (E), except North America (T) and Japan (J). Multiplex levels generally are designated with a DS, meaning digital signal (level) and channel interface and bandwidth with a T, E, or J.
Another factor that is often completely missed is the fact that telecom networks are dominated by voice traffic. The nature of voice traffic caused the network to evolve into circuit switched 64 Kbs channels. These channels are multiplexed into higher order bit streams. An OC192 transmission facility configured to handle only voice traffic contains 192-DS3 equivalents, each capable of 672 64 Kbs channels for a total of 129,024 unique, independent segments of bandwidth. An STM64 configured to handle only voice traffic contains 122,880 bandwidth segments. What about using some of this bandwidth to carry something of a different...