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InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual ADCP-77-044 Issue 5 June 2012 D-620616-0-20 Rev F ADCP-77-044 Issue 5 June 2012 Preface COPYRIGHT 2012, TE Connectivity All Rights Reserved REVISION HISTORY ISSUE DATE REASON FOR CHANGE 1 2 3 4 5 7/2008 10/2008 8/2009 5/2010 6/2012 First release Add Fusion Wideband 1900/AWS product content Add Fusion Wideband 700/AWS and 700 MIMO product content Add Fusion Wideband 700 (Lower ABC) MIMO product content Add Fusion Wideband 2600 MIMO product content LIST OF CHANGES The technical changes incorporated into this issue are listed below. PAGE IDENTIFIER DESCRIPTION OF CHANGE
-Add Fusion Wideband 2600 MIMO product content TRADEMARK INFORMATION TE is a registered trademark and InterReach, InterReach Unison, InterReach Fusion, WAVEXchange, FlexWave are registered trademarks and trademarks of TE Connectivity. All other products, company names, service marks, and trademarks mentioned in this document or website are used for identification purposes only and may be owned by other companies. DISCLAIMER OF LIABILITY Contents herein are current as of the date of publication. TE reserves the right to change the contents without prior notice. In no event shall TE be liable for any damages resulting from loss of data, loss of use, or loss of profits and TE further disclaims any and all liability for indirect, incidental, special, consequential or other similar damages. This disclaimer of liability applies to all products, publications and services during and after the warranty period. This publication may be verified at any time by contacting TEs Technical Assistance Center at 1-800-366-3891, extension 73476
(in U.S.A. or Canada) or 952-917-3476 (outside U.S.A. and Canada), or by e-mail to WirelessSupport@te.com. TE Connectivity 541 E. Trimble Road, San Jose, California 95131-1224 USA In U.S.A. and Canada: 1-800-530-9960 Outside U.S.A. and Canada: 1-408-952-2400 Fax: 1-408-952-2410 ADC Telecommunications, Inc. P.O. Box 1101, Minneapolis, Minnesota 55440-1101 In U.S.A. and Canada: 1-800-366-3891 Outside U.S.A. and Canada: (952) 938-8080 Fax: (952) 917-1717 Table of Contents SECTION 1 General Information . 1-1
. 1-1
. 1-1
. 1-2
. 1-3
. 1-4 1.1 Firmware Release 1.2 Purpose and Scope 1.3 Conventions in this Manual 1.4 Standards Conformance 1.5 Related Publications SECTION 2 SECTION 3 InterReach Fusion Wideband System Description . 2-1 2.1 System Overview . 2-1 2.2 System Hardware Description
. 2-3 2.3 System OA&M Capabilities Overview . 2-5
. 2-6
. 2-6
. 2-7
. 2-8
. 2-9
. 2-11 2.4 System Connectivity 2.5 System Operation 2.6 System Specifications 2.3.1 System Monitoring and Reporting 2.3.2 Using Alarm Contacts 2.6.1 RF End-to-End Performance Fusion Wideband Main Hub . 3-1 3.1 Fusion Wideband Main Hub Overview . 3-1 3.2 Fusion Wideband Main Hub Front Panel
. 3-4
. 3-5 3.2.1 Optical Fiber Uplink/Downlink Ports 3.2.2 Communications RS-232 Serial Connector
. 3-5
. 3-5 3.2.3 Main Hub LED Indicators
. 3-8
. 3-8 3.3.1.1 9-pin D-sub Connector . 3-8 3.3.1.2 N-type Female Connectors . 3-9
. 3-10
. 3-11 3.4 Main Hub Specifications 3.5 Faults, Warnings, and Status Messages 3.3.1 Fusion Wideband Main Hub Rear Panel Connectors 3.3 Fusion Wideband Main Hub Rear Panel D-620616-0-20 Rev F InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual 1 CONFIDENTIAL CONFIDENTIAL SECTION 4 3.5.1 Description 3.5.2 View Preference
. 3-11
. 3-12 Fusion Wideband Expansion Hub . 4-1 4.1 Expansion Hub Overview . 4-1
. 4-3 4.2 Expansion Hub Front Panel
. 4-4
. 4-4
. 4-4
. 4-5
. 4-8
. 4-9
. 4-10 4.2.1 75 Ohm Type F Connectors 4.2.2 Manufacturing RS-232 Serial Connector 4.2.3 Optical Fiber Uplink/Downlink Connectors 4.2.4 LED Indicators 4.3 Expansion Hub Rear Panel 4.4 Faults, Warnings, and Status Messages 4.5 Expansion Hub Specifications SECTION 5 Remote Access Unit . 5-1 5.1 RAU Overview . 5-1
. 5-5 5.2 Remote Access Unit Connectors
. 5-5 5.2.1 50 Ohm Type-N Connector 5.2.2 75 Ohm Type-F Connector
. 5-5
. 5-5
. 5-6
. 5-7 5.3 RAU LED Indicators 5.4 Faults and Warnings 5.5 Remote Access Unit Specifications SECTION 6 Designing a Fusion Wideband Solution . 6-1 6.1 Overview . 6-1 6.2 Downlink RSSI Design Goal
. 6-3
. 6-4 6.3 Maximum Output Power per Carrier 6.3.1 700 MHz (for 700/AWS RAU)
. 6-5 6.3.2 700 MHz (Upper C) MIMO RAU . 6-6 6.3.3 700 MHz (Lower ABC) MIMO RAU . 6-6 6.3.4 800 MHz SMR . 6-6
. 6-8 6.3.5 850 MHz Cellular
. 6-9 6.3.6 1800 MHz DCS 6.3.7 1900 MHz PCS
. 6-10 6.3.8 2100 MHz AWS . 6-11 6.3.9 2.1 GHz UMTS . 6-12 6.3.10 2.1 GHz UMTS High Power
. 6-12 6.3.11 2500 MHz WiMAX . 6-12 6.3.12 2600 MHz MIMO RAU . 6-13
. 6-14
. 6-16
. 6-17
. 6-18
. 6-22 6.4 System Gain 6.5 Estimating RF Coverage 6.5.1 Path Loss Equation 6.5.2 RAU Coverage Distance 6.5.3 Examples of Design Estimates 2 InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F CONFIDENTIAL 6.6 Link Budget Analysis 6.6.1 Elements of a Link Budget for Narrowband Standards 6.6.2 Narrowband Link Budget Analysis
. 6-24
. 6-24 for a Microcell Application 6.7 Optical Power Budget 6.8 Connecting a Main Hub to a Base Station 6.6.3 Elements of a Link Budget for CDMA Standards 6.6.4 CDMA Link Budget Analysis for a Microcell Application 6.6.5 Considerations for Re-Radiation (Over-the-Air) Systems
. 6-27
. 6-29
. 6-32
. 6-35
. 6-36
. 6-37 6.8.1 Uplink Attenuation
. 6-37 6.8.2 RAU Attenuation and ALC . 6-38 6.8.2.1 Using the RAU 10 dB Attenuation Setting . 6-39 6.8.2.2 Using the Uplink ALC Setting . 6-40 SECTION 7 7.2 Safety Precautions 7.1.1 Component Location Requirements 7.1.2 Cable and Connector Requirements 7.1.3 Distance Requirements 7.2.1 Installation Guidelines 7.2.2 General Safety Precautions 7.2.3 Fiber Port Safety Precautions 7.3 Preparing for System Installation Installing Fusion Wideband . 7-1
. 7-1 7.1 Installation Requirements
. 7-2
. 7-2
. 7-3
. 7-3
. 7-3
. 7-4
. 7-4
. 7-6
. 7-6
. 7-6
. 7-8
. 7-9
. 7-10
. 7-11
. 7-25
. 7-32 7.4 Fusion Wideband Installation Procedures 7.4.1 Installing a Fusion Wideband Main Hub 7.4.2 Installing Expansion Hubs 7.4.3 Installing RAUs 7.3.1 Pre-Installation Inspection 7.3.2 Installation Checklist 7.3.3 Tools and Materials Required 7.3.4 Optional Accessories 7.4.3.1 Troubleshooting Using RAU LEDs During Installation . 7-35 7.4.4 Configuring the Fusion Wideband System . 7-36
. 7-44 7.5 Splicing Fiber Optic Cable 7.6 Interfacing the Fusion Wideband Main Hub to an RF Source 7.6.1 Connecting a Single Fusion Wideband Main Hub to an RF
. 7-46 Source
. 7-46 7.6.2 Connecting Multiple Fusion Wideband Main Hubs to an RF Source
. 7-51 7.7 Connecting Contact Alarms to a Fusion Wideband System . 7-56
. 7-57
. 7-60
. 7-62 7.7.1 Alarm Source 7.7.2 Alarm Sense 7.7.3 Alarm Cables D-620616-0-20 Rev F InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual 3 CONFIDENTIAL 7.8 Alarm Monitoring Connectivity Options 7.8.1 Direct Connection 7.8.2 Modem Connection
. 7-63
. 7-63
. 7-64 7.8.2.1 Setting Up Fusion Wideband Modem (USR Modem) Using AdminBrowser . 7-64 7.8.2.2 Setting Up a PC Modem Using Windows . 7-65
. 7-73 7.8.3 100 BASE-T Port Expander Connection 7.8.4 POTS Line Sharing Switch Connection
. 7-74 7.8.5 Ethernet RF Modem . 7-75 7.8.6 Ethernet LAN Connection
. 7-76
. 7-77 7.8.7 SNMP Interface SECTION 8 Replacing Fusion Wideband Components . 8-1 8.1 Replacing an RAU . 8-1 8.2 Replacing a Fusion Wideband Expansion Hub
. 8-3
. 8-4 8.3 Replacing a Fusion Wideband Main Hub SECTION 9 Maintenance, Troubleshooting, and Technical Assistance 9-1 9.1 Service 9.2 Maintenance 9.3 Troubleshooting 9.3.1 Troubleshooting Using AdminBrowser
. 9-1
. 9-2
. 9-3
. 9-4 9.3.1.1 Troubleshooting Recommendations . 9-4 9.3.1.2 Fault/Warning/Status Indications . 9-5
. 9-5 9.4 Troubleshooting CATV . 9-10 9.5 Technical Assistance
. 9-10 9.3.2 Troubleshooting Using LEDs APPENDIX A Cables and Connectors . A-1
. A-1
. A-6
. A-7
. A-7
. A-8
. A-9 A.1 75 Ohm CATV Cable A.2 Fiber Optical Cables A.3 Coaxial Cable A.4 Standard Modem Cable A.5 TCP/IP Cross-over Cable A.6 DB-9 to DB-9 Null Modem Cable APPENDIX B Compliance . B-1
. B-1
. B-4 B.1 Fusion Wideband System Approval Status B.2 Human Exposure to RF 4 InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F CONFIDENTIAL APPENDIX C Faults, Warnings, Status Tables for Fusion, Fusion Wideband, Fusion SingleStar . A-1 C.1 Faults Reported by Main Hubs
. A-1 C.2 Faults Reported for System CPU . A-5 C.3 Faults for Expansion Hubs
. A-6
. A-9 C.4 Faults for RAUs
. A-10 C.5 Messages for Main Hubs C.6 Messages for System CPUs
. A-15 C.7 Messages for Expansion Hubs
. A-16
. A-19 C.8 Messages for RAUs D-620616-0-20 Rev F InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual 5 CONFIDENTIAL 6 InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F CONFIDENTIAL List of Figures
. 2-4 Figure 2-1 Fusion Wideband System Hardware
. 2-4 Figure 2-2 Fusion Wideband One Port System Hardware
. 2-5 Figure 2-3 Three Methods for OA&M Communications
. 2-6 Figure 2-4 System Monitoring and Reporting
. 2-7 Figure 2-5 Fusion Widebands Double Star Architecture
. 2-8 Figure 2-6 Downlink (Base Station to Wireless Devices) Figure 2-7 Uplink (Wireless Devices to Base Station)
. 2-8 Figure 3-1 Main Hub in a Fusion Wideband System . 3-2 Figure 3-2 Main Hub Block Diagram . 3-3
. 3-4 Figure 3-3 Fusion Wideband Main Hub Front Panel Figure 3-4 Fusion Wideband Main Hub Rear Panel
. 3-8
. 3-12 Figure 3-5 Preferences Check Boxes Figure 4-1 Expansion Hub in a Fusion Wideband System . 4-1 Figure 4-2 Expansion Hub Block Diagram . 4-2 Figure 4-3 Expansion Hub Front Panel
. 4-3 Figure 4-4 Expansion Hub Rear Panel
. 4-8 Figure 5-1 Remote Access Unit in a Fusion Wideband System . 5-2
. 5-2 Figure 5-2 Remote Access Unit Block Diagram (Multiband) Figure 6-1 Determining APL between the Antenna and the Wireless Device
.6-16
. 6-39 Figure 6-2 ALC Operation
. 7-12 Figure 7-1 Flush Mounting Bracket Detail Figure 7-2 Bracket Detail For Wall Mount Rack (PN 4712)
. 7-13
. 7-14 Figure 7-3 Installing Directly to the Wall D-620616-0-20 Rev F InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual 1 CONFIDENTIAL
. 7-15 Figure 7-4 Using Hub Rack-Mounting Brackets for Direct Wall Installation
. 7-18 Figure 7-5 Protective Ground Wire Connection
. 7-19 Figure 7-6 DC Terminals
. 7-19 Figure 7-7 Power Screw Locations
. 7-20 Figure 7-8 Pan Head Screw Location
. 7-20 Figure 7-9 Recommended Hub Wire Routing
. 7-21 Figure 7-10 Compression Lug and Mounting Screw Locations
. 7-22 Figure 7-11 Grounding Wire Connection
. 7-22 Figure 7-12 Power Wires and Studs
. 7-23 Figure 7-13 Wire Polarity Illustration
. 7-23 Figure 7-14 DC Illustration Detail
. 7-25 Figure 7-15 Flush Mounting Bracket Detail
. 7-26 Figure 7-16 Bracket Detail For Wall Mount Rack (PN 4712)
. 7-27 Figure 7-17 Using Hub Rack-Mounting Brackets for Direct Wall Installation Figure 7-18 Installing Directly to the Wall
. 7-28 Figure 7-19 800/850 MHz Spectrum . 7-33 Figure 7-20 Fusion Wideband 800/850/1900 MHz RAU Antenna Placement Guideline
. 7-33 Figure 7-21 Internet Protocol (TCP/IP) Properties Window . 7-37 Figure 7-22 Local Area Connection Properties Window . 7-38 Figure 7-23 Set Time and Date Window . 7-39 Figure 7-24 AdminBrowser Configuration Window . 7-40 Figure 7-25 AdminBrowser Configuration Window for Non WiMAX . 7-41 Figure 7-26 AdminBrowser Configuration Window WiMAX ONLY . 7-41 Figure 7-27 Simplex Base Station to a Fusion Wideband Main Hub
. 7-47 Figure 7-28 Duplex Base Station to a Fusion Wideband Main Hub
. 7-48 Figure 7-29 Connecting a Fusion Wideband Main Hub to Multiple Base Stations Figure 7-30 Connecting a Fusion Wideband Main Hub to a Roof-top Antenna Figure 7-31 Connecting Two Fusion Wideband Main Hubs RF Band Ports to a Simplex Repeater or Base Station Figure 7-32 Connecting Two Fusion Wideband Main Hubs RF Band Ports to a Duplex Repeater or Base Station Figure 7-33 Connecting FlexWave to Fusion Wideband Figure 7-34 Using a BTS to Monitor Fusion Wideband Figure 7-35 Using a BTS and AdminBrowser to Monitor Fusion Wideband Figure 7-36 Using Fusion Wideband to Monitor Unison Figure 7-37 Alarm Sense Contacts Figure 7-38 5-port Alarm Daisy-Chain Cable
. 7-55
. 7-57
. 7-58
. 7-59
. 7-60
. 7-61
. 7-62
. 7-49 7-50
. 7-53 2 InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F CONFIDENTIAL
. 7-63 Figure 7-39 OA&M Direct Connection
. 7-64 Figure 7-40 OA&M Modem Connection Figure 7-41 Default Dial-in Settings (Fusion Wideband Hub)
. 7-65 Figure 7-42 Network Connections Window . 7-66 Figure 7-43 New Connection Wizard - Welcome Window . 7-66 Figure 7-44 New Connection Wizard - Network Connection Type Window . 7-67 Figure 7-45 New Connection Wizard - Network Connection Window . 7-67 Figure 7-46 New Connection Wizard - Connection Name Window . 7-68 Figure 7-47 New Connection Wizard - Phone Number to Dial Window . 7-68 Figure 7-48 New Connection Wizard - Connection Availability Window . 7-69 Figure 7-49 New Connection Wizard - Completing New Connection Window .7-69 Figure 7-50 Connect Fusion Wideband Hub Window . 7-70 Figure 7-51 Fusion Wideband Hub Properties Window . 7-70 Figure 7-52 Modem Configuration Window . 7-71 Figure 7-53 Fusion Wideband Hub Properties - Security Tab Window . 7-71 Figure 7-54 Fusion Wideband Hub Properties - Networking Tab Window . 7-72 Figure 7-55 Internet Protocol Properties Window . 7-72 Figure 7-56 OA&M Connection using a 232 Port Expander
. 7-73 Figure 7-57 OA&M Connection Using a POTS Line Sharing Switch
. 7-74
. 7-75 Figure 7-58 Cascading Line Sharing Switches Figure 7-59 OA&M Connection Using Ethernet and ENET/232 Serial Hub
. 7-76 Figure 7-60 Fusion Wideband SNMP Configuration Options
. 7-77
. A-2 Figure A-1 CommScope 2065V for RG-59 Figure A-2 CommScope 2279V for RG-6
. A-3
. A-4 Figure A-3 CommScope 2293K for RG-11
. A-7 Figure A-1 Standard Modem Cable Pinout Figure A-2 Wiring Map for TCP/IP Cable
. A-8 Figure A-3 DB-9 Female to DB-9 Female Null Modem Cable Diagram . A-9 D-620616-0-20 Rev F InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual 3 CONFIDENTIAL 4 InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F List of Tables Physical Specifications Environmental Specifications Frequency Bands Covered by Fusion Wideband RAUs 2100 MHz RF End-to-End Performance 1800 MHz RF End-to-End Performance 2100 MHz High Power RF End-to-End Performance 1900 MHz RF End-to-End Performance AWS RF End-to-End Performance 800 MHz RF End-to-End Performance 850 MHz RF End-to-End Performance 1900 MHz RF End-to-End Performance 700 MHz (Lower ABC) RF End-to-End Performance 700 MHz (Upper C) RF End-to-End Performance Table 2-1 Table 2-2 Wavelength and Laser Power Specifications Table 2-3 Table 2-4 Table 2-5 Table 2-6 Table 2-7 Table 2-8 Table 2-9 Table 2-10 Table 2-11 Table 2-12 Table 2-13 Table 2-14 Table 2-15 AWS RF End-to-End Performance Table 2-16 Table 2-17 Table 2-18 Table 2-19 Table 3-1 Table 3-2 Table 3-3 Table 3-4 Main Hub Specifications Table 4-1 Table 4-2 Table 4-3 Table 4-4 Table 5-1
. 2-9
. 2-10
. 2-10
. 2-10
. 2-12
. 2-12
. 2-12
. 2-13
. 2-13
. 2-13
. 2-14
. 2-14
. 2-14
. 2-15
. 2-15
. 2-15
. 2-16
. 2-16
. 2-16
. 3-6
. 3-7
. 3-8
. 3-10
. 4-5
. 4-7
. 4-8
. 4-10
. 5-3 700 MHz (Upper C) RF End-to-End Performance 700 MHz (Lower ABC) RF End-to-End Performance 2500 MHz RF End-to-End Performance 2600 MHz RF End-to-End Performance Fusion Wideband Hub Status LED States Fusion Wideband Hub Port LED States 9-pin D-sub Pin Connector Functions Expansion Hub Unit Status and DL/UL Status LED States Fusion Wideband Expansion Hub Port LED States 9-pin D-sub Pin Connector Functions Expansion Hub Specifications Frequency Bands Covered by Fusion Wideband RAUs D-620616-0-20 Rev F InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual 1 CONFIDENTIAL CONFIDENTIAL System Gain (Loss) Relative to CATV Cable Length Table 5-2 Remote Access Unit LED States Table 5-3 Remote Access Unit Specifications Table 5-4 700 MHz (Lower A, B, C) Power per Carrier Table 6-1 700 MHz (Upper C) Power per Carrier Table 6-2 AWS Power per Carrier Table 6-3 700 MHz (Lower ABC) Power per Carrier Table 6-4 Power per Carrier Table 6-5 Cellular Power per Carrier Table 6-6 DCS Power per Carrier Table 6-7 PCS Power per Carrier Table 6-8 Table 6-9 AWS Power per Carrier Table 6-10 UMTS Power per Carrier Table 6-11 UMTS Power per Carrier Table 6-12 WiMAX Power per Carrier Table 6-13 System Gain (Loss) Relative to CATV Cable Length Table 6-14 Coaxial Cable Losses (Lcoax) Table 6-15 Average Signal Loss of Common Building Materials Table 6-16 Frequency Bands and the Value of the First Term in Equation (3) Table 6-17 Estimated Path Loss Slope for Different In-Building Environments Table 6-18 Approximate Radiated Distance from Antenna
. 5-4
. 5-6
. 5-7
. 6-5
. 6-5
. 6-5
. 6-6
. 6-6
. 6-8
. 6-9
. 6-10
. 6-11
. 6-12
. 6-12
. 6-12
. 6-15
. 6-16
. 6-17
. 6-18
. 6-18 for 800 MHz SMR Applications
. 6-19 Table 6-19 Approximate Radiated Distance from Antenna for 850 MHz Cellular Applications
. 6-19 Table 6-20 Approximate Radiated Distance from Antenna for 1800 MHz DCS Applications
. 6-20 Table 6-21 Approximate Radiated Distance from Antenna for 1900 MHz PCS Applications
. 6-20 Table 6-22 Approximate Radiated Distance from Antenna for 2.1 GHz UMTS Applications
. 6-21 Table 6-23 Approximate Radiated Distance from Antenna for 1.7/2.1 GHz AWS Applications
. 6-21 Table 6-24 Approximate Radiated Distance from Antenna for 2.5 GHz WiMAX Applications
. 6-21
. 6-25 Table 6-25 Link Budget Considerations for Narrowband Systems
. 6-27 Table 6-26 Narrowband Link Budget Analysis: Downlink
. 6-28 Table 6-27 Narrowband Link Budget Analysis: Uplink Table 6-28 Distribution of Power within a CDMA Signal
. 6-29 Table 6-29 Additional Link Budget Considerations for CDMA . 6-30
. 6-32 Table 6-30 CDMA Link Budget Analysis: Downlink 2 InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F CONFIDENTIAL Table 6-31 CDMA Link Budget Analysis: Uplink Table 7-1 Table 7-2 Table 7-3 Table 7-4 Table 7-5 Table 7-6 Table 7-7 Table 7-8 Table 9-1 Table 9-2 Table 9-3 Table 9-4
. 6-34
. 7-3
. 7-6
. 7-8
. 7-9
. 7-24
. 7-31
. 7-36
. 7-56
. 9-6
. 9-7 9-8 Distance Requirements Installation Checklist Tools and Materials Required for Component Installation Optional Accessories for Component Installation Troubleshooting Main Hub LEDs During Installation Troubleshooting Expansion Hub LEDs During Installation Troubleshooting RAU LEDs During Installation Alarm Types Troubleshooting Main Hub Port LEDs During Normal Operation Troubleshooting Main Hub Status LEDs During Normal Operation Troubleshooting Expansion Hub Port LEDs During Normal Operation Troubleshooting Expansion Hub Status LEDs During Normal Operation
. 9-9 Summary of CATV Cable Wiring Problems
. 9-10 Faults for System CPU . A-5
. A-9 Faults for RAUs
. A-11
. A-15
. A-19 Table 9-5 Table C-2 Table C-4 Table C-5 Warnings/Status Messages for Main Hubs Table C-6 Warning/Status Messages for System CPUs Table C-8 Warning/Status Messages for RAUs D-620616-0-20 Rev F InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual 3 CONFIDENTIAL 4 InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F SECTION 1 General Information This section contains the following subsections:
Section 1.1 Firmware Release . 1-1 Section 1.2 Purpose and Scope . 1-1 Section 1.3 Conventions in this Manual . 1-2 Section 1.4 Standards Conformance . 1-3 Section 1.5 Related Publications . 1-3 1.1 Firmware Release For the latest Software and Firmware Release and associated documentation, access the TE Customer Portal at http://www.te.com/adc. 1.2 Purpose and Scope This document describes the InterReach Fusion Wideband system. Section 2 InterReach Fusion Wideband System Description This section provides an overview of the Fusion Wideband hardware and OA&M capabilities. This section also contains system specifications and RF end-to-end performance tables. Section 3 Fusion Wideband Main Hub This section illustrates and describes the Fusion Wideband Main Hub. This section includes connector and LED descriptions, and unit specifications. D-620616-0-20 Rev F InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual 1-1 CONFIDENTIAL Conventions in this Manual Section 4 Fusion Wideband Expansion Hub This section illustrates and describes the Expansion Hub, as well as connector and LED descriptions, and unit specification. Section 5 Remote Access Unit This section illustrates and describes the Remote Access Unit. This section also includes connector and LED descriptions, and unit specifications. Section 6 Designing a Fusion Wideband Solution This section provides tools to aid you in designing your Fusion Wideband system, including tables of the maximum output power per carrier at the RAU and formu-
las and tables for calculating path loss, coverage distance, and link budget. Section 7 Installing Fusion Wideband This section provides installation procedures, requirements, safety precautions, and checklists. The installation procedures include guidelines for troubleshooting using the LEDs as you install the units. Section 8 Replacing Fusion Wideband Components This section provides installation procedures and considerations when you are replacing an Fusion Wideband component in an operating system. Section 9 Maintenance, Troubleshooting, and Technical Assistance This section provides contact information and troubleshooting tables. Appendix A Cables and Connectors This appendix provides connector and cable descriptions and requirements. It also includes cable strapping, connector crimping tools, and diagrams. Appendix B Compliance This section lists safety and radio/EMC approvals. Appendix C Faults, Warnings, Status Tables This section lists all system alarm messages. 1.3 Conventions in this Manual The following table lists the type style conventions used in this manual. Convention bold BOLD CAPS SMALL CAPS Description Used for emphasis Labels on equipment Software menu and window selections 1-2 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F Standards Conformance This manual lists measurements first in metric units, and then in U.S. Customary Sys-
tem of units in parentheses. For example:
0 to 45C (32 to 113F) This manual uses the following symbols to highlight certain information as described. NOTE: This format emphasizes text with special significance or impor-
tance, and provides supplemental information. CAUTION: This format indicates when a given action or omitted action can cause or contribute to a hazardous condition. Damage to the equipment can occur. WARNING: This format indicates when a given action or omitted action can result in catastrophic damage to the equipment or cause injury to the user. Procedure This format highlights a procedure. 1.4 Standards Conformance Fusion Wideband uses the TIA-570-B cabling standards for ease of installation. Refer to Appendix B for compliance information. CAUTION: The user is cautioned that changes or modifications not expressly approved by the party responsible for compliance could void the users authority to operate the equipment. D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 1-3 CONFIDENTIAL Related Publications 1.5 Related Publications AdminBrowser User Manual; TE part number D-620607-0-20 FlexWave Focus Configuration, Installation, and Reference Manual; TE part num-
ber 8500-10 InterReach Unison Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual; TE part num-
ber 8700-50 1-4 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F SECTION 2 InterReach Fusion Wideband System Description This section contains the following subsections:
Section 2.1 System Overview . 2-1 Section 2.2 System Hardware Description . 2-3 Section 2.3 System OA&M Capabilities Overview . 2-5 Section 2.4 System Connectivity . 2-7 Section 2.5 System Operation . 2-8 Section 2.6 System Specifications . 2-9 2.1 System Overview InterReach Fusion Wideband is an intelligent fiber optics/CATV, multi-band (fre-
quencies) wireless networking system designed to handle both wireless voice and data communications over licensed frequencies. It provides high-quality, ubiquitous, seamless access to the wireless network in larger buildings. Fusion Wideband provides RF characteristics designed for large public and private facilities such as campus environments, airports, shopping malls, subways, conven-
tion centers, sports venues, and so on. Fusion Wideband uses microprocessors to enable key capabilities such as software-selectable band settings, automatic gain con-
trol, ability to incrementally adjust downlink/uplink gain, end-to-end alarming of all components and the associated cable infrastructure, and a host of additional capabili-
ties. The Fusion Wideband system supports major wireless standards and air interface pro-
tocols in use around the world, including:
Frequencies: 700 MHz, 800 MHz, 850 MHz, 1700 MHz, 1800 MHz, 1900 MHz, 2100 MHz, 2500 MHz, 2600 MHz. Voice Protocols: AMPS, TDMA, CDMA, GSM/EGSM, WCDMA, LTE, WiMAX D-620616-0-20 Rev F InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual 2-1 CONFIDENTIAL System Overview Data Protocols: CDPD, EDGE, GPRS, WCDMA, CDMA2000, 1xRTT, EV-DO, LTE, Paging, and WiMAX The Fusion Wideband system supports three configurable bands:
Band 1 in 60 MHz and can be configured for 700 MHz, 800 MHz, 1900 MHz, 2100 MHz, 2500 MHz, or 2600 MHz Band 2 in 75 MHz and can be configured for 1700 MHz, 1800 MHz, 1900 MHz, 2100 MHz, 2500 MHz, or 2600 MHz Both bands support all protocols. Fusion Wideband remote access units (RAUs) contain combinations of Band 1, Band 2, and Band 3 frequencies to support various world areas. These frequencies are 1800 MHz/2100 MHz for Europe, the Middle East, and Asia, or 800 MHz/850 MHz/1900 MHz for North America. Refer to Table 2-4 for a spe-
cific list of supported RAUs. Band 3 (only used for North America: FSN-W2-808519-1, FSN-W2-7021-1, FSN-W2-7070-1, and FSN-W2-7575-1). For example, the FSN-W2-808519-1 RAU Band 3 is a 25 MHz sub-band of the 60 MHz Band and Band 1 is an 18 MHz sub-band of the 60 MHz Band. Key System Features Multi-Band, supports two or more full band frequencies for spectrum growth. Superior RF performance, particularly in the areas of IP3 and noise figure. High downlink composite power and low uplink noise figure enables support of a large number of channels and larger coverage footprint per antenna. Software configurable Main and Expansion Hubs allow the frequency bands to be configured in the field. Either single-mode or multi-mode fiber can be used, supporting flexible cabling alternatives (in addition to standard CATV 75 Ohm cabling). You can select the cabling type to met the resident cabling infrastructure of the facility and unique building topologies. Extended system reach. Using single-mode fiber, fiber runs can be a long as 6 kilometers (creating a total system wingspan of 12 kilometers). Alternatively, with multi-mode fiber, fiber runs can be as long as 500 meters. Standard 75 Ohm CATV cable, can be run up to 130 meters for RG-59 cable;
140 meters for RG-6; 235 meters for RG-11 using CommScope 2065V, 2279V, and 2293K cables. Flexible RF configuration capabilities, including:
System gain:
Ability to manually set gain in 1 dB steps, from 0 to 15 dB, on both down-
link and uplink. 2-2 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F System Hardware Description RAU:
RAU uplink and downlink gain can be independently attenuated 0 or 10 dB. Uplink level control protects the system from input overload and can be optimized for either a single operator or multiple operators/protocols. VSWR check on RAU reports if there is a disconnected antenna. Firmware Updates are downloaded (either locally or remotely) to the system when any modifications are made to the product, including the addition of new software capabilities and services. OA&M capabilities, including fault isolation to the field replaceable unit, report-
ing of all fault and warning conditions, and user-friendly web browser user inter-
face OA&M software package. 2.2 System Hardware Description The InterReach Fusion Wideband system consists of three modular components:
19" rack-mountable Main Hub (connects to up to 4 Expansion Hubs, except for the One Port Main Hub configuration that supports 1 Expansion Hub) Converts RF signals to optical IF on the downlink; optical IF-to-RF on the uplink Microprocessor controlled (for alarms, monitoring, and control) Auto-configurable bands Simplex interface to RF source Periodically polls all downstream RAUs for system status, and automatically reports any fault or warning conditions 19 rack mountable Expansion Hub (connects to up to 8 Remote Access Units) Optical signal conversion to electrical on the downlink; electrical to optical on the uplink Microprocessor controlled (for alarms, monitoring, and control) Software configurable band (based on commands from the Main Hub) Supplies DC power to RAUs over CATV cable. Remote Access Unit (RAU) Converts IF signals to RF on the downlink; RF-to-IF on the uplink Microprocessor controlled (for alarms, monitoring, and control) Multi-band protocol independent, frequency specific units The minimum configuration of a Fusion Wideband system is one Main Hub, one Expansion Hub, and one RAU (1-1-1). The maximum configuration of a system is D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 2-3 CONFIDENTIAL System Hardware Description one Main Hub, four Expansion Hubs, and 32 RAUs (1-4-32). Multiple systems can be combined to provide larger configurations. NOTE: The Fusion Wideband One Port Main Hub (PN: FSN-W1-MH-1P and FSN-W2-MH-1P) configuration is a cost reduced version of the Fusion Wideband Main Hub and supports only one Expansion Hub (up to 8 RAUs). The Fusion Wideband One Port Main Hub is software locked to 1 port 2 fiber ports. Additional ports are disabled internally. Please do not attempt to remove the front panel fiber port plate, since doing so will void the product warranty. Figure 2-1 Fusion Wideband System Hardware Figure 2-2 Fusion Wideband One Port System Hardware 2-4 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F System OA&M Capabilities Overview 2.3 System OA&M Capabilities Overview InterReach Fusion Wideband is microprocessor controlled and contains firmware to enable much of the operations, administration, and maintenance (OA&M) functionality. Complete alarming, down to the field replaceable unit (that is, Fusion Wideband Main Hub, Expansion Hub, and Remote Access Unit) and the cabling infrastructure, is available. All events occurring in a system, defined as a Fusion Wideband Main Hub and all of its associated Expansion Hubs and Remote Access Units, are automat-
ically reported to the Main Hub. The Main Hub monitors system status and communi-
cates that status using the following methods:
Normally closed (NC) alarm contact closures can be tied to standard NC alarm monitoring systems or directly to a base station for basic alarm monitoring. Connection Methods:
The Main Hubs front panel RJ-45 port connects directly to a PC (for local Ethernet access). The Main Hubs front panel RS-232 serial port connects directly to a modem
(for remote access). Remote access is also available with an optional 100BASE-T LAN switch con-
nections to the RJ-45 port. Figure 2-3 Three Methods for OA&M Communications Use AdminBrowser to configure or monitor a local or a remote Fusion Wideband system. PC/Laptop running a Standard Browser RS-232 2 RS-232 Ethernet TCP/IP Modem LAN Switch PSTN 1 3 Ethernet RS-232 Modem RJ-45 Ethernet Fusion Wideband Main Hub F-conn. Admin Browser Fusion Wideband Main Hub Modem Fusion Wideband Main Hub Fusion Wideband Main Hub AdminBrowser OA&M software runs on the Fusion Wideband Main Hub micropro-
cessor and communicates to its downstream Expansion Hubs and associated RAUs. Using AdminBrowser, you can perform the following from any standard web browser
(Internet Explorer) running on your PC/laptop system:
Configure a newly installed system Change system parameters D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 2-5 CONFIDENTIAL System OA&M Capabilities Overview Perform an end-to-end system test Query system status Refer to the AdminBrowser User Manual (D-620607-0-20) for information about installing and using AdminBrowser software. 2.3.1 System Monitoring and Reporting Each Fusion Wideband Main Hub in the system constantly monitors itself, its Expan-
sion Hubs, and their downstream RAUs for internal fault and warning conditions. The results of this monitoring are stored in memory and compared against new results. When a Main or Expansion Hub detects a change in status, it reports a fault or warn-
ing alarm. Faults are also indicated locally by red status LEDs. Both faults and warn-
ings are reported to AdminBrowser software and displayed on a PC/laptop connected to the Main Hubs RJ-45 port. Passive antennas connected to the RAUs are not moni-
tored automatically. Perform a System Test to retrieve status information about anten-
nas. Using AdminBrowser, you can install a new system or new components, change sys-
tem parameters, and query system status. Figure 2-4 illustrates how the system reports its status to AdminBrowser. Figure 2-4 System Monitoring and Reporting Fusion Wideband Expansion Hub AdminBrowser The Expansion Hub queries the status of each RAU and compares it to the previously stored status. If a fault is detected, LEDs on the front panel turn red. RAU RAU Each RAU passes its status to the Hub. If a fault is detected, the ALARM LED is red. If no fault is detected, the LED is green. PC/Laptop running a standard web browser Fusion Wideband Main Hub AdminBrowser The Main Hub queries status of each Expan-
sion Hub and each RAU and compares it to previously stored status. If a fault is detected, LEDs on the front panel turn red. Use a standard browser to communi-
cate with remotely or locally installed Fusion Wideband systems run-
ning AdminBrowser. If a fault or warning condition is reported, the AdminBrowser graphical user inter-
face indicates the prob-
lem on your standard PC browser. 2.3.2 Using Alarm Contacts You can connect the DB-9 female connector on the rear panel of the Fusion Wide-
band Main Hub to a local base station or to a daisy-chained series of Fusion and/or FlexWave Focus systems. 2-6 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F System Connectivity When you connect FlexWave Focus or a BTS to the Fusion Wideband, the Fusion Wideband Main Hub outputs the alarms (alarm source) and FlexWave Focus or the BTS receives the alarms (alarm sense). This is described in Section 7.7.1 on page 7-57. 2.4 System Connectivity The double star architecture of the Fusion Wideband system, illustrated in Figure 2-5, provides excellent system scalability and reliability. The system requires only one pair of fibers for eight antenna points. This makes any system expansion, such as add-
ing an extra antenna for additional coverage, potentially as easy as pulling an extra CATV cable. Figure 2-5 Fusion Widebands Double Star Architecture PORT 1 PORT 2 PORT 3 PORT 4 RS-232 RJ-45 Main Hub Fiber Expansion Hub Expansion Hub Expansion Hub Expansion Hub CATV (RG-59, 6, or 11) CATV RAU RAU CATV RAU up to 8 RAUs per Expansion Hub D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 2-7 CONFIDENTIAL System Operation 2.5 System Operation Figure 2-6 Downlink (Base Station to Wireless Devices) The Main Hub receives downlink RF signals from a base station using 50 Ohm coaxial cable. Main Hub The Main Hub converts the RF signals to IF, then to optical signals and sends them to Expansion Hubs (up to four) using optical fiber cable. Expansion Hub The Expansion Hub converts the optical sig-
nals to electrical signals and sends them to RAUs (up to eight) using 75 Ohm CATV cable. RAU The RAU converts the IF signals to RF and sends them to passive antennas using 50 Ohm coaxial cable. Figure 2-7 Uplink (Wireless Devices to Base Station) Expansion Hub Main Hub The Main Hub sends uplink RF signals to a base station using 50 Ohm coaxial cable. The Main Hub receives the optical signals from the Expansion Hubs (up to four) using optical fiber cable and con-
verts them to RF sig-
nals. RAU The RAU receives uplink RF signals from the passive antenna using 50 Ohm coaxial cable and converts them to IF signals. The Expansion Hub receives the IF signals from the RAUs (up to eight) using CATV cable and converts them to optical signals. 2-8 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F 2.6 System Specifications Table 2-1 Physical Specifications Parameter IF/RF Connectors Main Hub 4-type N, femalea (50 Ohm), 1 Downlink/Uplink pair per band Expansion Hub 8-type F, female (CATV 75 Ohm) External Alarm Connector
(contact source) ADMIN/LAN Interface Connectors Fiber Connectorsc LED Alarm and Status Indicators Power (AC Option) Power (DC Option) Power Consumption (W) Enclosure Dimensionse
(HWD) (Excluding angle- brackets for 19''
rack mounting of hub) One, 9-pin D-sub, female One, 9-pin D-sub, female One RJ-45, female One 9-pin D-sub, male for optional modem 4 pair, SC/APCd Unit Status (One pair):
Power Main Hub Status Downstream Unit Status
(One per fiber port):
Expansion Hub/RAU Rating: 100240V AC, 1A, 5060 Hz Operating Range: 90132V AC/170-250V AC auto-ranging Rating: 3864V DC, 2.5A 30 89 mm 438 mm 381 mm
(3.5 in. 17.25 in. 15 in.) (2U) One RJ-45, female One 9-pin D-sub, male One pair, SC/APC Unit Status (One pair):
Power and Expansion Hub Status Fiber Link Status (One pair):
DL Status and UL Status Port Status:
One per F connector port and Link/RAU Rating: 100240V AC, 6A, 5060 Hz Operating Range: 90132V AC/170-250V AC auto-ranging Rating: 38-64V DC, 14A 4 RAUs: 240 typical, 310 Max. 8 RAUs: 400 typical, 530 Max. 89 mm 438 mm 381 mm
(3.5 in. 17.25 in. 15 in.) (2U) Weight
< 5.5 kg (< 12 lbs.)
< 6.6 kg (< 14.5 lbs.) System Specifications Remote Access Unit One F, female
(CATV -75 Ohm) One N, femaleb
(antenna - 50 Ohm) Unit Status (One pair):
Link Alarm 54 mm x 286 mm x 281 mm
(2.13 in. 11.25 in. 11.13 in.)
< 2.1 kg (< 4.6 lbs.) a. 6-type N, female connectors for FSN-W2-MH-1, FSN-W2-MH-2, and FSN-W2-MH-3 Main Hub. b. 2-type N, female connectors for FSN-W1-1921-1, FSN-W2-808519-1, FSN-W2-7575-1, FSN-W2-7070-1, FSN-W3-2626-1, and FSN-2500-2-WMAX RAUs. c. It is critical to system performance that only SC/APC fiber connectors are used throughout the fiber network, including fiber distribution panels. d. FSN-W1-MH-1P and FSN-W2-MH-1P support only one pair, SP/APC fibers. e. Excluding angle-brackets for 19 rack mounting of hub. Note: The Fusion Wideband Main Hubs typical power consumption assumes that the CATV RG-59 cable length is no more than 130 meters, the RG-6 cable length is no more than 140 meters, and RG-11 cable length is no more than 235 meters using CommScope 2065V, 2279V, and 2293K cables. D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 2-9 CONFIDENTIAL System Specifications Table 2-2 Wavelength and Laser Power Specifications Measured Output Power Wavelength 1310 nm +20 nm Main Hub 890 uW Expansion Hub 3.8 mW Table 2-3 Environmental Specifications Parameter Operating Temperature Main Hub and Expansion Hub 0 to +45C (+32 to +113F) Non-operating Tempera-
ture Operating Humidity;
non-condensing 20 to +85C (4 to +185F) 5% to 95%
RAU 25 to +45C (13 to +113F) 25 to +85C (13 to +185F) 5% to 95%
Table 2-4 Frequency Bands Covered by Fusion Wideband RAUs Fusion Wideband RAU 2100/1800 2100 High Power
(single-band RAU) 1900/AWS Part Number FSN-W1-2118-1 FSN-W1-21HP-1 FSN-W1-1921-1 800/850/1900 FSN-W2-808519-1 Fusion Wide-
band Band 2100 1800 2100 1900
(A-F) AWS 800 RF Passband Downlink
(MHz) 2110-2170 1805-1880 2110-2170 Uplink
(MHz) 1920-1980 1710-1785 1920-1980 MAIN HUB/
RAU Band 1 2 1 1930-1990 1850-1910 1 2110-2155 851-869 1710-1755 806-824 RAU Band-
width 60 MHz 75 MHz 60 MHz 60 MHz 45 MHz 18 MHz 25 MHz 60 MHz 2 1
(sub-band 1A) 3
(sub-band 1B) 2 850 869-894 824-849 1900
(A-F) 1930-1990 1850-1910 2-10 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F System Specifications Table 2-4 Frequency Bands Covered by Fusion Wideband RAUs (continued) Fusion Wideband RAU 700/AWS Part Number FSN-W2-7021-1 FSN-W2-7575-1 FSN-W2-7070-1 700/700 MIMO
(Upper C) 700/700 MIMO
(Lower ABC) 2500/2500 FSN-2500-2-WMAX 2600/2600 FSN-W3-2626-1 RF Passband Downlink
(MHz) 746-757 Uplink
(MHz) 776-787 728-746 698-716 2110-2155 746-757 1710-1755 776-787 746-757 776-787 728-746 698-716 728-746 698-716 MAIN HUB/
RAU Band 1
(sub-band 1A) 3
(sub-band 1B) 2 1 (sub-
band 1A) 3 (sub-
band 1B) 1 (sub-
band 1A) 3 (sub-
band 1B) 2496-2690 2496-2690 2620-2690 2620-2690 2496-2690 2496-2690 2500-2570 2500-2570 1 2 1 2 Fusion Wide-
band Band 700
(Upper C) 700
(Lower ABC) AWS 700
(Upper C) 700
(Upper C) 700
(Lower ABC) 700
(Lower ABC) 2500 2500 2600 2600 RAU Band-
width 11 MHz 18 MHz 45 MHz 11 MHz 11 MHz 18 MHz 18 MHz 30 MHz 30 MHz 70 MHz 70 MHz 2.6.1 RF End-to-End Performance The following tables list the RF end-to-end performance of each protocol. NOTE: The system gain is adjustable in 1 dB steps from 0 to 15 dB, and the gain of each RAU can be attenuated 0 or 10 dB. D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 2-11 CONFIDENTIAL System Specifications 2100/1800 RAU Table 2-5 2100 MHz RF End-to-End Performance Parameter Average gain with 130 m RG-59 at 25C (77F) (dB) Ripple with 130 m RG-59 (dB) Output IP3 (dBm) Input IP3 (dBm) Output 1 dB Compression Point (dBm) Noise Figure 1 MH, 1 EH, 8 RAUs (dB) Noise Figure 1 MH, 4 EH, 32 RAUs (dB) Table 2-6 1800 MHz RF End-to-End Performance Parameter Average gain with 130 m RG-59 at 25C (77F) (dB) Ripple with 130 m RG-59 (dB) Output IP3 (dBm) Input IP3 (dBm) Output 1 dB Compression Point (dBm) Noise Figure 1 MH, 1 EH, 8 RAUs (dB) Noise Figure 1 MH, 4 EH, 32 RAUs (dB) Typical Downlink Uplink 15 5 38 26 15 5
-5 17 23 Typical Downlink Uplink 15 4.5 38 26 15 5 5 17 23 2100 High Power RAU Table 2-7 2100 MHz High Power RF End-to-End Performance Parameter Average gain with 130 m RG-59 at 25C (77F) (dB) *
Ripple with 130 m RG-59 (dB) Output IP3 (dBm) Input IP3 (dBm) Output 1 dB Compression Point (dBm) Noise Figure 1 MH, 1 EH, 8 RAUs (dB) Noise Figure 1 MH, 4 EH, 32 RAUs (dB) Typical Downlink Uplink 22 4.5 44 33 15 5 5 17 23
* The system Downlink gain is adjustable in 1 dB steps from 7 to 22 dB (the High Power RAU adds 7 dB of Downlink gain). 2-12 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F The system Uplink gain is adjustable in 1 dB steps from 0 to 15 dB. 1900/AWS RAU Table 2-8 1900 MHz RF End-to-End Performance Parameter Average gain with 130 m RG-59 at 25C (77F) (dB) Ripple with 130 m RG-59 (dB) Output IP3 (dBm) Input IP3 (dBm) Output 1 dB Compression Point (dBm) Noise Figure 1 MH, 1 EH, 8 RAUs (dB) Noise Figure 1 MH, 4 EH, 32 RAUs (dB) Table 2-9 AWS RF End-to-End Performance Parameter Average gain with 130 m RG-59 at 25C (77F) (dB) Ripple with 130 m RG-59 (dB) Output IP3 (dBm) Input IP3 (dBm) Output 1 dB Compression Point (dBm) Noise Figure 1 MH, 1 EH, 8 RAUs (dB) Noise Figure 1 MH, 4 EH, 32 RAUs (dB) 800/850/1900 RAU Table 2-10 800 MHz RF End-to-End Performance Parameter Average gain with 130 m RG-59 at 25C (77F) (dB) Ripple with 130 m RG-59 (dB) Output IP3 (dBm) Input IP3 (dBm) Output 1 dB Compression Point (dBm) Noise Figure 1 MH, 1 EH, 8 RAUs (dB) Noise Figure 1 MH, 4 EH, 32 RAUs (dB) System Specifications Typical Downlink Uplink 15 3.5 38 26 15 4 5 17 23 Typical Downlink Uplink 15 3.5 38 26 15 4 5 17 23 Typical Downlink Uplink 15 2.5 37 25 15 3 5 17 23 D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 2-13 CONFIDENTIAL System Specifications Table 2-11 850 MHz RF End-to-End Performance Parameter Average gain with 130 m RG-59 at 25C (77F) (dB) Ripple with 130 m RG-59 (dB) Output IP3 (dBm) Input IP3 (dBm) Output 1 dB Compression Point (dBm) Noise Figure 1 MH, 1 EH, 8 RAUs (dB) Noise Figure 1 MH, 4 EH, 32 RAUs (dB) Table 2-12 1900 MHz RF End-to-End Performance Parameter Average gain with 130 m RG-59 at 25C (77F) (dB) Ripple with 130 m RG-59 (dB) Output IP3 (dBm) Input IP3 (dBm) Output 1 dB Compression Point (dBm) Noise Figure 1 MH, 1 EH, 8 RAUs (dB) Noise Figure 1 MH, 4 EH, 32 RAUs (dB) Typical Downlink Uplink 15 2.5 37 25 15 3 5 17 23 Typical Downlink Uplink 15 3.5 38 26 15 4 5 17 23 700/AWS RAU Table 2-13 700 MHz (Lower ABC) RF End-to-End Performance Parameter Average gain with 130 m RG-59 at 25C (77F) (dB) Ripple with 130 m RG-59 (dB) Output IP3 (dBm) Input IP3 (dBm) Output 1 dB Compression Point (dBm) Noise Figure 1 MH, 1 EH, 8 RAUs (dB) Noise Figure 1 MH, 4 EH, 32 RAUs (dB) Typical Downlink Uplink 15 2.5 34 22 15 3 5 20 26 2-14 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F System Specifications Table 2-14 700 MHz (Upper C) RF End-to-End Performance Parameter Average gain with 130 m RG-59 at 25C (77F) (dB) Ripple with 130 m RG-59 (dB) Output IP3 (dBm) Input IP3 (dBm) Output 1 dB Compression Point (dBm) Noise Figure 1 MH, 1 EH, 8 RAUs (dB) Noise Figure 1 MH, 4 EH, 32 RAUs (dB) Table 2-15 AWS RF End-to-End Performance Parameter Average gain with 130 m RG-59 at 25C (77F) (dB) Ripple with 130 m RG-59 (dB) Output IP3 (dBm) Input IP3 (dBm) Output 1 dB Compression Point (dBm) Noise Figure 1 MH, 1 EH, 8 RAUs (dB) Noise Figure 1 MH, 4 EH, 32 RAUs (dB) Typical Downlink Uplink 15 2.5 34 22 15 3 5 20 26 Typical Downlink Uplink 15 3.5 38 26 15 4 5 17 23 700/700 (Upper C) MIMO RAU Table 2-16 700 MHz (Upper C) RF End-to-End Performance Parameter Average gain with 130 m RG-59 at 25C (77F) (dB) Ripple with 130 m RG-59 (dB) Output IP3 (dBm) Input IP3 (dBm) Output 1 dB Compression Point (dBm) Noise Figure 1 MH, 1 EH, 8 RAUs (dB) Noise Figure 1 MH, 4 EH, 32 RAUs (dB) Typical Downlink Uplink 15 2.5 38 26 15 3 5 17 23 D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 2-15 CONFIDENTIAL System Specifications 700/700 (Lower ABC) MIMO RAU Table 2-17 700 MHz (Lower ABC) RF End-to-End Performance Parameter Average gain with 130 m RG-59 at 25C (77F) (dB) Ripple with 130 m RG-59 (dB) Output IP3 (dBm) Input IP3 (dBm) Output 1 dB Compression Point (dBm) Noise Figure 1 MH, 1 EH, 8 RAUs (dB) Noise Figure 1 MH, 4 EH, 32 RAUs (dB) 2500/2500 RAU Table 2-18 2500 MHz RF End-to-End Performance Parameter Average gain with 130 m RG-59 at 25C (77F) (dB) Ripple with 130 m RG-59 (dB) Output IP3 (dBm) Input IP3 (dBm) Output 1 dB Compression Point (dBm) Noise Figure 1 MH, 1 EH, 8 RAUs (dB) Noise Figure 1 MH, 4 EH, 32 RAUs (dB) 2600/2600 RAU Table 2-19 2600 MHz RF End-to-End Performance Parameter Average gain with 130 m RG-59 at 25C (77F) (dB) Ripple with 130 m RG-59 (dB) Output IP3 (dBm) Input IP3 (dBm) Output 1 dB Compression Point (dBm) Noise Figure 1 MH, 1 EH, 8 RAUs (dB) Noise Figure 1 MH, 4 EH, 32 RAUs (dB) Typical Downlink Uplink 15 2.5 38 26 15 3 5 17 23 Typical Downlink Uplink 15 4.5 42.5 32 15 4.5 5 17 23 Typical Downlink Uplink 15 4.5 38 26 15 5 5 17 23 2-16 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F SECTION 3 Fusion Wideband Main Hub This section contains the following subsections:
Section 3.1 Fusion Wideband Main Hub Overview . 3-1 Section 3.2 Fusion Wideband Main Hub Front Panel . 3-4 Section 3.3 Fusion Wideband Main Hub Rear Panel . 3-8 Section 3.4 Main Hub Specifications . 3-10 Section 3.5 Faults, Warnings, and Status Messages . 3-11 3.1 Fusion Wideband Main Hub Overview The Fusion Wideband Main Hub (shown in Figure 3-1) distributes up to three indi-
vidual (Band 1, 2, and 3) downlink RF signals from a base station, repeater, or Flex-
Wave Focus system to up to four Expansion Hubs, which in turn distribute the signals to up to 32 Remote Access Units. The Main Hub also combines uplink signals from the associated Expansion Hubs. Fusion Wideband is a multi-band system. One RF source (Band 1 or RF1) goes to the 60 MHz band and the other RF source (Band 2 or RF2) goes to the 75 MHz band. Band 3 (or RF3) goes to a 25 MHz sub-band of the 60 MHz band and is functional only with the 800/850/1900, 700/AWS, 700/700 (Upper C) MIMO, and 700/700
(Lower ABC) MIMO RAU. The system installs in a 19" equipment rack and is usu-
ally co-located with the RF source in a telecommunications closet. D-620616-0-20 Rev F InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual 3-1 CONFIDENTIAL Fusion Wideband Main Hub Overview Figure 3-1 Main Hub in a Fusion Wideband System Downlink Path: The Main Hub receives up to 3 individual (Band1, 2, and 3) downlink RF signals from a base station, repeater, or FlexWave Focus system using 50 Ohm coaxial cable. It converts the signals to IF then to optical and sends them to up to four Expansion Hubs using fiber optic cable. The Main Hub also sends OA&M communication to the Expansion Hubs using the fiber optic cable. The Expansion Hubs, in turn, communicate the OA&M information to the RAUs using CATV cable. RF1, 2, and 3 Downlink to Main Hub Uplink from Main Hub RF1, 2, and 3 Fusion Wideband Main Hub Fusion Wideband Expansion Hub RAU Downlink from Main Hub Uplink to Main Hub Uplink Path: The Main Hub receives uplink optical signals from up to four Expansion Hubs using fiber optic cables. It con-
verts the signals to IF then to RF and sends them to the respective Band1, 2, and 3 base station, repeater, or FlexWave Focus system using 50 Ohm coaxial cable. The Main Hub also receives status information from the Expansion Hubs and all RAUs using the fiber optic cable. Figure 3-2 shows a detailed view of the major RF and optical functional blocks of the Main Hub. NOTE: The Fusion Wideband One Port Main Hub (PN: FSN-W1-MH-1P and FSN-W2-MH-1P) configuration is a cost reduced version of the Fusion Wideband Main Hub and supports only one Expansion Hub (up to 8 RAUs). 3-2 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F Fusion Wideband Main Hub Overview Figure 3-2 Main Hub Block Diagram CAL Tone D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 3-3 CONFIDENTIAL Fusion Wideband Main Hub Front Panel 3.2 Fusion Wideband Main Hub Front Panel Figure 3-3 Fusion Wideband Main Hub Front Panel 1 2 1 2 1 2 1 2 3 6 4 5 InterReach Wideband Fusion Main Hub 1. Four fiber optic ports (labeled PORT 1, PORT 2, PORT 3, PORT 4) One standard female SC/APC connector per port for MMF/SMF input (labeled UPLINK) One standard female SC/APC connector per port for MMF/SMF output
(labeled DOWNLINK) 2. Four sets of fiber port LEDs (one set per port) One LED per port for port link status and downstream unit status 3. One set of unit status LEDs One LED for unit power status (labeled POWER) One LED for unit status (labeled MAIN HUB STATUS) 4. One 9-pin D-sub male connector for system remote dial-up communication and diagnostics using a modem (labeled MODEM) 5. One RJ-45 female connector for system communication and diagnostics using a PC/laptop with direct connect or using a LAN switch (labeled ADMIN/LAN) 6. Power switch NOTE: The Fusion Wideband One Port Main Hub (PN: FSN-W1-MH-1P and FSN-W2-MH-1P) configuration is a cost reduced version of the Fusion Wideband Main Hub and supports only one Expansion Hub (up to 8 RAUs). 3-4 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F Fusion Wideband Main Hub Front Panel 3.2.1 Optical Fiber Uplink/Downlink Ports The optical fiber uplink/downlink ports transmit and receive optical signals between the Main Hub and up to four Expansion Hubs using industry-standard SMF or MMF cable. There are four fiber ports on the front panel of the Main Hub; one port per Expansion Hub. Each fiber port has two female SC/APC connectors:
Optical Fiber Uplink Connector This connector (labeled UPLINK) is used to receive the uplink optical signals from an Expansion Hub. Optical Fiber Downlink Connector This connector (labeled DOWNLINK) is used to transmit the downlink optical sig-
nals to an Expansion Hub. CAUTION: To avoid damaging the Main Hubs fiber connector ports, use only SC/APC fiber cable connectors when using either single-mode or multi-mode fiber. Additionally, it is critical to system performance that only SC/APC fiber connectors are used throughout the fiber network, includ-
ing fiber distribution panels. 3.2.2 Communications RS-232 Serial Connector Remote Monitoring Use a standard serial cable to connect a modem to the 9-pin D-sub male serial con-
nector for remote monitoring or configuring. The cable typically has a DB-9 female and a DB-9 female connector. Refer to Appendix A.6 on page A-9 for the cable pin-
out diagram. Remote monitoring is also available by connecting the RJ-45 (ADMIN/LAN) port to a LAN switch for remote Ethernet LAN access or direct dial-up router access. Local Monitoring Use a crossover Ethernet cable (PN-4069-ADB) to connect a laptop or PC to the RJ-45 female connector for local monitoring or configuring using the AdminBrowser resident software. The cable typically has a RJ-45 male connector on both ends. Refer to Appendix A.5 on page A-8 for the cable pinout. 3.2.3 Main Hub LED Indicators The units front panel LEDs indicate faults and commanded or fault lockouts. The LEDs do not indicate warnings or whether the system test has been performed. Use the LEDs to provide basic information only, or as a backup when you are not using Admin-
Browser. D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 3-5 CONFIDENTIAL Fusion Wideband Main Hub Front Panel Upon power up, the Main Hub goes through a 20-second test to check the LED lamps. During this time, the LEDs blink through the states shown in Table 3-1, letting you visually verify that the LED lamps and the firmware are functioning properly. Upon completion of initialization, the LEDs stay in one of the first two states shown in Table 3-1. The Main Hub automatically sends the program bands command to all connected RAUs. A mismatched band causes a fault message to be displayed in AdminBrowser and places the RAU in a disabled condition. NOTE: Refer to Section 9.3.2 for troubleshooting using the LEDs. NOTE: AdminBrowser should be used for troubleshooting the system. Only use LEDs for backup or confirmation. However, if there are communi-
cation problems within the system, the LEDs may provide additional infor-
mation that is not available using AdminBrowser. Unit Status LEDs The Main Hub has one pair of status LEDs, labeled POWER and STATUS, which can be in one of the states shown in Table 3-1. These LEDs can be:
steady green steady red off - no color (valid only during 90 second power cycle) flashing red (60 ppm) There is no off state when the units power is on. Table 3-1 Fusion Wideband Hub Status LED States POWER STATUS POWER STATUS POWER STATUS LED State Green Green Green Red Green Green
(60-ppm) Indicates The Main Hub is connected to power and all power supplies are operating. The Main Hub is not reporting a fault; however, the system test may need to be performed or a warning condition may exist. Use AdminBrowser to deter-
mine this. The Main Hub is connected to power and all power supplies are operating. Use AdminBrowser to power status. The Main Hub is reporting a fault. The Main Hub is connected to power and all power supplies are operating. Use Admin Browser to determine power status. The Main Hub is reporting a lockout condition. 3-6 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F Fusion Wideband Main Hub Front Panel Table 3-1 Fusion Wideband Hub Status LED States (continued) POWER STATUS POWER STATUS POWER STATUS LED State Green Red
(60-ppm) Red Red Green Red/Green
(alternating) Indicates The Main Hub is connected to power and all power supplies are operating. The Main Hub DL input signal level is too high. One or more power supplies are out-of-specification. After the System CPU is rebooted, the MH status LED blinks red/green while the system tree data is built, power up system test is executed, and all units have their current status updated. Should the MH status LED blink red/green after initial power up, either the System CPU has rebooted or a component of the software has reset. Fiber Port LEDs The Main Hub has one fiber port LED for each of the four fiber ports. The LED can be in one of the states shown in Table 3-2. This LED can be:
off steady green steady red flashing red (60 ppm) Table 3-2 Fusion Wideband Hub Port LED States LED State Off Indicates The Expansion Hub is not connected. The Expansion Hub is connected. There are no faults from the Expansion Hub or any connected RAU. There was a loss of communications with the Expansion Hub. The Expansion Hub is disconnected. The Expansion Hub or any connected RAU reported a fault. The Expansion Hub or any connected RAU reported a lockout condition. Green Red
(60 PPM) Red
(Steady) Green
(60-ppm) PORT PORT PORT PORT PORT D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 3-7 CONFIDENTIAL Fusion Wideband Main Hub Rear Panel 3.3 Fusion Wideband Main Hub Rear Panel Figure 3-4 Fusion Wideband Main Hub Rear Panel Band 1 Band 2 Band 3 UL1 UL2 UL3 Alarms DL1 DL2 DL3 4 AC Power 1 5 3 2 1. AC power cord connector 2. Two air exhaust vents 3. Three N-type, female connectors for each band (Band 1, Band 2, and Band 3):
Uplink (labeled UL1, UL2, and UL3) Downlink (labeled DL1, DL2, and DL3) 4. One 9-pin D-sub female connector for contact alarm monitoring (labeled ALARMS) 5. Ground lug for connecting unit to frame ground (labeled GROUND) 3.3.1 Fusion Wideband Main Hub Rear Panel Connectors 3.3.1.1 9-pin D-sub Connector The 9-pin D-sub connector (labeled ALARMS) provides a contact alarm for fault and warning system alarm monitoring. Table 3-3 lists the function of each pin on the 9-pin D-sub connector. Table 3-3 9-pin D-sub Pin Connector Functions Pin 1 2 3 4 Function Alarm Sense Input (DC Ground) Alarm Sense Input 3 Alarm Sense Input 2 Warning Source Contact (positive connection) 3-8 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F Fusion Wideband Main Hub Rear Panel Table 3-3 9-pin D-sub Pin Connector Functions Pin 5 6 7 8 9 Function Warning Source Contact (negative connection) DC Ground (common) Fault Source Contact (positive connection) Alarm Sense Input 1 Fault Source Contact (negative connection) This interface can both generate two source contact alarms (Fault and Warning) and sense 3 single external alarm contacts (Alarm Sense Input 1 through 3). 3.3.1.2 N-type Female Connectors There are two 50 Ohm N-type connector pairs for each of the 3 bands on the rear panel of the Hub:
The DOWNLINK connector receives downlink RF signals from a repeater, local base station, or FlexWave Focus system. The UPLINK connector transmits uplink RF signals to a repeater, local base sta-
tion, or FlexWave Focus system. CAUTION:The UPLINK and DOWNLINK ports cannot handle a DC power feed from the local base station. If DC power is present, a DC block must be used or the Fusion Wideband hub may be damaged. D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 3-9 CONFIDENTIAL Main Hub Specifications 3.4 Main Hub Specifications Table 3-4 Main Hub Specifications Specification Enclosure Dimensions (H W D)a:
Weight Operating Temperature Non-operating Temperature Operating Humidity, non-condensing External Alarm Connector
(contact closure) ADMIN/LAN Interface Connector Fiber Connectors RF Connectors LED Fault and Status Indicators AC Power Power Consumption (W) MTBF Description 89 mm x 438 mm x 381 mm (3.5 in. x 17.25 in. x 15 in.) 2U
<5.5 kg (<12 lb) 0 to +45C (+32 to +113F) 20 to +85C (4 to +185F) 5% to 95%
1 9-pin D-sub, female Maximum: 40 mA @ 40V DC Typical: 4 mA @ 12V DC 1 RJ-45, female 1 9-pin D-sub, male for optional modem 4 Pair, SC/APCb 4 Nc, female (50 Ohm), 1 Downlink/Uplink pair per band Unit Status (1 pair):
Power Main Hub Status Downstream Unit/Link Status (1 per fiber port):
Link/E-Hub/RAU Rating 100/240V AC, 1A, 50-60 Hz Operating Range: 90-132V AC/170-250V AC auto-ranging 30 133,829 hours a. Excluding angle brackets for the 19 rack mounting of the Hub. b. It is critical to system performance that only SC/APC fiber connectors are used throughout the fiber network, including fiber distribution panels. c. 6 N, female connectors for FSN-W2-MH-1, FSN-W2-MH-2, and FSN-W2-MH-3 NOTE: The Fusion Wideband One Port Main Hub
(PN: FSN-W1-MH-1P and FSN-W2-MH-1P) configuration is a cost reduced version of the Fusion Wideband Main Hub and supports only one Expansion Hub (up to 8 RAUs). 3-10 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F Faults, Warnings, and Status Messages 3.5 Faults, Warnings, and Status Messages 3.5.1 Description The Fusion Wideband Main Hub monitors and reports changes or events in system performance to:
Ensure that fiber receivers, amplifiers and IF/RF paths are functioning properly. Ensure that Expansion Hubs and Remote Access Units are connected and function-
ing properly. An event is classified as fault, warning, or status message. Faults are service impacting. Warnings indicate a possible service impact. Status and informational messages are generally not service impacting. The Fusion Wideband Main Hub periodically queries attached Expansion Hub and Remote Access Units for their status. Both faults and warnings are reported to a con-
nected PC/laptop running a standard browser communicating with the Admin-
Browser software. Only faults are indicated by the faceplate LEDs. For more information regarding the events, refer to:
Appendix C for Main Hub faults. Appendix C for Main Hub warnings. Appendix C for Main Hub status messages. Section 9 for troubleshooting Main Hub LEDs. D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 3-11 CONFIDENTIAL Faults, Warnings, and Status Messages 3.5.2 View Preference AdminBrowser 1.0 or higher enables you to select (using the screen shown in Figure 3-5) the type of events to be displayed. Figure 3-5 Preferences Check Boxes To modify the setting, using AdminBrowser, select Alarms Set Alarm Preference and select the desired choice. After you click OK, AdminBrowser refreshes and updates the tree view according to the new setting. NOTE: The setting is strictly visual and only in AdminBrowser. There is no affect on the hardware itself. By default, the event filtering is set to Enable viewing of Faults only. The only exception to when the event filtering is ignored is during the Install/Config-
ure command. All events are displayed regardless of the event filtering setting. This ensures a smooth installation. 3-12 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F SECTION 4 Fusion Wideband Expansion Hub This section contains the following subsections:
Section 4.1 Expansion Hub Overview . 4-1 Section 4.2 Expansion Hub Front Panel . 4-3 Section 4.3 Expansion Hub Rear Panel . 4-8 Section 4.4 Faults, Warnings, and Status Messages . 4-9 Section 4.5 Expansion Hub Specifications . 4-10 4.1 Expansion Hub Overview The Expansion Hub acts an interface between the Main Hub and the Remote Access Unit(s) by converting optical signals to electrical signals and vice versa, as shown in Figure 4-1. It also supplies control signals and DC power to operate the Remote Access Unit(s) as well as passing status information from the RAUs to the Main Hub. Figure 4-1 Expansion Hub in a Fusion Wideband System Downlink Path: The Expansion Hub receives downlink (Band 1, 2, and 3) optical signals from the Main Hub using fiber optic cable. It converts the signals to electrical and sends them to up to eight Remote Access Units (RAUs) using CATV cables. The Expansion Hub also receives configuration information from the Main Hub using the fiber optic cable and relays it to the RAUs using CATV cable. Downlink to Expansion Hub Fusion Wideband Main Hub Fusion Wideband Expansion Hub Uplink from Expansion Hub Downlink from Expansion Hub Uplink to Expansion Hub RAU Uplink Path: The Expansion Hub receives uplink (Band 1, 2, and 3) IF signals from up to eight RAUs using CATV cables. It converts the signals to optical and sends them to a Main Hub using fiber optic cable. The Expansion Hub also receives RAU status information using CATV cable and sends it and its own status information to the Main Hub using the fiber optic cable. D-620616-0-20 Rev F InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual 4-1 CONFIDENTIAL Expansion Hub Overview Figure 4-2 Expansion Hub Block Diagram 4-2 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F Expansion Hub Front Panel 4.2 Expansion Hub Front Panel Figure 4-3 Expansion Hub Front Panel 1 2 3 4 5 8 7 6 1. One port LED per type F connector port for link status and downstream RAU sta-
tus (8 pair total). 2. Eight CATV cable, type F connectors (labeled PORT 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8) 3. One pair of unit status LEDs One LED for unit power status (labeled POWER) One LED for unit status (labeled E-HUB STATUS) 4. One set of fiber connection status LEDs One LED for fiber downlink status (labeled DL STATUS) One LED for fiber uplink status (labeled UL STATUS) 5. One fiber optic port which has two connectors One standard female SC/APC connector for MMF/SMF output (labeled UPLINK) One standard female SC/APC connector for MMF/SMF input (labeled DOWNLINK) 6. One 9-pin D-sub male connector for TE factory testing (labeled CONSOLE) 7. One RJ-45 female connector for system communication and diagnostics using a PC/laptop with direct connect or using a LAN switch (labeled ADMIN/LAN) 8. Power Switch D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 4-3 CONFIDENTIAL Expansion Hub Front Panel 4.2.1 75 Ohm Type F Connectors The eight type F connectors on the Expansion Hub are for the CATV cables used to transmit and receive signals to and from RAUs. Use only 75 ohm type F connectors on the CATV cable. The CATV cable also delivers DC electrical power to the RAUs. The Expansion Hubs DC voltage output is 54V DC nominal. A current limiting circuit protects the Hub if any port draws excessive power. NOTE: For system performance, it is important to use only low loss solid cop-
per center conductor CATV cable with quality type F connectors that use captive centerpin connectors. Refer to Appendix A for approved cables and connectors. 4.2.2 Manufacturing RS-232 Serial Connector 4.2.3 Console Port This console port is only used by TE manufacturing test purposes. DO NOT CON-
NECT ANYTHING TO IT. Local Monitoring Use a crossover Ethernet cable (PN-4069-ADB) to directly connect a laptop or PC to the RJ-45 female connector for local monitoring or configuring the Expansion Hub and associated RAUs using the AdminBrowser-EH resident software. The cable typi-
cally has a RJ-45 male connector on both ends. Refer to Appendix A.5 on page A-8 for the cable pinout and the AdminBrowser manual. Optical Fiber Uplink/Downlink Connectors The optical fiber uplink/downlink port transmits and receives optical signals between the Expansion Hub and the Main Hub using industry-standard SMF or MMF cable. The fiber port has two female SC/APC connectors:
Optical Fiber Uplink Connector This connector (labeled UPLINK) is used to transmit (output) uplink optical signals to the Main Hub. Optical Fiber Downlink Connector This connector (labeled DOWNLINK) is used to receive (input) downlink optical sig-
nals from the Main Hub. CAUTION: To avoid damaging the Expansion Hubs fiber connector ports, use only SC/APC fiber cable connectors. Additionally, use only 4-4 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F Expansion Hub Front Panel SC/APC fiber connectors throughout the fiber network, including fiber distribu-
tion panels. This is critical for ensuring system performance. 4.2.4 LED Indicators The units front panel LEDs indicate fault conditions and commanded or fault lockouts. The LEDs do not indicate warnings or whether the system test has been performed. Only use the LEDs to provide basic information or as a backup when you are not using AdminBrowser. Upon power up, the Expansion Hub goes through a five-second test to check the LED lamps. During this time, the LEDs blink through the states shown in Table 4-2, letting you visually verify that the LED lamps and the firmware are functioning properly. NOTE: Refer to Section 9 for troubleshooting using the LEDs. Unit Status and DL/UL Status LEDs The Expansion Hub unit status and DL/UL status LEDs can be in one of the states shown in Table 4-1. These LEDs can be:
steady green steady red off Table 4-1 Expansion Hub Unit Status and DL/UL Status LED States POWER EH STATUS DL STATUS UL STATUS LED State Green / Green Green / Green POWER EH STATUS DL STATUS UL STATUS Green / Green Red / Green Indicates The Expansion Hub is connected to power and all power supplies are operating. The Expansion Hub is not reporting a fault or lockout condition; but the system test may need to be performed or a warning condition could exist (use AdminManager to determine this). Optical power received is above minimum (the Main Hub is con-
nected) although the cable optical loss may be greater than recom-
mended maximum. Optical power transmitted (uplink laser) is normal and communica-
tions with the Main Hub are normal. Optical power received is above minimum (the Main Hub is con-
nected) although the cable optical loss may be greater than recom-
mended maximum. Optical power transmitted (uplink laser) is normal and communica-
tions with the Main Hub are normal. The Expansion Hub is reporting a fault. D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 4-5 CONFIDENTIAL Expansion Hub Front Panel Table 4-1 Expansion Hub Unit Status and DL/UL Status LED States (continued) POWER EH STATUS DL STATUS UL STATUS POWER EH STATUS DL STATUS UL STATUS POWER EH STATUS DL STATUS UL STATUS LED State Green / Green Green / Green
(60-ppm) Green / Red Red / Green Green / Red
(60-ppm) Green / Green Red / Red Red / Red
(60-ppm) POWER EH STATUS DL STATUS UL STATUS Green / Red Red / Red Indicates Optical power received is above minimum (the Main Hub is con-
nected) although the cable optical loss may be greater than recom-
mended maximum. Optical power transmitted (uplink laser) is normal and communica-
tions with the Main Hub are normal. The Expansion Hub is reporting a commanded lockout. A fault condition was detected, optical power received is below mini-
mum. The Main Hub is not connected, is not powered, or the Main Hubs downlink laser has failed, or the downlink fiber is disconnected or damaged. An optical signal was detected, but there has been no valid communi-
cation from the MH in the preceeding 90 seconds. The Expansion Hub is reporting a fault condition. Optical power received is above minimum (Main Hub is connected) although the cable optical loss may be greater than recommended maximum. Optical power transmitted is below minimum (Expansion Hub uplink laser has failed; unable to communicate with Main Hub). UL STATUS LED state must be checked within the first 90 seconds after power on. If initially green, then red after 90 seconds, it means that there is no communication with the Main Hub. If red on power up, replace the Expansion Hub. No optical faults have been detected, but no valid message was received from the MH in the preceeding 90 seconds. Optical power received is below minimum (the Main Hub is not con-
nected, is not powered, or the Main Hubs downlink laser has failed, or the downlink fiber is disconnected or damaged.) Optical power transmitted is below minimum (the Expansion Hub uplink laser has failed; is unable to communicate with the Main Hub). UL STATUS LED state must be checked within the first 90 seconds after power on. If initially green, then red after 90 seconds, it means that there is no communication with the Main Hub. If red on power up, the uplink laser has failed, replace the Expansion Hub. POWER EH STATUS POWER EH STATUS DL STATUS UL STATUS DL STATUS UL STATUS POWER EH STATUS DL STATUS UL STATUS Green /Off Green / Off Red/ Dont Care Red/ Dont Care Green/ Red Off/ Off Expansion Hub is in factory test mode, return it to the factory. One or more power supplies are out of specification. The hub needs to be replaced. Expansion Hub failure. The Hub must be replaced. 4-6 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F Expansion Hub Front Panel RJ-45 Port LEDs The Expansion Hub has a port LED, labeled PORT, for each of the eight 75 Ohm, Type F ports. The port LEDs can be in one of the states shown in Table 4-2. These LEDs can be:
off steady green steady red flashing red (60 pulses per minute [PPM]) Table 4-2 Fusion Wideband Expansion Hub Port LED States PORT PORT PORT PORT PORT LED State Off Indicates The RAU is not connected. Green Red
(60 PPM) Red
(Steady) Green
(60-ppm) The RAU is connected. No faults from the RAU. The RAU was disconnected. The RAU is not communicating. The RAU port power is tripped. The RAU is disconnected. The RAU is reporting a fault. The RAU is disconnected. The RAU is reporting a lockout condition. D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 4-7 CONFIDENTIAL Expansion Hub Rear Panel 4.3 Expansion Hub Rear Panel Figure 4-4 Expansion Hub Rear Panel 1 2 4 3 1. AC power cord connector 2. Two air exhaust vents 3. One 9-pin D-sub female connector for contact alarm monitoring (labeled ALARMS) 4. Ground lug for connecting unit to frame ground (labeled GROUND) Table 4-3 9-pin D-sub Pin Connector Functions Pin 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Function Alarm Sense Input (DC Ground) Alarm Sense Input 3 Alarm Sense Input 2 N/C N/C DC Ground (common) N/C Alarm Sense Input 1 N/C This interface can monitor three single external alarm contacts (Alarm Sense Input 1 This interface monitors the output contact closures from a Universal Power Supply
(UPS). Verify the output contact closure state (normally closed or normally open) of the UPS, and set the appropriate contact definition using AdminBrowser. Faults are service impacting. 4-8 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F Faults, Warnings, and Status Messages Warnings indicate a possible service impact. Status messages are generally not service impacting. 4.4 Faults, Warnings, and Status Messages Both fault and warning conditions of the Expansion Hub and attached RAUs are reported to the Main Hub. Only faults are indicated by LEDs. For more information, refer to Appendix C, Faults, Warnings, Status Tables, on page C-1. NOTE: You can select what type of events AdminBrowser displays. Refer to Section 3.5.2 View Preference 3-12. D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 4-9 CONFIDENTIAL Expansion Hub Specifications 4.5 Expansion Hub Specifications Table 4-4 Expansion Hub Specifications Specification Enclosure Dimensions (H W D) Weight Operating Temperature Non-operating Temperature Operating Humidity, non-condensing CATV Connectorsa Fiber Connectorsb LED Alarm and Status Indicators External Alarm Connector (contact sense monitor) AC Power (Volts) (4763 Hz) Power Consumption (W) MTBF Description 89 mm x 438 mm x 381 mm
(3.5 in. x 17.25 in. x 15 in.) 2U
< 6.6 kg (< 14.5 lb.) 0 to +45C (+32 to +113F) 20 to +85C (4 to +185F) 5% to 95%
8 F, female (CATV - 75 Ohm) 1 Pair, SC/APC Unit Status (1 pair):
Power E-Hub Status Fiber Link Status (1 pair):
DL Status UL Status Port Status (1 pair per CATV port):
Link/RAU 1 9-pin D-sub, female Rating: 100/240V AC, 6A, 50-60 Hz Operating Range: 90-132V AC/170-250V AC auto-ranging 4 RAUs: 275 typical, 335 max. 8 RAUs: 475 typical, 585 max. 54,539 hours a. It is important that you use only recommended CATV 75 Ohm cable with quality F connectors. b. It is critical to system performance that only SC/APC fiber connectors are used throughout the fiber network, including fiber distribution panels. 4-10 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F SECTION 5 Remote Access Unit This section contains the following subsections:
Section 5.1 RAU Overview . 5-1 Section 5.2 Remote Access Unit Connectors . 5-5 Section 5.3 RAU LED Indicators . 5-5 Section 5.4 Faults and Warnings . 5-6 Section 5.5 Remote Access Unit Specifications . 5-7 5.1 RAU Overview The Remote Access Unit (RAU) is an active transceiver that connects to an Expan-
sion Hub using industry-standard CATV cable, which delivers RF signals, configura-
tion information, and electrical power to the RAU. An RAU passes converted IF to RF (Downlink) and converted RF to IF (Uplink) sig-
nals between an Expansion Hub and an attached passive antenna where the signals are transmitted to wireless devices as shown in Figure 5-1. D-620616-0-20 Rev F InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual 5-1 CONFIDENTIAL RAU Overview Figure 5-1 Remote Access Unit in a Fusion Wideband System Downlink Path: The RAU receives downlink IF signals from a Fusion Wideband Hub using 75 Ohm CATV cable. It con-
verts the signals to RF and sends them to a passive RF antenna using 50 Ohm coaxial cable. Also, the RAU receives con-
figuration information from the Fusion Wideband Hub using the 75 Ohm CATV cable. Fusion Wideband Main Hub Fusion Wideband Expansion Hub Downlink to RAU RAU Downlink to antenna Uplink from RAU Uplink from antenna Uplink Path: The RAU receives uplink RF signals from a passive RF antenna using 50 Ohm coaxial cable. It converts the signals to IF and sends them to a Fusion Wideband Hub using 75 Ohm CATV cable. Also, the RAU sends its status infor-
mation to the Fusion Wideband Hub using CATV cable. The RAU receives 54VDC power from the Fusion Wideband Hub port through the 75 Ohm CATV cable center pin. Figure 5-2 Remote Access Unit Block Diagram (Multiband)
, 3*
* For FSN-W2-808519-1 RAU when Band 3 is active. 5-2 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F RAU Overview The Fusion Wideband RAUs are manufactured to a specific set of bands: one 60 MHz Band 1 (split into two sub-bands 1A and 1B for the FSN-W2-808519-1 RAU), and one 75 MHz Band 2. Table 5-1 lists the Fusion Wideband RAUs, the Fusion Wide-
band Band, and the frequency bands they cover. Table 5-1 Frequency Bands Covered by Fusion Wideband RAUs Fusion Wideband RAU 2100/1800 2100 High Power
(single-band RAU) 1900/AWS Part Number FSN-W1-2118-1 FSN-W1-21HP-1 FSN-W1-1921-1 800/850/1900 FSN-W2-808519-1 Fusion Wide-
band Band 2100 1800 2100 1900
(A-F) AWS 800 RF Passband Downlink
(MHz) 2110-2170 1805-1880 2110-2170 Uplink
(MHz) 1920-1980 1710-1785 1920-1980 MAIN HUB/
RAU Band 1 2 1 1930-1990 1850-1910 1 2110-2155 851-869 1710-1755 806-824 700/AWS FSN-W2-7021-1 FSN-W2-7575-1 FSN-W2-7070-1 700/700 MIMO
(Upper C) 700/700 MIMO
(Lower ABC) 850 869-894 824-849 1930-1990 1850-1910 746-757 776-787 728-746 698-716 2110-2155 746-757 1710-1755 776-787 746-757 776-787 728-746 698-716 728-746 698-716 1900
(A-F) 700
(Upper C) 700
(Lower ABC) AWS 700
(Upper C) 700
(Upper C) 700
(Lower ABC) 700
(Lower ABC) RAU Band-
width 60 MHz 75 MHz 60 MHz 60 MHz 45 MHz 18 MHz 25 MHz 60 MHz 11 MHz 18 MHz 45 MHz 11 MHz 11 MHz 18 MHz 18 MHz 2 1
(sub-band 1A) 3
(sub-band 1B) 2 1
(sub-band 1A) 3
(sub-band 1B) 2 1 (sub-
band 1A) 3 (sub-
band 1B) 1 (sub-
band 1A) 3 (sub-
band 1B) D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 5-3 CONFIDENTIAL RAU Overview Table 5-1 Frequency Bands Covered by Fusion Wideband RAUs (continued) Fusion Wideband RAU 2500/2500 Part Number FSN-2500-2-WMAX 2600/2600 FSN-W3-2626-1 RF Passband Fusion Wide-
band Band 2500 2500 2600 2600 Downlink
(MHz) 2496-2690 2496-2690 2620-2690 2620-2690 Uplink
(MHz) 2496-2690 2496-2690 2500-2570 2500-2570 MAIN HUB/
RAU Band 1 2 1 2 RAU Band-
width 30 MHz 30 MHz 70 MHz 70 MHz Table 5-2 System Gain (Loss) Relative to CATV Cable Length Cable Type RG-59 RG-6 RG-11 Comm-
Scope Part Number Plenum Rated Solid Copper Conductor Copper Clad Conductor Zero-loss RF Maximum Length
(meters) Distance RF is 10dB Below Input RF
(meters) 2065V 2022V 5572R 5565 2279V 2275V 5726 5765 2293K 2285K 5913 Yes Yes No No Yes Yes No No Yes Yes No X X X X X X X X X X X 130 100 95 130 140 140 140 140 235 235 235 180 100*
95*
180 190 150*
140*
190 320 300*
300*
* Exceeding the distance of copper-clad cable will result in the attached RAU becoming non-functional. If the distance of a cable run is at its maximum and is of concern, TE recom-
mends the use of solid copper cable to ensure successful operation. 5-4 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F Remote Access Unit Connectors 5.2 Remote Access Unit Connectors 5.2.1 5.2.2 50 Ohm Type-N Connector The RAU has one female type-N connector (two female type-N connectors for FSN-W1-1921-1, FSN-W2-808519-1, FSN-W2-7070-1, FSN-W2-7575-1, and FSN-2500-2-WMAX RAUs). The connector is a duplexed RF input/output port that connects to a standard 50 passive antenna using coaxial cable. 75 Ohm Type-F Connector The RAU has one type-F female connector that connects it to a Fusion Wideband Hub using CATV 75 Ohm cable. Use RG-59, 6, or 11 solid copper center conductor cables. NOTE: For system performance, it is important that you use only low loss, solid copper center conductor CATV cable with quality F connectors that use captive centerpin conductors. Refer to Appendix A for specific information. 5.3 RAU LED Indicators Upon power up, the RAU goes through a two-second test to check the LED lamps. During this time, the LEDs blink green/green red/red, letting you visually verify that the LED lamps and the firmware are functioning properly. NOTE: Refer to Section 9 for troubleshooting using the LEDs. Status LEDs The RAU status LEDs can be in one of the states shown in Table 5-3. These LEDs can be:
off steady green steady red There is no off state when the units power is on. D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 5-5 CONFIDENTIAL Faults and Warnings Table 5-3 Remote Access Unit LED States LINK ALARM LINK ALARM LINK ALARM LINK ALARM LINK ALARM LED State Off Off Green Green Green Red Red Red Green (60-ppm) Green (60-ppm) Indicates The RAU is not receiving DC power. The RAU is powered and is not indicating a fault condition. Communication with the Fusion Wideband Hub is normal; however, the system test may need to be performed or a warning con-
dition may exist (use AdminBrowser to deter-
mine this). The RAU is indicating a fault or lockout condi-
tion, but communication with the Fusion Wide-
band Hub is normal. The RAU is reporting a fault and is not able to communicate with the Fusion Wideband Hub The RAU is reporting a lockout condition, but communication with the Fusion Wideband Hub is normal. 5.4 Faults and Warnings Both fault and warning conditions are reported to the Fusion Wideband Hub where they are stored. Only faults are indicated by the faceplate LEDs. For more information, refer to Appendix C. 5-6 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F Remote Access Unit Specifications 5.5 Remote Access Unit Specifications Table 5-4 Remote Access Unit Specifications Specification Dimensions (H W D) Weight Operating Temperature Non-operating Temperature Operating Humidity, non-condensing RF Connectors LED Alarm and Status Indicators Maximum Heat Dissipation (W) MTBF Description 54 mm 286 mm 281 mm
(2.13 in. 11.25 in. 11.13 in.)
< 2.1 kg (< 4.6 lb.) 25 to +45C (13 to +113F) 25 to +85C (13 to +185F) 5% to 95%
One Type-F, female (CATV - 75 ohms) One Type-N, femalea (coaxial 50 ohms) Unit Status (1 pair):
Link Alarm 50 typical, 64 max (from the Hub) 202,684 hours a. Two type N female connectors for FSN-W1-1921-1, FSN-W2-808519-1, FSN-W2-7070-1, FSN-W2-7575-1, FSN-W3-2626-1, and FSN-2500-2-WMAX RAUs. NOTE: For system performance, it is important that you use only low loss, solid copper center conductor CATV cable with quality F connectors that use captive centerpin conductors. Refer to Appendix A for more information. D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 5-7 CONFIDENTIAL Remote Access Unit Specifications 5-8 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F SECTION 6 Designing a Fusion Wideband Solution This section contains the following subsections:
Section 6.1 Overview . 6-1 Section 6.2 Downlink RSSI Design Goal . 6-3 Section 6.3 Maximum Output Power per Carrier . 6-4 Section 6.4 System Gain . 6-14 Section 6.5 Estimating RF Coverage . 6-16 Section 6.6 Link Budget Analysis . 6-24 Section 6.7 Optical Power Budget . 6-36 Section 6.8 Connecting a Main Hub to a Base Station . 6-37 6.1 Overview Designing a Fusion Wideband solution is a matter of determining coverage and capacity needs. This requires the following steps:
1. Determine the wireless service providers requirements: Refer to Section 6.2, Downlink RSSI Design Goal, on page 6-3. The following information is typically provided by the service provider:
Frequency (for example, 1900 MHz) Band (for example, A-F band in the PCS spectrum) Protocol (for example, CDMA, GSM, 1xRTT, GPRS, and so on) Number of sectors and peak capacity per sector (translates to the number of RF carriers that the system will have to transmit) Downlink RSSI design goal (RSSI, received signal strength at the wireless handset, for example, 85 dBm) D-620616-0-20 Rev F InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual 6-1 CONFIDENTIAL Overview The design goal is always a stronger signal than the mobile phone needs. It includes inherent factors which affect performance. RF source (base station or bidirectional amplifier or repeater), type of equip-
ment if possible. 2. Determine the downlink power per carrier from the RF source through the DAS: Refer to Section 6.3, Maximum Output Power per Carrier, on page 6-4. The maximum power per carrier is a function of modulation type, the number of RF carriers, signal quality issues, regulatory emissions requirements, and Fusion Widebands RF performance. Power per carrier decreases as the number of carri-
ers increases. 3. Develop an RF link budget: Refer to Section 6.5, Estimating RF Coverage, on page 6-16. Knowing both the power per carrier and RSSI design goal, you can develop an RF downlink link budget which estimates the allowable path loss from an RAUs antenna to the wireless handset. allowable path loss = power per carrier + antenna gain design goal Satisfactory performance can be expected as long as path loss is below this level. 4. Determine the in-building environment: Refer to Section 6.5, Estimating RF Coverage, on page 6-16. Determine which areas of the building require coverage (entire building, public areas, parking levels, and so on.) Obtain floor plans to determine floor space of building and the wall layout of the proposed areas to be covered. Floor plans are also useful when you are selecting antenna locations. If possible, determine the buildings construction materials (sheetrock, metal, concrete, and so on.) Determine the type of environment:
Open layout (for example, a convention center) Dense, close walls (for example, a hospital) Mixed use (for example, an office building with hard wall offices and cubi-
cles) 5. Determine the appropriate estimated path loss slope that corresponds to the type of building and its layout, and estimate the coverage distance for each RAU: Refer to Section 6.5, Estimating RF Coverage, on page 6-16. Use the path loss slope (PLS), which gives a value to the RF propagation charac-
teristics within the building, to convert the RF link budget into an estimate of the coverage distance per antenna. This helps establish the quantities of Fusion Wide-
band equipment you need. The actual path loss slope that corresponds to the spe-
cific RF environment inside the building can also be determined empirically by performing an RF site-survey of the building. This involves transmitting a cali-
6-2 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F Downlink RSSI Design Goal brated tone for a fixed antenna and making measurements with a mobile antenna throughout the area surrounding the transmitter. 6. Determine the items required to connect to the base station: Refer to Section 6.8, Connecting a Main Hub to a Base Station, on page 6-37. Once you know the quantities of Fusion Wideband equipment to be used, you can determine the accessories (combiners/dividers, surge suppressors, repeaters, attenuators, circulators, and so on.) required to connect the system to the base sta-
tion. The individual elements that must be considered in designing a Fusion Wideband solution are explained in the following sections. NOTE: Access the TE Customer Portal at http://www.te.com/adc for on-line dimensioning and design tools. 6.2 Downlink RSSI Design Goal Wireless service providers typically provide a minimum downlink signal level and an associated confidence factor when specifying coverage requirements. These two fig-
ures of merit are a function of wireless handset sensitivity and margins for fading and body loss. Wireless handset sensitivity is the weakest signal that the handset can pro-
cess reliably and is a combination of the thermal noise in the channel, noise figure of the handset receiver front end and minimum required SNR. Fade margins for multi-
path fading (fast or small-scale) and log-normal shadow fading (slow or large-scale) are determined by the desired confidence factor, and other factors. Downlink RSSI design goal calculations for the GSM protocol are shown below for a 95% area cover-
age confidence factor. Noise Power 10 Log (KT)+10 Log (200 KHz); K=1.38X1023, T=300 degrees Kelvin Wireless Handset Noise Figure Required SNR Multipath Fade Margin 95% Reliability for Rician K=6 dB Log-normal Fade Margin 95% Area/87% Edge Reliability for 35 dB PLS and 9 dB Sigma Body Attenuation Downlink RSSI Design Goal (PDesignGoal) Signal level received by wireless handset at edge of coverage area 121 dBm 8 dB 9 dB 6 dB 10 dB
3 dB 85 dBm D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 6-3 CONFIDENTIAL Maximum Output Power per Carrier Downlink design goals on the order of 85 dBm are typical for protocols, such as GSM. Wireless service providers may choose a higher level to ensure that in-building signal dominates any macro signal that may be leaking into the building. 6.3 Maximum Output Power per Carrier The following tables show the recommended maximum power per carrier out of the RAU 50 Ohm Type-N connector for different frequencies, protocols, and numbers of carriers. These maximum levels are dictated by RF signal quality and regulatory emissions issues. In general, as the number of RF carrier increases, the maximum power per carrier decreases. If these levels are exceeded, signal quality will be degraded and/or regulator requirements will be violated. The maximum input power to the Hub is determined by subtracting the system gain from the maximum output power of the RAU. System gain is software selectable from 0 dB to 15 dB in 1 dB steps. Additionally, both the uplink and downlink gain of each RAU can be attenuated 0 or 10 dB. When connecting a Hub to a base station or repeater, attenuation on the downlink is typically required to avoid exceeding Fusion Widebands maximum output power recommendations. WARNING: Exceeding the maximum input power may cause perma-
nent damage to the Hub. Do not exceed the maximum composite input power of 1W (+30 dBm) to the Hub at any time. NOTE: These specifications are for downlink power at the RAU output (excluding antenna). 6-4 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F Maximum Output Power per Carrier 6.3.1 700 MHz (for 700/AWS RAU) Table 6-1 700 MHz (Lower A, B, C) Power per Carrier Power per Carrier
(dBm) WCDMA 14.0 11.0 9.0 8.0 7.0 LTE 14.0 11.0 9.0 8.0 7.0 No. of Carriers 1 2 3 4 5 Note: Operation at or above these output power levels may pre-
vent Fusion Wideband from meeting RF performance specifica-
tions or FCC Part 15 and EN55022 emissions requirements. Table 6-2 700 MHz (Upper C) Power per Carrier No. of Carriers 1 2 3 4 5 Power per Carrier (dBm) LTE 14.0 11.0 9.0 8.0 7.0 Note: Operation at or above these output power levels may prevent Fusion Wideband from meeting RF performance specifications or FCC Part 15 and EN55022 emissions requirements. Table 6-3 AWS Power per Carrier Power per Carrier
(dBm) WCDMA 18.0 15.0 13.0 12.0 11.0 LTE 18.0 15.0 13.0 12.0 11.0 No. of Carriers 1 2 3 4 5 Note: Operation at or above these output power levels may pre-
vent Fusion Wideband from meeting RF performance specifica-
tions or FCC Part 15 and EN55022 emissions requirements. D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 6-5 CONFIDENTIAL Maximum Output Power per Carrier 6.3.2 700 MHz (Upper C) MIMO RAU 700 MHz (Upper C) Power per Carrier Number of Carriers Power per Carrier (dBm) 1 2 3 4 5 LTE 18.0 15.0 13.0 12.0 11.0 Note: Operation at or above these output power levels may prevent Fusion Wideband from meeting RF performance specifications or FCC Part 15 and EN55022 emissions require-
ments. 6.3.3 700 MHz (Lower ABC) MIMO RAU Table 6-4 700 MHz (Lower ABC) Power per Carrier Number of Carriers Power per Carrier (dBm) 1 2 3 4 5 WCDMA 18.0 15.0 13.0 12.0 11.0 LTE 18.0 15.0 13.0 12.0 11.0 Note: Operation at or above these output power levels may prevent Fusion Wideband from meeting RF performance specifications or FCC Part 15 and EN55022 emissions requirements. 6.3.4 800 MHz SMR Table 6-5 Power per Carrier Power per Carrier (dBm) - 800MHz No. of Carriers 1 2 3 4 5 CDMA 2000 18.0 15.0 13.0 12.0 11.0 LTE 18.0 15.0 13.0 12.0 11.0 iDEN 16.5 13.0 10.5 9.0 8.0 Analog FM 24.0 19.0 15.5 12.5 11.0 APCO 25 CQPSK 21.0 16.0 13.5 11.5 10.0 APCO 25 C4FM 24.0 18.5 15.0 12.5 10.5 6-6 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F Maximum Output Power per Carrier Table 6-5 Power per Carrier (continued) Power per Carrier (dBm) - 800MHz Analog FM APCO 25 CQPSK APCO 25 C4FM 9.5 8.5 7.5 7.0 6.0 8.5 8.0 7.0 6.5 6.0 9.0 8.0 7.5 6.5 6.0 No. of Carriers 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 CDMA 2000 10.0 9.5 9.0 8.5 8.0 7.5 7.0 7.0 6.5 6.0 6.0 LTE
iDEN 7.0 6.0 5.5 5.0 4.5 4.0 3.5 3.0 3.0 2.5 2.0 Note: Operation at or above these output power levels may prevent Fusion Wideband from meeting RF performance specifications or FCC Part 15 and EN55022 emissions requirements. D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 6-7 CONFIDENTIAL Maximum Output Power per Carrier 6.3.5 850 MHz Cellular Table 6-6 Cellular Power per Carrier Power per Carrier CDMA 2000 WCDMA 18.0 15.0 13.0 12.0 11.0 18.0 15.0 13.0 12.0 11.0 10.0 9.5 9.0 LTE 18.0 15.0 13.0 12.0 11.0 No. of Carriers 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 20 30 GSM 16.5 13.5 11.5 10.0 9.0 8.5 8.0 7.5 7.0 6.5 6.5 6.0 6.5 5.5 5.0 5.0 4.5 3.0 EDGE 16.5 13.5 11.5 10.0 9.0 8.5 8.0 7.5 7.0 6.5 6.5 6.0 5.5 5.5 5.0 5.0 4.0 2.0 Note: Operation at or above these output power levels may prevent Fusion Wideband from meeting RF performance specifications or FCC Part 15 and EN55022 emissions requirements. 6-8 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F Maximum Output Power per Carrier 6.3.6 1800 MHz DCS Table 6-7 DCS Power per Carrier No. of Carriers 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 20 30 Power per Carrier (dBm) GSM 16.5 14.5 12.5 11.5 10.5 9.5 9.0 8.5 8.0 7.5 7.0 6.5 6.5 6.0 5.5 5.5 4.5 2.5 EDGE 16.5 14.5 12.5 11.5 10.5 9.5 9.0 8.0 7.5 7.0 6.5 6.0 6.0 5.5 5.0 5.0 4.0 2.0 Note: Operation at or above these output power levels may pre-
vent Fusion Wideband from meeting RF performance specifica-
tions or FCC Part 15 and EN55022 emissions requirements. D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 6-9 CONFIDENTIAL Maximum Output Power per Carrier 6.3.7 1900 MHz PCS Table 6-8 PCS Power per Carrier Power per Carrier (dBm) WCDMA 18.0 15.0 13.0 12.0 11.0 LTE 18.0 15.0 13.0 12.0 11.0 CDMA 2000 18.0 15.0 13.0 12.0 11.0 10.0 9.5 9.0 No. of Carriers 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 20 30 GSM 16.5 15.5 13.5 12.0 11.0 10.5 10.0 9.0 8.5 8.0 7.5 7.0 6.5 6.5 6.0 5.5 4.5 3.0 EDGE 16.5 15.5 13.5 12.0 10.5 9.5 9.0 8.0 7.5 7.0 6.5 6.0 6.0 5.5 5.0 5.0 4.0 2.0 Note: Operation at or above these output power levels may prevent Fusion Wideband from meeting RF performance specifications or FCC Part 15 and EN55022 emissions requirements. 6-10 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F Maximum Output Power per Carrier 6.3.8 2100 MHz AWS Table 6-9 AWS Power per Carrier Power per Carrier (dBm) WCDMA 18.0 15.0 13.0 12.0 11.0 LTE 18.0 15.0 13.0 12.0 11.0 CDMA 2000 18.0 15.0 13.0 12.0 11.0 10.0 9.5 9.0 No. of Carriers 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 20 30 GSM 16.5 15.5 13.5 12.0 11.0 10.5 10.0 9.0 8.5 8.0 7.5 7.0 6.5 6.5 6.0 5.5 4.5 3.0 EDGE 16.5 15.5 13.5 12.0 10.5 9.5 9.0 8.0 7.5 7.0 6.5 6.0 6.0 5.5 5.0 5.0 4.0 2.0 Note: Operation at or above these output power levels may prevent Fusion Wideband from meeting RF performance specifications or FCC Part 15 and EN55022 emissions requirements. D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 6-11 CONFIDENTIAL Maximum Output Power per Carrier 6.3.9 2.1 GHz UMTS Table 6-10 UMTS Power per Carrier No. of Carriers Power per Carrier (dBm) WCDMA 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 15.0 11.0 8.0 6.5 5.0 4.0 3.0 Note: Measurements were taken with no baseband clipping. Note: Operation at or above these output power levels may prevent Fusion Wideband from meeting RF performance specifications or FCC Part 15 and EN55022 emissions requirements. 6.3.10 2.1 GHz UMTS High Power Table 6-11 UMTS Power per Carrier No. of Carriers Power per Carrier (dBm) WCDMA 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 22.0 18.0 15.0 13.5 12.0 11.0 10.0 Note: Measurements taken with no baseband clipping. Note: Operation at or above these output power levels may prevent Fusion Wideband from meeting RF performance specifications or FCC Part 15 and EN55022 emissions requirements. 6.3.11 2500 MHz WiMAX Table 6-12 WiMAX Power per Carrier No. of Carriers 1 Power per Carrier (dBm) WiMAX 20.0 Note: Measurements taken with no baseband clipping. Note: Operation at or above these output power levels may prevent Fusion Wideband from meeting RF performance specifications or FCC Part 15 and EN55022 emissions requirements. 6-12 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F Maximum Output Power per Carrier 6.3.12 2600 MHz MIMO RAU 2600 MHz Power per Carrier Number of Carriers Power per Carrier (dBm) 1 2 3 4 5 WCDMA 15.0 11.0 8.0 6.5 5.0 LTE 15.0 11.0 8.0 6.5 5.0 Note: Operation at or above these output power levels may prevent Fusion Wideband from meeting RF performance specifications or FCC Part 15 and EN55022 emissions requirements. Designing for Capacity Growth Fusion Wideband systems are deployed to enhance in-building coverage and/or to off-load capacity from a macro cell site. In many instances, subscriber usage increases with time and the wireless provider responds by increasing the load on the installed Fusion Wideband system. For example, the initial deployment might only require two RF carriers, but four RF carriers may be needed in the future based on capacity growth forecasts. There are two options for dealing with this scenario:
1. Design the initial coverage with a maximum power per carrier for four RF carri-
ers. This will likely result in additional RAUs. 2. Design the initial coverage for two RF carriers, but reserve RAU ports on the Hub for future use. These ports can be used to fill potential coverage holes once the power per carrier is lowered to accommodate the two additional carriers. D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 6-13 CONFIDENTIAL System Gain 6.4 System Gain The system gain of the Fusion Wideband defaults to 0 dB or can be set up to 15 dB in 1 dB increments. In addition, uplink and downlink gains of each RAU can be inde-
pendently attenuated by 0 or 10 dB using AdminBrowser. The recommended maximum lengths of CATV cable are as follows:
For RG-59 cable 130 meters for CommScope PN 2065V. For RG-6 cable 140 meters for CommScope PN 2279V. For RG-11 cable 235 meters for CommScope PN 2293K. If the maximum distance is not required, then copper-clad over steel center-conductor cable may be use to reduce cable costs. If the CATV cable is longer than the recommended distance per cable type, the gain of the system will decrease, as shown in Table 6-13. 6-14 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F System Gain Table 6-13 System Gain (Loss) Relative to CATV Cable Length Cable Type RG-59 RG-6 RG-11 Comm-
Scope Part Number Plenum Rated Solid Copper Conductor Copper Clad Conductor Distance Where RF is 10dB Below Input RF
(meters) Zero-loss RF Maximum Length
(meters) 2065V 2022V 5572R 5565 2279V 2275V 5726 5765 2293K 2285K 5913 Yes Yes No No Yes Yes No No Yes Yes No X X X X X X X X X X X 130 100 95 130 140 140 140 140 235 235 235 180 100*
95*
180 190 150*
140*
190 320 300*
300*
* Exceeding the distance of copper-clad cable will result in the attached RAU becoming non-functional. If the distance of a cable run is at its maximum and is of concern, TE recommends the use of solid copper cable to ensure successful operation. D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 6-15 CONFIDENTIAL Estimating RF Coverage 6.5 Estimating RF Coverage The maximum output power per carrier (based on the number and type of RF carriers being transmitted) and the minimum acceptable received power at the wireless device
(that is, the RSSI design goal) essentially establish the RF downlink budget and, con-
sequently, the maximum allowable path loss (APL) between the RAUs antenna and the wireless device. Since in-building systems, such as the Fusion Wideband, are gen-
erally downlink-limited, this approach is applicable in the majority of deployments. Figure 6-1 Determining APL between the Antenna and the Wireless Device G = Antenna Gain Lcoax = Coaxial cable loss RAU P = power per carrier from the RAU Distance = d RSSI = power at the wireless device APL = (P Lcoax + G) RSSI
(1) where:
APL = the maximum allowable path loss in dB P = the power per carrier transmitted by the RAU in dBm Lcoax = the coaxial cable loss between the RAU and passive antenna in dB G = the gain of the passive antenna in dBi Coaxial cable is used to connect the RAU to an antenna. Table 6-14 lists coaxial cable loss for various cable lengths. Table 6-14 Coaxial Cable Losses (Lcoax) Length of Cable
(.195 in. diameter) 0.9 m (3 ft) 1.8 m (6 ft) 3.0 m (10 ft) Loss at 850 MHz (dB) 0.6 1.0 1.5 Loss at 1900 MHz (dB) 0.8 1.5 2.3 You can calculate the distance, d, corresponding to the maximum allowable path loss using equations introduced in the following sections. 6-16 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F Estimating RF Coverage 6.5.1 Path Loss Equation In-building path loss obeys the distance power law1 in equation (2):
PL = 20log10(4d0f/c) + 10nlog10(d/d0) + s
(2) where:
PL is the path loss at a distance, d, from the antenna d = the distance expressed in meters d0 = free-space path loss distance in meters c = the speed of light in a vacuum (3.0 108 m/sec). n = the path loss exponent and depends on the building clutter and frequency f = the operating frequency in Hertz. of operation s= a normal random variable that depends on partition material and geome-
tries inside the building and is accounted for by the log-normal fade margin used in the downlink RSSI design goal calculation As a reference, Table 6-15 provides estimates of signal loss for some RF barriers1. Table 6-15 Average Signal Loss of Common Building Materials Partition Type Metal wall Aluminum siding Foil insulation Cubicle walls Concrete block wall Concrete floor Sheetrock Light machinery General machinery Heavy machinery Equipment racks Assembly line Ceiling duct Metal stairs Loss (dB) 26 20 4 1.4 13 10 1 to 2 3 7 11 7 6 5 5 Frequency (MHz) 815 815 815 900 1300 1300 1300 1300 1300 1300 1300 1300 1300 1300 1. Rappaport, Theodore S. Wireless Communications, Principles, and Practice. Prentice Hall PTR, 1996. D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 6-17 CONFIDENTIAL Estimating RF Coverage 6.5.2 RAU Coverage Distance Use equations (1) and (2), on pages 6-16 and 6-17, respectively, to estimate the dis-
tance from the antenna to where the RF signal decreases to the minimum acceptable level at the wireless device. With d0 set to one meter and path loss slope (PLS) defined as 10n, Equation (2) can be simplified to:
PL(d) = 20log10(4f/c) + PLSlog10(d)
(3) Table 6-16 gives the value of the first term of Equation (3) (that is., (20log10(4f/c)) for various frequency bands. Table 6-16 Frequency Bands and the Value of the First Term in Equation (3) Frequency 800 MHz SMR 850 MHz Cellular 1800 MHz DCS 1900 MHz PCS 2.1 GHz UMTS 1.7/2.1 GHz AWS 2.5 GHz WiMAX Band (MHz) Uplink 806-824 824-849 1710-1785 1850-1910 19201980 1710-1755 2496-2690 Downlink 851-869 869-894 1805-1880 1930-1990 21102170 2110-2155 2496-2690 Mid-Band Frequency
(MHz) 838 859 1795 1920 2045 2132.5a 2595 20log10(4f/c) 30.9 31.1 37.5 38.1 38.7 39.0 40.7 a. Due to the wide frequency spread between the Uplink and Downlink bands, the mid-band frequency of the Downlink band was chosen for 1.7/2.1 GHz AWS. Table 6-17 shows estimated PLS for various environments that have different clut-
ter (that is, objects that attenuate the RF signals, such as walls, partitions, stairwells, equipment racks, and so.). Table 6-17 Estimated Path Loss Slope for Different In-Building Environments Environment Type Open Environment very few RF obstructions Moderately Open Environment low-to-medium amount of RF obstructions Mildly Dense Environment medium-to-high amount of RF obstructions Example Parking Garage, Conven-
tion Center Warehouse, Airport, Man-
ufacturing Retail, Office Space with approximately 80% cubi-
cles and 20% hard walled offices PLS for 850/900 MHz 33.7 PLS for 1800/1900/
2100/2500 MHz 30.1 35 36.1 32 33.1 6-18 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F Estimating RF Coverage Table 6-17 Estimated Path Loss Slope for Different In-Building Environments Environment Type Moderately Dense Environment medium-to-high amount of RF obstructions Dense Environment large amount of RF obstructions Example Office Space with approx-
imately 50% cubicles and 50% hard walled offices Hospital, Office Space with approximately 20%
cubicles and 80% hard walled offices PLS for 850/900 MHz 37.6 PLS for 1800/1900/
2100/2500 MHz 34.8 39.4 38.1 By setting the path loss to the maximum allowable level (PL = APL), equation (3) can be used to estimate the maximum coverage distance of an antenna connected to an RAU, for a given frequency and type of in-building environment. d = 10^((APL - 20log10(4f/c))/PLS)
(4) For reference, Tables 6-19 through 6-24 show the distance covered by an antenna for various in-building environments. The following assumptions were made:
Path loss Equation (4) 6 dBm output per carrier at the RAU output 3 dBi antenna gain RSSI design goal = 85 dBm (typical for narrowband protocols, but not for spread-spectrum protocols) Table 6-18 Approximate Radiated Distance from Antenna for 800 MHz SMR Applications Environment Type Open Environment Moderately Open Environment Mildly Dense Environment Moderately Dense Environment Dense Environment Distance from Antenna Meters 75 64 56 48 40 Feet 244 208 184 156 131 Table 6-19 Approximate Radiated Distance from Antenna for 850 MHz Cellular Applications Distance from Antenna Environment Type Open Environment Moderately Open Environment Meters 73 63 Feet 241 205 D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 6-19 CONFIDENTIAL Estimating RF Coverage Table 6-19 Approximate Radiated Distance from Antenna for 850 MHz Cellular Applications Environment Type Mildly Dense Environment Moderately Dense Environment Dense Environment Distance from Antenna Meters 55 47 39 Feet 181 154 129 Table 6-20 Approximate Radiated Distance from Antenna for 1800 MHz DCS Applications Facility Open Environment Moderately Open Environment Mildly Dense Environment Moderately Dense Environment Dense Environment Distance from Antenna Meters 75 58 50 42 30 Feet 246 191 166 137 100 Table 6-21 Approximate Radiated Distance from Antenna for 1900 MHz PCS Applications Facility Open Environment Moderately Open Environment Mildly Dense Environment Moderately Dense Environment Dense Environment Distance from Antenna Meters 72 56 49 40 29 Feet 236 183 160 132 96 6-20 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F Estimating RF Coverage Table 6-22 Approximate Radiated Distance from Antenna for 2.1 GHz UMTS Applications Facility Open Environment Moderately Open Environment Mildly Dense Environment Moderately Dense Environment Dense Environment Distance from Antenna Meters 69 54 47 39 28 Feet 226 176 154 128 93 Table 6-23 Approximate Radiated Distance from Antenna for 1.7/2.1 GHz AWS Applications Facility Open Environment Moderately Open Environment Mildly Dense Environment Moderately Dense Environment Dense Environment Distance from Antenna Meters 67 52 46 38 28 Feet 220 172 150 125 91 Table 6-24 Approximate Radiated Distance from Antenna for 2.5 GHz WiMAX Applications Facility Open Environment Moderately Open Environment Mildly Dense Environment Moderately Dense Environment Dense Environment Distance from Antenna Meters 59 47 41 35 25 Feet 194 152 134 112 83 D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 6-21 CONFIDENTIAL Estimating RF Coverage 6.5.3 Examples of Design Estimates Example Design Estimate for an 1900 MHz CDMA Application 1. Design goals:
PCS (1920 MHz = average of the lowest uplink and the highest downlink fre-
quency in 1900 MHz PCS band) CDMA provider 8 CDMA carriers in the system 85 dBm design goal (to 95% of the building) the minimum received power at the wireless device Base station with simplex RF connections 2. Power Per Carrier: The tables in Section 6.3, Maximum Output Power per Car-
rier, on page 6-4 provide maximum power per carrier information. The 1900 MHz CDMA table indicates that Fusion Wideband can support eight carriers with a recommended maximum power per carrier of 6.5 dBm. The input power should be set to the desired output power minus the system gain. 3. Building information:
16 floor building with 9,290 sq. meters (100,000 sq. ft.) per floor; total 148,640 sq. meters (1,600,000 sq. ft.). Walls are sheetrock construction, suspended ceiling tiles. Antennas used are omni-directional, ceiling mounted. Standard office environment, 80% hard wall offices and 20% cubicles. 4. Link Budget: In this example, a design goal of 85 dBm is used. Suppose 3 dBi omni-directional antennas are used in the design. Then, the maximum RF propa-
gation loss should be no more than 94.5 dB (6.5 dBm + 3 dBi + 85 dBm) over 95% of the area being covered. It is important to note that a design goal such as 85 dBm is usually derived taking into account multipath fading and log-normal shadowing characteristics. Thus, this design goal will only be met on average over 95% of the area being covered. At any given point, a fade may bring the sig-
nal level underneath the design goal. Note that this method of calculating a link budget is only for the downlink path. For information to calculate link budgets for both the downlink and uplink paths, refer to Section 6.6 on page 6-24. 5. Path Loss Slope: For a rough estimate, Table 6-17, Estimated Path Loss Slope for Different In-Building Environments on page 6-18, shows that a building with 80%
hard wall offices and 20% cubicles, at 1920 MHz, has an approximate path loss slope (PLS) of 38.1. Given the RF link budget of 94.5 dB, the distance of coverage from each RAU will be 30.2 meters (99 ft). This corresponds to a coverage area of 2,868 sq. meters (30,854 sq. ft.) per RAU (refer to Section 6.5.1 for details on path loss estimation). For this case we assumed a circular radiation pattern, though the actual area covered depends upon the pattern of the antenna and the obstructions in the facility. 6-22 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F Estimating RF Coverage 6. Equipment Required: Since you know the building size, you can now estimate the Fusion Wideband equipment quantities needed. Before you test any RF levels in the building, you can estimate that four antennas per level will be needed. This assumes no propagation between floors. If there is propagation, you may not need antennas on every floor. a. 4 antennas per floor 16 floors = 64 RAUs b. 64 RAUs 8 (maximum 8 RAUs per Expansion Hub) = 8 Expansion Hubs c. 8 Expansion Hubs 4 (maximum 4 Expansion Hubs per Main Hub) = 2 Main Hubs Check that the fiber and CATV cable distances are as recommended. If the dis-
tances differ, use the tables in Section 6.4, System Gain, on page 6-14 to deter-
mine system gains or losses. The path loss may need to be recalculated to assure adequate signal levels in the required coverage distance. The above estimates assume that all cable length requirements are met. If Expansion Hubs cannot be placed so that the RAUs are within the distance requirement, addi-
tional Expansion Hubs may need to be placed closer to the required RAUs locations. An RF Site Survey and Building Evaluation is required to accurately establish the Fusion Wideband equipment quantities required for the building. The site survey measures the RF losses within the building to determine the actual PLS, used in the final path loss formula to determine the actual requirements of the Fusion Wideband system. D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 6-23 CONFIDENTIAL Link Budget Analysis 6.6 Link Budget Analysis A link budget is a methodical way to account for the gains and losses in an RF system so that the quality of coverage can be predicted. The end result can often be stated as a design goal in which the coverage is determined by the maximum distance from each RAU before the signal strength falls beneath that goal. One key feature of the link budget is the maximum power per carrier explained in Section 6.3. While the maximum power per carrier is important as far as emissions and signal quality requirements are concerned, it is critical that the maximum signal into the Main Hub never exceed 1W (+30 dBm). Composite power levels above this limit will cause damage to the Main Hub. WARNING: Exceeding the maximum input power of 1W (+30 dBm) could cause permanent damage to the Main Hub. NOTE: Visit the TE customer portal at http://www.te.com/adc for the on-line Link Budget Tool. 6.6.1 Elements of a Link Budget for Narrowband Standards The link budget represents a typical calculation that might be used to determine how much path loss can be afforded in a Fusion Wideband design. This link budget ana-
lyzes both the downlink and uplink paths. For most configurations, the downlink requires lower path loss and is therefore the limiting factor in the system design. It is for this reason that a predetermined design goal for the downlink is sufficient to predict coverage distance. The link budget is organized in a simple manner: the transmitted power is calculated, the airlink losses due to fading and body loss are summed, and the receiver sensitivity
(minimum level a signal can be received for acceptable call quality) is calculated. The maximum allowable path loss (in dB) is the difference between the transmitted power, less the airlink losses, and the receiver sensitivity. From the path loss, the maximum coverage distance can be estimated using the path loss formula presented in Section 6.5.1. Table 6-25 provides link budget considerations for narrowband systems. 6-24 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F Link Budget Analysis Consideration BTS Transmit Power Attenuation between BTS and Fusion Wideband Antenna Gain BTS Noise Figure Fusion Wideband Noise Figure Thermal Noise Table 6-25 Link Budget Considerations for Narrowband Systems Description The power per carrier transmitted from the base station output This includes all losses: cable, attenuator, splitter/combiner, and so forth. On the downlink, attenuation must be chosen so that the maximum power per carrier going into the Main Hub does not exceed the levels given in Section 6.3. On the uplink, attenuation is chosen to keep the maximum uplink signal and noise level low enough to prevent base station alarms but small enough not to cause degradation in the system sensitivity. If the Fusion Wideband noise figure minus the attenuation is at least 10 dB higher than the BTS noise figure, the system noise figure is approximately that of Fusion Wideband alone. Refer to Sec-
tion 6.8 for ways to independently set the uplink and downlink attenuations between the base station and Fusion Wideband. The radiated output power includes antenna gain. For example, if you use a 3 dBi antenna at the RAU that is transmitting 0 dBm per carrier, the effective radiated power (relative to an isotropic radi-
ator) is 3 dBm per carrier. This is the effective noise floor of the base station input (usually base station sensitivity is this effec-
tive noise floor plus a certain C/I ratio). This is Fusion Widebands uplink noise figure, which varies depending on the number of Expansion Hubs and RAUs, and the frequency band. Fusion Widebands uplink noise figure is specified for a 1-1-8 configuration. Thus, the noise figure for a Fusion Wideband system (or multiple systems whose uplink ports are power combined) is NF(1-1-8) + 10*log(# of Expansion Hubs). This repre-
sents an upper-bound because the noise figure is lower if any of the Expansion Hubs RAU ports are not used. This is the noise level in the signal bandwidth (BW). Thermal noise power = 174 dBm/Hz + 10Log(BW). Protocol TDMA GSM iDEN Signal Bandwidth 30 kHz 200 kHz 25 kHz Thermal Noise 129 dBm 121 dBm 130 dBm Required C/I ratio Mobile Transmit Power Multipath Fade Margin For each wireless standard, a certain C/I (carrier to interference) ratio is needed to obtain acceptable demodulation performance. For narrowband systems, (TDMA, GSM, EDGE, iDEN, AMPS) this level varies from about 9 dB to 20 dB. The maximum power the mobile can transmit (power transmitted at highest power level setting). This margin allows for a certain level of fading due to multipath interference. Inside buildings there is often one or more fairly strong signals and many weaker signals arriving from reflections and dif-
fraction. Signals arriving from multiple paths add constructively or destructively. This margin accounts for the possibility of destructive multipath interference. In RF site surveys the effects of multipath fading are typically not accounted for because such fading is averaged out over power level samples taken over many locations. D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 6-25 CONFIDENTIAL Link Budget Analysis Table 6-25 Link Budget Considerations for Narrowband Systems (continued) Consideration Log-normal Fade Margin Body Loss Minimum Received Signal Level Description This margin adds an allowance for RF shadowing due to objects obstructing the direct path between the mobile equipment and the RAU. In RF site surveys, the effects of shadowing are partially accounted for since it is characterized by relatively slow changes in power level. This accounts for RF attenuation caused by the users head and body. This is also referred to as the design goal. The link budget says that you can achieve adequate cov-
erage if the signal level is, on average, above this level over 95% of the area covered, for example. 6-26 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F Link Budget Analysis 6.6.2 Narrowband Link Budget Analysis for a Microcell Application Table 6-26 Narrowband Link Budget Analysis: Downlink Line Downlink Transmitter a. b. c. d. e. f. g. h. i. j. k. l. m. n. p. BTS transmit power per carrier (dBm) Attenuation between BTS and Fusion Wideband (dB) Power into Fusion Wideband (dBm) Fusion Wideband gain (dB) Antenna gain (dBi) Radiated power per carrier (dBm) Airlink Multipath fade margin (dB) Log-normal fade margin with 9 dB std. deviation, 95% area coverage, 87% edge coverage Body loss (dB) Airlink losses (not including facility path loss) Receiver Thermal noise (dBm/30 kHz) Mobile noise figure (dB) Required C/I ratio (dB) Minimum received signal (dBm) Maximum path loss (dB) 33 23 10 0 3 13 6 10 3 19 129 7 17 105
+99 c = a + b f = c + d + e j = g + h + i n = k + l + m k: in this example, k represents the thermal noise for a TDMA signal, which has a bandwidth of 30 kHz p = f j n D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 6-27 CONFIDENTIAL Link Budget Analysis Table 6-27 Narrowband Link Budget Analysis: Uplink Line Uplink Receiver a. b. c. d. e. f. g. h. i. j. k. l. m. n. p. BTS noise figure (dB) Attenuation between BTS and Fusion Wideband (dB) Fusion Wideband gain (dB) Fusion Wideband noise figure (dB) 1-4-32 System noise figure (dB) Thermal noise (dBm/30 kHz) Required C/I ratio (dB) Antenna gain (dBi) Receive sensitivity (dBm) Airlink Multipath fade margin (dB) Log-normal fade margin with 9 dB std. deviation, 95% area coverage, 87% edge coverage Body loss (dB) Airlink losses (not including facility path loss) Transmitter Mobile transmit power (dBm) Maximum path loss (dB) 4 10 0 22 22.6 129 12 3 97.4 6 10 3 19 28 106.4 e: enter the noise figure and gain of each system component (a, b, c, and d) into the standard cascaded noise figure formula Fsys = F1 +
F2 1 G1
F3 1 G1G2
+ .... where
(Noise Figure/10) F = 10 G = 10(Gain/10)
(See Rappaport, Theodore S. Wireless Communications, Principles, and Practice. Prentice Hall PTR, 1996.) i = f + e + g h m = j + k + l p = n m i Therefore, the system is downlink limited but the downlink and uplink are almost balanced, which is a desirable condition. 6-28 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F 6.6.3 Link Budget Analysis Elements of a Link Budget for CDMA Standards A CDMA link budget is slightly more complicated because you must consider the spread spectrum nature of CDMA. Unlike narrowband standards such as TDMA and GSM, CDMA signals are spread over a relatively wide frequency band. Upon recep-
tion, the CDMA signal is de-spread. In the de-spreading process the power in the received signal becomes concentrated into a narrow band, whereas the noise level remains unchanged. Hence, the signal-to-noise ratio of the de-spread signal is higher than that of the CDMA signal before de-spreading. This increase is called processing gain. For IS-95 and J-STD-008, the processing gain is 21 dB or 19 dB depending on the user data rate (9.6 Kbps for rate set 1 and 14.4 Kbps for rate set 2, respectively). Because of the processing gain, a CDMA signal (comprising one Walsh code channel within the composite CDMA signal) can be received at a lower level than that required for narrowband signals. A reasonable level is 95 dBm, which results in about 85 dBm composite as shown below. An important issue to keep in mind is that the downlink CDMA signal is composed of many orthogonal channels: pilot, paging, sync, and traffic. The composite power level is the sum of the powers from the individual channels. Table 6-28 shows an example. Table 6-28 Distribution of Power within a CDMA Signal Channel Pilot Sync Primary Paging Traffic Walsh Code Number Relative Power Level 0 32 1 20%
5%
19%
831, 3363 9% (per traffic channel) 7.0 dB 13.3 dB 7.3 dB 10.3 dB This table assumes that there are 15 active traffic channels operating with 50% voice activity (so that the total power adds up to 100%). Notice that the pilot and sync chan-
nels together contribute about 25% of the power. When measuring the power in a CDMA signal you must be aware that if only the pilot and sync channels are active, the power level will be about 6 to 7 dB lower than the maximum power level you can expect when all voice channels are active. The implication is that if only the pilot and sync channels are active, and the maximum power per carrier table says that you should not exceed 10 dBm for a CDMA signal, for example, then you should set the attenuation between the base station and the Main Hub so that the Main Hub receives 3 dBm (assuming 0 dB system gain). An additional consideration for CDMA systems is that the uplink and downlink paths should be gain and noise balanced. This is required for proper operation of soft-hand-
off to the outdoor network as well as preventing excess interference that is caused by mobiles on the indoor system transmitting at power levels that are not coordinated with the outdoor mobiles. This balance is achieved if the power level transmitted by the mobiles under close-loop power control is similar to the power level transmitted under open-loop power control. D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 6-29 CONFIDENTIAL Link Budget Analysis The open-loop power control equation is PTX + PRX = 73 dBm (for Cellular, IS-95) PTX + PRX = 76 dBm (for PCS, J-STD-008) where PTX is the mobiles transmitted power and PRX is the power received by the mobile. The power level transmitted under closed-loop power control is adjusted by the base station to achieve a certain Eb/N0 (explained in Table 6-29 on page 6-30). The differ-
ence between these power levels, P, can be estimated by comparing the power radi-
ated from the RAU, Pdownink, to the minimum received signal, Puplink, at the RAU:
P = Pdownink + Puplink + 73 dBm (for Cellular) P = Pdownink + Puplink + 76 dBm (for PCS) Its a good idea to keep 12 dB < P < 12 dB. Table 6-29 provides link budget considerations for CDMA systems. Table 6-29 Additional Link Budget Considerations for CDMA Consideration Multipath Fade Margin Power per car-
rier, downlink Description The multipath fade margin can be reduced (by at least 3 dB) by using different lengths of optical fiber (this is called delay diversity). The delay over fiber is approximately 5S/km. If the difference in fiber lengths to Expansion Hubs with overlapping coverage areas produces at least 1 chip (0.8S) delay of one path relative to the other, then the multipaths signals can be resolved and processed independently by the base stations rake receiver. A CDMA signal traveling through 163 meters of MMF cable is delayed by approximately one chip. This depends on how many channels are active. For example, the signal is about 7 dB lower if only the pilot, sync, and paging channels are active compared to a fully-loaded CDMA signal. Furthermore, in the CDMA forward link, voice channels are turned off when the user is not speaking. On average this is assumed to be about 50% of the time. So, in the spreadsheet, both the power per Walsh code channel (rep-
resenting how much signal a mobile will receive on the Walsh code that it is de-spreading) and the total power are used. The channel power is needed to determine the maximum path loss, and the total power is needed to deter-
mine how hard the Fusion Wideband system is being driven. The total power for a fully-loaded CDMA signal is given by (approximately):
total power = voice channel power + 13 dB + 10log10 (50%)
= voice channel power + 10 dB Information Rate This is simply 10log10(9.6 Kbps) = 40 dB for rate set 1 10log10(14.4 Kbps) = 42 dB for rate set 2 6-30 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F Link Budget Analysis Table 6-29 Additional Link Budget Considerations for CDMA (continued) Consideration Process Gain Description The process of de-spreading the desired signal boosts that signal relative to the noise and interference. This gain needs to be included in the link budget. In the following formulas, PG = process gain:
Eb/No PG = 10log10(1.25 MHz / 9.6 Kbps) = 21 dB rate set 1 PG = 10log10(1.25 MHz / 14.4 Kbps) = 19 dB rate set 2 Note that the process gain can also be expressed as 10log10 (CDMA bandwidth) minus the information rate. This is the energy-per-bit divided by the received noise and interference. Its the CDMA equivalent of sig-
nal-to-noise ratio (SNR). This figure depends on the mobiles receiver and the multipath environment. For example, the multipath delays inside a building are usually too small for a rake receiver in the mobile (or base station) to resolve and coherently combine multipath components. However, if artificial delay can be introduced by, for instance, using different lengths of cable, then the required Eb/No is lower and the mul-
tipath fade margin in the link budget can be reduced in some cases. If the receiver noise figure is NF (dB), then the receive sensitivity (dBm) is given by:
Psensitivity = NF + Eb/No + thermal noise in a 1.25 MHz band PG
= NF + Eb/No 113 (dBm/1.25 MHz) PG Noise Rise On the uplink, the noise floor is determined not only by the Fusion Wideband system, but also by the num-
ber of mobiles that are transmitting. This is because when the base station attempts to de-spread a particu-
lar mobiles signal, all other mobile signals appear to be noise. Because the noise floor rises as more mobiles try to communicate with a base station, the more mobiles there are, the more power they have to transmit. Hence, the noise floor rises rapidly:
Hand-off Gain noise rise = 10log10(1 / (1 loading)) where loading is the number of users as a percentage of the theoretical maximum number of users. Typically, a base station is set to limit the loading to 75%. This noise ratio must be included in the link budget as a worst-case condition for uplink sensitivity. If there are less users than 75% of the maximum, then the uplink coverage will be better than predicted. CDMA supports soft hand-off, a process by which the mobile communicates simultaneously with more than one base station or more than one sector of a base station. Soft hand-off provides improved receive sensitivity because there are two or more receivers or transmitters involved. A line for hand-off gain is included in the CDMA link budgets worksheet although the gain is set to 0 dB because the in-building system will probably be designed to limit soft-handoff. Other CDMA Issues Never combine multiple sectors (more than one CDMA signal at the same fre-
quency) into a Fusion Wideband system. The combined CDMA signals will inter-
fere with each other. Try to minimize overlap between in-building coverage areas that utilize different sectors, as well as in-building coverage and outdoor coverage areas. This is impor-
tant because any area in which more than one dominant pilot signal (at the same frequency) is measured by the mobile will result in soft-handoff. Soft-handoff decreases the overall network capacity by allocating multiple channel resources to a single mobile phone. D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 6-31 CONFIDENTIAL Link Budget Analysis 6.6.4 CDMA Link Budget Analysis for a Microcell Application Table 6-30 CDMA Link Budget Analysis: Downlink Line Downlink Transmitter a. b. c. d. e. f. g. h. i. j. k. l. m. n. o. p. q. r. s. t. u. v. w. BTS transmit power per traffic channel (dBm) Voice activity factor Composite power (dBm) Attenuation between BTS and Fusion Wideband (dB) Power per channel into Fusion Wideband (dBm) Composite power into Fusion Wideband (dBm) Fusion Wideband gain (dB) Antenna gain (dBi) Radiated power per channel (dBm) Composite radiated power (dBm) Airlink Handoff gain (dB) Multipath fade margin (dB) Log-normal fade margin with 9 dB std. deviation, 95% area cover-
age, 87% edge coverage Additional loss (dB) Body loss (dB) Airlink losses (not including facility path loss) Receiver Mobile noise figure (dB) Thermal noise (dBm/Hz) Receiver interference density (dBm/Hz) Information ratio (dB/Hz) Required Eb/(No+lo) Minimum received signal (dBm) Maximum path loss (dB) 30.0 50%
40.0 24 9.0 16.0 0.0 3.0 12.0 19.0 0.0 6.0 10.0 0.0 3.0 19.0 7.0 174.0 167.0 41.6 7.0 118.4
+99.4 6-32 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F Link Budget Analysis b and c: see notes in Table 6-29 regarding power per carrier, downlink e = a + d f = c + d i = e + g + h j = f + g + h p = k + l + m + n + o s = q + r v = s + t + u w = j p v x = j (downlink) + m (uplink) + P where P = Ptx + Prx = 73 dB for Cellular 76 dB for PCS D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 6-33 CONFIDENTIAL Link Budget Analysis Table 6-31 CDMA Link Budget Analysis: Uplink Line Uplink Receiver a. b. c. d. e. f. g. h. i. j. k. l. m. n. o. p. q. r. s. t. BTS noise figure (dB) Attenuation between BTS and Fusion Wideband (dB) Fusion Wideband gain (dB) Fusion Wideband noise figure (dB) System noise figure (dB) Thermal noise (dBm/Hz) Noise rise 75% loading (dB) Receiver interference density (dBm/Hz) Information rate (dB/Hz) Required Eb/(No+lo) Handoff gain (dB) Antenna gain (dBi) Minimum received signal (dBm) Airlink Multipath fade margin (dB) Log-normal fade margin with 9 dB std. deviation, 95% area cover-
age, 87% edge coverage Additional loss (dB) Body loss (dB) Airlink losses (not including facility path loss) Transmitter Mobile transmit power (dBm) Maximum path loss (dB) 3.0 30.0 0.0 22.0 33.3 174.0 6.0 134.6 41.6 5.0 0.0 3.0 91.1 6.0 10.0 0.0 3.0 19.0 28.0 100.1 6-34 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F Link Budget Analysis e: enter the noise figure and gain of each system component (a, b, c, and d) into the standard cascaded noise figure formula Fsys = F1 +
F2 1 G1
F3 1 G1G2
+ .... where
(Noise Figure/10) F = 10 G = 10(Gain/10)
(See Rappaport, Theodore S. Wireless Communications, Principles, and Practice. Prentice Hall PTR, 1996.) h = e + f + g m = h + i + j k l r = n + o + p + q t = s r m 6.6.5 Considerations for Re-Radiation (Over-the-Air) Systems Fusion Wideband can be used to extend the coverage of the outdoor network by con-
necting to a roof-top donor antenna pointed toward an outdoor base station. Addi-
tional considerations for such an application of Fusion Wideband are:
Sizing the gain and output power requirements for a bi-directional amplifier
(repeater). Ensuring that noise radiated on the uplink from the in-building system does not cause the outdoor base station to become desensitized to wireless handsets in the outdoor network. Filtering out signals that lie in adjacent frequency bands. For instance, if you are providing coverage for Cellular B-band operation it may be necessary to filter out the A, A and A bands which may contain strong signals from other outdoor base stations. Further information on these issues can be found in TE application notes for re-radia-
tion applications. D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 6-35 CONFIDENTIAL Optical Power Budget 6.7 Optical Power Budget Fusion Wideband uses SC/APC connectors. The connector losses associated with mating to these connectors is accounted for in the design and should not be included as elements of the optical power budget. The reason is that when the optical power budget is defined, measurements are taken with these connectors in place. The Fusion Wideband optical power budget for both multi-mode and sin-
gle-mode fiber cable is 3.0 dB (optical). The maximum loss through the fiber can not exceed 3 dB (optical). The maximum lengths of the fiber cable should not exceed 500m (1,640 ft) for multi-mode and 6 km
(19,685 ft) for single-mode. Both the optical budget and the maximum cable length must be taken into consideration when designing the system. NOTE: It is critical to system performance that only SC/APC fiber connectors are used throughout the fiber network, including fiber distribution panels. 6-36 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F Connecting a Main Hub to a Base Station 6.8 Connecting a Main Hub to a Base Station The Fusion Wideband system supports up to three RF sources: one for Band 1, one for Band 2 and one for Band 3. This section explains how each band can be connected to its associated base station. Each Fusion Main Hub band has separate system gain parameters. For example, Band 1 can be set for +5 dB of downlink system gain while Band 2 can have +15 dB of downlink system gain. Thus, each band can be configured as a separate system to allow for full integration to its associated base station. When connecting each of the Fusion Wideband Main Hub bands to its base station, the following equipment may be required: circulators, filter diplexers, directional couplers, combiner/splitters, attenuators, coax cables, and connectors. In addition, use the following considerations to achieve optimal performance:
1. The downlink power from the base stations must be attenuated enough so that the power radiated by the RAU does not exceed the maximum power per carrier listed in Section 6.3, Maximum Output Power per Carrier, on page 6-4. 2. The uplink attenuation should be small enough that the sensitivity of the overall system is limited by Fusion Wideband, not by the attenuator. However, some base stations trigger alarms if the noise or signal levels are too high. In this case the attenuation must be large enough to prevent this from happening. CAUTION:The UPLINK and DOWNLINK ports cannot handle a DC power feed from a BTS. If DC power is present, a DC block must be used or the Fusion Wideband Main Hub may be damaged. If, in an area covered by Fusion Wideband, a mobile phone indicates good signal strength but consistently has difficulty completing calls, it is possible that the attenua-
tion between Fusion Wideband and the base station needs to be adjusted. In other words, it is possible that if the uplink is over-attenuated, the downlink power will pro-
vide good coverage, but the uplink coverage distance will be small. When there is an excessive amount of loss between the Fusion Wideband Main Hub uplink and its associated bands base station, the uplink system gain can be increased to as much as 15 dB to prevent a reduction in the overall system sensitivity. 6.8.1 Uplink Attenuation The attenuation between the Main Hubs uplink port and the associated bands base station reduces both the noise level and the desired signals out of Fusion Wideband. Setting the attenuation on the uplink is a trade-off between keeping the noise and maximum signal levels transmitted from Fusion Wideband to the base station receiver low while not reducing the SNR (signal-to-noise ratio) of the path from the D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 6-37 CONFIDENTIAL Connecting a Main Hub to a Base Station RAU inputs to the base station inputs. This SNR can not be better than the SNR of Fusion Wideband by itself, although it can be significantly worse. A good rule of thumb is to set the uplink attenuation such that the noise level out of Fusion Wideband is within 10 dB of the base stations sensitivity. 6.8.2 RAU Attenuation and ALC The RAU attenuation and ALC are set using the AdminBrowser Edit Unit Proper-
ties screen. Embedded within the uplink RF front-end of each Fusion Wideband RAU band is an ALC circuit. This ALC circuit protects the Fusion Wideband system from overload and excessive intermodulation products due to high-powered mobiles or other signal sources that are within the supported frequency band and are in close proximity to the RAU. Each individual Band (1or 2) of a Fusion Wideband RAU has an uplink ALC circuit that operates as a feedback loop. A power detector measures the level of each bands uplink RF input and if that level exceeds 30 dBm, an RF attenuator is activated. The level of attenuation is equal to the amount that the input exceeds 30 dBm. The fol-
lowing sequence describes the operation of the ALC circuit, as illustrated in Figure 6-2. 1. The RF signal level into either Band of the RAU rises above the activation thresh-
old (30 dBm), causing that ALC loop to enter into the attack phase. 2. During the attack phase, the ALC loop increases the attenuation (0 to 30 dB) until the detector reading is reduced to the activation threshold. The duration of this attack phase is called the attack time. 3. After the attack time, the ALC loop enters the hold phase and maintains a fixed attenuation so long as the high-level RF signal is present. 4. The RF signal level drops below the release threshold (45 dBm) and the ALC loop enters the release phase. 5. During the release phase, the ALC loop holds the attenuation for a fixed period then quickly releases the attenuation. An important feature of the ALC loop is that in Step 3, the attenuation is maintained at a fixed level until the signal drops by a significant amount. This prevents the ALC loop from tracking variations in the RF signal itself and distorting the waveform modulation. 6-38 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F Connecting a Main Hub to a Base Station 4 Release Level
-45dBm Figure 6-2 ALC Operation Activation Level
-30dBm Input Signal Level Output Signal Level 3 2 1 Attack Phase Hold Phase 5 Release Phase Time 6.8.2.1 Using the RAU 10 dB Attenuation Setting Each RAU band can, independently of the other RAUs in a system, have its uplink or downlink gain attenuated by 0 or 10 dB for each RAU band (1, 2 or 3). This is accom-
plished by selecting the appropriate UPLINK and/or DOWNLINK attenuation for each RAU band in the Edit Unit Properties screen of AdminBrowser for the selected RAU. Downlink Attenuation: The downlink attenuator provides a mechanism to reduce the signal strength from an RAU band. For instance, this could be for an RAU band located near a window in a tall building that is causing excessive leakage to the macro-network. In such a case it is important to attenuate the downlink only. The uplink should not be attenuated. If the uplink is attenuated, the uplink sensitiv-
ity is reduced and mobile phones in the area of that RAU band will have to trans-
mit at a higher power. This would increase interference to the outdoor network from such mobiles. Uplink Attenuation: The uplink attenuator attenuates environmental noise picked up by an RAU band located in an area where heavy electrical machinery is operat-
ing. In such environments the electrical noise can be quite high and it is useful to reduce the amount of such noise that gets propagated through the distributed antenna system. Attenuating the uplink of an RAU band located in areas of high electrical noise helps preserve the sensitivity of the rest of the system. The effect of activating the uplink or downlink attenuators is to reduce the coverage area of the adjusted RAU band. The coverage radius will be reduced by roughly a fac-
tor of 2. More specifically, if d is the coverage distance without attenuation and d is the coverage radius with the attenuation, then d d
1010 dB
PLS where PLS is path loss slope (dBm). D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 6-39 CONFIDENTIAL Connecting a Main Hub to a Base Station 6.8.2.2 Using the Uplink ALC Setting Uplink automatic level control (UL ALC) circuitry for each band within the RAU provides automatic level control on high-power signals in the uplink path. This func-
tionality is required to prevent RF signal compression caused by a single or multiple wireless devices in very close proximity to the RAU band. Compression causes signal degradation and, ultimately, dropped calls and data errors, and should be prevented. Two settings are available to optimize UL ALC performance:
Multiple Operators: Use when more than one operator and/or protocol is present in the Fusion Wideband systems band frequency or adjacent frequency bands. This setting is most commonly used. Single Operator and Protocol: Use when only one operator and protocol is on-the-air within the Fusion Wideband systems configured and adjacent fre-
quency bands. This setting is seldom used. 6-40 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F SECTION 7 Installing Fusion Wideband This section contains the following subsections:
Section 7.1 Installation Requirements . 7-1 Section 7.2 Safety Precautions . 7-3 Section 7.3 Preparing for System Installation . 7-6 Section 7.4 Fusion Wideband Installation Procedures . 7-10 Section 7.5 Splicing Fiber Optic Cable . 7-44 Section 7.6 Interfacing the Fusion Wideband Main Hub to an RF Source . 7-46 Section 7.7 Connecting Contact Alarms to a Fusion Wideband System . 7-56 Section 7.8 Alarm Monitoring Connectivity Options . 7-63 7.1 Installation Requirements Before and during installation, keep in mind these sources of potential problems:
Faulty cabling/connector Dirty connectors and ports Malfunction of one or more Fusion Wideband components Antenna, base station, or repeater problem External RF interface Tripped circuit breaker Equipment is not grounded Using a crossover Ethernet cable that does not support full hardware handshaking when using AdminBrowser D-620616-0-20 Rev F InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual 7-1 CONFIDENTIAL Installation Requirements NOTE: Faulty cabling is the cause of a vast majority of problems. All CATV cable should be tested to TIA-570-B specifications. 7.1.1 Component Location Requirements Fusion Wideband components are intended to be installed in indoor locations only. If outdoor installation is desired, such as a parking garage, the Fusion Wideband com-
ponents must be installed in the appropriate environmental enclosures. 7.1.2 Cable and Connector Requirements Fusion Wideband equipment operates over the following:
CATV 75 Ohm cable with F connectors Single-mode fiber (SMF) or multi-mode (MMF) cable with SC/APC fiber connec-
tors throughout the fiber network, including fiber distribution panels These cables are widely-used, industry standards for the cable TV industry. The regu-
lations and guidelines for Fusion Wideband cable installation are identical to those specified by the TIA/EIA 568-B standard and the TIA/EIA/570-A standards. TE recommends solid copper center conductor, plenum-rated CATV cable and con-
nectors for conformity to building codes, standards, and to ensure stated performance of maximum distance and RF specifications. CommScope 2065V cable or equivalent is required for RG-59. CommScope 2279V cable or equivalent is required for RG-6. CommScope 2293K cable may also be used for RG-11. NOTE: Refer to Appendix A for more information related to 75 Ohm CATV. TE recommends connectors with fixed centerpins to ensure proper seating and to eliminate oxidation, which occurs with bare center conductors. Recommended con-
nectors are as follows:
CANARE Connectors FP-C4F for CommScope 2065V cable FP-C55A for CommScope 2279V cable FP-C71A for CommScope 2293K cable 7-2 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F Safety Precautions NOTE: The proper crimp tool and die must be matched by the connector type. 7.1.3 Distance Requirements Table 7-1 shows the distances between Fusion Wideband components and related equipment. Table 7-1 Distance Requirements Cable Type Coaxial; N male connectors Cable Length 36 m (1020 ft) typical Equipment Combination Repeater/BTS to Fusion Wideband Main Hub Fusion Wideband Expansion Hub to RAU CATV 75 Ohm;
shielded F male con-
nectors Main Hub to Expan-
sion Hub RAU to passive antenna Multi-mode fiber:
Single-mode fiber:
SC/APC male con-
nectors Coaxial; N male connectors 10 m (33 ft) maximum Minimum: 10 meters (33 ft) Maximum:
130 meters (426 ft) for RG-59;
140 meters (459 ft) for RG-6;
235 meters (771 ft) for RG-11 Refer to Table 5-1 and Table 5-2. 500 m (1640 ft.) maximum 6 km (19,685 ft.) maximum 13.5 m (312 ft) typical Additional Information Limited by loss and noise. Refer to your link budget calculation. Limited by CE Mark require-
ments. Refer to System Gain on page 6-14. Limited by 3 dB optical attenuation Limited by loss and noise. Refer to your link budget calculation. 7.2 Safety Precautions 7.2.1 Installation Guidelines Use the following guidelines when installing TE equipment:
1. Provide sufficient airflow and cooling to the equipment to prevent heat build-up from exceeding the maximum ambient air temperature specification. Do not com-
promise the amount of airflow required for safe operation of the equipment. If you are removing the system, turn it off and remove the power cord first. There are no user-serviceable parts inside the components. 2. D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 7-3 CONFIDENTIAL Safety Precautions 3. The internal power supplies have internal fuses that are not user replaceable. Con-
sider the worst-case power consumption shown on the product labels when provi-
sioning the equipments AC power source and distribution. 4. Verify that the Hub is grounded properly using the AC power cord third wire ground. NOTE: Be careful with the mechanical loading of the rack mounted hub. Mount the equipment in the rack in such a way that a hazardous condition, due to uneven mechanical loading, does not result. 7.2.2 General Safety Precautions The following precautions apply to TE products:
The units have no user-serviceable parts. Faulty or failed units are fully replaceable through TE. Please contact us at:
1-800-530-9960 (U.S. only)
+1-408-952-2400 (International) When you connect the fiber optic cable, clean all optical fiber SC/APC connectors according to the cable manufacturers instructions. When you connect a radiating antenna to an RAU, firmly hand-tighten the N con-
nector DO NOT over-tighten the connector. WARNING: To reduce the risk of fire or electric shock, do not expose this equipment to rain or moisture. The components are intended for indoor use only. Do not install the RAU outdoors. Do not connect an RAU to an antenna that is located outdoors where it could be subject to lightning strikes, power crosses, or wind. The Expansion Hub and RAU units are designed for intra-building cabling only. Outdoor routing of any cabling to these units shall not exceed 140 feet. NOTE: Outdoor cables farther than 140 feet must be installed with proper lightning protection. 7.2.3 Fiber Port Safety Precautions The following are suggested safety precautions for working with fiber ports. For information about system compliance with safety standards, refer to Appendix B. 7-4 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F Safety Precautions WARNING: Observe the following warning about viewing fiber ends in ports. Do not stare with unprotected eyes at the connector ends of the fibers or the ports of the hubs. Invisible infrared radia-
tion is present at the front panel of the Main Hub and the Expansion Hub. Do not remove the fiber port dust caps unless the port is going to be used. Do not stare directly into a fiber port. Test fiber cables: When you test fiber optic cables, connect the optical power source last and disconnect it first. Use Class 1 test equipment. Fiber ends: Cover any unconnected fiber ends with an approved cap. Do not use tape. Broken fiber cables: Do not stare with unprotected eyes at any broken ends of the fibers. Laser light emitted from fiber sources can cause eye injury. Avoid contact with broken fibers; they are sharp and can pierce the skin. Report any broken fiber cables and have them replaced. Cleaning: Be sure the connectors are clean and free of dust or oils. Use only approved methods for cleaning optical fiber connectors. Modifications: Do not make any unauthorized modifications to this fiber optic system or associated equipment. Live work: Live work is permitted because TE equipment is a Class 1 hazard. Signs: No warning signs are required. Class 1 laser product: The system meets the criteria for a Class 1 laser product per IEC 60825-1: 1993+A1:+A2:2001 and IEC106825-2. CLASS 1 CLASS 1 LASER PRODUCT LASER PRODUCT This mark appears on the front panel of the Main Hub and the Expansion Hub. Complies with 21 CFR 1040.10 and 1040.11 except for deviations pursuant to Laser Notice No. 50, dated July 26, 2001. The hazard level at all locations within the equipment is Hazard Level 1. CAUTION: Use of controls or adjustments or performance of procedures other than those specified herein may result in hazardous radiation exposure. D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 7-5 CONFIDENTIAL Preparing for System Installation 7.3 Preparing for System Installation 7.3.1 Pre-Installation Inspection Follow this procedure before installing Fusion Wideband equipment:
1. Verify the number of packages received against the packing list. 2. Check all packages for external damage; report any external damage to the ship-
ping carrier. If there is damage, a shipping agent should be present before you unpack and inspect the contents because damage caused during transit is the responsibility of the shipping agent. 3. Open and check each package against the packing list. If any items are missing, contact TE customer service (refer to Section 7.2.2 on page 7-4). If damage is discovered at the time of installation, contact the shipping agent. 4. 7.3.2 Installation Checklist Table 7-2 Installation Checklist Installation Requirement Floor Plans System Design Power available:
Fusion Wideband Main Hub (AC) Fusion Wideband Expansion Hub (AC) To RAU (DC) Fusion Wideband Main Hub (DC) Fusion Wideband Expansion Hub (DC) Rack space available
(Main and Expansion Hub) Wallmount Fusion Wideband Main Hub Clearance for air circulation:
Fusion Wideband Main or Expansion Hub RAU Suitable operating environment:
Fusion Wideband Main or Expansion Hub RAUs Consideration Installation location of equipment clearly marked Used to verify frequency bands after installation Hubs power cord is 2 m (6.5 ft) long. 100/240V, 1A, 5060 Hz 100/240V, 6A, 50-60 Hz 54V (from the Hub) 3864VDC, 2.5A 3864VDC, 14A 89 mm (3.5 in.) high (2U) Hub must be mounted on 3/4 plywood backboard. 76 mm (3 in.) front and rear, 51 mm (2 in.) sides 76 mm (3 in.) all around Indoor location only 0 to +45C (+32 to +113F) 5% to 95% non-condensing humidity 25 to +45C (13 to +113F) 5% to 95% non-condensing humidity Donor Antenna-to-Fusion Wideband Configuration (for each Fusion Wideband Band) Donor Antenna Installed, inspected; N-male to N-male coaxial cable to lightning arrestor/surge suppressor Installed between roof-top antenna and repeater; N-male to N-male 50 Ohm coax-
ial cable and outdoor cables longer than 140 feet. Lightning Arrestor or Surge Suppressor 7-6 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F Preparing for System Installation Table 7-2 Installation Checklist (continued) Consideration Installed between lightning arrestor/surge suppressor and Hub; N-male to N-male coaxial cable. The Repeater must be a UL listed product. Installed between the circulator and the Hub downlink port to prevent overload. Optionally, it may be installed between the uplink port and the circulator. Installed between the repeater and the Hub uplink and downlink ports Installed, inspected; verify RF power (see tables in Section 6.3 on page 6-4);
N-male to N-male coaxial cable Attenuation may be required to achieve the desired RF output at the RAU, and the desired uplink noise floor level When using a duplex BTS: Installed between the BTS and the Hub uplink and downlink ports. Not used with a simplex BTS Installation Requirement Repeater Attenuator Attenuator Circulator or Duplexer Circulator or Duplexer Base Station-to-Fusion Wideband Configuration (for each Fusion Wideband Band) Base Station Connecting Multiple Fusion Wideband Main Hubs Together 5-port Alarm Daisy-Chain Cable
(PN 4024-3) For contact alarm monitoring of fault and warning alarms. Used to feed the alarms from multiple Fusion Wideband Main Hubs into a BTS or FlexWave Focus. N.C. Operation. Cabling Coaxial: repeater, base station, Smart Source to Fusion Wideband Main Hub Coaxial: RAU to passive antennas Fiber: Main Hub to Expansion Hubs CATV Fusion Wideband Expansion Hub to RAUs Coax approved; N-type male connectors. Use low-loss cable; N male connector; typical 1 m (3.3 ft) using RG142 coaxial cable. SC/APC (angle-polished) male connectors for entire fiber run (can use SC/APC pigtails, PN 4012SCAPC-10 for MMF or 4013SCAPC-10 for SMF);
Use jumper fiber cables for collocated Main and Expansion Hubs (3 m/10 ft.):
Multi-mode: PN 4017SCAPC-10 Single-mode: PN 4018SCAPC-10 Distance limited by optical loss of 3 dB Multi-mode up to 500 m (1640 ft.) Single-mode up to 6 km (19,685 ft.) TIA-570-B approved; centerpin F male connectors. CATV connectors must be connected to the shield at both ends. The RAU will be damaged if it is mis-wired. Tie-off cables to avoid damaging the connectors because of cable strain. Minimum: 0 meters (0 ft) Maximum: RG-59: 130 meters (426 ft) *
RG-6: 140 meters (459 ft) RG-11: 235 meters (771 ft) D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 7-7 CONFIDENTIAL Preparing for System Installation Table 7-2 Installation Checklist (continued) Installation Requirement
* Refer to Appendix A for CATV cable requirements. Consideration Configuring the System PC/laptop running standard browser software Miscellaneous Cross-over Ethernet cable Straight-through cable Distances Fusion Wideband Main Hub is within 36m
(1020 ft) of connecting repeater/BTS/Flex-
Wave Refer to the AdminBrowser User Manual (PN D-620607-0-20) Male connectors; Fusion Wideband Main Hub to a PC/laptop running a standard browser to the Fusion Wideband AdminBrowser software; local connection or LAN switch connector for remote connections. Female/male connectors; Fusion Wideband Main Hub to a modem for a remote connection. If longer distance, determine the loss of the cable used for this connection and adjust the RF signal for each Band into the Fusion Wideband Main Hub accord-
ingly. This can be done by readjusting the power from the base station, or by changing the attenuation value between the base station/repeater and the Hub Bands (1 and 2). 7.3.3 Tools and Materials Required Table 7-3 Tools and Materials Required for Component Installation Description Cable ties Screwdriver Mounting screws and spring nuts Screws, anchors (for mounting RAUs) Drill Fiber connector cleaning kit Fusion splicer Splicing tool kit (including snips, cladding strippers, fiber cleaver, isopropyl alcohol, lint-free wipes) Fusion splicing sleeves 7-8 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F Preparing for System Installation 7.3.4 Optional Accessories Table 7-4 Optional Accessories for Component Installation Description Wall-mount bracket (PN 4712) When using this bracket with an Fusion Wideband Main Hub, the Hubs mounting bracket must be moved to the alternate mounting position (refer to the procedure on page page 7-11). Cable management (Cable manager: PN 4759; Tie wrap bar: PN 4757) Splice trays Pigtails with SC/APC connectors, 3 m (10 ft.) Multi-mode fiber SC/APC pigtail: PN 4012SCAPC-10 Single-mode fiber SC/APC pigtail: PN 4013SCAPC-10 Jumper cable when Main and Expansion Hubs are collocated, 3 m (10 ft.) Multi-mode fiber SC/APC: PN 4018SCAPC-10 Line Sharing Switch:
When using a single POTS line with multiple Fusion Wideband Main Hubs, connect up to four or eight modems to a line sharing switch:
4-port (240031-0) 8-port (240052-0) Alarm Cables:
5-port Alarm Daisy-Chain Cable (PN 4024-3) Alarm Sense Adapter Cable (PN 4025-1) D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 7-9 CONFIDENTIAL Fusion Wideband Installation Procedures 7.4 Fusion Wideband Installation Procedures The following procedures assume that the system is new from the factory and that it has not been programmed with bands. If you are replacing components in a pre-installed system with either new units or units that may already be programmed (for example, re-using units from another sys-
tem), refer to Section 8. Installing a Fusion Wideband Main Hub . 7-11 Installing a Fusion Wideband Main Hub in a Rack . 7-11 Using the Wall Rack-Mounting Option . 7-13 Installing an Optional Cable Manager in the Rack . 7-12 Installing a Main Hub Using the 12 Wall-Mounted Rack (PN 4712) . 7-12 Installing a Fusion Wideband Main Hub Directly to the Wall . 7-14 Connecting the Fiber Cables to the Main Hub . 7-15 Making Power Connections . 7-18 Powering On the Main Hub . 7-23 Installing Expansion Hubs . 7-25 Installing an Expansion Hub in a Rack . 7-25 Installing an Expansion Hub Using the 12 Wall-Mounted Rack . 7-26 Installing a Fusion Wideband Expansion Hub Directly to the Wall . 7-27 Installing an Optional Cable Manager in the Rack . 7-28 Powering On the Expansion Hub . 7-28 Connecting the Fiber Cables to the Expansion Hub . 7-29 Connecting the 75 Ohm CATV Cables . 7-30 Troubleshooting Expansion Hub LEDs During Installation . 7-31 Installing RAUs . 7-32 Installing RAUs . 7-32 Installing Passive Antennas . 7-32 Connecting the Antenna to the RAU . 7-34 Connecting the CATV Cable . 7-34 Troubleshooting Using RAU LEDs During Installation . 7-35 Configuring the Fusion Wideband System . 7-36 Connecting a PC to the Main Hub to Run AdminBrowser . 7-36 Programming the Main Hub Using AdminBrowser . 7-37 Fusion Splicing of Fiber and Pigtail . 7-44 7-10 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F Fusion Wideband Installation Procedures The following procedures assume that the system is installed and programmed. Interfacing the Fusion Wideband Main Hub to an RF Source . 7-46 Connecting a Single Fusion Wideband Main Hub to an RF Source . 7-46 Connecting a Fusion Wideband Main Hub to a Roof-top Antenna . 7-50 Connecting Multiple Fusion Wideband Main Hubs to an RF Source . 7-51 Connecting Multiple Wideband Main Hubs to a Duplex Repeater or BTS 7-54 Connecting Contact Alarms to a Fusion Wideband System . 7-56 Alarm Source . 7-57 Alarm Sense . 7-60 Alarm Cables . 7-62 Alarm Monitoring Connectivity Options . 7-63 Direct Connection . 7-63 Modem Connection . 7-64 100 BASE-T Port Expander Connection . 7-73 POTS Line Sharing Switch Connection . 7-74 Ethernet LAN Connection . 7-76 SNMP Interface . 7-77 7.4.1 Installing a Fusion Wideband Main Hub CAUTION: Install Fusion Wideband Main Hubs in indoor loca-
tions only. Installing a Fusion Wideband Main Hub in a Rack The Fusion Wideband Main Hub (2U high) mounts in a standard 19 in. (483 mm) equipment rack. Allow clearance of 76 mm (3 in.) front and rear, and 51 mm (2 in.) on both sides for air circulation. No top or bottom clearance is required. D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 7-11 CONFIDENTIAL Fusion Wideband Installation Procedures Figure 7-1 Flush Mounting Bracket Detail Consideration:
The Fusion Wideband Main Hub is shipped with #10-32 mounting screws. Another common rack thread is #12-24. Confirm that the mounting screws match the racks threads. Insert spring nuts into rack where needed or use existing threaded holes. To install the Hub in a rack:
1. 2. Place the Hub into the rack from the front. 3. Align the flange holes with the spring nuts installed in Step 1. 4. 5. Tighten the mounting screws. Insert the mounting screws in the appropriate positions in the rack. Installing an Optional Cable Manager in the Rack Using the screws provided, fasten the cable manager to the rack, immediately above or below the Main Hub. Installing a Main Hub Using the 12 Wall-Mounted Rack (PN 4712) Considerations:
7-12 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F Fusion Wideband Installation Procedures The rack-mounting brackets on the Fusion Wideband Main Hub must be moved to the recessed mounting position (shown in Figure 7-2) to allow for the required 76 mm (3 in.) rear clearance. The maximum weight the bracket can hold is 22.5 kg (50 lbs). The bracket is designed to accommodate a Fusion Wideband Main Hub (12 lbs.) or an Expansion Hub (14.5 lbs.). The wall mount bracket should be securely mounted to wall, using the four key slot mounting holes on the bracket. Using the Wall Rack-Mounting Option You can flip the rack mounting brackets, as shown in Figure 7-2, so the hub can be mounted 76 mm (3 in.) forward in the rack. Figure 7-2 Bracket Detail For Wall Mount Rack (PN 4712) To install the Hub to the wall-mounted rack:
1. Attach the wall bracket (PN 4712) to wall the using #10 Pan Head wood screws, 1-1/2 minimum length for mounting in wood studs or 3/4thick plywood. The bracket must be positioned so that the Hub will be in a horizontal position when it is installed. (Refer to Figure 7-2.) NOTE: If wall stud spacing of 16 is not available, TE recommends that 3/4 plywood be pre-installed to the wall. You can then attach the bracket to the plywood using the wood screws. 2. Remove both of the rack mounting brackets from the Hub. 3. Reattach each of the rack mounting brackets to the recessed wall mount position. D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 7-13 CONFIDENTIAL Fusion Wideband Installation Procedures 4. Install the Hub in the rack using the rack mounting screws. Installing a Fusion Wideband Main Hub Directly to the Wall To install the Hub directly to the wall:
1. Pre-install 3/4 plywood to the wall. 2. Mount both of the rack mounting brackets using #10-32 machine screws (refer to illustration Figure 7-4). 3. Attach the Hub to the wall so the mounting brackets are orientated at the top and bottom of the wall mounted hub. (Refer to Figure 7-3.) Figure 7-3 Installing Directly to the Wall Use two #10 Pan Head wood screws, 1-1/2 length, to secure each bracket to the plywood. In this orientation the enclosure fans shall face to the left. 7-14 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F Fusion Wideband Installation Procedures Figure 7-4 Using Hub Rack-Mounting Brackets for Direct Wall Installation Connecting the Fiber Cables to the Main Hub Considerations:
Before connecting the fiber cables, confirm that their optical loss does not exceed the 3 dB optical budget. If you are using fiber distribution panels, confirm that the total optical loss of fiber cable, from the Main Hub through distribution panels and patch cords to the Expansion Hub, does not exceed the optical budget. Make sure the fiber cables connectors are SC/APC (angle-polished). Using any other connector type will result in degraded system performance and may damage the equipment. (You can use an SC/APC pigtail if the fiber cables connectors are not SC/APC. Refer toFusion Splicing of Fiber and Pigtail on page 7-44. Or, you can change the fibers connector to SC/APC.) NOTE: Observe all Fiber Port Safety Precautions listed in Section 7.2.3 on page 7-4. D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 7-15 CONFIDENTIAL Fusion Wideband Installation Procedures To clean the fiber ports:
You can clean the Hubs fiber ports using canned compressed air or isopropyl alcohol and foam tipped swabs. Considerations:
If using compressed air:
The air must be free of dust, water, and oil. Hold the can level during use. If using isopropyl alcohol and foam tipped swabs:
Use only 98% pure or more alcohol Procedure using compressed air:
1. Remove the ports dust cap. 2. Spray the compressed air away from the unit for a few seconds to clean out the nozzle and then blow dust particles out of each fiber port. Procedure using isopropyl alcohol:
1. Remove the connectors dust cap. 2. Dip a 2.5mm lint-free, foam-tipped swab in isopropyl alcohol and slowly insert the tip into the connector. 3. Gently twist the swab to clean the port. Insert a dry swab into the port to dry it. 4. Additionally, you can use compressed air after the alcohol has completely evapo-
rated. To clean the fiber ends:
Be sure that the fiber cables SC/APC connectors are clean and free of dust and oils. You need lint-free cloths, isopropyl alcohol, and compressed air 1. Moisten a lint-free cloth with isopropyl alcohol. 2. Gently wipe the fiber end with the moistened cloth. 3. Using a dry lint-free cloth, gently wipe the fiber end. 4. Spray the compressed air away from the connector for a few seconds to clean out the nozzle and then use it to completely dry the connector. To test the fiber cables:
Perform cable testing and record the results. Test results are required for the final As-Built Document. To connect the fiber cables:
The fiber cable is labeled with either 1 or 2, or is color-coded. In addition to these labels, you should add a code that identifies which port on the Main Hub is being 7-16 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F Fusion Wideband Installation Procedures used and which Expansion Hub the cables are intended for. This differentiates the connectors for proper connection between the Main Hub and Expansion Hubs. For example:
First pair to Main Hub port 1: 11 (uplink), 12 (downlink);
Second pair to Main Hub port 2: 21 (uplink), 22 (downlink);
Third pair to Main Hub port 3: 31 (uplink), 32 (downlink); and so on. NOTE: The Fusion Wideband One Port Main Hub (PN: FSN-W1-MH-1P and FSN-W2-MH-1P) configuration is a cost reduced version of the Fusion Wideband Main Hub and supports only one Expansion Hub (up to 8 RAUs). If the fiber jumper is labeled with 1 or 2:
1. Connect 1s to UPLINK ports on the Main Hub. 2. Connect 2s to DOWNLINK ports on the Main Hub. 3. Record which cable number and port number you connected to UPLINK and DOWNLINK. This information is needed when connecting the other end of the fiber cable to the Expansion Hubs fiber ports. The fiber port LEDs should be off, indicating that the Expansion Hub(s) are not connected. If the fiber jumper is color-coded (for example, blue or red):
1. Connect blue to UPLINK ports on the Main Hub. 2. Connect red to DOWNLINK ports on the Main Hub. 3. Record which color and port number you connected to UPLINK and DOWNLINK. This information is needed when connecting the other end of the fiber cable to the Expansion Hubs fiber ports. The fiber port LEDs should be off, indicating that the Expansion Hub(s) are not connected. D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 7-17 CONFIDENTIAL Fusion Wideband Installation Procedures Making Power Connections Only trained and qualified personnel should be allowed to install or replace this equipment. AC Powered Main Hub To connect AC power to a Main Hub:
1. Connect the AC power cord to the Main Hub. 2. Plug the power cord into an AC power outlet. DC Powered Main Hub and Expansion Hub WARNING: The protective earth connection should be connected before proceeding with power connections. Confirm the DC power source is powered off during installation. Damage to hubs may result if power is connected improperly. The DC powered Main Hub and Expansion Hub are intended to be powered by a
+48VDC power source. The hubs are designed for 14AWG to 6AWG wire size connections. Use only UL listed AWM wire, rated 600V and 90 degrees C. If wires larger than 6AWG are needed from the DC power source, follow local codes for reducing the wire size at hub connection point. Follow local codes for routing of power cables to power source. The unit should be connected to a DC branch circuit breaker. A suitable discon-
nect device must be provided in the DC branch, either a circuit breaker or switch, that can be employed to disconnect power to the system during servicing. To connect DC power to a Main Hub or Expansion Hub:
Insert the +48VDC wire into the compression terminal at the + location. Insert the -48VDC wire into the compression terminal at the - location. 1. Strip 5/8 (16mm) of wire insulation material off each power wire. 2. 3. 4. Bare wire ends should be fully inserted into terminal. 5. Use a flat blade screw driver to fasten the wire inside the compression terminal. 6. For the Protective Ground Wire (Figure 7-5), use 14AWG minimum wire with a
#8-32 stud size ring lug. Figure 7-5 Protective Ground Wire Connection 7-18 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F Fusion Wideband Installation Procedures WARNING: The warning color code of the power cables depends on the color coding of the DC power source installed at your site. Color code standards for DC wiring do not exist. To ensure that the correct polarity is connected to the hubs, confirm the connection of the power cables to the + (positive) and - (negative) leads (Figure 7-6) at the power source. Figure 7-6 DC Terminals 7. Use the illustrations in Figure 7-7 and Figure 7-9 to connect the power. Figure 7-7 Power Screw Locations D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 7-19 CONFIDENTIAL Fusion Wideband Installation Procedures 8. Install the clear protective cover with the pan head screws as shown in Figure 7-8. Figure 7-8 Pan Head Screw Location Figure 7-9 Recommended Hub Wire Routing 7-20 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F Fusion Wideband Installation Procedures Optional Connection to DC Power Source This is an optional connection method using ring tongue lugs instead of the com-
pression lugs that are premounted on the terminal block. Use wire selection instructions previously explained. WARNING: Before connecting power wires, be sure the power source is shut off, and the power switch of the hubs are in the OFF position. Connect the ground wires before connecting the power wires. 1. Remove the existing compression lugs by first removing the mounting screws as shown in Figure 7-10. Figure 7-10 Compression Lug and Mounting Screw Locations 2. Connect the safety ground wire as previously explained and shown in Figure 7-11. Use 14AWG minimum wire with a #8-32 stud size ring lug as shown in Figure 7-12. D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 7-21 CONFIDENTIAL Fusion Wideband Installation Procedures Figure 7-11 Grounding Wire Connection Figure 7-12 Power Wires and Studs 3. Install the finish wires using the proper polarity and secure them with #8-32 pan head screws previously removed as illustrated in Figure 7-13. 7-22 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F Fusion Wideband Installation Procedures Figure 7-13 Wire Polarity Illustration 4. Attach the clear protective cover and secure it with the two #8-32 pan head screws supplied with the Hub as shown in Figure 7-14. Figure 7-14 DC Illustration Detail Powering On the Main Hub 1. Connect the AC or DC power as explained in Making Power Connections on page 7-18. 2. Turn on the power to the Main Hub and check that all the LED lamps are func-
tioning properly. D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 7-23 CONFIDENTIAL Fusion Wideband Installation Procedures Upon power-up, the LEDs blinks for five seconds as a visual check that they are functioning. After the five-second test:
LED states during power on will vary, depending on whether Expansion Hubs are connected. Refer to Table 7-5 for possible combinations. Table 7-5 Troubleshooting Main Hub LEDs During Installation During Installation Power On 1. Main Hub power is On with no Expansion Hubs con-
nected. 2. Main Hub power is On with Expansion Hubs con-
nected and powered on. LED POWER State Off POWER Red Action Check AC power; check that the Main Hub power-on switch is on; replace the Main Hub Replace the Main Hub Replace the Main Hub. Impact The Main Hub is not powering on. The power supply is out-of-specification. The micro controller is not resetting properly;
flash memory cor-
rupted. PORT PORT PORT LEDs are on but they didnt blink through all states Red Off Off The port is unusable; replace the Main Hub when possible. Fiber sensor fault, do not use the port. If the port LEDs do not illuminate, check the fiber uplink for excessive optical loss. If Expansion Hubs DL STATUS LED is red:
Verify that the fiber is connected to the correct port (that is, uplink/downlink) Swap the uplink and downlink cables. Connect the fiber pair to another port. If the sec-
ond ports LEDs do not illuminate Green/Red, replace the Main Hub. If the second port works, flag the first port as unusable; replace the Main Hub when possible. No uplink optical power, the Expansion Hub is not recognized as being present. No communication with the Expansion Hub. PORT Red (60 ppm) If the Expansion Hub DL STATUS LED is red, check the downlink fiber cable for excessive opti-
cal loss. No communication with the Expansion Hub. PORT Red Connect the fiber pair to another port. If the sec-
ond ports LEDs do not illuminate Green/Red, replace the Main Hub. If the second port works, flag the first port as unusable; replace the Main Hub when possible. The Expansion Hub or connected RAU reports a fault Use AdminManager to determine the problem. The Expansion Hub or one or more RAUs are off-line. 7-24 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F Fusion Wideband Installation Procedures 7.4.2 Installing Expansion Hubs The Expansion Hub (2U high) can be installed in a standard 19 in. (483 mm) equip-
ment rack or in a wall-mountable equipment rack that is available from TE. Allow a clearance of 76 mm (3 in.) front and rear and 51 mm (2 in.) sides for air circulation. No top and bottom clearance is required. CAUTION: Install Expansion Hubs in indoor locations only. Installing an Expansion Hub in a Rack Consideration:
The Expansion Hub is shipped with #10-32 mounting screws. Another common rack thread is #12-24. Confirm that the mounting screws match the racks threads. Figure 7-15 Flush Mounting Bracket Detail Insert spring nuts into the rack where needed or use existing threaded holes. To install the hub in a rack:
1. 2. Place the Expansion Hub into the rack from the front. 3. Align the flange holes with the spring nuts installed in Step 1. 4. 5. Tighten the mounting screws. Insert the mounting screws in the appropriate positions in the rack. D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 7-25 CONFIDENTIAL Fusion Wideband Installation Procedures Installing an Expansion Hub Using the 12 Wall-Mounted Rack Considerations:
The rack (PN4712) is 305 mm (12 in.) deep. The Expansion Hub is 381 mm (15 in.) deep. You must move the rack mounting brackets on the Expansion Hub, as shown in Figure 7-16) to the center mounting position to allow for the 76 mm (3 in.) rear clearance that is required. The maximum weight the rack can hold is 22.5 kg (50 lbs). Figure 7-16 Bracket Detail For Wall Mount Rack (PN 4712) To install the hub in a wall-mounted rack:
1. Attach the equipment rack to the wall using the screws that are provided. The rack must be positioned so that the Expansion Hub will be in a horizontal position when it is installed. NOTE: If wall stud spacing of 16 is not available, TE recommends that 3/4 plywood be pre-installed to the wall. You can then attach the bracket to the plywood using the wood screws. 2. Remove both of the rack mounting brackets from the Hub. 3. Reattach each of the rack mounting brackets to the recessed wall mount position
(Figure 7-16). Install the Hub in the rack using the rack mounting screws. 4. 5. Tighten the mounting screws. 7-26 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F Fusion Wideband Installation Procedures Installing a Fusion Wideband Expansion Hub Directly to the Wall To install the Hub directly to the wall:
1. Pre-install 3/4 plywood to the wall. 2. Mount both of the rack mounting brackets using #10-32 machine screws (refer to illustration Figure 7-17). 3. Attach the Hub to the wall so the mounting brackets are orientated at the top and bottom of the wall mounted hub. (Refer to Figure 7-18.) Figure 7-17 Using Hub Rack-Mounting Brackets for Direct Wall Installation D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 7-27 CONFIDENTIAL Fusion Wideband Installation Procedures Figure 7-18 Installing Directly to the Wall NOTE: Leave the dust caps on the fiber ports until you are ready to connect the fiber optic cables. Installing an Optional Cable Manager in the Rack Using the screws provided, fasten the cable manager to the rack, immediately above or below the Expansion Hub. Powering On the Expansion Hub 1. Connect the AC or DC power as explained in Making Power Connections on page 7-18. 7-28 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F Fusion Wideband Installation Procedures 2. Turn on the power to the Expansion Hub and check that all the LED lamps are functioning properly. Upon power-up, the LEDs blinks for five seconds as a visual check that they are functioning. After the five-second test:
The POWER and UL STATUS LEDs should be green. If the uplink fiber is not connected, the UL STATUS LED turns red indicating that there is no communication with the Main Hub. The E-HUB STATUS and DL STATUS LEDs should be red. All port LEDs should be off because no RAUs are connected yet. Connecting the Fiber Cables to the Expansion Hub Considerations:
Before connecting the fiber cables, confirm that their optical loss does not exceed 3 dB optical budget. RL is less than -60dB. If fiber distribution panels are used, confirm that the total optical loss of fiber cable, from the Main Hub through distribution panels and patch cords to the Expansion Hub, does not exceed the optical budget. Make sure the fiber cables connectors are SC/APC (angle-polished).Using any other connector type will result in degraded system performance and may damage the equipment. (You can use an SC/APC pigtail if the fiber cables connectors are not SC/APC, refer to Fusion Splicing of Fiber and Pigtail on page 7-44, or replace the connectors.) NOTE: Observe all Fiber Port Safety Precautions listed in Section 7.2.3 on page 7-4. To connect the fiber cables:
The fiber cable is labeled with either 1 or 2, or is color-coded. For proper connection between the Main Hub ports and the Expansion Hub ports, refer to the numbering or color-coded connections you recorded when installing the Main Hub(s). If the fiber jumper is labeled with 1 or 2:
1. Connect 2 to DOWNLINK on Expansion Hub. The DL STATUS LED should turn green as soon as you connect the fiber. If it does not, there is a downlink problem. Make sure you are connecting the correct cable to the port. 2. Connect 1 to UPLINK on Expansion Hub. The UL STATUS LED turns green on the first Main Hub communication. It may take up to 20 seconds to establish communication. The Expansion Hubs E-HUB STATUS LED turns green when the Main Hub sends it the frequency band command. D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 7-29 CONFIDENTIAL Fusion Wideband Installation Procedures If the UL STATUS and E-HUB STATUS LEDs do not turn green/green, check the Main Hub LEDs. Refer to page 7-24, item 2 in Table 7-5. If the fiber jumper is color-coded (for example, blue or red):
1. Connect red to DOWNLINK on Expansion Hub. The DL STATUS LED should turn green as soon as you connect the fiber. If it does not, there is a downlink problem. Make sure you are connecting the correct cable to the port. 2. Connect blue to UPLINK on Expansion Hub. The UL STATUS LED turns green on the first Main Hub communication. It may take up to 20 seconds to establish communication. The Expansion Hubs E-HUB STATUS LED turns green when the Main Hub sends it the frequency band command. If the UL STATUS and E-HUB STATUS LEDs do not turn green/green, check the Main Hub LEDs. See page 7-24, item 2 in Table 7-5. Connecting the 75 Ohm CATV Cables Considerations:
Verify that the cable has been tested and the test results are recorded. This informa-
tion is required for the As-Built Document. Verify that only captive centerpin F connectors are used on the solid copper center conductor CATV cable from CommScope (or equivalent). Verify that the CATV cable is labeled with:
Fusion Wideband Expansion Hub port number being used RAU identifier Carrier (for multiple operator systems) To connect the CATV cables:
1. Connect the CATV cables to the F ports according to the labels on the cables. The STATUS LEDs should be off because the RAUs are not connected at the other end of the CATV cable. 2. Record which cable you are connecting to which port (that is, from the label on the cable). This information is required for the As-Built Document. 3. Tie-off the cables or use the optional cable manager to avoid damaging the con-
nectors because of cable strain. 7-30 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F Fusion Wideband Installation Procedures Troubleshooting Expansion Hub LEDs During Installation All Expansion Hub PORT LEDs with RAUs connected should indicate Green/Red. This indicates that the RAU is powered on and communication has been estab-
lished. The Expansion Hub UL STATUS LED should be Green. Table 7-6 Troubleshooting Expansion Hub LEDs During Installation During Installation 1. Expansion Hub power is On and no RAUs are connected LED POWER State Off PORT PORT UL STATUS LEDs are on but didnt blink through all states. Flashing Red
(6 PPM) Red, after power-up blink Action Check AC power; make sure the Expansion Hub power-on switch is on; replace the Expansion Hub. Replace the Expansion Hub. Port unusable; replace the Expan-
sion Hub when possible. Replace the Expansion Hub. UL STATUS Red DL STATUS Red 2. Expansion Hub power is On and RAUs are connected PORT PORT Off Flashing Red
(60 PPM) PORT Red Check the Main Hub LEDs Refer to page 7-24, item 2 in Table 7-5. Use AdminBrowser to determine the problem. Check the downlink fiber for opti-
cal power; verify that the cables are connected to correct ports
(that is, uplink/downlink) Check the Main Hub LEDs. Refer to page 7-24, item 2 in Table 7-5. Check the CATV cable. Test the CATV cable. If the cable tests OK, try another port. If the second ports LEDs are Red/Off, replace the RAU. If the second RAU doesnt work; replace the Expansion Hub. Use AdminBrowser to determine the problem. Impact The Expansion Hub is not powering on. The Microcontroller is not resetting properly; flash memory corrupted. Current sensor fault; do not use the port. The Expansion Hub laser is not operational; no uplink between the Expansion Hub and Main Hub. No communication with Main Hub. No downlink between the Expansion Hub and Main Hub. Power is not getting to the RAU. Power levels to RAU are not correct; communications are not established. If the second port works, flag the first port as unusable;
replace EH when possible. RAU is off-line. D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 7-31 CONFIDENTIAL Fusion Wideband Installation Procedures 7.4.3 Installing RAUs CAUTION: Install RAUs in indoor locations only. Do not con-
nect an antenna that is installed in an outdoor location to an RAU. For outdoor installations, a protective enclosure is required. Installing RAUs Mount all RAUs in the locations marked on the floor plans. Considerations:
You can place the unit, without its fastening hardware, on a flat surface, such as a shelf, desk, cabinet, or any other horizontal surface that allows stable placement with the mounting base facing down to the mounting surface. For mounting to other locations (that is, walls, ceilings, poles) the RAU must be securely mounted using the 4 slotted mounting holes provided with #6 diameter fasteners. This method of mounting must securely hold a minimum of 7 lbs. load. Attach the RAU securely to a stationary object (that is, a wall, pole, or ceiling tile). For proper ventilation:
Keep at least 76 mm (3 in.) clearance around the RAU to ensure proper venting. Do not stack RAUs on top of each other. Always mount the RAU with the solid face (containing the mounting holes) against the mounting surface. For the 800/850/1900 MHz RAU (P/N: FSN-W2-808519-1), make sure the 800 MHz iDEN antenna and the 850/1900 MHz antenna are separated by enough space to reduce signal interference between the 800 and 850 MHz bands. Refer to 800/850 MHz Isolation Requirements on page 7-33 for the recommended dis-
tance between antennas. Installing Passive Antennas Refer to the manufacturers installation instructions to install passive antennas. Location Passive antennas are usually installed below the ceiling. If they are installed above the ceiling, you must consider the additional loss due to the ceiling material when estimating the antenna coverage area. 7-32 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F Fusion Wideband Installation Procedures 800/850 MHz Isolation Requirements When deploying any RF system, give special attention to preventing receiver block-
ing or desensitization by out-of-band transmitters. Typically, sharp filters in the receiver front-end will reduce the interfering transmitters to tolerable levels. In select cases, the interferers may occupy a frequency band that is directly adjacent to the receiving band and cannot be adequately rejected by filtering. The only recourse in these situations is to provide sufficient isolation by physically separating the interfer-
ing transmitters and receivers. iDEN occupies spectrum at both 800 MHz and 900 MHz (Tx:851869/Rx:806824 and Tx:935941 /Rx:896902), while the Cellular A and B carriers share a single 850 MHz block (Tx:869894/Rx:824849). The combination of these frequency bands, 800/900 MHz iDEN and 850 MHz Cellular, result in uplink (BTS receive) bands that are adjacent to downlink (BTS transmit) bands. Figure 7-19 depicts these nearly con-
tiguous bands, with arrows indicating the interfering downlink and receiving uplink bands. Figure 7-19 800/850 MHz Spectrum 850 850 896-902 Installation of an in-building distributed antenna system (DAS) to provide coverage for both 800/900 MHz iDEN and 850 MHz Cellular must account for these down-
link-to-uplink interference issues and provide adequate isolation. TE offers the following guidelines toward achieving the proper amount of isolation when deploying TE Fusion DAS products. Figure 7-20 Fusion Wideband 800/850/1900 MHz RAU Antenna Placement Guideline
>d Band 1 800 MHz Band 2/3 850/1900 MHz D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 7-33 CONFIDENTIAL Fusion Wideband Installation Procedures 800 MHz iDEN Downlink and 850 MHz Cellular Uplink A 2 MHz frequency gap (851 849 MHz) separates the 800 iDEN downlink and 850 Cellular uplink frequency bands. Because of this narrow spacing, 800 iDEN down-
link intermodulation products may fall within the 850 Cellular uplink band. In addi-
tion, 800 iDEN downlink signals near the lower edge of the band at 851 MHz may cause the 850 Cellular uplink automatic level control (ALC) circuitry in the RAU to engage and thereby reduce uplink gain. To prevent either of these conditions, use the following guidelines:
Lower frequency 800 iDEN signals < 30dBm for Fusion In-band 800 iDEN intermodulation products < -90dBm Given a typical DAS configuration (4 iDEN carriers, omni-directional antennas, line of sight), these guidelines translate to an antenna spacing (d) of 6 9 meters. 850 MHz Cellular Downlink and 900 MHz iDEN Uplink A 2 MHz frequency gap (896 894 MHz) separates the 850 Cellular downlink and 900 iDEN uplink frequency bands. Because of this narrow spacing, 850 Cellular downlink intermodulation products may fall within the 900 iDEN uplink band. In addition, 850 Cellular downlink signals near the upper edge of the band at 894 MHz may cause the 900 iDEN uplink ALC to engage and thereby reduce uplink gain. To prevent either of these conditions, use the following guidelines:
Upper frequency 850 Cellular signals < 30dBm for Fusion In-band 850 Cellular intermodulation products < -90dBm Given a typical DAS configuration (6 CDMA carriers for Fusion, omni-directional antennas, line of sight), these guidelines translate to an antenna spacing (d) of 8-14 meters. Connecting the Antenna to the RAU Connect a passive multi-band antenna to the N connector on the RAU using coaxial cable with the least amount of loss possible. CAUTION: Firmly hand-tighten the N connector DO NOT over-tighten the connector. Connecting the CATV Cable Considerations:
Verify that the cable has been tested and the test results are recorded. This informa-
tion is required for the As-Built Document. 7-34 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F Fusion Wideband Installation Procedures Verify that only captive centerpin 75 Ohm Type-F connectors are used on the solid copper center conductor CATV 75 Ohm cable. Verify that the CATV cable is labeled with:
Fusion Wideband Main Hub port number being used RAU identifier Carrier (for multiple operator systems) To connect the CATV cable:
1. Connect the CATV cables to the F female port on the RAU according to the label on the cable. Power is supplied by the Fusion Wideband Main Hub over the CATV cable con-
ductors. Upon power up, the LEDs will blink for two seconds as a visual check that they are functioning. After the two-second test:
The LINK LED should be green indicating it is receiving power and communi-
cations from the Fusion Wideband Main Hub. The ALARM LED should be red until the Fusion Wideband Main Hub issues the band command, within about 20 seconds, then it should be green. 2. Record which cable you are connecting to the RAU (from the label on the cable). This information is required for the As-Built Document. 3. Tie-off cables or use the optional cable manager to avoid damaging the connectors because of cable strain. 7.4.3.1 Troubleshooting Using RAU LEDs During Installation The LINK LED should be green and remain green for longer than 90 seconds. The ALARM LEDs are red when the system band has not been programmed. D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 7-35 CONFIDENTIAL Fusion Wideband Installation Procedures Table 7-7 Troubleshooting RAU LEDs During Installation During Installation The RAU is connected to the Fusion Wide-
band Expansion Hub, which is powered on LED LINK ALARM LINK ALARM State Off Off Green Red LINK ALARM Red from green, after cables are connected for 60 seconds Red Action Check CATV cable. Check CATV cable Check Hub LEDs Refer to page 7-31, item 2 in Table 7-6. Use AdminBrowser to determine the problem. Check CATV cable. Check the Hub LEDs. Use AdminBrowser to determine the problem. Impact No power to the RAU. The RAU is off-line. No communications between the RAU and the Hub. 7.4.4 Configuring the Fusion Wideband System Before the system can operate properly, use AdminBrowser to program the Fusion Wideband Main Hub with the frequency bands that are to be distributed. The Hub must be programmed with the same frequencies as the RAU used. NOTE: The frequency bands should automatically be set on power up and this step should not be required. Considerations:
The AdminBrowser software, described in the AdminBrowser User Manual
(PN D-620607-0-20), must be running on a PC/laptop. Crossover Ethernet cable with male connectors required. Connecting a PC to the Main Hub to Run AdminBrowser 1. Connect the AC power cord to the Hub. Make sure the Hub is grounded through the ground lug on the AC power and the frame ground lug as required. The warranty does not cover damage caused when an ungrounded Hub is powered on. 2. Plug the power cord into an AC power outlet. 3. Verify that all cables are properly connected on the Hub. 4. Turn on the power to the Hub. 7-36 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F Fusion Wideband Installation Procedures All LEDs blink through the power up sequence. At each port where an RAU is detected (drawing current), the port LEDs lights green. The Fusion Wideband STATUS LED is orange during system boot and should turn green after about 90 seconds if it finds no faults. This state indicates the bands are not programmed and provides feedback on the status of the RAU connections. The LEDs blink for 20 seconds as a visual check that they are functioning. 5. Connect the cross-over Ethernet cable to the PC/laptop and then to the RJ-45 100-BASE-T port on the Hubs front panel. Programming the Main Hub Using AdminBrowser Connect the provided TCP/IP crossover cable to the laptop and then to the Admin/LAN RJ-45 port on the Fusion Wideband Main Hubs front panel. Turn on the laptop and start the Fusion Wideband Main Hub. Windows 2000 1. Right-click My Network Places and select Properties. 2. Highlight Internet Protocol (TCP/IP) and click Properties. A window similar to the Figure 7-21 appears. Figure 7-21 Internet Protocol (TCP/IP) Properties Window D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 7-37 CONFIDENTIAL Fusion Wideband Installation Procedures 3. Make note of the current IP address, Subnet mask, and Default gateway, if they are configured. You will need to re-enter them after you have configured the Fusion Wideband Main Hub. 4. Select Use the following IP address. 5. Change the IP address to 192.168.0.101 6. Change the Subnet mask to 255.255.255.0 7. Change the Default gateway to 192.168.0.1 8. Click OK twice. You may be asked if you want to reboot your computer. If so, click Yes. Windows XP 1. Click Start>Settings>Network Connections>Local Area Connection. The win-
dow shown in Figure 7-22 appears. Figure 7-22 Local Area Connection Properties Window 2. In the This connection uses the following items, scroll down to and select Internet Protocol (TCP/IP) and click Properties. 3. Perform steps 3 through 8 in the preceding section. 7-38 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F Fusion Wideband Installation Procedures Using AdminBrowser To access Fusion Wideband using AdminBrowser, use the following steps:
1. Make sure the Main Hub Status LED is green. 2. Launch your web browser, type Https://192.168.0.100 in the URL line, and click Go. 3. When AdminBrowser appears, log in using the default user ID: operator, and the default password: password. 4. Click System Configuration and then click Set Date/Time. A window similar to Figure 7-23 appears. Figure 7-23 Set Time and Date Window 5. Enter the desired time and date in the format indicated in the window and click Set Date/Time. A window appears requiring you to reboot the system for the new date and time to take effect. 6. Select the Fusion Wideband Main Hub and click Install/Configure System. A window similar to the Figure 7-24 appears. D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 7-39 CONFIDENTIAL Fusion Wideband Installation Procedures Figure 7-24 AdminBrowser Configuration Window 7. If desired, type in a label. The label is the system name displayed next to the icons and used in messages.It can be up to 32 characters long depending upon the firmware version. The default system label is Fusion and will be used if you enter nothing. 8. Use the next section to schedule a System Test. This section allows you to do the following:
Click the check box to enable this feature. Click the check box to cause system test on power up. NOTE: System test will always be run on power up when this box is checked, even if a scheduled system is not enabled. Enter values to schedule the date and time of the next system test. Enter values to specify the recurrence of the test by day or by week. Schedule System Test allows periodic, automatic execution of the system end-to-end test. Just like Perform System Test, a Schedule System Test suspends normal service for the duration of the test; calls are dropped, and no new calls can be established during the test. Test duration depends on the configuration (number of RAUs) and requires one or two minutes to complete. After completion of the system test, the scheduled system test time is updated to the next test time. 9. Use the scroll bar on the left side of the page to scroll down to view the rest of the page as shown in Figure 7-25 (Non-WiMAX Installations) and Figure 7-26
(WiMAX Installations only). 7-40 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F Fusion Wideband Installation Procedures Figure 7-25 AdminBrowser Configuration Window for Non WiMAX 10. In the Band area, do the following:
You should not have to select the bands. The system self configures the band by validating that all the RAUs connected are the same type. When both bands are not configured, use the Shutdown check box. The system ignores any alarms generated from the shutdown bands. Use the pull-down to specify the Uplink and Downlink gain for each band. You can set system gain within the specified range in 1 dB increments. Use the pull-down to set the Uplink Automatic Level Control to either Single or Multiple for each band in the system. (The default is Multiple. 11. FOR WiMAX INSTALLATIONS ONLY: Use the scroll bar on the left side of the page to scroll down to view the next part of the windows shown in Figure 7-26. Figure 7-26 AdminBrowser Configuration Window WiMAX ONLY In the Band area, do the following:
Select the Protocol mode: This configures the system to support WiMAX radios that are one of the following:
MIMO (multiple in-multiple out) SISO (single in-single out). The default is MIMO. D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 7-41 CONFIDENTIAL Fusion Wideband Installation Procedures Select the Center Frequency and Bandwidth using the arrows next to the fields. The center frequency is the frequency of WiMAX radios being used for Band 1 and Band 2. NOTE: In MIMO mode, the frequencies are the same. The system can be configured to support 2-SISO radios, one per band, across any 30 MHz within the WiMAX band. Use the pull-down to select the Switching Mode. This indicates whether or not the downlink-to-uplink frame duration is known. The two options are as fol-
lows:
Static-Selected: This mode specifies the number of symbols. Use the pull-down to select the symbol in the downlink and uplink portions of the frame. (The default is 29,18.) In this mode, the system always switches from the downlink to the uplink path after the downlink portion of the frame has elapsed. Static-Auto: This mode causes the system to attempt to determine the cor-
rect switching time, then enforce it. (The default is Static-Auto) Select the Band Synchronization Mode with the pull-down. This parameter can be configured to operate as one of the following:
Synchronized: This mode is for cases like MIMO, where the timing for both bands is the same. In this mode, the system always switches between uplink and downlink simultaneously for both bands. Unsynchronized: In this mode, the two WiMAX bands switch indepen-
dently from each other. (The default is Unsynchronized) Reference: Select which WiMAX radio band will be used for frame reference. When any band is not configured, use the Shutdown check box. The system ignores any alarms generated from the shutdown bands. Use the pull-down to specify the Uplink and Downlink gain for each band. You can set system gain within the specified range in 1 dB increments. Use the pull-down to set the Uplink Automatic Level Control to either Single or Multiple for each band in the system. (The default is Multiple.) 7-42 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F Fusion Wideband Installation Procedures 12. Use the scroll bar on the left side of the window to scroll down to view the rest of the window as shown below. 13. In the Input/Output Alarms area, do the following for each Alarm Sense:
Enable each Alarm Sense by using the check box. Use the pull-down to set the Normal State to Closed or Opened. (The default is Closed. Assign a label to each alarm sense. 14. When you have completed inputting the desired information, click Install System to configure the system. During configuration all disconnect statuses are cleared for attached RAUs; the frequency band, gain, and system label are set; logs are cleared; the system test is performed; and finally the system tree is refreshed. The icons should be:
Indicating that the band is correctly set on the Main Hub. Indicating that the band is correctly set on the Expansion Hub. Indicating that communications are OK. If there are problems, the icons will be different and a message is displayed in the Messages pane. 15. Connect the Main Hub to the RF source (for example, BTS or BDA). Do not exceed the maximum input RF power (1 Watt) to the Fusion Wide-
band Main Hub. Exceeding the limit could cause permanent damage to the Hub. CAUTION:Only carriers and their approved installers or TE-authorized installers are allowed to connect to the RF source. Serious damage to the equipment can occur if it is over-driven. The Fusion Wideband system should now be operational. Using a mobile phone, walk your site and test the signal strength. 16. Make sure to change the TCP/IP setting in your laptop back to their original val-
ues. D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 7-43 CONFIDENTIAL Splicing Fiber Optic Cable NOTE: TE equipment is designed to operate in the licensed frequency bands of mobile operators. In the USA, the EU, and most countries this equipment may only be used by the licensee, his authorized agents or those with written authorization to do so. Similarly, unauthorized use is illegal, and subjects the owner to the corresponding legal sanctions of the national jurisdiction involved. Ownership of TE equipment carries no automatic right of use. 7.5 Splicing Fiber Optic Cable The fiber cable must have SC/APC connectors for the entire run. If it does not, you can splice a pigtail, which has SC/APC connectors, to the fiber cable. TE offers two pigtails: one for single-mode fiber (PN 4013SCAPC-3) and one for multi-mode fiber (PN 4012SCAPC-3). TE recommends fusion splices because they have the lowest splice loss and return loss. Mechanical splices have higher losses and higher back reflection than fusion splices and are not recommended. Using a fusion splicer involves fusing together two butted and cleaved ends of fiber. The fusion splicer aligns the fibers and maintains alignment during the fusion pro-
cess. fusion splices have very low loss (typically less than 0.05 dB) and very low back reflection (return loss). Fusion splices should be organized in a splice tray designed to store and protect the splices. Fusion Splicing of Fiber and Pigtail Before you begin, make sure the fusion splicer is set to the proper mode (that is, single- or multi-mode). To fusion splice the fiber optic cable to the SC/APC pigtail: Option A 1. Secure both the fiber cable and the SC/APC pigtail in a splice tray that is installed immediately adjacent to the Hub. 2. Prepare the fiber end by cutting back the polyethylene jacket, the kevlar or fiber-
glass strength members, the extruded coating, and the buffer coating in order to expose the bare fiber cladding plus core. Ensure that sufficient slack is maintained in order to be able to reach the fusion splicer. 3. Clean the unclad fiber core using isopropyl alcohol and lint-free wipes. 4. Cleave the unclad fiber to the length prescribed by the fusion splicers specifica-
tion sheets. 7-44 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F Splicing Fiber Optic Cable 5. Repeat steps 2 through 4 for the SC/APC pigtail. 6. Pass the splice sleeve onto the fiber strand. 7. Position both fiber ends in the fusion splicer and complete splice in accordance with the fusion splicers operation instructions. 8. Ensure that the estimated loss for the splice as measured by the fusion splicer is 0.10 dB or better. 9. Slide the fusion splicing sleeve over the point of the fusion splice. 10. Place the sleeve and fused fiber into the fusion splicers heater. 11. Allow time for the splice sleeve to cure. 12. Return fiber splice to the splice tray, store the sleeve in a splice holder within the tray, and store excess cable length in accordance with the tray manufactures directions. After successfully testing the fiber, plug the SC/APC pigtail into the proper opti-
cal port on the Hub. To fusion splice the fiber optic cable to the SC/APC pigtail: Option B 1. Secure both the fiber cable and the SC/APC pigtail in a splice tray portion of a fiber distribution panel. 2. Prepare the fiber end by cutting back the polyethylene jacket, the kevlar or fiber-
glass strength members, the extruded coating, and the buffer coating in order to expose the bare fiber cladding plus core. Ensure that sufficient slack is maintained in order to be able to reach the fusion splicer. 3. Clean the unclad fiber core using isopropyl alcohol and lint-free wipes. 4. Cleave the unclad fiber to the length prescribed by the fusion splicers specifica-
tion sheets. 5. Repeat steps 2 through 4 for the SC/APC pigtail. 6. Pass the splice sleeve onto the fiber strand. 7. Position both fiber ends in the fusion splicer and complete splice in accordance with the fusion splicers operation instructions. 8. Ensure that the estimated loss for the splice as measured by the fusion splicer is 0.10 dB or better. 9. Slide the fusion splicing sleeve over the point of the fusion splice. 10. Place the sleeve and fused fiber into the fusion splicers heater. 11. Allow time for the splice sleeve to cure. 12. Return fiber splice to the splice tray, store the sleeve in a splice holder within the tray, and store excess cable length in accordance with the tray manufactures directions. 13. After successfully testing the fiber cable, plug the SC/APC pigtail into the back side of the SC/APC bulkhead in the Fiber Distribution Panel. Install a SC/APC patch cord between the front side of the SC/APC bulkhead and the proper optical port on the Hub. D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 7-45 CONFIDENTIAL Interfacing the Fusion Wideband Main Hub to an RF Source NOTE: Refer to Section 9 for troubleshooting. 7.6 Interfacing the Fusion Wideband Main Hub to an RF Source WARNING: Only TE personnel or TE-authorized installation person-
nel should connect the Fusion Wideband Main Hub to its Band associ-
ated base station or repeater. Exceeding the maximum input power could cause failure of the Fusion Wideband Main Hub (refer to Section 5.2 on page 5-4 for maximum power specifications). If the maximum composite power is too high, attenuation is required. 7.6.1 Connecting a Single Fusion Wideband Main Hub to an RF Source The Fusion Wideband system supports up to three RF sources, one for Band 1, one for Band 2, and one for Band 3. This section explains how each Band can be con-
nected to its associated RF source. Connecting a Fusion Wideband Main Hub to an In-Building BTS WARNING: Only TE personnel or TE-authorized installation person-
nel should connect the Fusion Wideband Main Hub to a base station or repeater. Exceeding the maximum input power could cause failure of the Fusion Wideband Main Hub (refer to Section 5.2 on page 5-4 for maximum power specifications). If the maximum composite power is too high, attenuation is required. CAUTION:The UPLINK and DOWNLINK ports cannot handle a DC power feed from the base station. If DC power is present, a DC block must be used or the hub may be damaged. Connecting a Simplex Base Station to a Fusion Wideband Main Hub RF Band:
1. Connect an N-male to N-male coaxial cable to the transmit simplex connector on the base station. 7-46 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F Interfacing the Fusion Wideband Main Hub to an RF Source 2. Connect the other end of the N-male to N-male coaxial cable to the DOWNLINK connector on the Hub for the corresponding Band 1 or Band 2. 3. Connect an N-male to N-male coaxial cable to the receive simplex connector on the base station. 4. Connect the other end of the N-male to N-male coaxial cable to the UPLINK con-
nector on the Hub for the corresponding Band 1 or Band 2. Figure 7-27 Simplex Base Station to a Fusion Wideband Main Hub Band 1 Band 2 Band 3 UL1 UL2 UL3 Alarms DL1 DL2 DL3 AC Power N-male to N-male Coaxial Cable Insert attenuator, if needed Note: This applies to either Band 1, Band 2, and Band 3. Simplex Base Station Band 3 T1/E1 to Mobile Switching Center Connecting a Duplex Base Station to a Fusion Wideband Main Hub:
When connecting to a duplex base station, use a circulator or duplexer between it and the Fusion Wideband Main Hub. You can insert attenuators between the circulator or duplexer and Hub as needed. 1. Connect an N-male to N-male coaxial cable to the duplex connector on the base station. 2. Connect the other N-male connector or duplexer to a circulator. 3. Connect an N-male to N-male coaxial cable to the DOWNLINK connector on the Hub for Band 1, Band 2, and Band 3. 4. Connect the other end of the N-male coaxial cable to the transmit connector on the circulator. 5. Connect an N-male to N-male coaxial cable to the UPLINK connector on the Hub for Band 1, and Band 2, and Band 3. 6. Connect the other end of the N-male coaxial cable to the receive connector on the circulator. D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 7-47 CONFIDENTIAL Interfacing the Fusion Wideband Main Hub to an RF Source Figure 7-28 Duplex Base Station to a Fusion Wideband Main Hub Band 1 Band 2 Band 3 UL1 UL2 UL3 Alarms DL1 DL2 DL3 AC Power Insert attenuator, if needed Note: This applies to either Band 1, Band 2, Band 3. N-male to N-male Coaxial Cable Circulator N-male to N-male Coaxial Cable Duplex Base Station T1/E1 to Mobile Switching Center 7-48 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F Interfacing the Fusion Wideband Main Hub to an RF Source Connecting a Fusion Wideband Main Hub RF Band to Multiple BTSs WARNING: Only TE personnel or TE-authorized installation person-
nel should connect the Fusion Wideband Main Hub to a base station or repeater. Exceeding the maximum input power could cause failure of the Fusion Wideband Main Hub (refer to Section 5.2 on page 5-4 for maximum power specifications). If the maximum composite power is too high, attenuation is required. You can use power combiner/splitters to connect a Fusion Wideband Main Hub RF Band to multiple base stations, as shown in Figure 7-29. Figure 7-29 Connecting a Fusion Wideband Main Hub to Multiple Base Stations Band 1 Band 2 Band 3 UL1 UL2 UL3 Alarms DL1 DL2 DL3 AC Power N-male to N-male Coaxial Jumper Cables between Combiner/Splitter and Fusion Main Hubs Uplink Port for each on Band 1, Band 2, or Band 3 N-male to N-male Coaxial Jumper Cables between Combiner/Splitter and Fusion Main Hubs Downlink Port for either Band 1, Band 2, or Band 3 2 x 1 Power Combiner/Splitter 2 x 1 Power Combiner/Splitter Insert attenuators, if needed N-male to N-male Coaxial Jumper Cable to Repeater or Base Station UL DL BTS 1 UL DL BTS 2 D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 7-49 CONFIDENTIAL Interfacing the Fusion Wideband Main Hub to an RF Source Connecting a Fusion Wideband Main Hub to a Roof-top Antenna TE recommends that you use a lightning arrestor or surge protector in a roof-top antenna configuration. Insert the lightning arrestor or surge protector between the roof-top antenna and the repeater connected to the Fusion Wideband Main Hub RF Band. 1. Connect an N-male to N-male coaxial cable to the roof-top antenna. 2. Connect the other end of the N-male to N-male coaxial cable to the grounded surge suppressor. 3. Connect an N-male to N-male coaxial cable to the grounded surge suppressor. 4. Connect the other end of the N-male to N-male coaxial cable to the repeater. 5. Connect an N-male to N-male coaxial cable to the repeater. 6. Connect the other end of the N-male to N-male coaxial cable to the circulator 1 connector. 7. Connect an N-male to N-male coaxial cable to the circulator 2 connector. 8. Connect the other end of the N-male to N-male coaxial cable to the DOWNLINK connector on the Hub for either Band 1 or Band 2. Attenuation may be required to achieve the desired RF output at the RAU. 9. Connect an N-male to N-male coaxial cable to the circulator 3 connector. 10. Connect the other end of the N-male to N-male coaxial cable to the UPLINK con-
nector on the Hub for either Band 1 or Band 2. Figure 7-30 Connecting a Fusion Wideband Main Hub to a Roof-top Antenna Band 1 Band 2 Band 3 UL1 UL2 UL3 Alarms DL1 DL2 DL3 Roof-top Antenna N-male to N-male Coaxial Cable Grounded Surge Suppressor N-male to N-male Coaxial Cable Repeater Note: This applies to either Band 1 or Band 2. Circulator 2 1 3 Attenuator
(optional) AC Power N-male to N-male Coaxial Cables 7-50 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F Interfacing the Fusion Wideband Main Hub to an RF Source Connecting a Fusion Wideband Main Hub to FlexWave Focus Refer to the FlexWave Focus manual for information. 7.6.2 Connecting Multiple Fusion Wideband Main Hubs to an RF Source You can use power combiner/splitters as splitters to connect multiple Fusion Wide-
band Main Hubs in order to increase the total number of RAUs in a system. You can also use power combiner/splitters to combine base station channels in order to increase the number of RF carriers the system transports. Connecting Multiple Fusion Wideband Main Hubs to a Simplex Repeater or BTS WARNING: Only TE personnel or TE-authorized installation person-
nel should connect the Fusion Wideband Main Hub to a base station or repeater. Exceeding the maximum input power could cause failure of the Fusion Wideband Main Hub (refer to Section 5.2 on page 5-4 for maximum power specifications). If the maximum composite power is too high, attenuation is required. Considerations:
2 hybrid power combiner/splitters; one for uplink and one for downlink (2x1 for two Fusion Wideband Main Hubs, 3x1 for three, 4x1 for four, and so on.) 1 N-male to N-male coaxial jumper cable between each power combiner/splitter and the base station 2 N-male to N-male coaxial jumper cables between each power combiner/splitter and each Fusion Wideband Main Hub RF Band (either Band 1, Band 2, or Band 3) Procedure:
1. Connect the power combiner/splitters to the repeater or base station using N-male to N-male coaxial jumper cables:
a. From the first power combiner/splitter to the repeater or base station UPLINK b. From the second power combiner/splitter to the repeater or base station DOWNLINK 2. Connect the power combiner/splitters to the Hubs:
a. From the first Hubs UPLINK port (Band 1, Band 2, or Band 3) to the first power combiner/splitter b. From the first Hubs DOWNLINK port (Band 1, Band 2, or Band 3 to the second power combiner/splitter c. From the second Hubs UPLINK port (Band 1, Band 2, or Band 3) to the first power combiner/splitter D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 7-51 CONFIDENTIAL Interfacing the Fusion Wideband Main Hub to an RF Source d. From the second Hubs DOWNLINK port (Band 1, Band 2, or Band 3) to the second power combiner/splitter NOTE: Connections should not cross Bands. For example, all Band 1 connections should be made to the same hybrid power combiner/splitter connected to the repeater BTS that matches the Band 1 frequency. 3. Check Hub LEDs. After connecting and powering on the Hub, check all LEDs to ensure that the sys-
tem is operating properly. Make sure the Hub is grounded. The warranty does not cover damage caused when an ungrounded Hub is powered on. NOTE: Use a 50 ohm terminator on any unused power combiner/splitter ports. Figure 7-31 shows how to connect two Main Hubs to a simplex repeater or base sta-
tion. Connecting two Hubs increases the total number of supportable RAUs from 8 to 16. 7-52 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F Interfacing the Fusion Wideband Main Hub to an RF Source Figure 7-31 Connecting Two Fusion Wideband Main Hubs RF Band Ports to a Simplex Repeater or Base Station Band 1 Band 2 Band 3 UL1 UL2 UL3 Alarms DL1 DL2 DL3 N-male to N-male Coaxial Jumper Cables between Combiner/Splitter and Fusion Main Hubs Uplink Port for either Band 1, Band 2, or Band 3. AC Power Band 1 Band 2 Band 3 UL1 UL2 UL3 Alarms DL1 DL2 DL3 AC Power N-male to N-male Coaxial Jumper Cables between Combiner/Splitter and Fusion Main Hubs Downlink Port for either Band 1, Band 2, or Band 3. 2 x 1 Power Combiner/Splitter 2 x 1 Power Combiner/Splitter N-male to N-male Coaxial Jumper Cable to Repeater or Base Station N-male to N-male Coaxial Jumper Cable to Repeater or Base Station D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 7-53 CONFIDENTIAL Interfacing the Fusion Wideband Main Hub to an RF Source Connecting Multiple Wideband Main Hubs to a Duplex Repeater or BTS WARNING: Only TE personnel or TE-authorized installation person-
nel should connect the Fusion Wideband Main Hub to a base station or repeater. Exceeding the maximum input power could cause failure of the Fusion Wideband Main Hub (refer to Section 5.2 on page 5-4 for maximum power specifications). If the maximum composite power is too high, attenuation is required. Considerations:
2 hybrid power combiner/splitters; one for uplink and one for downlink (2x1 for two Fusion Wideband Main Hubs, 3x1 for three, 4x1 for four, and so.) 2 N-male to N-male coaxial jumper cables to connect each Fusion Wideband Main Hubs RF Band to the power combiner/splitters 1 circulator 1 N-male to N-male coaxial jumper cable between each circulator and the repeater or base station 1 N-male to N-male coaxial jumper cable between each circulator and power com-
biner/splitter Procedure:
1. Connect the circulator to the repeater or base station using one N-male to N-male coaxial jumper cable. 2. Connect each power combiner/splitter to the circulator using one N-male to N-male coaxial jumper cable per combiner/splitter. 3. Connect the power combiner/splitter to the Hubs using N-male to N-male coaxial jumper cable:
a. From the first Hubs UPLINK (Band 1, Band 2, or Band 3) port to the first power combiner/splitter b. From the first Hubs DOWNLINK (Band 1, Band 2, or Band 3) port to the sec-
ond power combiner/splitter c. From the second Hubs UPLINK (Band 1, Band 2, or Band 3) port to the first power combiner/splitter d. From the second Hubs DOWNLINK (Band 1, Band 2, or Band 3) port to the second power combiner/splitter NOTE: Connections should not cross Bands. For example, all Band 1 connections should be made to the same hybrid power combiner/splitter connected to the repeater BTS that matches the Band 1 frequency. 7-54 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F Interfacing the Fusion Wideband Main Hub to an RF Source 4. Check Hub LEDs. After connecting and powering on the Hub, check all LEDs to ensure that the sys-
tem is operating properly. Make sure the Main Hub is grounded. The warranty does not cover damage caused when an ungrounded Hub is powered on. NOTE: Use a 50 ohm terminator on any unused power combiner/splitter ports. Figure 7-32 shows how to connect two Hubs to a duplex repeater or base station. You need to use one circulator and one more coaxial jumper cable, as shown. Figure 7-32 Connecting Two Fusion Wideband Main Hubs RF Band Ports to a Duplex Repeater or Base Station D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 7-55 CONFIDENTIAL Connecting Contact Alarms to a Fusion Wideband System 7.7 Connecting Contact Alarms to a Fusion Wideband System The Fusion Wideband Main Hub can generate (source) two contact alarms as well as sense three external contact alarm. Alarm Source (refer to Section 7.7.1 on page 7-57) The Fusion Wideband Main Hub has two alarm contacts, fault (major) and warn-
ing (minor). These contacts are normally-closed (NC) and will open when an inter-
nal alarm is detected. NOTE: The contact can be changed to normally-open (NO) with Admin-
Browser. This is not recommended since no alarm would be sent if power to the Fusion Wideband Main Hub fails. Fault is activated when any faults or disconnects are detected. Warning is activated when any warning conditions are detected except lockout or when the end-to-end system test is not valid. Alarm Sense (refer to Section 7.7.2 on page 7-60) The Fusion Wideband Main Hub can monitor 3 external alarm contacts. Each port can be configured for normally-open (NO) or normally-closed (NC) contacts. The interface expects a set of floating contacts, and an external voltage source is not required for this interface. Use AdminBrowser to monitor the port status. Table 7-8 lists the alarm types, equipment to which the Fusion Wideband Main Hub is connected, cable(s) used, and the faults and warnings that are detected. Table 7-8 Alarm Types Alarm Type Source Source Fusion Wideband Connected to FlexWave BTS Sense Unison Cable(s) Used Errors Detected 5-port Alarm Daisy-Chain Cable Faults 5-port Alarm Daisy-Chain Cable Faults and Warnings In addition, a custom daisy-chain cable-to-BTS interface cable is required. Make this interface cable to the desired length and with the appropriate pin placement. 5-port Alarm Daisy-Chain Cable and the Alarm Sense Adapter Cable Faults Note that FlexWave Focus supports only faults (major errors). 7-56 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F Connecting Contact Alarms to a Fusion Wideband System 7.7.1 Alarm Source Fusion Wideband always acts as an alarm source, no matter what type of equipment you are connecting to. Refer to Section 7.7.2 on page 7-60 if you want Fusion Wide-
band to sense Unison contact closures or other external alarms. Using FlexWave Focus to Monitor Fusion Wideband When you connect FlexWave Focus to the Fusion Wideband, the Fusion Wideband Main Hub is the output of the alarms (alarm source) and Focus is the input (alarm sense), as shown in Figure 7-33. Focus supports only faults (major errors). Figure 7-33 Connecting FlexWave to Fusion Wideband Fusion Main Hub Band 1 Band 2 Band 3 UL1 UL2 UL3 Alarms DL1 DL2 DL3 AC Power 5-port Alarm Daisy-Chain Cable AC Power Alarm Source Band 1 Band 2 Band 3 UL1 UL2 UL3 Alarms DL1 DL2 DL3 Alarm Source FlexWave Focus RFM RF OUT DOWNLINK RF IN UPLINK FIBER UPLINK DOWNLINK ALARM RS-232C May need 9-pin Adapter, which ships with the cable Alarm Sense D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 7-57 CONFIDENTIAL Connecting Contact Alarms to a Fusion Wideband System Using a Base Station to Monitor Fusion Wideband NOTE: The BTS must be configured, by the carrier, for contact closure monitoring prior to connecting a Fusion Wideband Main Hub to it. When you connect a BTS to Fusion Wideband, the Fusion Wideband Main Hub is the output of the alarms (alarm source) and the BTS is the input (alarm sense), as shown in Figure 7-34. An interface cable is required between the daisy-chain cable and the BTS. Because BTS alarm interface pinouts and Fusion Wideband-to-BTS distances vary, this cable is often custom and wired on-site. Refer to Section 3.2.1 for Alarm Contact details (Normally Closed). Figure 7-34 Using a BTS to Monitor Fusion Wideband Band 1 Band 2 Band 3 UL1 UL2 UL3 Alarms DL1 DL2 DL3 Alarm Source Band 1 Band 2 Band 3 UL1 UL2 UL3 Alarms DL1 DL2 DL3 Alarm Source AC Power 5-port Alarm Daisy-Chain Cable Alarm Sense BTS Interface Cable
(custom made, on-site) AC Power NOTE: For normally open contacts, the fault and warning contacts need to be wired in parallel with other Main Hubs. NOTE: TE does not recommend using normally open contacts. 7-58 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F Connecting Contact Alarms to a Fusion Wideband System Using a Base Station and AdminBrowser to Monitor Fusion Wideband NOTE: The BTS must be configured, by the carrier, for contact closure monitoring prior to connecting a Fusion Wideband Main Hub to it. In order to take full advantage of Fusion Widebands OA&M capabilities you can use TEs AdminBrowser software in addition to a BTS to monitor the system, as shown in Figure 7-35. Refer to Section 7.8.7 for SNMP optional feature capabilities. Figure 7-35 Using a BTS and AdminBrowser to Monitor Fusion Wideband BTS D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 7-59 CONFIDENTIAL Connecting Contact Alarms to a Fusion Wideband System 7.7.2 Alarm Sense Use AdminBrowser to enable the Fusion Wideband system for alarm sense when connecting to the contact closure of Unison Main Hubs or other external alarms (refer to Set Contact Sense Properties in the AdminBrowser User Manual). Using Fusion Wideband to Monitor Unison When you connect Unison to Fusion Wideband, the Fusion Wideband Main Hub is the input of the alarms (alarm sense) and the Unison is the output (alarm source), as shown in Figure 7-36. The input alarm sense needs to be set to normally closed (NC). Figure 7-36 Using Fusion Wideband to Monitor Unison Band 1 Band 2 Band 3 UL1 UL2 UL3 Alarms DL1 DL2 DL3 Fusion Wideband Main Hub AC Power Up to 5 Unison Main Hubs Alarm Sense Adapter Cable Alarm Sense 5-port Alarm Daisy-Chain Cable Alarm Source Alarm Source Unison supports only faults. You must use the Alarm Sense Adapter Cable to inter-
face the daisy-chain cable to Fusion Wideband. The adapter cable is required because it translates the Unison fault pinout to the sense input pins on the Fusion Wideband Main Hub. 7-60 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F Connecting Contact Alarms to a Fusion Wideband System Figure 7-37 Alarm Sense Contacts
+5V 8 1 Diagnostic I External Equipment Contacts D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 7-61 CONFIDENTIAL Connecting Contact Alarms to a Fusion Wideband System 7.7.3 Alarm Cables 5-port Alarm Daisy-Chain Cable Figure 7-38 shows the 5-port Alarm Daisy-Chain Cable (PN 4024-3), which supports fault and warning conditions. Figure 7-38 5-port Alarm Daisy-Chain Cable 1.2 meters (4 feet) DB-9 female to Base Station, FlexWave Focus, or the Alarm Sense Adapter Cable when connecting Unison 7 9 4 5 J1 Female NOTE: Do not daisy-chain Fusion Wideband Main Hubs with FlexWave Focus if you want both faults and warnings from Fusion. Only faults are reported if you combine Fusion with FlexWave in the same daisy chain. 5 meter
(1.5 feet)
.5 meter
(1.5 feet)
.5 meter
(1.5 feet)
.5 meter
(1.5 feet)
.25 meter
(.75 feet) 7 Splice 9 4 Splice 5 7 Splice 9 4 Splice 5 7 Splice 9 4 Splice 5 7 Splice 9 4 Splice 5 7 9 4 5 7 4 J2 Male J3 Male J4 Male J5 Male J6 Male J7 Female Terminator DB-9 male to Fusion, Unison, FlexWave Focus, Alarm Port Connector Hood DB-9 male to Fusion, Unison, FlexWave Focus Alarm Port DB-9 male to Fusion, Unison, FlexWave Focus Alarm Port DB-9 male to Fusion, Unison, FlexWave Focus Alarm Port Option 1: DB-9 to Fusion, Unison, FlexWave Focus Alarm Port. J7 not used Option 2: Use J2-J5 for alarm ports. J6 is used to connect to an additional Alarm Daisy-Chain Cable. J7 is not used. Option 3: Connect fewer than 5 ports and terminate the daisy chain by connecting J7 to the lowest unused port. 7-62 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F Alarm Monitoring Connectivity Options 7.8 Alarm Monitoring Connectivity Options The following connectivity options are described:
Section 7.8.1 Direct Connection . 7-63 Section 7.8.2 Modem Connection . 7-64 Section 7.8.3 100 BASE-T Port Expander Connection . 7-73 Section 7.8.4 POTS Line Sharing Switch Connection . 7-74 Section 7.8.6 Ethernet LAN Connection . 7-76 Section 7.8.7 SNMP Interface . 7-77 7.8.1 Direct Connection In this configuration, the PC connects directly to the RJ-45 100 BASE-T port on the Fusion Wideband Main Hubs front panel using an Ethernet cross-over cable. Figure 7-39 OA&M Direct Connection AdminBrower is resident in Fusion Wideband. Cross-over 100 BASE-T Cable PC running Standard Browser Software D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 7-63 CONFIDENTIAL Alarm Monitoring Connectivity Options 7.8.2 Modem Connection In this configuration, the PC and the Fusion Wideband Main Hub connect to analog modems and communicate using a standard dial-up telephone connection. Figure 7-40 OA&M Modem Connection Straight-through modem cable (#4028-10) Modem
#140272-0 PSTN Straight-through modem cable
#4028-10 Modem
#140272-0 PC running Standard Browser Software NOTE: Refer to Appendix A.3 on page A-7 for the modem cable wiring informa-
tion. Modem switch settings are as follows for US Robotics modem:
PC-side: 1, 2 and 6 Up Fusion Wideband Hub-side: 2 and 6 Up 7.8.2.1 Setting Up Fusion Wideband Modem (USR Modem) Using AdminBrowser Use the following steps to set up a PPP Dial-In on Fusion Wideband:
1. Start AdminBrowser as explained in the AdminBrowser manual. 2. Select System Configuration. 3. Select Setup Modem Connection. The window shown in Figure 7-41 appears. 7-64 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F Alarm Monitoring Connectivity Options Figure 7-41 Default Dial-in Settings (Fusion Wideband Hub) 4. Make sure the modem type is: None The Modem init string is for a USR modem. The server address is the IP address of the MH. 5. Click Setup Connection. 7.8.2.2 Setting Up a PC Modem Using Windows Use the following sets to set up a dial-up connection on your PC:
1. Click Start, Settings, Network Connections. The window shown in Figure 7-42 appears. D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 7-65 CONFIDENTIAL Alarm Monitoring Connectivity Options Figure 7-42 Network Connections Window 2. Click Create a new connection. The window shown in Figure 7-43 appears. Figure 7-43 New Connection Wizard - Welcome Window 3. Click Next. The window shown in Figure 7-44 appears. 7-66 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F Alarm Monitoring Connectivity Options Figure 7-44 New Connection Wizard - Network Connection Type Window 4. Select Connect to the network at my workplace and click Next. The window shown in Figure 7-45 appears. Figure 7-45 New Connection Wizard - Network Connection Window 5. Select Dial-up connection and click Next. The window shown in Figure 7-46 appears. D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 7-67 CONFIDENTIAL Alarm Monitoring Connectivity Options Figure 7-46 New Connection Wizard - Connection Name Window 6. Type a name for this connection and click Next. The window shown in Figure 7-47 appears. Figure 7-47 New Connection Wizard - Phone Number to Dial Window 7. Type the desired dial in phone number and click Next. The window shown in Figure 7-48 appears. 7-68 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F Alarm Monitoring Connectivity Options Figure 7-48 New Connection Wizard - Connection Availability Window 8. Select Anyones use and click Next. The window shown in Figure 7-49 appears. Figure 7-49 New Connection Wizard - Completing New Connection Window 9. Click Finish. The window shown in Figure 7-50 appears. D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 7-69 CONFIDENTIAL Alarm Monitoring Connectivity Options Figure 7-50 Connect Fusion Wideband Hub Window 10. Type a password as indicated and click Properties. The window shown in Figure 7-51 appears. The default parameters are as follows:
User name: ppp_user Password (one word, all lower case): password Figure 7-51 Fusion Wideband Hub Properties Window 11. Click Configure... The window shown in Figure 7-52 appears. 7-70 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F Alarm Monitoring Connectivity Options Figure 7-52 Modem Configuration Window 12. Select the modem speed and other parameters for your modem as desired and click OK. 13. Select the Security tab. The window shown in Figure 7-53 appears. Figure 7-53 Fusion Wideband Hub Properties - Security Tab Window 14. Select Typical and then click the Networking tab. The window shown in Figure 7-54 appears. D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 7-71 CONFIDENTIAL Alarm Monitoring Connectivity Options Figure 7-54 Fusion Wideband Hub Properties - Networking Tab Window 15. Select Internet Protocol (TCP/IP) as shown and click Properties. The window shown in Figure 7-55 appears. Figure 7-55 Internet Protocol Properties Window 16. Select Obtain an IP address automatically and Obtain DNS server address automatically and click OK. 17. To connect to the Fusion Wideband Hub over the Dial-up connection, start you web browser and type the server IP address configured in Section 7.8.2.1 in the address bar. 7-72 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F Alarm Monitoring Connectivity Options 7.8.3 100 BASE-T Port Expander Connection In this configuration a LAN switch is used to allow the connection of multiple devices to a single PC with a 100 BASE-T port. Testing was performed with a Link-
sys 4-port switch. Each Fusion Wideband MH must have a unique IP address. Figure 7-56 OA&M Connection using a 232 Port Expander AdminBrowser software is resident in Fusion Wideband. PC running Standard Browser Software 100 BASE-T Cable RJ-45 male to RJ-45 male LAN switch 100 BASE-T Ethernet connection D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 7-73 CONFIDENTIAL Alarm Monitoring Connectivity Options PC running Standard Browser Software 7.8.4 POTS Line Sharing Switch Connection Using a line sharing switch, you can connect two or more modems to a single tele-
phone line. Figure 7-57 OA&M Connection Using a POTS Line Sharing Switch Straight-through modem cable
#4028-10 Modem
#140272-0 PSTN 4- or 8-port Line Sharing Switch 4-port:
#240031-0 8-port
#240052-0 Standard phone cable Modem Up to 4 modems per Switch Modem
#140272-0 Straight-through modem cable (#4028-10) 7-74 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F Alarm Monitoring Connectivity Options Figure 7-58 Cascading Line Sharing Switches Straight-through modem cable Modem PSTN 4-port: #240031-0 8-port: #240052-0 Line Sharing Switch PC running Standard Browser Software Standard phone cable 4-port:
#240031-0 8-port:
#240052-0 Line Sharing Switch Line Sharing Switch Line Sharing Switch Line Sharing Switch Straight-
through modem cables M o d e m M o d e m M o d e m M o d e m M o d e m M o d e m M o d e m M o d e m M o d e m M o d e m M o d e m M o d e m M o d e m M o d e m M o d e m M o d e m 7.8.5 Ethernet RF Modem Fusion Wideband can also use an Ethernet-based RF modem. Just about any RF modem will work, although modems that support Port Address Translation are best. D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 7-75 CONFIDENTIAL Alarm Monitoring Connectivity Options 7.8.6 Ethernet LAN Connection An Ethernet LAN connection can be used to communicate between the PC and Fusion Wideband. Testing was performed with an Linksys 4-port LAN switch. Figure 7-59 OA&M Connection Using Ethernet and ENET/232 Serial Hub 100 BASE-T Cable RJ-45 to RJ-45 male LAN Switch Ethernet TCP/IP Ethernet PC running Standard Browser Software 7-76 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F Alarm Monitoring Connectivity Options 7.8.7 SNMP Interface Faults and warnings can also be diagnosed with SNMP using a standard (NMS) net-
work management system (optional). SNMP resident software in Fusion Wideband provides SNMP interactions for Traps and Notification. The Fusion Wideband SNMP includes a MIB for integrating into the Network Man-
agement System (NMS) and supports SNMPv1 and SNMPv2c. Figure 7-60 Fusion Wideband SNMP Configuration Options D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 7-77 CONFIDENTIAL Alarm Monitoring Connectivity Options 7-78 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F SECTION 8 Replacing Fusion Wideband Components This section contains the following subsections:
Section 8.1 Replacing an RAU . 8-1 Section 8.2 Replacing a Fusion Wideband Expansion Hub . 8-3 Section 8.3 Replacing a Fusion Wideband Main Hub . 8-4 8.1 Replacing an RAU Be aware that the new RAU must support the same bands as the one you are replac-
ing. If the RAU is of the wrong band combination, it will not operate properly in the system. Replacing an RAU 1. Using AdminBrowser, log in and click SYSTEM INFORMATION. 2. Click SHOW SYSTEM TREE, select Fusion Wideband Main Hub, and click GET SYS-
TEM INFORMATION. All system settings for Hubs and RAUs will be displayed. Write down or save the Uplink and Downlink Attenuation setting so you can set the new RAU with the same settings. Install the new RAU. 3. Click CANCEL to close the window. 4. Verify that the new RAU is of the same frequency bands as the one replaced. 5. Disconnect the CATV cable and antenna cable from the unit to be replaced. 6. 7. Connect the antenna cable and then the CATV cable to the new RAU. 8. Click SYSTEM CONFIGURATION. 9. Click SHOW SYSTEM TREE. 10. Select the Fusion Wideband RAU replaced and click EDIT UNIT PROPERTIES. D-x620616-0-20 Rev F InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual 8-1 CONFIDENTIAL Replacing an RAU 11. Set the attenuation of each band as the old RAU was programmed and click SAVE PROPERTIES. Perform System Test When convenient, perform System Test to optimize performance. During System Test, the entire system is temporarily off-line and no RF is being transmitted. Checking the RAUs LEDs 1. The RAUs LINK and ALARM LEDs should blink (green/red) on power up. If the LEDs do not blink on power up, replace the RAU. 2. After several seconds both LEDs should change to green, which indicates that the unit has been successfully replaced, there is communication with the Hub, and the RAU band is correct. a. If the LINK LED remains green and the ALARM LED remains red, verify that the RAU model is correct for the intended frequency band. Disconnect the cable and then reconnect it once; doing this more than once will not change the result. b. c. If both LEDs still dont change to green, use AdminBrowser to determine the exact nature of the fault and see a recommendation of how to correct it. If both LEDs turn red (after 90 seconds), the Hub has terminated communica-
tions. 8-2 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-x620616-0-20 Rev F Replacing a Fusion Wideband Expansion Hub 8.2 Replacing a Fusion Wideband Expansion Hub Replacing a Fusion Wideband Expansion Hub 1. Turn off the power to the Expansion Hub. 2. Disconnect all CATV cables, both fiber cables, and the AC power cord. 3. Replace the Expansion Hub with a new one. 4. Connect the AC power cord, all CATV cables, and both fiber cables remember-
ing to clean and correctly connect the uplink and downlink fiber. 5. Turn on the power to the Expansion Hub. AdminBrowser Tasks The Main Hub automatically issues the band setting. When convenient, use AdminBrowser to perform System Test in order to optimize performance. During System Test, the entire system is temporarily off-line and no RF is being transmitted. For a fully loaded system (one Main Hub, four Expansion Hubs, and 32 RAUs), it can take up to 1.5 minutes to complete the test. Checking the Expansion Hubs LEDs The LEDs should blink through all states on power up. If the LEDs do not blink on power up, replace the Expansion Hub. If the LEDs do not illuminate at all, make sure the AC power cable is con-
nected. The UL STATUS and DL STATUS LEDs should be green. The E-HUB STATUS and POWER LEDs should be green. For each CATV port that has an RAU connected the LEDs should be green. It can take several seconds for each CATV connection for the LEDs to display properly. NOTE: Refer to Section 9 for troubleshooting using the LEDs. D-x620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 8-3 CONFIDENTIAL Replacing a Fusion Wideband Main Hub 8.3 Replacing a Fusion Wideband Main Hub You must record the system configuration settings from the old Fusion Wideband Main Hubs memory before replacing the unit. You will program the new Main Hub with this information. If the Main Hub is programmed incorrectly, the system will not work. If the Hub to be replaced is not functioning and you cannot use AdminBrowser, get the configuration settings from the As-Built Document that was created as part of the original installation. Replacing a Fusion Wideband Main Hub 1. Using AdminBrowser, log in, click SYSTEM INFORMATION, click SHOW SYSTEM TREE, select Fusion Wideband Hub, click GET SYSTEM INFORMATION. 2. Turn off the power to the Fusion Wideband Main Hub. 3. Disconnect all cables and the AC power cord. 4. Replace the Main Hub with a new one. 5. Connect the AC power cord and all cables. 6. Connect the crossover Ethernet cable to the PC and then to the Main Hubs front panel 100Base-T connector. ADMIN/LAN port) 7. Start the standard browser on the PC to communicate with AdminBrowser soft-
ware. 8. Turn on the power to the Main Hub. 9. Observe the LEDs after turning on the power. All the LEDs blink during the initial power up sequence. All LEDs should turn green after the power on sequence is complete. Power up sequence takes between 1 and 2 minutes depending on the number of RAUs. Configure the New Fusion Wideband Main Hub 1. Using AdminBrowser and log in to the Main Hub. 2. Click SYSTEM CONFIGURATION. 3. Click SET DATE/TIME and enter the current date and time. 4. Click SET DATE/TIME. 5. Follow the instructions to eventually reboot the system to set the date and time. 6. Using AdminBrowser, log in and click SYSTEM CONFIGURATION. 7. Click INSTALL SYSTEM. 8. Set the new Main Hub parameters from the old Main Hub and click INSTALL SYS-
TEM (that is, uplink and downlink gain, system labels, and so on). 9. Follow the instructions to perform a System Test. 8-4 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-x620616-0-20 Rev F Replacing a Fusion Wideband Main Hub 10. Click SYSTEM CONFIGURATION and click on SETUP NETWORK CONNECTION OR MODEM CONNECTION if the Main Hub has Network or Modem equipment con-
nected to it. During System Test, the entire system is temporarily off-line and no RF is being transmitted. Checking the Main Hubs LEDs The LEDs should blink through a 5-second test on power up. If the LEDs do not blink on power up, replace the Main Hub. If the LEDs do not illuminate at all, make sure the AC power cable is con-
nected. For each fiber optic port that has a connected Expansion Hub, which has been pro-
grammed with a band, the PORT LED should be green. Refer to Section 9.3, Troubleshooting, on page 9-3 for more LED states. NOTE: If there is no communication between the Main Hub and the Expansion Hubs, use the AdminBrowser to isolate system problems. D-x620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 8-5 CONFIDENTIAL Replacing a Fusion Wideband Main Hub 8-6 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-x620616-0-20 Rev F SECTION 9 Maintenance, Troubleshooting, and Technical Assistance This section contains the following subsections:
Section 9.1 Service . 9-1 Section 9.2 Maintenance . 9-2 Section 9.3 Troubleshooting . 9-3 Section 9.4 Troubleshooting CATV . 9-10 Section 9.5 Technical Assistance . 9-10 9.1 Service There are no user-serviceable parts in any of the Fusion Wideband components. Faulty or failed components are fully replaceable through TE. All units should be replaced and returned to the factory for service if needed. Address 541 E. Trimble Road San Jose, California 95131-1224 USA 1-408-952-2400 1-408-952-2410 1-800-530-9960 (U.S. only)
+1-408-952-2400 (International) http://www.te.com WirelessSupport@te.com Phone Fax Help Hot Line Web Address e-mail D-620616-0-20 Rev F InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual 9-1 CONFIDENTIAL Maintenance 9.2 Maintenance Keep the fiber ports clean and free of dust. No other periodic maintenance of the Fusion Wideband equipment is required. To clean the fiber ports:
You can clean the Hubs fiber ports using canned compressed air or isopropyl alcohol and cotton swabs. Considerations:
If you use compressed air:
The air must be free of dust, water, and oil. Hold the can level during use. If using isopropyl alcohol and foam-tipped swab:
Use only 98% pure or more alcohol. Procedure using compressed air:
1. Remove the connectors dust cap. 2. Spray the compressed air away from the unit for a few seconds to clean out the nozzle and then blow dust particles out of each fiber port. Procedure using isopropyl alcohol:
1. Remove the connectors dust cap. 2. Dip a 2.5mm lint-free, foam-tipped swab in isopropyl alcohol and slowly insert the tip into the connector. 3. Gently twist the swab to clean the connector. 4. Insert a dry swab to dry the connector. Additionally, you can use compressed air after the alcohol has completely evapo-
rated. 9-2 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F Troubleshooting 9.3 Troubleshooting NOTE: Fusion Wideband has no user-serviceable parts. Faulty or failed units are fully replaceable through TE. Sources of potential problems include:
Faulty cabling/connector Malfunction of one or more Fusion Wideband components Antenna, base station, or repeater problem External RF interface Tripped circuit breaker Equipment is not grounded Using an Ethernet crossover cable that does not support full hardware handshaking when using AdminBrowser NOTE: Faulty cabling is the cause of a vast majority of problems. All CATV 75 Ohm cable should be tested to TIA-570-B specifications. The RAU will be damaged if the cable connector is not installed properly. You must use AdminBrowser for troubleshooting the system, use the LEDs only as backup or for confirmation. If you cannot determine the cause of a problem after following the recommended pro-
cedures, call TE customer help hot line:
1-800-530-9960 (U.S. only)
+1-408-952-2400 (International) Or, email us at WirelessSupport@te.com. Please provide the following information:
Serial number of the unit Description of the problem Using AdminBrowser 1.00, access Special Features, then the Get Service Information window. Save and email this file to TE. What is the length of the CATV cable? What type is it (for example RG-6)?
Status of the LEDs on the unit Was the unit power cycled?
D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 9-3 CONFIDENTIAL Troubleshooting 9.3.1 Troubleshooting Using AdminBrowser Use AdminBrowser software to determine the current faults and warnings for all of the units in the system. To troubleshoot, start with the Fusion Wideband Main Hubs faults AND warnings, then proceed to each of the Expansion Hubs, finishing with each of the RAUs. NOTE: AdminBrowser v1.00 displays events (faults, warnings, or status messages) depending on your view preference. To change your view prefer-
ence, refer to Section 3.3.2, View Preference, on page 3-10. System Troubleshooting Using AdminBrowser, click SYSTEM INFORMATION, then click GET FAULTS, WARNINGS AND STATUSES. This gives the present status of the system, depending upon View Preferences for all components. Faults usually impact service; warnings may impact service; status messages contain information that should not be ignored, but indicate conditions that do not generally impact service. NOTE: System commands can take longer to execute compared to compo-
nent commands. NOTE: This RAU icon indicates there is fault on the RAU. This icon indicates a disconnected device. You cannot request status on a discon-
nected device. 9.3.1.1 Troubleshooting Recommendations Some actions that you can take, depending on the device fault or warning include, are as follows:
a. Hardware faults on Expansion Hub. Try swapping fiber with another Expansion Hub at the Main Hub. Try cleaning the fiber and the fiber ports with alcohol foam tip swab and compressed air. See Section , To clean the fiber ports:, on page -2. Power cycle the Expansion Hub. 9-4 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F Troubleshooting b. Under Alarms, click CLEAR ALL DISCONNECTS at the Fusion Wideband Main Hub. c. Power cycle the Fusion Wideband Main Hub. d. RAU hardware faults. Try moving a working CATV to the suspect port and verifying that the RAU comes up OK. e. Try isolating the system components:
Check to see if the whole system is effected or a portion of the system. If the whole system is effected, disconnect the DAS system from the RF source and see if the RF source is working. Continue to isolate by disabling portions of the system. Under System Con-
figuration, click SHOW SYSTEM TREE and select a component. Then click SET OUT OF SERVICE/SET IN SERVICE. 9.3.1.2 Fault/Warning/Status Indications Once all of the units are powered on and the cable connections are made, the faults from each unit can be requested using AdminBrowser. Start with the Fusion Wide-
band Main Hub and work downstream. Resolve all faults first and then check the warnings. Take appropriate action to resolve the faults, as indicated in the following tables. In cases where there is more than one possible cause, they are listed from the most likely to the least likely cause. Actions are listed in the order that they should be performed; not all actions may need to be done. NOTE: If you have a red STATUS LED without a fault message, it probably indicates that the unit is locked out. Refer to Appendix C for tables containing Fault, Warning, and Status messages and their meanings. 9.3.2 Troubleshooting Using LEDs The following troubleshooting guide is from the perspective that all Fusion Wideband equipment is installed, their cables are connected, and they are powered on; it is assumed that the system was operating normally before the problem to be diagnosed occurred. Always use AdminBrowser, if possible, to troubleshoot the system. The Fusion Wide-
band Main Hub and Expansion Hub LEDs are for backup troubleshooting. The RAU LEDs probably will not provide additional information for troubleshooting. D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 9-5 CONFIDENTIAL Troubleshooting 9.3.2.1 Troubleshooting Main Hub LEDs During Normal Operation All of the Main Hubs LEDs should be green during normal operation. If any LEDs are red, get status using AdminBrowser to determine the exact cause and recommen-
dations. Table 9-1 Troubleshooting Main Hub Port LEDs During Normal Operation During Normal Operation Expansion Hub Not Connected Main Hub Port LEDs PORT State Red PORT Expansion Hub Connected Flashing Red
(60 ppm) Action If the Expansion Hub was discon-
nected accidentally, re-connect the cables. The LEDs should change to Green/Red (then Green/Green, after 20 seconds, if the Main Hub band has been programmed). When the Expansion Hub is to be removed from service permanently, use AdminBrowsers Clear All Dis-
connect Status command to clear all disconnect states to no connect states. Use AdminBrowser to determine the exact cause of the Main Hubs faults. PORT Red The Expansion Hub or connected RAU reports a fault condition; use AdminBrowser to determine the exact cause of the Expansion Hub and RAUs faults. Impact The Expansion Hub was previously connected, but it is not currently con-
nected; the Expansion Hub uplink cable disconnected. AdminBrowser clears all disconnects caused by installation as part of the clean-up process. After installation, power cycle the Main Hub or use AdminBrowsers Clear All Discon-
nect Status command. Changes the Main Hubs port LEDs to Off/Off. Lost communication with Expansion Hub; could be Expansion Hub problem or fiber cable problem. The Expansion Hub communication problems delay MH responses to AdminBrowser commands, resulting in command time-outs. You can discon-
nect the offending Expansion Hub ini-
tially to obtain status from the rest of the system, then connect the Expansion Hub and resolve the communication problem. Degraded performance or unit may be off-line. Depends on fault condition. 9-6 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F Troubleshooting Table 9-2 Troubleshooting Main Hub Status LEDs During Normal Operation During Normal Operation At Any Time Main Hub Status LEDs MAIN HUB STATUS State Red MAIN HUB STATUS POWER Flashing Red
(60ppm) Red At Any Time Action Use AdminBrowser to determine the exact cause of the fault. Power cycle one time. If the fault remains, replace the Main Hub. Use AdminBrowser to check if the Main Hub is commanded Out-of-Service (every Expansion Hub port status LED will be red as well). A power cycle will not clear a com-
manded Out-of-Service, you must use AdminBrowser to clear this state. Reduce input signal power. Impact Internal Main Hub fault. The Main Hub and all downstream units are off-line. Signal compression. Replace the Main Hub. One or more power supplies are out of specification. D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 9-7 CONFIDENTIAL Troubleshooting 9.3.2.2 Troubleshooting Expansion Hub LEDs During Normal Operation All of the Expansion Hub LINK and E-HUB/RAU LEDs that have RAUs connected should be Green/Green, indicating that the RAU is powered on, communication is established, and operation is normal. The POWER, EHUB STATUS, DL STATUS, and UL STATUS LEDs should all be Green. Table 9-3 Troubleshooting Expansion Hub Port LEDs During Normal Operation During Normal Operation RAU is not connected Expansion Hub Port LEDs PORT State Off RAU is connected PORT Red PORT PORT Flashing Red (60 ppm) Flashing Red (60 ppm) Action If the RAU was disconnected acci-
dentally, re-connect the CATV cable. The Expansion Hubs port LEDs should change to Green/Red
(then Green/Green, after 20 sec-
onds, if the Main Hub is connected, powered on, and has band pro-
grammed). Use AdminBrowsers Clear All Disconnect Status command if you are permanently removing the RAU from service. The Expansion Hubs port LEDs should change to Off/Off. Disconnect/reconnect the CATV cable to force power-on reset to the RAU. If the port LEDs remain Red check for the exact cause of Expan-
sion Hub faults using Admin-
Browser. The RAU reports a fault condition;
check for the exact cause of Expan-
sion Hub and RAU faults using AdminBrowser. The Expansion Hub reports no con-
nection, cable shorts, or a current port trap condition. Impact The RAU was previously connected, but it is not currently connected; the RAU cable is disconnected. Lost communications with the RAU. The RAU could have powered down due to over current; cable could have been damaged. Depends on the fault condition. Expansion Hub communications with the RAU. The Expansion Hub is at fault. The cable could have been dam-
aged. The cable leads may be shorted. 9-8 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F Troubleshooting Table 9-4 Troubleshooting Expansion Hub Status LEDs During Normal Operation During Normal Operation At Any Time Expansion Hub Status LEDs UL STATUS State Red DL STATUS Red E-H STATUS Red Action Check uplink fiber for optical loss. Power cycle Expansion Hub one time to check uplink laser. Check the downlink fiber for opti-
cal loss If either the UL STATUS or the DL STATUS are also red, see above. Cycle power on the Expansion Hub. If fault remains, replace the Expansion Hub. Impact No communications between the Main Hub and the Expansion Hub. Uplink laser failure. No communications with the Main Hub. Internal Expansion Hub fault (including either of the above UL STATUS or DL STATUS states). D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 9-9 CONFIDENTIAL Troubleshooting CATV 9.4 Troubleshooting CATV The following table summarizes CATV problems, as reported by AdminBrowser if a cable is cut or miswired. NOTE: Recommended minimum and maximum CATV cable lengths vary depending upon the type of CATV cable used. Refer to Section 6.1.2, Cable and Connector Requirements, on page 6-2. Table 9-5 Summary of CATV Cable Wiring Problems None Problem Type Message Loose connec-
tor, shorted con-
ductor or improper con-
nection to the shield. No communication with RAUn Portn UL RF path loss is too high The DL RF path loss is too high RAUn over current or port short Icon Impact High phase noise, degraded signal on both Downlink and Uplink (high bit error rate) RAU unable to communicate with Hub, degraded performance or RAU off-line Increased ripple in the uplink path, decreased UL gain, or no UL gain Increased ripple in the downlink path, RAU off-line RAU will not power on. 9.5 Technical Assistance Call our help hot line for technical assistance:
1-800-530-9960 (U.S. only)
+1-408-952-2400 (International) Please provide your name, phone number, e-mail address, and the following informa-
tion. A TE customer service representative will contact you with assistance. Company name End user name Type of system, model number, frequency Approximate time in service (warranty), sales order number Description of problem LED status AdminBrowser faults, warnings, and status messages 9-10 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F APPENDIX A Cables and Connectors A.1 75 Ohm CATV Cable Connects the Expansion Hub to the RAU(s) Transmits multiband (downlink) and receives (uplink) IF signals Delivers DC electrical power to the RAUs. The Fusion Wideband Hubs DC volt-
age output is 54V DC nominal. A current limiting circuit is used to protect the Hub if it reaches its current limit Carries configuration and status information Use 75 Ohm type-F connectors with captive centerpins Lengths:
RG-59:
Minimum: 0 meters (0 ft.) Maximum: 130 meters (426 ft.) RG-6:
Minimum: 0 meters (0 ft.) Maximum: 140 meters (459 ft.) RG-11:
Minimum: 0 meters (0 ft.) Maximum: 235 meters (771 ft.) Recommended minimum and maximum CATV cable lengths vary depending upon which CATV cable you use. Be sure to test cable termination before installing the cable. CommScope CATV cable or equivalent is required:
CommScope 20655V for RG-59. This cable is illustrated in Figure A-1. CommScope 2279V for RG-6. This cable is illustrated in Figure A-2. CommScope 2293K for RG-11.This cable is illustrated in Figure A-3. D-620616-0-20 Rev F InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual A-1 CONFIDENTIAL Figure A-1 CommScope 2065V for RG-59 A-2 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F Figure A-2 CommScope 2279V for RG-6 D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 A-3 CONFIDENTIAL Figure A-3 CommScope 2293K for RG-11 NOTE: TE requires solid copper center conductor CATV cable for proper DC voltage to the RAU and maximum distances. A-4 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F Use the following connectors and tools to prepare the cable ends:
CommScope cable part number: 2065V Canare part number: F connector FP-C4F Crimp Tool TC-1, Crimp Die TCD-4C, Cable Strip preparation tool TS100E CommScope cable part number: 2279V Canare part number: F connector FP-C55A Crimp Tool TC-1, Crimp Die TCD-35CA, Cable Strip preparation tool TS100E CommScope cable part number: 2293V Canare part number: F connector FP-C71A Crimp Tool TC-1, Crimp Die TCD-7CA, Cable Strip preparation tool TS100E If the maximum distance is not required, then copper-clad over steel-center conductor cable may be used to reduce cable costs. Table A-2 shows CommScope cable choices of plenum, non-plenum, solid copper conductor, and copper-clad over-steel conductor cable with their part numbers and maximum distances. D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 A-5 CONFIDENTIAL Table A-1 System Gain (Loss) Relative to CATV Cable Length Cable Type RG-59 RG-6 RG-11 Comm-
Scope Part Number Plenum Rated Solid Copper Conductor Copper Clad Conductor Distance Where RF is 10dB Below Input RF
(meters) Zero-loss RF Maximum Length
(meters) 2065V 2022V 5572R 5565 2279V 2275V 5726 5765 2293K 2285K 5913 Yes Yes No No Yes Yes No No Yes Yes No X X X X X X X X X X X 130 100 95 130 140 140 140 140 235 235 235 180 100*
95*
180 190 150*
140*
190 320 300*
300*
* Exceeding the distance of copper-clad cable will result in the attached RAU becoming non-functional. If the distance of a cable run is at its maximum and is of concern, TE recom-
mends the use of solid copper cable to ensure successful operation. A.2 Fiber Optical Cables Connects the Main Hub to Expansion Hub(s) Transmits (downlink) and receives (uplink) optical signals Carries configuration and status information Use industry-standard 62.5m/125m MMF or Corning SMF-28 fiber, or equiva-
lent. SC/APC (angle-polished) connectors are required throughout the fiber network
(port-to-port), including fiber distribution panels A-6 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F Distances:
Multi-mode Fiber: up to 500 m (1,640 ft) 3 dB optical loss maximum Single-mode Fiber: up to 6 km (19,685 ft) 3 dB optical loss maximum A.3 Coaxial Cable Connects a Fusion Wideband Hub to a repeater or base station (N-type connectors) Connects an RAU to a passive antenna (N-type connectors) A.4 Standard Modem Cable This cable (PN 4028-10) connects a modem to the Fusion Wideband Hubs front panel serial port. Figure A-1 Standard Modem Cable Pinout DB-9 Connector Pin 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 DB-25 Connector Pin 8 3 2 20 7 6 4 5 22 D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 A-7 CONFIDENTIAL A.5 TCP/IP Cross-over Cable A TCP/IP cross-over cable (PN 4069-ADB) is used to connect a standard browser PC to the AdminBrowser with a Fusion Wideband Hub. A cable is included with the Fusion Wideband Hub. The pinouts for this cable are illustrated in Figure A-2. Figure A-2 Wiring Map for TCP/IP Cable Connector 1
(586A) 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 R GG B W O W LO B W R B W L B
RJ-45 Port Green/
White Green 3 6 Orange/
White 1 Blue Blue/
White 4 5 Orange 2 Connector 2
(586B) Brown/
White Brown 7 8 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 R OO B W G W LG B W R B W L B
RJ-45 Port A-8 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F A.6 DB-9 to DB-9 Null Modem Cable Use a DB-9 female to DB-9 female null modem cable to connect the craft persons PC/Laptop to the RS-232 port on the front of the Fusion Wideband Hub for IP address configuration. Table A-2 lists the cable pinout and Figure A-3 shows a dia-
gram of its wiring. Table A-2 DB-9 Female to DB-9 Female Null Modem Cable Pinout From P1-4 P1-6 P1-3 P1-2 P1-5 P1-7 P1-8 P1-9 Signal DTR DSR TXD RXD GND RTS CTS N/C To P2-6, P2-1 P1-1, P2-4 P2-2 P2-3 P2-5 P2-8 P2-7 N/C Signal DSR, DCD DCD, DTR RXD TXD GND CTS RTS N/C Figure A-3 DB-9 Female to DB-9 Female Null Modem Cable Diagram DB-9 Connector Pin 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 DB-9 Connector Pin 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Note that for each DB-9 connector, pins 1 and 6 are tied together and sent to pin 4 of the opposite connector, providing the required handshake signals. D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 A-9 CONFIDENTIAL A-10 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F APPENDIX B Compliance B.1 Fusion Wideband System Approval Status InterReach Fusion Wideband has been approved as shown below. 700 MHz LTE Products Safety: UL, CSA, CB Scheme certificate to IEC 60950, 3rd Edition, and IEC 60950-1, 1st Edition, with all national deviations. EMC: FCC part 15 class A Radio: FCC part 27 800 SMR/iDEN Products Safety: UL, CSA, CB Scheme certificate to IEC 60950, 3rd Edition, and IEC 60950-1, 1st Edition, with all national deviations. EMC: FCC part 15 class A Radio: FCC part 90 850 Cellular Products Safety: UL, CSA, CB Scheme certificate to IEC 60950, 3rd Edition, and IEC 60950-1, 1st Edition, with all national deviations. EMC: FCC part 15 class A Radio: FCC part 22 D-620616-0-20 Rev F InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual B-1 CONFIDENTIAL 1800 DCS Products Safety: UL, CSA, CB Scheme certificate to IEC 60950, 3rd Edition, and IEC 60950-1, 1st Edition, with all national deviations. EMC: EN 301 489-8 V1.2.1 Radio: EN 301 502 V8.1.2 1900 PCS Products Safety: UL, CSA, CB Scheme certificate to IEC 60950, 3rd Edition, and IEC 60950-1, 1st Edition, with all national deviations. EMC: FCC part 15 class A Radio: FCC part 24 2100 UMTS Products Safety: UL, CSA, CB Scheme certificate to IEC 60950, 3rd Edition, and IEC 60950-1, 1st Edition, with all national deviations. EMC: EN 301 489-23 V1.2.1 Radio: EN 301 908-11 V2.3.1 1700/2100 AWS Products Safety: UL, CSA, CB Scheme certificate to IEC 60950, 3rd Edition, and IEC 60950-1, 1st Edition, with all national deviations. EMC: FCC part 15 class A Radio: FCC part 27 2500 WiMAX Products Safety: UL, CSA, CB Scheme certificate to IEC 60950, 3rd Edition, and IEC 60950-1, 1st Edition, with all national deviations. EMC: FCC part 15 class A Radio: FCC part 27 2600 MHz LTE Products Safety: UL, CSA, CB Scheme certificate to IEC 60950, 3rd Edition, and IEC 60950-1, 1st Edition, with all national deviations. EMC: EN 301 489-23 V1.5.1 Radio: EN 301 908-15 V5.2.1 B-2 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F InterReach Fusion Wideband Main Hub and Expansion Hub Safety: UL, CSA, CB Scheme certificate to IEC 60950-1, First Edition, with all national deviations. EMC: CISPR 22A EMC: CISPR 24 NOTE: For Canadian customers, the Manufacturers rated output power1 of this equipment is for single carrier operation. For situations when multiple carrier signals are present, the rating would have to be reduced by 3.5 dB, especially where the output signal is re-radiated and can cause interference to adjacent band users. This power reduction is to be by means of input power or gain reduction and not by an attenuator at the output of the device. NOTE: This device complies with Part 15 of the FCC Rules. Operation is subject to the following two conditions: (1) this device may not cause harm-
ful interference, and (2) this device must accept any interference received, including interference that may cause undesired operation. NOTE: This equipment has been tested and found to comply with the limits for a Class A digital device, pursuant to Part 15 of the FCC Rules. These limits are designed to provide reasonable protection against harmful interfer-
ence when the equipment is operated in a commercial environment. This equipment generates, uses, and can radiate radio frequency energy and, if not installed and used in accordance with the instruction manual, may cause harmful interference to radio communications. This equipment complies with the FCC radiation exposure limits for general popula-
tion/uncontrolled exposure environments. Changes or modifications not approved and performed by TE may void the users authority to operate the equipment. 1. Manufacturers rated output power refers to Fusion Widebands downlink P1dB. The power per carrier tables take into account this power reduction for multiple carriers. D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 B-3 CONFIDENTIAL B.2 Human Exposure to RF The U.S. Federal Communications Commission (FCC) has developed guidelines for evaluation of human exposure to RF emissions. The guidelines incorporate limits for Maximum Permissible Exposure (MPE) for power density of transmitters operating at frequencies between 300 kHz and 100 GHz. Limits have been set for portable, mobile, and fixed equipment. TE products fall in the category of fixed equipment;
products intended to be permanently secured and exposures are evaluated for dis-
tances greater than 20cm (7 7/8). Portable devices fall into exposures of less than 20cm, are SAR evaluations are used. Antenna gain is restricted to 1.5 W ERP (2.49 W EIRP) in order to satisfy RF expo-
sure compliance requirements. If higher than 1.5 W ERP, routine MPE evaluation is needed. The antennas should be installed to provide at least 20 cm from all persons to satisfy MPE requirements of FCC Part 2, 2.1091. Basic MPE evaluation is performed by taking the maximum power output of the equipment, the gain of the antenna to be used, and distance from the antenna, refer-
enced in FCC OET Bulletin 65 Evaluation Compliance with FCC Guidelines for Human Exposure to Radio Frequency for Electric Fields. TE products transmit well below the FCC power density limits. FCC defines power output limits at 20cm distance for various frequency ranges:
Over 300 mHz to 1.5 GHz the limit is determined by frequency/1500 Above 1.5 GHz the limit is 1mW/cm2 The basic equation for determining power density is:
S = PG / 4R2 Where S is power density in mW/cm2 PG, the transmitted power from the antenna identified as EIRP (Equivalent Isotropi-
cally Radiated Power), is the product of power output of device and antenna gain, in mW. R is the distance of interest from the antenna. Typical Installation Example:
Assuming an antenna is placed on a 10 foot ceiling, for a person 6 feet tall, the dis-
tance from antenna to body is 4 feet (112 cm.). For a PCS 1900 remote unit, the maximum power output, according to the power table in Section 6.3 Maximum Output Power per Carrier on page 6-4, is 16.5 dB. Assuming a 7 dBi antenna is used, PG in the equation is equal to 23.5 dB (224 mW) EIRP. B-4 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F Using S = PG/4R2 S = 224/(4x3.14) x (122)2 = 0.001 mW/cm2 Also, assuming a minimum distance of 20 cm according to FCC regulations S = 224/(4 x 3.14) x (20)2 = 0.04 mW/cm2 D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 B-5 CONFIDENTIAL B-6 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F APPENDIX C Faults, Warnings, Status Tables for Fusion, Fusion Wideband, Fusion SingleStar This appendix contains the following sections:
Section C.1 Faults Reported by Main Hubs . C-1 Section C.2 Faults Reported for System CPU . C-5 Section C.3 Faults for Expansion Hubs . C-6 Section C.4 Faults for RAUs . C-9 Section C.5 Messages for Main Hubs . C-10 Section C.6 Messages for System CPUs . C-15 Section C.7 Messages for Expansion Hubs . C-16 Section C.8 Messages for RAUs . C-19 The following tables contain messages for all versions of firmware, but all messages are not displayed by a given firmware version. C.1 Faults Reported by Main Hubs Faults indicate service-impacting conditions and should be given immediate atten-
tion. Once all of the units are powered on and the cable connections are made, the faults from each unit can be requested using AdminBrowser. Start with the Fusion or Fusion Wideband Main Hub and work downstream. Resolve all faults first and then check the warnings. Take appropriate action to resolve the faults, as indicated in the following tables. In cases where there is more than one possible cause, they are listed from the most likely to the least likely cause. Actions are listed in the order that they should be performed; not all actions may need to be done. InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F C-1 CONFIDENTIAL NOTE: If you have a red STATUS LED without a fault message, it probably indicates that the unit is locked out. Table C-1 Fault Messages for Main Hubs Message Number
{MF01}
{MF02}
{MF03}
{MF04}
{MF05}
{MF06}
{MF07}
{MF08}
{MF09}
{MF10}
{MF11}
{MF12}
{MF13}
{MF14}
{MF15}
{MF16}
{MF17}
{MF18}
{ML19}
{MF20}
{MF21}
{MF22}
{MF23}
{MF24}
{MF25}
{MF26}
{ML27}
{MF28}
{MF29}
{MF30}
{MF31}
{MF32}
Description Software error occurred and recovered. Software error occurred and recovered. Software error occurred and recovered. Software reset occurred and recovered, or firmware download. Software error occurred and recovered. Problem detected in the Hub. Internal communication reset. Hub power cycle. Internal communications failure. Hardware Reset. Band not programmed. Hardware failure (DL Pilot PLL). Hardware failure (DL Pilot Too High). Hardware failure (DL Pilot Too Low). Hardware failure (54 VDC). Hardware failure (RF VDC Power). Self Lockout (All Bands). Hardware failure (DL PLL Band 1). Hardware failure (UL PLL Band 1). Commanded Out-of-service (Band 1). Hardware failure (UL1 LO2 Band 1). Problem detected in the Hub. Problem detected in the Hub. Problem detected in the Hub Problem detected in the Hub. Hardware failure (DL PLL Band 2). Hardware failure (UL PLL Band 2). Commanded Out-of-service (Band 2). Problem detected in the Hub. Problem detected in the Hub. Problem detected in the Hub. Problem detected in the Hub. Problem detected in the Hub. Reason/Action If this happens repeatedly, replace the Hub. If this happens repeatedly, replace the Hub. If this happens repeatedly, replace the Hub. If this happens repeatedly, replace the Hub. If this happens repeatedly, replace the Hub. Contact TE Support for more information. Hub power cycle. No internal communications in preceding 15 min-
utes. Commanded hardware power on reset Use AdminBrowser to program the band. Cycle power once. If fault persists, replace the Hub Cycle power once. If fault persists, replace the Hub. Cycle power once. If fault persists, replace the Hub. 54 VDC power supply is out of range, replace the Hub Loss of DC power to RF circuits, replace the Hub. Hub has shutdown the system due to an internal fault. System is offline. Cycle power once. If fault persists, replace the Hub. Cycle power once. If fault persists, replace the Hub Band 1 commanded out-of-service by User. Cycle power once. If the fault persists, replace the Hub. Contact TE Support for more information. Contact TE Support for more information. Contact TE Support for more information. Contact TE Support for more information. Cycle power once. If fault persists, replace the Hub. Cycle power once. If fault persists, replace the Hub. Band 2 commanded out-of-service by User. Contact TE Support for more information. Contact TE Support for more information. Contact TE Support for more information. Contact TE Support for more information. Contact TE Support for more information. C-2 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F Table C-1 Fault Messages for Main Hubs (continued) Message Number
{MF33}
{MF34}
{ML35}
{MF36}
{MF37}
{MF38}
{MF39}
{MF40}
{MF41}
Description Hardware failure (DL PLL Band 3). Hardware failure (UL PLL Band 3). Commanded Out-of-service (Band 3). Hardware failure (638 MHz PLL). Hardware failure (656 MHz PLL). Problem detected in the Hub. Problem detected in the Hub. Problem detected in the Hub. Hardware failure (Optical Power Out).
{MF42}
{MF43}
{MF44}
{MF45}
{MF46}
{MF47}
{MF48}
{MD129}
{MD130}
{MD131}
{MD132}
{MD133}
{MD134}
{MD135}
{MD136}
{MC137}
{MC138}
{MC139}
{MC140}
{MC141}
{MC142}
{MC143}
{MC144}
{MT145}
Unable to sync with TDD frame (Band 1). Unable to sync with TDD frame (Band 2). Unable to determine number of TDD symbols (Band 1). Unable to determine number of TDD symbols (Band 2). Problem detected in the Hub. Problem detected in the Hub Problem detected in the Hub. Port 1 Disconnected. Port 2 Disconnected. Port 3 Disconnected. Port 4 Disconnected. Port 5 Disconnected. Port 6 Disconnected. Port 7 Disconnected. Port 8 Disconnected. Port 1 No Communications. Port 2 No Communications. Port 3 No Communications. Port 4 No Communications. Port 5 No Communications. Port 6 No Communications. Port 7 No Communications. Port 8 No Communications. Port 1 Cable Fault.
{MT146}
Port 2 Cable Fault.
{MT147}
Port 3 Cable Fault. Reason/Action Cycle power once. If fault persists, replace the Hub. Cycle power once. If fault persists, replace the Hub. Band 3 commanded out-of-service by User. Cycle power once. If fault persists, replace the Hub. Cycle power once. If fault persists, replace the Hub. Contact TE Support for more information. Contact TE Support for more information. Contact TE Support for more information. Cycle power once. If the fault persists, replace the Hub. Check input signal and/or user TDD settings. Check input signal and/or user TDD settings. Make sure that the WiMAX signal has a valid num-
ber of downlink symbols. If the value is okay, try selecting a fixed number of symbols. Make sure that the WiMAX signal has a valid num-
ber of downlink symbols. If the value is okay, try selecting a fixed number of symbols. Contact TE Support for more information. Contact TE Support for more information. Contact TE Support for more information. Unit is disconnected. Unit is disconnected. Unit is disconnected. Unit is disconnected. Unit is disconnected. Unit is disconnected. Unit is disconnected. Unit is disconnected. No communications with remote unit. No communications with remote unit. No communications with remote unit. No communications with remote unit. No communications with remote unit. No communications with remote unit. No communications with remote unit. No communications with remote unit. Possible electrical short in the coax cable, or RAU problem. Possible electrical short in the coax cable, or RAU problem. Possible electrical short in the coax cable, or RAU problem. D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 C-3 CONFIDENTIAL Table C-1 Fault Messages for Main Hubs (continued) Message Number
{MT148}
Description Port 4 Cable Fault.
{MT149}
Port 5 Cable Fault.
{MT150}
Port 6 Cable Fault.
{MT151}
Port 7 Cable Fault.
{MT152}
Port 8 Cable Fault.
{MT153}
{MT154}
{MT155}
{MT156}
{MT157}
{MT158}
{MT159}
{MT160}
{MF161}
{MF162}
{MF163}
{MF164}
{MF165}
{MF166}
{MF167}
{MF168}
{MF169}
{MF170}
{MF171}
{MF172}
{MF173}
{MF174}
{MF175}
{MF176}
Port 1 Trip. Port 2 Trip. Port 3 Trip. Port 4 Trip. Port 5 Trip. Port 6 Trip. Port 7 Trip. Port 8 Trip. Problem detected in the Hub. Problem detected in the Hub. Problem detected in the Hub. Problem detected in the Hub. Problem detected in the Hub. Problem detected in the Hub. Problem detected in the Hub. Problem detected in the Hub. Problem detected in the Hub. Problem detected in the Hub. Problem detected in the Hub. Problem detected in the Hub. Problem detected in the Hub. Problem detected in the Hub. Problem detected in the Hub. Problem detected in the Hub. Reason/Action Possible electrical short in the coax cable, or RAU problem. Possible electrical short in the coax cable, or RAU problem. Possible electrical short in the coax cable, or RAU problem. Possible electrical short in the coax cable, or RAU problem. Possible electrical short in the coax cable, or RAU problem. Remote Unit is drawing too much current. Remote Unit is drawing too much current. Remote Unit is drawing too much current. Remote Unit is drawing too much current. Remote Unit is drawing too much current. Remote Unit is drawing too much current. Remote Unit is drawing too much current. Remote Unit is drawing too much current. Contact TE Support for more information. Contact TE Support for more information. Contact TE Support for more information. Contact TE Support for more information. Contact TE Support for more information. Contact TE Support for more information. Contact TE Support for more information. Contact TE Support for more information. Contact TE Support for more information. Contact TE Support for more information. Contact TE Support for more information. Contact TE Support for more information. Contact TE Support for more information. Contact TE Support for more information. Contact TE Support for more information. Contact TE Support for more information. C-4 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F C.2 Faults Reported for System CPU Table C-2 Faults for System CPU Message Number
{SF01}
{SF02}
{SF03}
{SF04}
{SF05}
{SF06}
{SF07}
{SF08}
{SF09}
{SF10}
{SF11}
{SF12}
{SF13}
{SF14}
{SF15}
{SF16}
{SF17}
{SF18}
{SF19}
{SF20}
{SF21}
{SF22}
{SF23}
{SF24}
{SF25}
{SF26}
{SF27}
{SF28}
{SF29}
{SF30}
{SF31}
{SF32}
Description No internal communications. Unable to open file (sysinfo). Unable to open file (sysstat). Invalid internal response. No MAC address. Unable to open file (sysinfo_org). Unable to open file (sbc_status). Invalid internal field response. Unable to open file (fileTTL). Invalid internal ASCII response. Unable to open file (sysalarm). Unable to open file (password_etb). Unable to open file (CRC). Problem detected in the System CPU. pThread not executing. Problem detected in the System CPU. Problem detected in the System CPU. Problem detected in the System CPU. Problem detected in the System CPU. Problem detected in the System CPU. Problem detected in the System CPU. Problem detected in the System CPU. Problem detected in the System CPU. Problem detected in the System CPU. Problem detected in the System CPU. Problem detected in the System CPU. Problem detected in the System CPU. Problem detected in the System CPU. Problem detected in the System CPU. Problem detected in the System CPU. Problem detected in the System CPU. Problem detected in the System CPU. Reason/Action No internal communications in preceding 2 minutes. Power cycle to clear. System CPU rebooted. System CPU rebooted. System CPU rebooted, internal command does not return valid response after 4 retries. System CPU rebooted, unable to read MAC address from the Ethernet driver. System CPU rebooted. System CPU rebooted. System CPU rebooted, internal command format invalid. System CPU rebooted. System CPU rebooted, illegal number of bytes. System CPU rebooted. System CPU rebooted. System CPU rebooted. Contact TE Support for more information. System CPU rebooted. Contact TE Support for more information. Contact TE Support for more information. Contact TE Support for more information. Contact TE Support for more information. Contact TE Support for more information. Contact TE Support for more information. Contact TE Support for more information. Contact TE Support for more information. Contact TE Support for more information. Contact TE Support for more information. Contact TE Support for more information. Contact TE Support for more information. Contact TE Support for more information. Contact TE Support for more information. Contact TE Support for more information. Contact TE Support for more information. Contact TE Support for more information. D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 C-5 CONFIDENTIAL C.3 Faults for Expansion Hubs Table C-3 Fault Messages for Expansion Hubs Message Number
{EF01}
{EF02}
{EF03}
{EF04}
{EF05}
{EF06}
{EF07}
{EF08}
{EF09}
{EF10}
{EF11}
{EF12}
{EF13}
{EF14}
{EF15}
{EF16}
{EF17}
{EF18}
{EF19}
{EF20}
{EF21}
{EF22}
{EF23}
{EF24}
{EF25}
Description Software error occurred and recovered. Software reset occurred and recovered, or firm-
ware download. Software reset occurred and recovered. Software reset occurred and recovered. Software error occurred and recovered. Firmware download. Hub power cycle. MH communications fail-
ure. MH communications fail-
ure. Hardware failure (PLL). Hardware failure (54 VDC). Problem detected in the EH. Band not programmed. Low optical input power. Hardware failure (Optical Output Power). Self Lockout (All Bands). Commanded Out-of-ser-
vice (Band 1). Fault lockout (Band 1). Problem detected in the EH. Problem detected in the EH. Problem detected in the EH. Problem detected in the EH. Problem detected in the EH. Problem detected in the EH. Commanded Out-of-ser-
vice (Band 2). Reason/Action If this happens repeatedly, replace the Hub. If this happens repeatedly, replace the Hub. If this happens repeatedly, replace the Hub. If this happens repeatedly, replace the Hub. If this happens repeatedly, replace the Hub. Firmware download. Hub power cycle. No communications from MH in THE preceding 90 seconds. EH uplink messages not getting to the MH. Cycle power once. If the fault persists, replace the Hub. 54 VDC power supply is out of range, replace the Hub. Contact TE Support for more information. Cycle power once. If the fault persists, replace the Hub. Check downlink fiber connections. Cycle power once. If the fault persists, replace the Hub. The Hub has shutdown the system due to an internal fault. The sys-
tem is offline. Band 1 commanded out-of-service by the user. Band 1 out-of-service due to an MH fault. Contact TE Support for more information. Contact TE Support for more information. Contact TE Support for more information. Contact TE Support for more information. Contact TE Support for more information. Contact TE Support for more information. Band 2 commanded out-of-service by the user. C-6 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F Table C-3 Fault Messages for Expansion Hubs (continued) Message Number
{EF26}
{EF27}
{EF28}
{EF29}
{EF30}
{EF31}
{EF32}
{EF33}
{EF34}
{EF35}
{EF36}
{EF37}
{EF38}
{EF39}
{EF40}
{ED129}
{ED130}
{ED131}
{ED132}
{ED133}
{ED134}
{ED135}
{ED136}
{EC137}
{EC138}
{EC139}
{EC140}
{EC141}
{EC142}
Description Fault lockout (Band 2). Problem detected in the EH. Problem detected in the EH. Problem detected in the EH. Problem detected in the EH. Problem detected in the EH. Problem detected in the EH. Commanded Out-of-ser-
vice (Band 3). Fault lockout (Band 3). Problem detected in the EH. Problem detected in the EH. Problem detected in the EH. Problem detected in the EH. Problem detected in the EH. Problem detected in the EH. Port 1 Disconnected. Port 2 Disconnected. Port 3 Disconnected. Port 4 Disconnected. Port 5 Disconnected. Port 6 Disconnected. Port 7 Disconnected. Port 8 Disconnected. Port 1 No Communica-
tions. Port 2 No Communica-
tions. Port 3 No Communica-
tions. Port 4 No Communica-
tions. Port 5 No Communica-
tions. Port 6 No Communica-
tions. Reason/Action Band 2 out-of-service due to MH fault. Contact TE Support for more information. Contact TE Support for more information. Contact TE Support for more information. Contact TE Support for more information. Contact TE Support for more information. Contact TE Support for more information. Band 3 commanded out-of-service by the user. Band 3 out-of-service due to an MH fault. Contact TE Support for more information. Contact TE Support for more information. Contact TE Support for more information. Contact TE Support for more information. Contact TE Support for more information. Contact TE Support for more information. Unit is disconnected. Unit is disconnected. Unit is disconnected. Unit is disconnected. Unit is disconnected. Unit is disconnected. Unit is disconnected. Unit is disconnected. No communications with remote unit. No communications with remote unit. No communications with remote unit. No communications with remote unit. No communications with remote unit. No communications with remote unit. D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 C-7 CONFIDENTIAL Table C-3 Fault Messages for Expansion Hubs (continued) Message Number
{EC143}
{EC144}
{ET145}
{ET146}
{ET147}
{ET148}
{ET149}
{ET150}
{ET151}
{ET152}
{ET153}
{ET154}
{ET155}
{ET156}
{ET157}
{ET158}
{ET159}
{ET160}
Description Port 7 No Communica-
tions. Port 8 No Communica-
tions. Port 1 Cable Fault. Port 2 Cable Fault. Port 3 Cable Fault. Port 4 Cable Fault. Port 5 Cable Fault. Port 6 Cable Fault. Port 7 Cable Fault. Port 8 Cable Fault. Port 1 Trip. Port 2 Trip. Port 3 Trip. Port 4 Trip. Port 5 Trip. Port 6 Trip. Port 7 Trip. Port 8 Trip. Reason/Action No communications with remote unit. No communications with remote unit. Possible electrical short in the coaxial cable, or an RAU problem. Possible electrical short in the coaxial cable, or an RAU problem. Possible electrical short in the coaxial cable, or an RAU problem. Possible electrical short in the coaxial cable, or an RAU problem. Possible electrical short in the coaxial cable, or an RAU problem. Possible electrical short in the coaxial cable, or an RAU problem. Possible electrical short in the coaxial cable, or an RAU problem. Possible electrical short in the coaxial cable, or an RAU problem. The Remote Unit is drawing too much current. The Remote Unit is drawing too much current. The Remote Unit is drawing too much current. The Remote Unit is drawing too much current. The Remote Unit is drawing too much current. The Remote Unit is drawing too much current. The Remote Unit is drawing too much current. The Remote Unit is drawing too much current. C-8 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F C.4 Faults for RAUs Table C-4 Faults for RAUs Message Number
{RF01}
{RF02}
{RF03}
{RF04}
{RF05}
{RF06}
{RF07}
{RF08}
{RF09}
{RF10}
{RF11}
{RF12}
{RF13}
{RF14}
{RF15}
{RF16}
{RF17}
{RF18}
{RF19}
{RF20}
{RL21}
{RL22}
{RL23}
{RF24}
{RX25}
{RX26}
{RX27}
{RF28}
{RF29}
{RF30}
{RF31}
{RF32}
Description Software error occurred and recovered. Software error occurred and recovered. Software error occurred and recovered. Software reset occurred and recovered, or firmware download. Software error occurred and recovered. Problem detected in the RAU. RAU power cycle. Problem detected in the RAU. Invalid band. Low input DC voltage. Hardware Failure (DL PLL Band 1). Hardware Failure (DL PLL Band 2). Hardware Failure (DL PLL Band 3). Hardware Failure (UL PLL Band 1). Hardware Failure (UL PLL Band 2). Hardware Failure (UL PLL Band 3). Hardware Failure (PA Band 1). Hardware Failure (PA Band 2). Hardware Failure (PA Band 3). Hardware Failure (UL Pilot). Commanded Out-of-service (Band 1). Commanded Out-of-service (Band 2). Commanded Out-of-service (Band 3). Problem detected in the RAU. Commanded shutdown (Band 1). Commanded shutdown (Band 2). Commanded shutdown (Band 3). Internal shutdown (Band 1). Internal shutdown (Band 2). Internal shutdown (Band 3). Hardware Failure (UL PLL2 Band 1). Problem detected in the RAU. Reason/Action If this happens repeatedly, replace the RAU. If this happens repeatedly, replace the RAU. If this happens repeatedly, replace the RAU. If this happens repeatedly, replace the RAU. If this happens repeatedly, replace the RAU. Contact TE Support for more information. RAU power cycle. Contact TE Support for more information. The RAU doesn't support programmed band. Check the RAU type against the band programmed in the hub. Check the coaxial cable for high RF loss. Try another Hub port. If the fault persists, replace the RAU. If the fault clears, mark the Hub port as unusable and replace the Hub when possible. Cycle power once. If the fault persists, replace the RAU. Cycle power once. If the fault persists, replace the RAU. Cycle power once. If the fault persists, replace the RAU. Cycle power once. If the fault persists, replace the RAU. Cycle power once. If the fault persists, replace the RAU. Cycle power once. If the fault persists, replace the RAU. Cycle power once. If the fault persists, replace the RAU. Cycle power once. If the fault persists, replace the RAU. Cycle power once. If the fault persists, replace the RAU. Cycle power once. If the fault persists, replace the RAU. Band 1 commanded out-of-service by User. Command In-Service on Band 1 to restore service. Band 2 commanded out-of-service by User. Command In-Service on Band 2 to restore service. Band 3 commanded out-of-service by User. Command In-Service on Band 3 to restore service. Contact TE Support for more information. Check the status of hub to which the RAU is connected. Check the status of hub to which the RAU is connected. Check the status of the hub to which the RAU is con-
nected. RAU Fault condition in band 1 path (or common path). RAU Fault condition in band 2 path (or common path). RAU Fault condition in band 3 path (or common path). Cycle power once. If the fault persists, replace the RAU. Contact TE Support for more information. D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 C-9 CONFIDENTIAL C.5 Messages for Main Hubs Warning Messages Warnings alert you to conditions that indicate possible service impact. Warnings are displayed in the Messages pane in red lettering. Before addressing warnings, ensure that all faults are resolved. Take appropriate action to resolve the warnings, as indicated in the following tables. NOTE: AdminBrowser v000007 or higher displays events (faults, warn-
ings, or status messages) depending on your view preference. To change your view preference, refer to Section 3.5, Faults, Warnings, and Status Messages of the Fusion Installation, Operation, and Maintenance Manual. Status Messages Status messages alert you to conditions that are important, but generally do not impact service. Status messages alert you to conditions that are important, but gener-
ally do not impact service. Status messages are displayed in the Messages pane in blue lettering. NOTE: AdminBrowser v000007 or higher displays events (faults, warn-
ings, or status messages) depending on your view preference. To change your view preference, refer to Section 3.5, Faults, Warnings, and Status Messages of the Fusion Installation, Operation, and Maintenance Manual. NOTE: The icons displayed in the system status tree assume that there are no other faults, warnings, or status present. In Table C-5, the message number is in the following form:
[Mnn]/X where nn equals the message number, and X equals the default of either Sta-
tus (S) or Warning (W). C-10 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F Table C-5 Warnings/Status Messages for Main Hubs Message Number/
Default
[M01]/S
[M02]/S
[M03]/S
[M04]/W
[M05]/W
[M06]/W
[M07]/W
[M08]/W
[M09]/W
[M10]/W
[M11]/W
[M12]/W
[M13]/S
[M14]/S
[M15]/S
[M16]/S
[M17]/S
[M18]/S
[M19]/S
[M20]/W
[M21]/W
[M22]/W
[M23]/S
[M24]/S
[M25]/S
[M26]/S
[M27]/S
[M28]/W
[M29]/W Description Fan 1 failure. Fan 2 failure. 54 VDC Pwr Supply Fan failure. 5 VDC Monitor. 9 VDC Monitor. 54 VDC Monitor. 3 VDC Monitor. 12 VDC Monitor. Temperature High.
-5 VDC Monitor. High laser current. DL path loss is too high Low input optical (Port 1). Low input optical (Port 2). Low input optical (Port 3). Low input optical (Port 4). Hardware failure (Test Tone PLL Band 1). Hardware failure (Test Tone Too High Band 1). Hardware failure (Test Tone Too Low Band 1). Overdrive limiter active (Band 1). CEMark limiter at maximum
(Band 1). No DL test tone (Band 1). No UL test tone (Band 1). Problem detected in the system. Hardware failure (Test Tone PLL Band 2). Hardware failure (Test Tone Too High Band 2). Hardware failure (Test Tone Too Low Band 2). Overdrive limiter active (Band 2). CEMark limiter at maximum
(Band 2). Reason/Action Check the fan for rotation, air flow blockage, and dust. Replace the Hub on high temperature warning. Check the fan for rotation, air flow blockage, and dust. Replace the Hub on high temperature warning. Check the fan for rotation, air flow blockage, and dust. Replace the Hub on high temperature warning. DC power out of range, replace the Hub. DC power out of range, replace the Hub. DC power out of range, replace the Hub. DC power out of range, replace the Hub. DC power out of range, replace the Hub. Reduce ambient temperature, check for air flow blockage, fan rotation. DC power is out of range, replace the Hub. Output laser failure possible, replace the Hub when possi-
ble. Replace the Hub. Check the uplink fiber. Check the uplink fiber. Check the uplink fiber. Check the uplink fiber. Unable to perform DL system test. Unable to perform DL system test. Unable to perform DL system test. Reduce input signal power to avoid potential component damage. Reduce input signal power to avoid drop in system gain. Hub DL gain is low. Hub UL path gain is low. Contact TE Support for more information. Unable to perform DL system test. Replace the hub when possible. Unable to perform DL system test. Replace the hub when possible. Unable to perform DL system test. Replace the hub when possible. Reduce input signal power to avoid potential component damage. Reduce input signal power to avoid drop in system gain. D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 C-11 CONFIDENTIAL Table C-5 Warnings/Status Messages for Main Hubs (continued) Message Number/
Default
[M30]/W
[M31]/S
[M32]/S
[M33]/S
[M34]/S
[M35]/S
[M36]/W
[M37]/W
[M38]/W
[M39]/S
[M40]/S
[M41]/W
[M42]/W
[M43]/W
[M44]/W
[M45]/W
[M46]/W
[M47]/W
[M48]/W
[M49]/W
[M50]/W
[M51]/W
[M52]/W
[M53]/W
[M54]/W
[M55]/W
[M56]/W
[M57]/W
[M58]/W
[M59]/W
[M60]/W
[M61]/W
[M62]/W
[M63]/W
[M64]/W
[M65]/S Description No DL test tone (Band 2). No UL test tone (Band 2). Problem detected in the system. Hardware failure (Test Tone PLL Band 3). Hardware failure (Test Tone Too High Band 3). Hardware failure (Test Tone Too Low Band 3). Overdrive limiter active (Band 3). CEMark limiter at maximum
(Band 3). No DL test tone (Band 3). No UL test tone (Band 3). Problem detected in the Hub. Port 1 No DL test tone (Band 1). Port 2 No DL test tone (Band 1). Port 3 No DL test tone (Band 1). Port 4 No DL test tone (Band 1). Port 5 No DL test tone (Band 1). Port 6 No DL test tone (Band 1). Port 7 No DL test tone (Band 1). Port 8 No DL test tone (Band 1). Port 1 No DL test tone (Band 2). Port 2 No DL test tone (Band 2). Port 3 No DL test tone (Band 2). Port 4 No DL test tone (Band 2). Port 5 No DL test tone (Band 2). Port 6 No DL test tone (Band 2). Port 7 No DL test tone (Band 2). Port 8 No DL test tone (Band 2). Port 1 No DL test tone (Band 3). Port 2 No DL test tone (Band 3). Port 3 No DL test tone (Band 3). Port 4 No DL test tone (Band 3). Port 5 No DL test tone (Band 3). Port 6 No DL test tone (Band 3). Port 7 No DL test tone (Band 3). Port 8 No DL test tone (Band 3). No UL test tone Port 1 (Band 1). Reason/Action Hub DL path gain is low. Hub UL path gain is low. Contact TE Support for more information. Unable to perform DL system test. Unable to perform DL system test. Unable to perform DL system test. Reduce input signal power to avoid potential component damage. Reduce input signal power to avoid drop in system gain. Hub DL path gain is low. Hub UL path gain is low. Contact TE Support for more information. Hub/Port DL path gain is low. Hub/Port DL path gain is low. Hub/Port DL path gain is low. Hub/Port DL path gain is low. Hub/Port DL path gain is low. Hub/Port DL path gain is low. Hub/Port DL path gain is low. Hub/Port DL path gain is low. Hub/Port DL path gain is low. Hub/Port DL path gain is low. Hub/Port DL path gain is low. Hub/Port DL path gain is low. Hub/Port DL path gain is low. Hub/Port DL path gain is low. Hub/Port DL path gain is low. Hub/Port DL path gain is low. Hub/Port DL path gain is low. Hub/Port DL path gain is low. Hub/Port DL path gain is low. Hub/Port DL path gain is low. Hub/Port DL path gain is low. Hub/Port DL path gain is low. Hub/Port DL path gain is low. Hub/Port DL path gain is low. Hub/Port UL path gain is low. C-12 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F Table C-5 Warnings/Status Messages for Main Hubs (continued) Message Number/
Default
[M66]/S
[M67]/S
[M68]/S
[M69]/S
[M70]/S
[M71]/S
[M72]/S
[M73]/S
[M74]/S
[M75]/S
[M76]/S
[M77]/S
[M78]/S
[M79]/S
[M80]/S
[M81]/W Description No UL test tone Port 2 (Band 1). No UL test tone Port 3 (Band 1). No UL test tone Port 4 (Band 1). No UL test tone Port 1 (Band 2). No UL test tone Port 2 (Band 2). No UL test tone Port 3 (Band 2). No UL test tone Port 4 (Band 2). No UL test tone Port 1 (Band 3). No UL test tone Port 2 (Band 3). No UL test tone Port 3 (Band 3). No UL test tone Port 4 (Band 3). Problem detected in the Hub. Problem detected in the Hub. Problem detected in the Hub. Problem detected in the Hub. Port 1 DL path loss is high.
[M82]/W Port 2 DL path loss is high.
[M83]/W Port 3 DL path loss is high.
[M84]/W Port 4 DL path loss is high.
[M85]/W Port 5 DL path loss is high.
[M86]/W Port 6 DL path loss is high.
[M87]/W Port 7 DL path loss is high.
[M88]/W Port 8 DL path loss is high.
[M89]/W Port 1 UL path loss is high.
[M90]/W Port 2 UL path loss is high.
[M91]/W Port 3 UL path loss is high. Reason/Action Hub/Port UL path gain is low. Hub/Port UL path gain is low. Hub/Port UL path gain is low. Hub/Port UL path gain is low. Hub/Port UL path gain is low. Hub/Port UL path gain is low. Hub/Port UL path gain is low. Hub/Port UL path gain is low. Hub/Port UL path gain is low. Hub/Port UL path gain is low. Hub/Port UL path gain is low. Contact TE Support for more information. Contact TE Support for more information. Contact TE Support for more information. Contact TE Support for more information. If the problem is on more than one port, replace the Hub. Switch the cable connection to a different hub port until the Hub can be replaced. If the problem is on more than one port, replace the Hub. Switch the cable connection to a different hub port until the Hub can be replaced. If the problem is on more than one port, replace the Hub. Switch the cable connection to a different hub port until the Hub can be replaced. If the problem is on more than one port, replace the Hub. Switch the cable connection to a different hub port until the Hub can be replaced. If the problem is on more than one port, replace the Hub. Switch the cable connection to a different hub port until the Hub can be replaced. If the problem is on more than one port, replace the Hub. Switch the cable connection to a different hub port until the Hub can be replaced. If the problem is on more than one port, replace the Hub. Switch the cable connection to a different hub port until the Hub can be replaced. If the problem is on more than one port, replace the Hub. Switch the cable connection to a different hub port until the Hub can be replaced. Check the cable for high RF loss. Switch the cable connec-
tion to a different hub port. If the problem on more than one port, replace the Hub, otherwise replace the RAU. Check the cable for high RF loss. Switch the cable connec-
tion to a different hub port. If the problem is on more than one port, replace the Hub, otherwise replace the RAU. Check the cable for high RF loss. Switch the cable connec-
tion to a different hub port. If the problem is on more than one port, replace the Hub, otherwise replace the RAU. D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 C-13 CONFIDENTIAL Table C-5 Warnings/Status Messages for Main Hubs (continued) Message Number/
Default
[M92]/W Description Port 4 UL path loss is high.
[M93]/W Port 5 UL path loss is high.
[M94]/W Port 6 UL path loss is high.
[M95]/W Port 7 UL path loss is high.
[M96]/W Port 8 UL path loss is high.
[M97]/W
[M98]/W
[M99]/W
[M100]/W
[M101]/W
[M102]/W
[M103]/W
[M104]/W
[M105]/W
[M106]/W
[M107]/W
[M108]/W
[M109]/W
[M110]/W
[M111]/W
[M112]/W
[M113)/S
[M114)/S
[M115)/S
[M116)/S
[M117)/S
[M118)/S
[M119)/S Port 1 UL path exceeds maximum gain. Port 2 UL path exceeds maximum gain. Port 2 UL path exceeds maximum gain. Port 2 UL path exceeds maximum gain. Port 2 UL path exceeds maximum gain. Port 2 UL path exceeds maximum gain. Port 2 UL path exceeds maximum gain. Port 8 UL path exceeds maximum gain. Port 1 54 VDC Power Enabled. Port 2 54 VDC Power Enabled. Port 3 54 VDC Power Enabled. Port 4 54 VDC Power Enabled. Port 5 54 VDC Power Enabled. Port 6 54 VDC Power Enabled. Port 7 54 VDC Power Enabled. Port 8 54 VDC Power Enabled. Port 1 UL Pilot Invalid Enable. Port 2 UL Pilot Invalid Enable. Port 3 UL Pilot Invalid Enable. Port 4 UL Pilot Invalid Enable. Port 5 UL Pilot Invalid Enable. Port 6 UL Pilot Invalid Enable. Port 7 UL Pilot Invalid Enable. Reason/Action Check the cable for high RF loss. Switch the cable connec-
tion to a different hub port. If the problem is on more than one port, replace the Hub, otherwise replace the RAU. Check the cable for high RF loss. Switch the cable connec-
tion to a different hub port. If the problem is on more than one port, replace the Hub, otherwise replace the RAU. Check the cable for high RF loss. Switch the cable connec-
tion to a different hub port. If the problem is on more than one port, replace the Hub, otherwise replace the RAU. Check the cable for high RF loss. Switch the cable connec-
tion to a different hub port. If the problem is on more than one port, replace the Hub, otherwise replace the RAU. Check the cable for high RF loss. Switch the cable connec-
tion to a different hub port. If the problem is on more than one port, replace the Hub, otherwise replace the RAU. If the problem is common to more than one port, replace the Hub, otherwise check the RAU. If the problem is common to more than one port, replace the Hub, otherwise check the RAU. If the problem is common to more than one port, replace the Hub, otherwise check the RAU. If the problem is common to more than one port, replace the Hub, otherwise check the RAU. If the problem is common to more than one port, replace the Hub, otherwise check the RAU. If the problem is common to more than one port, replace the Hub, otherwise check the RAU. If the problem is common to more than one port, replace the Hub, otherwise check the RAU. If the problem is common to more than one port, replace the Hub, otherwise check the RAU. Caution: Port 54 VDC power may be present at the output. Caution: Port 54 VDC power may be present at the output. Caution: Port 54 VDC power may be present at the output. Caution: Port 54 VDC power may be present at the output. Caution: Port 54 VDC power may be present at the output. Caution: Port 54 VDC power may be present at the output. Caution: Port 54 VDC power may be present at the output. Caution: Port 54 VDC power may be present at the output. Check all downstream units for uplink pilot control. Check all downstream units for uplink pilot control. Check all downstream units for uplink pilot control. Check all downstream units for uplink pilot control. Check all downstream units for uplink pilot control. Check all downstream units for uplink pilot control. Check all downstream units for uplink pilot control. C-14 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F Table C-5 Warnings/Status Messages for Main Hubs (continued) Message Number/
Default
[M120)/S
[M121)/S
[M122)/W
[M123)/W Description Port 8 UL Pilot Invalid Enable. 3.3 VDC Monitor. TDD signaling tone outside valid range (Band 1). TDD signaling tone outside valid range (Band 2). Reason/Action Check all downstream units for uplink pilot control. Possible 3.3 VDC failure. Replace the Hub. Replace the Hub. C.6 Messages for System CPUs In Table C-6, the message number is in the following form:
[Snn]/X where nn equals the message number, and X equals the default of either Sta-
tus (S) or Warning (W). Table C-6 Warning/Status Messages for System CPUs Message Number/
Default
[S01]/W
[S02]/W
[S03]/W
[S04]/S
[S05]/S
[S06]/S
[S07]/S
[S08]/S
[S09]/S
[S10]/S
[S11]/S
[S12]/S
[S13]/S
[S14]/S
[S15]/S
[S16]/S Description Alarm Input 1. Alarm Input 2. Alarm Input 3. Performed System Test Problem detected in the System CPU. Loaded default etb file. Loaded default SBC status file. Problem detected in the System CPU. TTL is full. Problem detected in the System CPU. Problem detected in the System CPU. Loaded default Password file. Loaded default sys config file. Communication retries exceeded. Problem detected in the System CPU. Problem detected in the System CPU. Reason/Action Check equipment connected to alarm input 1. Check equipment connected to alarm input 2. Check equipment connected to alarm input 3. System has just performed system test. Contact TE Support for more information. Contact TE Support for more information. Contact TE Support for more information. Contact TE Support for more information. Retrieve the TTL and erase. Contact TE Support for more information. Contact TE Support for more information. Contact TE Support for more information. Contact TE Support for more information. Attempted command three times without response. Contact TE Support for more information. Contact TE Support for more information. D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 C-15 CONFIDENTIAL C.7 Messages for Expansion Hubs Table C-7 Warning/Status Message for Expansion Hubs Message Number
/Default
[E01]/W
[E02]/W
[E03]/W
[E04]/S
[E05]/W
[E06]/W
[E07]/W
[E08]/S
[E09]/S Description Alarm Input 1. Alarm Input 2. Alarm Input 3. Problem detected in the EH. SNMP Trap #1. SNMP Trap #2. SNMP Trap #3. Problem detected in the EH. Fan 1 failure.
[E10]/S Fan 2 failure.
[E11]/W
[E12]/W
[E13]/W
[E14]/W
[E15]/W
[E16]/W
[E17]/W
-5 VDC Monitor. 5 VDC Monitor. 9 VDC Monitor. 54 VDC Pwr Supply failure. 3 VDC Monitor. 12 VDC Monitor. Temperature High.
[E18]/W DL path exceeds maximum gain.
[E19]/W DL path loss is high.
[E20]/W
[E21]/W
[E22]/W
[E23]/W
[E24]/S
[E25]/W
[E26]/W
[E27]/W
[E28]/W
[E29]/W
[E30]/W
[E31]/W
[E32]/W Hardware Failure (High UL Pilot). Hardware Failure (Low UL Pilot). Low optical input power. High laser current. Problem detected in the EH. Port 1 No DL test tone (Band 1). Port 2 No DL test tone (Band 1). Port 3 No DL test tone (Band 1). Port 4 No DL test tone (Band 1). Port 5 No DL test tone (Band 1). Port 6 No DL test tone (Band 1). Port 7 No DL test tone (Band 1). Port 8 No DL test tone (Band 1). Reason/Action Check the equipment connected to alarm input 1. Check the equipment connected to alarm input 2. Check the equipment connected to alarm input 3. Contact TE Support for more information. TBD. TBD. TBD. Contact TE Support for more information. Check the fan for proper rotation, air flow blockage, and dust accumulation. Replace the Hub on high temperature warning. Check the fan for proper rotation, air flow blockage, and dust accumulation. Replace the Hub on high temperature warning. DC power out of range, replace the Hub. DC power out of range, replace the Hub. DC power out of range, replace the Hub. DC port power supply out of range, replace the Hub. DC power out of range, replace the Hub. DC power out of range, replace the Hub. Reduce the ambient temperature, check for air flow blockage, fan rotation. If the problem is common to more than one port, replace the MH, otherwise check the EH. Check the cable for high RF loss. Switch the cable connec-
tion to a different MH port. If the problem is on more than one port, replace the EH, otherwise replace the RAU. Cycle power once. If the fault persists, replace the EH. Cycle power once. If the fault persists, replace the EH. Check the downlink fiber connection. Contact TE Support for more information. Contact TE Support for more information. Hub/Port DL path gain is low. Hub/Port DL path gain is low. Hub/Port DL path gain is low. Hub/Port DL path gain is low. Hub/Port DL path gain is low. Hub/Port DL path gain is low. Hub/Port DL path gain is low. Hub/Port DL path gain is low. C-16 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F Table C-7 Warning/Status Message for Expansion Hubs (continued) Message Number
/Default
[E33]/W
[E34]/W
[E35]/W
[E36]/W
[E37]/W
[E38]/W
[E39]/W
[E40]/W
[E41]/W
[E42]/W
[E43]/W
[E44]/W
[E45]/W
[E46]/W
[E47]/W
[E48]/W
[E49]/W Description Port 1 No DL test tone (Band 2). Port 2 No DL test tone (Band 2). Port 3 No DL test tone (Band 2). Port 4 No DL test tone (Band 2). Port 5 No DL test tone (Band 2). Port 6 No DL test tone (Band 2). Port 7 No DL test tone (Band 2). Port 8 No DL test tone (Band 2). Port 1 No DL test tone (Band 3). Port 2 No DL test tone (Band 3). Port 3 No DL test tone (Band 3). Port 4 No DL test tone (Band 3). Port 5 No DL test tone (Band 3). Port 6 No DL test tone (Band 3). Port 7 No DL test tone (Band 3). Port 8 No DL test tone (Band 3). Port 1 DL path loss is high.
[E50]/W Port 2 DL path loss is high.
[E51]/W Port 3 DL path loss is high.
[E52]/W Port 4 DL path loss is high.
[E53]/W Port 5 DL path loss is high.
[E54]/W Port 6 DL path loss is high.
[E55]/W Port 7 DL path loss is high.
[E56]/W Port 8 DL path loss is high.
[E57]/W Port 1 UL path loss is high.
[E58]/W Port 2 UL path loss is high. Reason/Action Hub/Port DL path gain is low. Hub/Port DL path gain is low. Hub/Port DL path gain is low. Hub/Port DL path gain is low. Hub/Port DL path gain is low. Hub/Port DL path gain is low. Hub/Port DL path gain is low. Hub/Port DL path gain is low. Hub/Port DL path gain is low. Hub/Port DL path gain is low. Hub/Port DL path gain is low. Hub/Port DL path gain is low. Hub/Port DL path gain is low. Hub/Port DL path gain is low. Hub/Port DL path gain is low. Hub/Port DL path gain is low. If the problem is on more than one port, replace the Hub. Switch the cable connection to a different hub port until the Hub can be replaced. If the problem is on more than one port, replace the Hub. Switch the cable connection to a different hub port until the Hub can be replaced. If the problem is on more than one port, replace the Hub. Switch the cable connection to a different hub port until the Hub can be replaced. If the problem is on more than one port, replace the Hub. Switch the cable connection to a different hub port until the Hub can be replaced. If the problem is on more than one port, replace the Hub. Switch the cable connection to a different hub port until the Hub can be replaced. If the problem is on more than one port, replace the Hub. Switch the cable connection to a different hub port until the Hub can be replaced. If the problem is on more than one port, replace the Hub. Switch the cable connection to a different hub port until the Hub can be replaced. If the problem is on more than one port, replace the Hub. Switch the cable connection to a different hub port until the Hub can be replaced. Check the cable for high RF loss. Switch the cable connec-
tion to a different hub port. If the problem is on more than one port, replace the Hub, otherwise replace the RAU. Check the cable for high RF loss. Switch the cable connec-
tion to a different hub port. If the problem is on more than one port, replace the Hub, otherwise replace the RAU. D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 C-17 CONFIDENTIAL Table C-7 Warning/Status Message for Expansion Hubs (continued) Message Number
/Default
[E59]/W Description Port 3 UL path loss is high.
[E60]/W Port 4 UL path loss is high.
[E61]/W Port 5 UL path loss is high.
[E62]/W Port 6 UL path loss is high.
[E63]/W Port 7 UL path loss is high.
[E64]/W Port 8 UL path loss is high.
[E65]/W
[E66]/W
[E67]/W
[E68]/W
[E69]/W
[E70]/W
[E71]/W
[E72]/W
[E73]/W
[E74]/W
[E75]/W
[E76]/W
[E77]/W
[E78]/W
[E79]/W
[E80]/W Port 1 UL path exceeds maxi-
mum gain. Port 2 UL path exceeds maxi-
mum gain. Port 3 UL path exceeds maxi-
mum gain. Port 4 UL path exceeds maxi-
mum gain. Port 5 UL path exceeds maxi-
mum gain. Port 6 UL path exceeds maxi-
mum gain. Port 7 UL path exceeds maxi-
mum gain. Port 8 UL path exceeds maxi-
mum gain. Port 1 54 VDC Power Enabled. Port 2 54 VDC Power Enabled. Port 3 54 VDC Power Enabled. Port 4 54 VDC Power Enabled. Port 5 54 VDC Power Enabled. Port 6 54 VDC Power Enabled. Port 7 54 VDC Power Enabled. Port 8 54 VDC Power Enabled. Reason/Action Check the cable for high RF loss. Switch the cable connec-
tion to a different hub port. If the problem is on more than one port, replace the Hub, otherwise replace the RAU. Check the cable for high RF loss. Switch the cable connec-
tion to a different hub port. If the problem is on more than one port, replace the Hub, otherwise replace the RAU. Check the cable for high RF loss. Switch the cable connec-
tion to a different hub port. If the problem is on more than one port, replace the Hub, otherwise replace the RAU. Check the cable for high RF loss. Switch the cable connec-
tion to a different hub port. If the problem is on more than one port, replace the Hub, otherwise replace the RAU. Check the cable for high RF loss. Switch the cable connec-
tion to a different hub port. If the problem is on more than one port, replace the Hub, otherwise replace the RAU. Check the cable for high RF loss. Switch the cable connec-
tion to a different hub port. If the problem is on more than one port, replace the Hub, otherwise replace the RAU. If the problem is common to more than one port, replace the Hub, otherwise check RAU. If the problem is common to more than one port, replace the Hub, otherwise check RAU. If the problem is common to more than one port, replace the Hub, otherwise check RAU. If the problem is common to more than one port, replace the Hub, otherwise check RAU. If the problem is common to more than one port, replace the Hub, otherwise check RAU. If the problem is common to more than one port, replace the Hub, otherwise check RAU. If problem is common to more than one port, replace the Hub, otherwise check RAU. If the problem is common to more than one port, replace the Hub, otherwise check RAU. Caution: Port 54 VDC power may be present at the output. Caution: Port 54 VDC power may be present at the output. Caution: Port 54 VDC power may be present at the output. Caution: Port 54 VDC power may be present at the output. Caution: Port 54 VDC power may be present at the output. Caution: Port 54 VDC power may be present at the output. Caution: Port 54 VDC power may be present at the output. Caution: Port 54 VDC power may be present at the output. C-18 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F C.8 Messages for RAUs In Table C-8, the message number is in the following form:
[Rnn]/X where nn equals the message number, and X equals the default of either Sta-
tus (S) or Warning (W). Table C-8 Warning/Status Messages for RAUs Message Number Default
[R01]/W Description Temperature High.
[R02]/W No communications from Hub.
[R03]/W DL RF path loss is too high.
[R04]/W
[R05]/S
[R06]/S
[R07]/S
[R08]/S
[R09]/W
[R10]/S
[R11]/S
[R12]/S
[R13]/S
[R14]/S
[R15]/S
[R16]/S
[R17]/S
[R18]/S
[R19]/S
[R20]/W
[R21]/W DL RF path exceeds maximum gain. DL RF path problem (Band 1). DL RF path problem (Band 2). DL RF path problem (Band 3). System test required. Antenna Disconnected. UL RF path problem (Band 1). UL RF path problem (Band 2). UL RF path problem (Band 3). Problem detected in the RAU. Problem detected in the RAU. Problem detected in the RAU. Problem detected in the RAU. Antenna disconnected (Band 1). Antenna disconnected (Band 2). Hardware Failure (UL FD PLL Band 1). TDD signaling tone outside valid range (Band 1). TDD signaling tone outside valid range (Band 2). Reason/Action Check RAU location for excessive temperature; check for air flow blockage and/or incorrect installation. Move the RAU to a cooler environment. Check the cable for high RF loss. Switch the cable connec-
tion to a different hub port. If the problem persists, replace the RAU. Check the cable for high RF loss. Switch the cable connec-
tion to a different hub port. If the problem persists, replace the RAU. Check the Hub for proper operation; switch the cable con-
nection to a different hub port. If the problem persists, replace the RAU. Unable to complete the DL system end-to-end test, replace the RAU when possible. Unable to complete the DL system end-to-end test, replace the RAU when possible. Unable to complete the DL system end-to-end test, replace the RAU when possible. Run system test. Check RAU antenna connection; re-run system test. Unable to complete the UL system end-to-end test, replace the RAU when possible. Unable to complete the UL system end-to-end test, replace the RAU when possible. Unable to complete the UL system end-to-end test, replace the RAU when possible. Contact TE Support for more information. Contact TE Support for more information. Contact TE Support for more information. Contact TE Support for more information. Check the RAU Band 1 antenna, then rerun the system test. Check the RAU Band 2 antenna, then rerun the system test. Unable to complete a UL system end-to-end test. Replace the RAU when possible. If the Main Hub and Expansion Hub are okay, replace the RAU. If the Main Hub and Expansion Hub are okay, replace the RAU. D-620616-0-20 Rev F Help Hot Line (U.S. only): 1-800-530-9960 C-19 CONFIDENTIAL Table C-8 Warning/Status Messages for RAUs (continued) Message Number Default
[R22]/S Description High PA current (Band 1).
[R23]/S High PA current (Band 2). Reason/Action The unit is operating with reduced gain. Verify that the input signal is at the appropriate level. If the problem per-
sists, replace the RAU when possible. The unit is operating with reduced gain. Verify that the input signal is at the appropriate level. If the problem per-
sists, replace the RAU when possible. C-20 CONFIDENTIAL InterReach Fusion Wideband Installation, Operation, and Reference Manual D-620616-0-20 Rev F
frequency | equipment class | purpose | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 2012-07-19 | 2110 ~ 2155 | PCB - PCS Licensed Transmitter | Original Equipment |
app s | Applicant Information | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Effective |
2012-07-19
|
||||
1 | Applicant's complete, legal business name |
ADC Telecommunications Inc.
|
||||
1 | FCC Registration Number (FRN) |
0008274896
|
||||
1 | Physical Address |
501 Shenandoah Drive
|
||||
1 |
Shakopee, Minnesota 55379
|
|||||
1 |
United States
|
|||||
app s | TCB Information | |||||
1 | TCB Application Email Address |
b******@baclcorp.com
|
||||
1 | TCB Scope |
B1: Commercial mobile radio services equipment in the following 47 CFR Parts 20, 22 (cellular), 24,25 (below 3 GHz) & 27
|
||||
app s | FCC ID | |||||
1 | Grantee Code |
NOO
|
||||
1 | Equipment Product Code |
F0684-112
|
||||
app s | Person at the applicant's address to receive grant or for contact | |||||
1 | Name |
J******** W********
|
||||
1 | Title |
Compliance Engineer
|
||||
1 | Telephone Number |
952-4********
|
||||
1 | Fax Number |
952-4********
|
||||
1 |
J******@commscope.com
|
|||||
app s | Technical Contact | |||||
n/a | ||||||
app s | Non Technical Contact | |||||
n/a | ||||||
app s | Confidentiality (long or short term) | |||||
1 | Does this application include a request for confidentiality for any portion(s) of the data contained in this application pursuant to 47 CFR § 0.459 of the Commission Rules?: | Yes | ||||
1 | Long-Term Confidentiality Does this application include a request for confidentiality for any portion(s) of the data contained in this application pursuant to 47 CFR § 0.459 of the Commission Rules?: | No | ||||
if no date is supplied, the release date will be set to 45 calendar days past the date of grant. | ||||||
app s | Cognitive Radio & Software Defined Radio, Class, etc | |||||
1 | Is this application for software defined/cognitive radio authorization? | No | ||||
1 | Equipment Class | PCB - PCS Licensed Transmitter | ||||
1 | Description of product as it is marketed: (NOTE: This text will appear below the equipment class on the grant) | Remote Access Unit for InterReach Fusion System | ||||
1 | Related OET KnowledgeDataBase Inquiry: Is there a KDB inquiry associated with this application? | No | ||||
1 | Modular Equipment Type | Does not apply | ||||
1 | Purpose / Application is for | Original Equipment | ||||
1 | Composite Equipment: Is the equipment in this application a composite device subject to an additional equipment authorization? | No | ||||
1 | Related Equipment: Is the equipment in this application part of a system that operates with, or is marketed with, another device that requires an equipment authorization? | No | ||||
1 | Grant Comments | Power listed is conducted at the antenna terminal. The antenna used for this transmitter must be installed to provide a separation distance of at least 20 cm from all persons. Users and installers must be provided with antenna installation instructions and transmitter operating conditions for satisfying RF exposure compliance. | ||||
1 | Is there an equipment authorization waiver associated with this application? | No | ||||
1 | If there is an equipment authorization waiver associated with this application, has the associated waiver been approved and all information uploaded? | No | ||||
app s | Test Firm Name and Contact Information | |||||
1 | Firm Name |
Bay Area Compliance Laboratories Corporation
|
||||
1 | Name |
L******** T******
|
||||
1 | Telephone Number |
408-7******** Extension:
|
||||
1 | Fax Number |
408 7********
|
||||
1 |
l******@baclcorp.com
|
|||||
Equipment Specifications | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Line | Rule Parts | Grant Notes | Lower Frequency | Upper Frequency | Power Output | Tolerance | Emission Designator | Microprocessor Number | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1 | 1 | 24E | 1930 | 1990 | 0.3365 | 0.01 ppm | 300KGXW | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1 | 2 | 24E | 1930 | 1990 | 0.5916 | 0.01 ppm | 300KG7W | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1 | 3 | 24E | 1930 | 1990 | 0.1265 | 0.01 ppm | 1M25F9W | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1 | 4 | 24E | 1930 | 1990 | 0.1227 | 0.01 ppm | 5M00F9W | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1 | 5 | 24E | 1930 | 1990 | 0.1659 | 0.01 ppm | 1M40D7D | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1 | 6 | 24E | 1930 | 1990 | 0.1656 | 0.01 ppm | 3M00D7D | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1 | 7 | 24E | 1930 | 1990 | 0.1648 | 0.01 ppm | 5M00D7D | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1 | 8 | 24E | 1930 | 1990 | 0.1702 | 0.01 ppm | 10M0D7D | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1 | 9 | 27 | 2110 | 2155 | 0.3656 | 0.01 ppm | 300KGXW | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1 | 1 | 27 | 2110 | 2155 | 0.4603 | 0.01 ppm | 300KG7W | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1 | 11 | 27 | 2110 | 2155 | 0.0959 | 0.01 ppm | 1M25F9W | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1 | 12 | 27 | 2110 | 2155 | 0.0914 | 0.01 ppm | 5M00F9W | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1 | 13 | 27 | 2110 | 2155 | 0.1315 | 0.01 ppm | 1M40D7D | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1 | 14 | 27 | 2110 | 2155 | 0.1346 | 0.01 ppm | 3M00D7D | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1 | 15 | 27 | 2110 | 2155 | 0.1352 | 0.01 ppm | 5M00D7D | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1 | 16 | 27 | 2110 | 2155 | 0.1352 | 0.01 ppm | 10M0D7D |
some individual PII (Personally Identifiable Information) available on the public forms may be redacted, original source may include additional details
This product uses the FCC Data API but is not endorsed or certified by the FCC