The invention relates to an aerial system, in particular a mobile communication aerial system, and an associated transmission and control device according to the pre-characterising clause of claim 1.
Mobile communication aerials can radiate and/or receive in one or more frequency bands, for example in a 900 MHz band, an 1800 MHz band, a 1900 MHz band, or for example in a UMTS band, thus for example in a range from about 1920 MHz to 2170 MHz. In principle there are no restrictions to other frequency ranges.
Proven mobile communication aerials work with radiators or radiator devices which, for example, can transmit and/or receive in two polarisations which are perpendicular to each other. In this respect, X polarisation is also often mentioned, since the two polarisation planes are in principle aligned at a +45° angle and a −45° angle respectively to the horizontal plane or vertical plane. Irrespective of this, the main radiation direction of mobile communication aerials is often set at a radiation angle which differs from a horizontal alignment, and which preferably can be changed by remote control. This involves remotely controllable electronic down-tilt angle adjustment, and an associated adjustment device, often also called an RET unit for short.
Such a controller is to be taken as known, for example, from EP 1 356 539 B1, and such a method of operating such an RET unit from, for example, EP 1 455 413 B1.
Irrespective of the construction of the aerial systems in the region of a base station, it is necessary that the corresponding aerial systems should be synchronised with each other.
According to most mobile communication standards, the synchronisation of the base station is also ensured via a network and switching system, called “NSS” for short, and also known as the backbone network.
Satellite signals are not required here, since the subscribers are synchronised in the appropriate connection channel. The basic properties of such a mobile communication system are reproduced in, for example, P. Jung: Analyse and Entwurf digitaler Mobilfunksysteme Verlag Teubner, Stuttgart, 1997, pp. 231-240.
Against this background, the mobile communication network is constantly expanded and/or modernised by providing new mobile communication systems, if appropriate at the same location, in particular at the same mast. In conventional mobile communication systems, on the aerial side, electronic components (for example low-noise reception amplifiers) are often provided, for example in the form of current-alarmed devices (also sometimes called “CWA devices” for short in the following, the abbreviation “CWA” standing for “current window alarm”). Newer aerial systems are also equipped, for example, with so-called AISG device functions (where AISG stands for “antenna interface standards group”). Aerial systems are also equipped, for example, with 3GPP device functions, which allow communication not via the AISG protocol, but via the 3GPP protocol (where “3GPP” stands for “3rd generation partnership project”).
In the following, reference is made to
The conventional base station which is shown in
On the basis of
Differing from the example reproduced in
As part of modernisation, for example, a so-called RET unit, i.e. a so-called remotely controllable electronic down-tilt device, can be retrofitted on the aerial device shown in
The object of this invention is to create a possibility for modernising a conventional aerial system, in particular a mobile communication aerial system, which has advantages compared with the modernisation concepts which have been carried out until now.
According to the invention, the object is achieved with reference to a transmission and control device corresponding to the features given in claim 1, and with reference to an aerial system, in particular a mobile communication aerial system, corresponding to the features given in claim 10. Advantageous versions of the invention are given in the subclaims.
In the known solutions according to the prior art until now, it was necessary, in modernising a conventional mobile communication system, which for example worked with current-alarmed ALD devices, when replacing the old base station and installing a newer, more modern base station, also to replace the current-alarmed ALD devices with corresponding aerial-side protocol-controlled devices, for example devices which work and/or can be controlled using an AISG protocol or 3GPP protocol. in contrast, within the invention it is now possible to leave the CWA-based device components which are provided on the aerial side, i.e. not to replace them, but merely to modernise the base station, a converter circuit according to the invention being connected upstream from the aerial device, before or after the transmission path of the feeders, so as to provide in this way the corresponding simulation and provision of the required direct voltage to control the CWA components.
The converter circuit according to the invention can be constructed so that it is suitable as a complementary solution for specified manufacturer-specific base stations, and designed for a quite specific transmission protocol, for example an AISG protocol, or a 3GPP protocol, etc. By contrast, however, it is also possible to provide and use a converter circuit according to the invention, which scans its connections on the base station side, i.e. those connections to which the HF feeders coming from the base station are also connected (one HF feeder for polarisation being provided in each case). Through this scanning process, it is possible to determine in the converter circuit whether the relevant connected or renewed base station transmits control data, for example, on the basis of an AISG protocol, a 3GPP protocol or another suitable protocol. Then, in accordance with the scan result, it is possible to set up a connection in the relevant converter circuit according to the invention in such a way that the ALD devices which are connected on the aerial side (and which therefore, as current-alarmed devices, draw different currents depending on fault changes and/or status changes) are controlled correspondingly, and/or their faults or status changes are transmitted to the base station, or the corresponding information can be made available on enquiry or polling, for example by the base station.
In this case, the necessary direct voltage for the CWA devices provided on the aerial side can also be made available at the appropriate level via the new base station.
Thus with the above-mentioned converter circuit according to the invention, corresponding provision of direct voltage for the CWA devices, precisely at the order of magnitude which was required until now for the CWA devices, is also possible.
The explained converter circuit can thus use the energy of the base station, but only within the limits which are also allowed for standardised AISG-3GPP components. The currents—measured in the converter—of the CWA device connected upstream are used only to detect operational and/or fault states, and are not mapped onto the current consumption of the converter side on the base station side. If the current level which the base station provides is insufficient, preferably the required direct current is made available via a separate interface of the converter circuit.
In a preferred embodiment of the invention, a further separate interface, which can be used either to control the converter itself, and/or to control the aerial arrangement which can be reached via it, and/or to provide direct current for active aerial components (including CWA devices), is provided on the relevant converter circuit.
This mentioned additional interface on the converter circuit can also be omitted in the case of sufficient total direct current power at the base station.
Further advantages, details and features of the invention result from the attached embodiments on the basis of drawings. In detail:
FIG 5: is a view similar to
Below, reference is made to
Thus the aerial system according to
On a mast 1′, in principle only two feed lines 5a and 5b are available.
The aerial system ANT is also controlled and/or operated on the aerial side via current-alarmed (CWA) ALD mobile communication components 17, which are connected to the associated aerial ANT via two HF connecting lines 5.2a and 5.2b.
In this embodiment too, for one polarisation the output BS2-A1 is connected via a base-station-side connecting line 5.1a to a first input 111a of a converter 11, and the aerial-side connection 111′a of the converter 11 is connected via the HF feed line 5a to one input of the aerial-side current-alarmed ALD mobile communication component 17.
For the second polarisation, a further base-side connecting line 5.1b is connected to a second input 111b of the converter 11, the aerial-side second connection 111′b of the converter being connected via the second HF feed line 5b (with reference to the second polarisation) to the aerial-side second input of the current-alarmed ALD mobile communication component 17.
The drawing does not show that via the two shown HF feed links 5a, 5b from the base station BS2 to the aerial device ANT, not only the HF signals, but also the associated direct current supply for current alarming take place.
For operation, it is now provided that the converter device 11 measures the power consumption or current drawing at its aerial-side interfaces, and depending on these measured values, communicates the fault and/or operational state of the aerial-side CWA mobile communication component to the base station, preferably via an AISG/3GPP protocol, and/or makes this information available for interrogation by the base station. The information signal which is transmitted by the converter 11 to the base station BS2 can be, for example, an HDLC signal, i.e. a so-called “High-Level Data Link Control” signal.
By contrast, a corresponding information signal can also take place immediately on the basis of an AISG protocol, a 3GPP protocol or similar, i.e. in general on the basis of such a protocol which is used on the side of the associated base station BS2. On the base station side, the converter device 11 preferably behaves like a standardised AISG or 3GPP mobile communication component. In general, therefore, a conversion is carried out in the converter, preferably into a protocol which for data and information exchange to the base station BS2 can be alternately transmitted to the converter, received and correspondingly analysed and converted.
The above-mentioned information signal (for example HDLC) or a corresponding AISG or 3GPP protocol signal may relate to the measured current or a failure state, for example with reference to a low-noise reception amplifier, or with reference to two low-noise reception amplifiers TMA which are provided in one housing and are as provided for the aerial device ANT.
The converter circuit 11 controls and/or handles the required modulation, demodulation, power transformation and regulation of the current consumption.
Depending on the construction of the converter circuit, it is also possible to ensure that the corresponding power supply is separated from the current and power supply for the base station. In other words, the power supply for the converter unit (and the ALD devices) can be provided separately externally to the base station.
If a corresponding aerial system is to be put into operation, the following starting scenario is possible:
If it does not correspond to the relevant direct current power for the connected ALT devices, then the DC power which the base station BS2 makes available is transformed (for example by means of a switched-mode power supply) into a suitable DC voltage (for example 12 V) and fed into the appropriate feeder cable 5a or 5b to supply the installed ALD devices and/or components 17.
An additional or total required DC power drawing of the ALD devices and components and of the converter 11 can be made available to the system as required via a further interface 35 in addition to the for example four shown connections 111 on the relevant converter, on which subject reference is made below to
The mentioned additional interface 35 can thus be used for an additional or total required DC power drawing of all ALD devices and components and for operation and/or configuration of the converter circuit.
The converter connections facing the aerial side are de-energised and high-resistance at first. The converter connections facing the base station are also high-resistance at first. A corresponding DC voltage (for example that of the base station) is present at these.
The converter checks each of its aerial-side outputs for any connected DC loads (for example double low-noise reception amplifiers DTMA, provided bias tee circuits SST or, for example, existing RET circuits for remotely controllable setting of the down-tilt angle), and regularly (the time interval preferably being configurable) measures their current drawing. The DC voltage which is present on an HF feed line (feeder) is only switched through to the ANT converter output(s) which is/are also connected to a DC load. All converter outputs are short-circuit-resistant.
A configuration setting which is given by the system can be preset via further converter interfaces. The power which is drawn on the base station side is always used to supply the connected loads and the converter circuit.
The converter 11 also monitors its base-station-side connections 111a, 111b for any protocol signals (for example AISG, 3GPP or other protocols which are different from these) which are present. This monitoring can take place statically or by multiplexing.
From the explained construction, it is clear that the above-mentioned additional converter interface 35 can also be omitted, in the case of a sufficient total direct current power at the connections on the base station side. Similarly, via the optional additional interface 35 on the converter, communication can take place with the ALD devices and components 17 which can be reached via it, for example for setting and monitoring the ALD communication independently of the base stations, for example in the case of a system installation, if the base station is not yet installed.
The converter can be configured both via its HF connections (for example via the connections 111a, 111b on the base station side) and via the additional interface 35.
The embodiments have been explained for converters which are provided in effect as separate devices or components in the region of the base station before the HF transmission link, or near the associated aerial device at the other end of the HF link which usually runs above the mast or a building.
However, the explained converter 11 can, for example, also be integrated, with its corresponding functions, into an aerial device ANT, a CWA device or a CWA component 17, or the associated base station BS1 to BS2.
In
From the explained description, it can be seen that the converter supports and carries out the function of mapping different ALD devices into the base station. This means, therefore, that the communication interfaces of the individual ALD devices can migrate into the appropriate base station. This makes it possible particularly conveniently, to replace an older base station using current-alarmed CWA ALD devices or components with a newer base station (which, for example, works on the basis of a 3GPP protocol), without having to replace a corresponding current-alarmed ALD device. This possibility of replacement also applies to base stations of different manufacturers.
To summarise it can thus be established that the converter according to the invention is in the form of a “protocol converter”, which translates and converts a current-alarming changeover (CWA direct current consumption magnitudes) into an AISG or, for example, 3GPP protocol.
This combination of such a converter with, for example, a current-alarmed TMA (low-noise aerial amplifier), thus maps this onto an input amplifier which conforms to AISG or 3GPP.
As explained, the protocol recognition can take place statically or dynamically, at the converter connections on the base station side. However, since when an old base station is replaced and a new base station is installed, the protocol basis on which the control should and can take place is always defined, the above-mentioned permanent monitoring of the converter inputs on the base station side with regard to specified protocol signals being present can also be omitted.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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102008053851.5 | Oct 2008 | DE | national |
Number | Date | Country | |
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61110136 | Oct 2008 | US |