This invention relates generally to telephone lines, and more particularly, to qualifying telephone lines for data communications.
Public switched telephone networks, e.g., plain old telephone systems (POTS), were originally designed for voice communications having a limited frequency range. Today, the same POTS networks often carry data transmissions using higher frequencies. The difference in frequencies suggests that some POTS lines, which function well for voice, will function poorly for data. The risk of poor quality data transmissions has motivated telephone operating companies (TELCO's) to develop tests for predicting the quality of lines for data transmissions.
One quality test uses physical line length to determine a line's attenuation. The attenuation of a line whose length is less than about four kilometers (km) is usually low enough for data transmission. But, measuring the line length is typically more involved than measuring the straight line distance between a customer's address and a switching station. Typically, lines form branching structures rather than going radially from the switching station to the customer addresses. Thus, determining a line length usually entails manually mapping the actual branching structures connecting the customer to the switching station. Such complex manual techniques can be time intensive and may lead to errors.
Furthermore, determining that a line's length is less than a preselected limit, e.g., four km, may be insufficient to qualify the line for data transmission. The line's attenuation also depends on the physical properties of each branch segment making up the line, e.g., the gauge mixture of the line. In lines having segments with different properties, the above-described mapping technique generally should take into account the properties of each segment to determine the total attenuation of the line.
TELCO's have also used direct electrical tests to determine the quality of POTS lines for data transmissions. Typically, such tests are manual and two-ended. Two-ended tests involve sending one employee to a customer's address or final distribution point and another employee to a switching station. The two employees coordinate their activities to perform direct electrical measurements on the customer line using hand-held devices. These two ended measurements are substantially independent of the termination characteristics at the customer's address. An example of two-ended measurements is described in ROEHRKASTEN W: ‘MESSUNG VON XDSL-PARAMETERN’ NACHRICHTENTECNIK ELEKTRONIK, DE, VEB VERLAG TECHNIK. BERLIN, vol. 48, no. 2, 1 Mar. 1998 (1998-Mar.-01), pages 20–21, XP000752845 ISSN: 0323-4657.
Nevertheless, these two-ended tests need two separate employees, which makes them labour intensive. The labour requirements affect the cost of such tests. The two-ended tests cost about $150 per customer line. This cost is so high that a TELCO is often prohibited from using such tests for all customer lines.
HEDLUND, ERIC; CULLINAN, TOM: ‘DSL Loop Test’ TELEPHONY, vol. 235, no. 8, 24 Aug. 1998 (1998-Aug.-24), pages 48–52, XP002147002 USA, mentions single-ended testing but does not specify how such testing may be performed.
The present invention is directed to overcoming, or at least reducing, one or more of the problems set forth above.
In a first aspect, the invention provides a method of assessing the suitability of customer telephone lines for data transmission. The method includes selecting a telephone line via a test access of a switching station and electrically connecting the tip and ring wires adjacent one end of the selected line in a common mode configuration. The method also includes performing single-ended electrical measurements on the tip and ring wires with respect to ground by driving the tip and ring wires in the common mode.
The method includes determining an electrical property of the wires from the single-ended measurements.
In a second aspect, the invention provides a system for determining a signal attenuation of a customer line. Each customer line has tip and ring wires. The system includes a measurement unit having first and second input terminals to couple to a test access of a telephony switch. The measurement unit is capable of driving the input terminals in a common mode configuration with respect to ground to perform single-ended impedance measurements on the tip and ring wires of the customer lines in the common mode configuration.
In a third aspect, the invention provides a method of marketing customer telephone lines for selected data transmission services. Each line has associated tip and ring wires. The method includes automatically performing single-ended electrical measurements on the customer telephone lines and determining which of the customer lines qualify for a selected data transmission service from the measurements. The tip and ring wires are driven in a common mode configuration during at least a portion of the measurements upon the associated lines. The method includes sorting the lines by distribution point and qualification to transmit data. The method also includes offering the selected data service to a portion of the customers in response to lines determined to be qualified for the service being available.
Other objects, features, and advantages of the invention will be apparent from the following description, taken together with the drawings in which:
Each customer line 12–14 is a twisted copper two-wire pair adapted for telephone voice communications. The two wires of each line 12–14 are generally referred to as the ring and tip wires. The lines 12–14 are contained in one or in a series of standard telephony cables 20. The cable 20 may carry more than a dozen customer lines (not all shown) thereby creating an environment that changes electrical and transmission properties of the separate lines 12–14. The properties of the lines 12–14 may also depend on their segment structure.
Referring again to
The line testing is controlled by a computer 30. The computer 30 sends signals the switch 15, via line 31, e.g., to select the line 12–14 to be tested. The computer 30 sends signals to the measurement unit 27, via line 32, to select and control the test to be performed. The measurement unit 27 sends measurement results to the computer 30 via the same line 32.
The computer 30 includes a storage medium 33 encoding an executable software program for testing selected ones of the lines 12–14. The program includes instructions for one or more methods of controlling single-ended measurements on the lines 12–14. The program also includes instructions for methods of analyzing the measurements to qualify or disqualify the lines 12–14 for data transmissions. Both types of method are described below.
The line testing qualifies or disqualifies the individual lines 12–14 being tested. To qualify, the computer 30 must predict that the line 12–14, under test, will support data transmissions without remedial measures. To disqualify, the computer 30 must predict that the line 12–14, under test, will not support data transmissions without remedial measures. The computer 30 may perform tests before or after the line 12–14, under test, is in service for data transmissions.
Tests to qualify or disqualify a line 12–14 for data transmission involve several steps. For each step, the computer 30 signals the switch 15 to disconnect the particular line 12–14, selected for testing, from the line card (not shown) and reroute the line to the test access 29. When the switch 15 reroutes the line, the computer 30 signals the measurement unit 27 to perform preselected single-ended measurements on the selected line 12–14. The measurement unit 27 performs the measurements and returns results to the computer 30. After receiving the results of the measurements, the computer 30 signals the switch 15 to reroute the selected line 12–14 to the line card. Then, the switch 15 transfers connections for the selected line 12–14 to the line card enabling the associated customer unit 16–18 to again communicate with the rest of the network 8.
In the first stage, the computer 30 tests for traditional line faults by performing independent electrical measurements on the tip and ring wires T, R of the selected line 12. First, the computer 30 performs such measurements to determine whether the selected line 12 has any metallic faults (step 52). Metallic faults include shorts to ground, to a voltage source, or between the paired wires T, R, and/or capacitive imbalances between the paired wires T, R of the selected line 12. Second, the computer 30 performs such measurements to determine whether the selected line 12 has any speed inhibiting faults (step 54). Speed inhibiting faults include resistive imbalances between the paired wires T, R of the selected line 12, and split pair or load inductances. Speed inhibiting faults also include bridged taps that reflect signals resonantly, e.g., the spurious tap 55 shown in
The threshold values of single-ended measurements, which indicate the above-described faults, generally depend on the type of data transmissions. Methods for performing and analyzing such single-ended measurements are known in the art. For example, U.S. Application No. 60/106,845 ('845), filed Nov. 3, 1998, by Roger Faulkner et al, and U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,699,402 ('402) and 4,113,998 ('998) describe such methods and apparatus. The '845 application and '402 and '998 patents are incorporated by reference, in their entirety, in the present application. The '402 application and the '402 and '998 patents also describe apparatus 53, of the measurement unit 27 used for the single-ended measurements to detect the faults.
If the computer 30 to finds either a metallic or a speed-inhibiting fault, the computer 30 disqualifies the selected line 12 for data transmissions (block 56). If the computer 30 finds no such faults, the computer 30 determines whether the selected line 12 attenuates signals of a selected frequency by more than a threshold value for the preselected data transmission service (step 58). In the absence of faults, the signal attenuation at high frequencies is the primary measure for determining a line's ability to transmit data.
The test access 29 has internal connections 44, which electrically couple the tip and ring wires T, R of the line 12 under test to the terminal 40 and the terminal 41, respectively. Thus, the tip and ring wires T, R are electrically connected together, at the switch end, so that the signal generator 36 drives these wires T, R in common mode configuration during impedance measurements. Driving the wires T, R in common mode makes electrical measurements insensitive to termination characteristics of the customer unit 16.
Both the preselected threshold value for the signal attenuation and the preselected frequency depend on the type of data transmission. For ISDN data transmissions, the preselected threshold is about 45 deci-Bells (dB) at 100 KHz. For ASDL data transmissions, the preselected threshold is about 40 dB at 300 KHz depending on deployed terminal equipment.
If the signal attenuation at the preselected frequency is above threshold, the computer 30 disqualifies the selected line 12 for the corresponding type of data transmissions (block 56). If the signal attenuation is below threshold at the preselected frequency, the computer 30 qualifies the line 12 for the corresponding type of data transmissions (block 60) providing no faults were found at either step 52 or step 54.
The measurement unit 27 measures the capacitance C and then uses the value of C to determine the frequency for measuring the impedance Z. The capacitance C is a lumped value between the common mode tip and ring wires T, R and ground. The measurement unit 27 determines C at a low frequency, e.g., 80 Hertz (Hz). If the measured value of C is less than 400 nano-Farads (nF), the AC signal generator 27 drives the tip and ring wires T, R in common-mode at about 2.5 KHz to measure the impedance Z. If the value of C is greater than 400 nF, the AC signal generator 27 drives the tip and ring wires T, R, in common-mode, at a higher frequency between about 3 and 20 KHz, e.g., 3.0 KHz, to measure the impedance Z. The computer 30 uses the relation Z=V/I, where the voltage V is measured by the voltmeter 38 and the current I is measured by the ammeter 40, to find Z.
Next, the computer 30 determines the signal attenuation A(f) at high frequencies characteristic of data transmissions using the low frequency measurements of C and Z (step 74). The high frequencies are more than ten times the frequencies used for measuring Z and C. The value of “A(f)” at higher frequency “f” is known from an empirical formula (1) given by:
A(f)=K[Z2+(2πfC)−2]−1/2. (1)
The value of K=5,000 dB-ohms provides good predictions of the attenuation A(f), in dB, for C and Z (in ohms) measured at low frequencies as described above. For this value of K, the frequency f, at which the attenuation is to be determined, should be between about 40 KHz and 300 KHz.
Next, the computer 30 determines whether the high frequency attenuation A(f) is above the preselected threshold for the selected type of data transmissions (step 76). If the attenuation A(f) is above the threshold, the computer 30 disqualifies the selected line 12. If the attenuation is below threshold, the computer 30 qualifies the selected line for the selected data transmissions.
The values of the high frequency attenuation A(f) of the table 80 correspond to a variety of one and two segment structures for the selected customer line 12. Columns 1 and 2 list segment lengths and gauges, i.e., diameters in millimeters, for the copper tip and ring wires T, R of the selected line 12. For each one and two segment structure shown, the predicted and reference attenuations differ by less than about 2 dB. Generally, formula (1) gives values of the high frequency attenuation A, which differ by less than about 3 dB for various segment mixtures if the wire gauges are between about 0.4 mm and 0.7 mm and total line lengths are less than about 6.5 km.
To provide the requested data services at step 98, the TELCO may swap customer lines to the same final distribution point. The swapping reassigns a qualified line to a customer requesting data service if the customer's own line is disqualified. The swap reassigns the customer's original disqualified line to another customer, who is at the same final distribution point and not demanding data service. The disqualified line can still provide voice services to the other customer. Thus, swapping can increase a TELCO's revenue by making more lines available for more expensive data services.
A TELCO can also use swapping in response to a request by the customer for data services. In response to such a request, the TELCO determines whether the customer's own line qualifies for the requested service by the above-described methods. If the line qualifies, the TELCO provides the customer data services over his own line. If the line disqualifies for the requested service, the TELCO performs additional qualification tests on other lines to the same final distribution point, which are not presently used for data transmission services. If one of those lines qualifies for the requested data service, the TELCO swaps the customer's line with the qualified line. Then, the qualified line provides data services to the customer requesting such services and the unqualified line provides normal voice service to the other customer.
Other embodiments are within the scope of the following claims.
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