- This topic has 113 replies, 1 voice, and was last updated 4 years, 8 months ago by Akbar Ali.
-
AuthorPosts
-
5th April 2007 at 07:22 #38388TechieGuest
why we use in some cases vertical polarization & horizontal polarization
6th April 2007 at 04:43 #38389Imran SabirGuestHi everyone,
Can any body tell me,what is the effect oh HI-LO Voilation on the network while designing a Ring Topology?
Is it true that performance degradation in 26GHz band is more severe than 38GHz band,due to Rain?6th April 2007 at 04:45 #38390Imran SabirGuestHi everyone,
Kindly give me the answer that,
Why RSL(Recieved Signal Level) is in dbm while Fade Margin is in db?6th April 2007 at 05:23 #38391Imran SabirGuestHi Techie,
actually the selection of polarization depends upon the different prameters.
Vertical polarization is more effective against rain.
Vertically polarized waves are less effective to multipath fade in lower frequencies.
vertical polarized wave give us 30% more RSL as compared to the Horizontal polirized wave.
The reason for using both H & V polarizations is to get maximum use of frequency in th network with out interference.Hopefully this will help you
6th April 2007 at 05:52 #38392PixGuestHi sabir,
A received level is the measurement of an absolute power, that corresponds to miliwatts for instance. So that’s dBm.
The fading margin is an attenuation, that is a relative difference in power. And that’s not an absolute power, that can’t be express in milliwatt. It is relative… So it’s dB. A certain power – 3dB, means the power (whatever value it actually was) is divided by 2.
-6 dB = power divided by 4
– 9 dB = divided by 66th April 2007 at 06:57 #38393Imran SabirGuestthx Pix,
But my concern is that,
FM=Rx Sensitivity(dbm)- RSL(dbm)if both RSL & Rx Sensitivity are in dbm,how FM is in db?
6th April 2007 at 11:40 #38394TechieGuestHi Imran Sabir,
Thanks for your reply, i wanted to ask you one more thing that is there any distance limitation in using the H and V Polarizations in the frequency bands
7th April 2007 at 13:44 #38395saadiaGuesthello everyone!
i want to know about path losses in GSM 1800.can anybody tell me what is the link balance?7th April 2007 at 14:48 #38396AhmedGuestwhy we use in some cases vertical polarization & horizontal polarization.pls answer me
7th April 2007 at 17:14 #38397WinetGuestpatrick.fr – 4 Apr 2007
Could you explain me what you meant?
ODU HS = Hot Standby?
Link is made on Ericsson Mini Link TN equipment, I’m sure there is 1+0 option checked. How ODU can be HS in this case?7th April 2007 at 19:45 #38398nizarGuestcan anybody tell me which all countries use alcatel bts for installaTION………………………………………………
9th April 2007 at 04:13 #38399Imran SabbirGuestHi Winet,
to me it seems that your link is getting interference from some other source.Contact your Transmission Planner to verify if there is any interference on that link or not.9th April 2007 at 09:40 #38400Imran SabirGuestHi Techie:
Is there any distance limitation in using the H and V Polarizations in the frequency bands?Hop distance is not dependent on the polarization,rather it is frequency dependent. Anyhow at smaller frequncies,H polarized wave suffer more multipath fading than V polarized wave,while in upper frequency bands,H polarized waves suffer more Rain fading than the V polarized waves.
12th April 2007 at 10:16 #38401TechieGuestCan anyone tell me the RSL Levels for Frequency bands
12th April 2007 at 16:48 #38402pixGuestHi Sabir,
sorry for the late reply.
by substracting two powers, you obtain a delta of power.
And a “delta” is an attenuation…dBm – dBm = dB
that’s correct.
a dB is a difference (or “delta”) between two powers expressed in dBm. Maybe you should refer to wikipedia if you want a more mathematical approach of this…
-
AuthorPosts
- The forum ‘Telecom Design’ is closed to new topics and replies.