Crosby Communications
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Telephone: 0845 200 6000
18th May 2008

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Cordless telephones

Cordless telephones are one of those minor miracles of modern life -- with a cordless phone, you can talk on the phone while moving freely about your house or in your yard. Cordless phones have many of the same features as standard telephones. The main difference is that cordless phones do not have a cord from the handset to the phone base unit. In cordless telephone this wire is replace with a wireless radio link. A cordless telephone is basically a combination telephone and radio transmitter/receiver.A cordless phone has two major parts: base and handset. The base is attached to the phone jack through a standard phone wire connection, and as far as the phone system is concerned it looks just like a normal phone. The base receives the incoming call (as an electrical signal) through the phone line, converts it to an FM radio signal and then broadcasts that signal.

The handset receives the radio signal from the base, converts it to an electrical signal and sends that signal to the speaker, where it is converted into the sound you hear. When you talk to handset microphone, the handset transmits the audio in the same way to base that then sends that audio to telephone line. The base and handset operate on a frequency pair that allows you to talk and listen at the same time, called duplex frequency. There are many generations of cordless telephones in use. Cordless phones first appeared around 1980 in USA. Those earliest cordless phones operated at a frequency of 27 MHz. In 1986, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) granted the frequency range of 47-49 MHz for cordless phones, which improved their interference problem and reduced the power needed to run them. However, the phones still had a limited range and poor sound quality. In 1994, digital cordless phones in the 900 MHz frequency range were introduced. Digital signals allowed the phones to be more secure and decreased eavesdropping (is was pretty easy to eavesdrop on analog cordless phone conversations). In 1998, the FCC opened up the 2.4 GHz range for cordless phone use.

Other countries have also cordless phone systems that operate at different frequency ranges. For example in Europe there has been systems like CT1, CT2 and DECT.CT1 is a simple analogue system that operates at 47 MHz band (8 channels). Also versions for 31 MHz and 900 MHz operation exist (more channels here).CT2 is a more modern system that uses digital radio communications at 864.1-868.1 MHz frequency range. CT2, the second generation of cordless phones, uses a digital speech path in any one of the forty 100KHz wide RF channels in the frequency range 864-868MHz. Instead full duplex operation is obtainedby the use of a digital technique known as Time Division Duplex (TDD). With TDDthe two halves of a telephone conversation are first converted into digital formand then they are divided into a number of small data packets. Each packet isthen compressed to one half of its original size before the two sets of data are interleaved on the same carrier frequency. The CT2 specification defines a Common Air Interface (CAI), which means that all CT2 handsets and base stations can communicate with each other, regardless ofmanufacturer.

The modulation methid enployed is two-level FSK with frequencydeviations of (a) 14.4 to 25.2 kHz above the carrier frequency representingbinary 1 (b) 14.4 to 25.2 kHz below the carrier frequency representing binary 0. A single RF channel is used for both directions of transmission using the 'ping-pong' version of TDD. Speech signals in either direction of transmissionare sampled and coded into digital form at 32kbits/s. The 2ms duration samplesare transmitted at 72kbits/s in 1ms bursts to allow the bits to be compressedinto packets of data of 1ms duration. Forty RF channels are available do that CT2 is a combined FDMA/TDD system. DECT is a digital telecommunication system standardized by ETSI. It operates at 1880-1900 MHz frequency (uses TDMA modulation). DECT supports 20-500 meters range with both voice and data communications (nowadays the main use is voice).

The Digital European Cordless Telephone system uses a cellular radio-like technologyThe DECT system uses a three dimension cellular layout in which there may be cellsabove and below one another as well as side by side layout and is designed for high density use. The DECT system uses the frequency band 1.88-19GHz and this band is divided up into ten separate carrier frequencies. In turn, each carrier frequency is divided into 23 time slots, any two of which are used for a conversation The system provides 32kbit/s voice channels using TDD. DECT uses FDMA/TDMA/TDD techniques to provide 120 duplex channels using 10 separate carrier frequncies and multiplexing 12 send channels and 12 receive channels onto each carrier. The bit rate per channel is 1152kbits/s and the modulation is GMSK with a frequency deviation of +/- 228kHz and a carrier spacing of 1728kHz. PHS is a personal communications system, which supports bothprivate use (i.e. for use as cordless telephone or wireless PABX extension) andpublic use (i.e. for use in the public PHS service). It is widely used in Japan.PHS generally operates at 1895-1906.1 MHz which isdesignated for PHS private use in Japan. PHS equipment that is designed towork in the private and public PHS band operate at 1895-1918.1MHz.

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