The cellular concept used in the Advanced Mobile Phone Service (amps) system to achieve spectrum efficiency requires a complex and flexible distributed system control architecture. Three major subsystems serve as the control elements: the mobile unit, the cell site, and the switching office. System control functions are partitioned among these subsystems to handle the following amps control challenges: interfacing with the nationwide switched telephone network, dialing from mobile units, supervising calls from mobile subscribers in the presence of noise and co‐channel interference, performing call setup functions including paging and access, and locating and handing off mobiles between cell sites. This paper explains the techniques used to achieve the control functions of the three major subsystems and the ways they in turn participate in control of the total amps system.
Federal Communication Commission Docket 18 262 allocated a 75-MHz band to the common carriers to implement high capacity mobile telephone systems. TheBell System has proposed a cellular arrangement of low-power transmitters/receivers that permits frequency reuse in a coverage area. This method of achieving spectrum efficiency will require extensive centralized coordination and control to properly administer channel assignments and to interconnect the mobiles with each other and with the direct distance dialing (DDD) network. This can be accomplished by means of an electronic switching system (ESS) with special data terminals and trunking arrangements, and a unique program.In the proposed plan the radio sites (base stations) act effectively as remote concentrators in the frequency domain under the control of ESS, which in turn acts primarily as a trunk-to-trunk switcher. In addition to the usual switching, signaling, and supervising functions, the switching office must also perform numerous special functions including paging of mobiles, location of mobiles (signal strength and ranging data analysis), channel reassignment of mobiles, and reswitching of mobiles ' to various base stations-these last three occurring while customers are talking.
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