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Hi Group,
Do cable modems modulate the data on a carrier and send down the line or do they just use baseband? If they are carrier control, what frequency do they operate? Thanks, De KJ4UO |
#2
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"PDRUNEN" wrote in message
... Hi Group, Do cable modems modulate the data on a carrier and send down the line or do they just use baseband? If they are carrier control, what frequency do they operate? Thanks, De KJ4UO They do not operate (downstream data) on standard cable TV video channels used by the local cable provider, but usually for upstream select from available bandwidth below 42 MHz) The service is bi-directional (which requires upgrades to some older CATV equipment to support this functionality) Cable Modems since about 1996 operate under the DOCSIS standard (there is also a Euro-DOCSIS) http://www.cablemodem.com/ The three successive versions of the DOCSIS cable modem specifications: DOCSIS® 1.0, DOCSIS® 1.1, and DOCSIS® 2.0, provide increasing levels of capabilities and functionality, while maintaining multi-vendor interoperability and full backward and forward compatibility of DOCSIS. a.. DOCSIS 1.0 specifications include technology that was available in the 1995-1996 timeframe, and have become very widely deployed around the world. b.. DOCSIS 1.1 specifications provide improved operational flexibility, security, and Quality-of-Service (QoS) features that enable real-time services such as voice-over-IP telephony (VoIP), interactive gaming, and tier-based services. c.. DOCSIS 2.0 specifications provide dramatically increased upstream throughput for symmetric services. DOCSIS 2.0 provides 30 Mbps of capability Digital data signals are transmitted over radio frequency (RF) carrier signals on a cable system. For two-way communication, there is one carrier signal that carries data in the "downstream" direction (from the cable network to the customer), and another that carries data in the "upstream" direction (from the customer to the cable network). Cable modems are devices at the subscriber premises that convert digital information into a modulated RF signal in the upstream direction, and convert the RF signals to digital information in the downstream direction. Another piece of equipment, called a Cable Modem Termination System (CMTS), performs the converse operation for multiple subscribers at the cable operator's headend. Typically, a few hundred users may share a 6-MHz downstream channel and one or more upstream channels. The downstream channel occupies the space of a single television transmission channel in the cable operator's channel lineup. It is compatible with digital set-top MPEG transport stream modulation (64 or 256 QAM), and can provide up to 40 Mbps. In DOCSIS 1.0 and 1.1, the upstream channels can be up to 3.2-MHz wide, and can deliver up to 10 Mbps-per-channel. In DOCSIS 2.0, upstream channels can deliver up to 30 Mbps over channels as wide as 6.4 MHz. A media access control (MAC) layer coordinates shared access to the upstream bandwidth. Google on DOCSIS for thousands of references and technical documents. gb |
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