GB1602461A - Transmission of speech and supervisory signals - Google Patents

Transmission of speech and supervisory signals Download PDF

Info

Publication number
GB1602461A
GB1602461A GB1388377A GB1388377A GB1602461A GB 1602461 A GB1602461 A GB 1602461A GB 1388377 A GB1388377 A GB 1388377A GB 1388377 A GB1388377 A GB 1388377A GB 1602461 A GB1602461 A GB 1602461A
Authority
GB
United Kingdom
Prior art keywords
signal
signals
speech
supervisory
carrier signal
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired
Application number
GB1388377A
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Essex County Council
Original Assignee
Essex County Council
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Essex County Council filed Critical Essex County Council
Priority to GB1388377A priority Critical patent/GB1602461A/en
Publication of GB1602461A publication Critical patent/GB1602461A/en
Expired legal-status Critical Current

Links

Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04JMULTIPLEX COMMUNICATION
    • H04J1/00Frequency-division multiplex systems
    • H04J1/02Details
    • H04J1/14Arrangements providing for calling or supervisory signals

Landscapes

  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Computer Networks & Wireless Communication (AREA)
  • Signal Processing (AREA)
  • Mobile Radio Communication Systems (AREA)

Description

(54) TRANSMISSION OF SPEECH AND SUPERVISORY SIGNALS VIA A RADIO TELEPHONE (71) We, ESSEX COUNTY COUNCIL, a British Body Corporate, of County Hall, Chelmsford, Essex, do hereby declare the invention, for which we pray that a patent may be granted to us, and the method by which it is to be performed, to be particularly described in and by the following statement: This invention relates to telephone systems in which communication is effected via a radio link.
The provision of telephone communication by radio is a standard facility provided by a number of developed countries. However, connections between subscribers are generally manually made and monitored by an intervening operator. Efforts have been made to provide automatic access to and from a public automatic switched network, but reliable operation demands absolute integrity of establishing, maintaining and subsequently releasing the connection irrespective of signal fluctuations or the presence of noise in the radio channel. The known techniques rely on the transmission of coded tones to provide the control signals associated with the connection to and from the respective radio stations.
Known systems which enable direct connection with a switched telephone network use techniques which are similar to those commonly found in line communication.
Whilst these techniques provide a working system, certain limitations inherent in their implementation preclude the optimum use of a radio link.
The present invention provides a significant improvement in system operation due to an improved method of transmitting the data required to intiate, route and terminate automatic connection between telephone subscribers via a radio circuit.
According to one aspect of the invention, a method of transmitting speech signals together with supervisory signals for supervising establishment and subsequent release of a connection to a selected subscriber in an automatic telephone system in which communication is effected by transmission of signals via a radio link comprises generating a carrier signal; linearly modulating the carrier signal with the speech signals to produce speech-related sideband energy; imposing the supervisory signals on the carrier signal so that a characteristic of the carrier signal assumes a plurality of discrete states to represent the supervisory signals at a low baud rate thereby producing supervisory signal related sideband energy containing frequencies all of which are closer to the frequency of the carrier signal than are the frequencies in the speech-related sideband energy, whereby the supervisory signal-related sideband energy is entirely separate in the frequency domain from the speechrelated sideband energy; and transmitting at least the sidebands via the radio link.
By this method it is possible to utilise the maximum power transmitted by the system to convey the data, and as the supervisory signals are at a low baud rate, such as the conventional dial interruption rate, it is also possible to provide an optimally-filtered channel with a data signal-to-noise ratio at least two orders of magnitude greater than the best signal-to-noise ratio obtainable in a conventional radio speech channel using an equivalent carrier power.
This method of transmission also allows non-coherent detection to be used; for example envelope detection utilising the total transmitted power can provide optimum retrieval. The rapid random fading and destruction of phase coherence which result from propagation conditions commonly found in radio systems will not materially affect the detection fidelity.
Furthermore, since the supervisory signals may be sent in a sub-band of the allocated system bandwidth which is not required to carry the frequencies used for the transmission of speech, the special discrimination circuitry which is required in conventional modulated carrier systems to separate the received supervisory signals and speech becomes unnecessary when the present invention is used.
Optimum transmission and detection of the supervisory signals may be effected with a minimum of analogue circuitry, and the use of digital processing results in economy of power consumption, size and cost of the equipment, and makes possible the use of a system incorporating miniature portable equipment.
According to another aspect of the invention, an automatic telephone system in which communication is effected by transmission of signals via a radio link comprises means to generate a carrier signal; -means to produce speech signals; means to modulate the carrier signal linearly with the speech signals to produce speech-related sideband energy; means to produce supervisory signals for supervising establishment and subsequent release of a connection to a selected subscriber; means to impose the supervisory signals on the carrier signal so that a characteristic of the carrier signal assumes a plurality of discrete states to represent the supervisory signals at a low baud rate thereby producing supervisory signal related sideband energy containing frequencies all of which are closer to the frequency of the carrier signal than are the frequencies in the speech-related sideband energy, whereby the supervisory signal-related sideband energy is entirely separate in the frequency domain from the speech-related sideband energy; and means to transmit at least the sidebands via the radio link.
One embodiment of the invention will now be described, by way of example, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which: Fig. 1 is a block schematic diagram of a transmitter-receiver unit, and Fig. 2 is a block schematic diagram of a transmit/receive station incorporating the unit of Fig. 1.
The requirements dictated by switchednetwork originated calls and remote radioinitiated calls are as follows:- In switched-network originated calls the principal consideration is the speech quality which will prevail if the connection is made; hence signalling to the remote station is sensibly made by sending tones on the speech channel. If the signal-to-noise ratio is less than an acceptable level, the remote station will not be aware that it is being called, and an attempt to make a connection which would be of unsatisfactory quality is inhibited.
In remotely originated calls, consideration must be given to the unknown quality of the connection which might be made. In this case, the coded pulsed-carrier is received at the fixed location by circuits which discriminate between the pulses sent and the noise present in the channel. Using time-coincident "window" circuitry which inhibits signals outside the window, only the correct pulse structure, together with noise-free pulse intervals, will be accepted. This ensures that the remote station cannot seize exchange equipment unless the received signal-tonoise ratio is adequate for the interferencefree transmission of dialling digits which must follow the initiation of the connection.
Additional security, if required, may be obtained by storing the transmitted digits at the remote equipment and subsequently comparing the stored digits with the digits received after retransmission back to the remote station by the fixed station transmitter.
Referring to Fig. 1 of the drawings, a transmitter-receiver unit 1 comprises a transmitter section 2 and a receiver section 3.
The transmitter section 2 includes a radiofrequency generator 4 which feeds a carrier signal to a modulator 5. Audio-frequency signals are fed to the modulator 5 from an audio source (not shown) along a "speech in" line 6 to modulate the carrier linearly in accordance with the speech, following known speech transmission techniques. This modulation will produce sideband energy containing frequencies which are separated from the carrier frequency, the smallest separation being equal to the lowest speech signal frequency.
A coding network 7 receives data (supervisory signals) from a data source (not shown) along a "data in" line 8. The supervisory signals are required to establish, and subsequently release, the connection to a selected remote subscriber. The coding network 7 provides an output signal which is fed to the carrier signal generator 4 to time code the carrier signal in accordance with the data.
In a simple form of embodiment, the coding network 7 and the data source may together comprise a standard telephone dial which is wired to provide an off-normal current which is interrupted to produce a pulse train during its return to the rest position, the number of pulses in the train representing the data to be transmitted. In a more sophisticated arrangement, the data source and the network 7 may provide an encoded representation comprising a preamble indicating that data are about to be transmitted; the actual data; and a postamble indicating that the transmission of data has finished.
The time coding is effected by causing discrete changes in the amplitude or phase of the carrier signal, each discrete amplitude or phase state representing a different data code element. For example, the coding may be effected by the switching on and off of the carrier signal in accordance with the coded output signal from the network 7.
The switching of the carrier signal will produce sideband energy related to the supervisory data. The data rate is relatively slow, and will not normally exceed 250 bauds. This means that the frequencies in the supervisory signal sideband energy will be closer to the carrier frequency than the closest speech sideband frequency, and the transmitted supervisory signals will therefore not encroach on the transmitted speech signal frequencies.
The modulated carrier signal is fed by the modulator 5 to an amplifier 9 and thence to a combined transmit/receive aerial 10.
The receiver section 3 comprises an amplifier 11 connected to the aerial 10 and including radio-frequency and intermediatefrequency amplifier stages with an associated local oscillator. Outputs from the amplifier 11 are fed to a speech detector 12 and a data detector 13. These detectors could alternatively be replaced by a single dual-purpose detector. The detected speech signals are then fed via an audio processor 14 to a "speech out" line 15. The detected data signals are similarly fed via a data processor 16 to a "data out" line 17.
Referring now to Fig. 2 of the drawings, the speech output of the transmitter/receiver unit 1, in quiescent conditions, is ineffective, whilst the carrier output feeds to storage and comparison circuitry 22 and to an "initiate" signal gate 23 information relating to channel occupancy. If the channel is occupied by another signal, the "initiate" signal is inhibited.
Upon receipt of an "initiate" signal when the channel is unoccupied, a pulse selector 24 selects the output of an "initiate" pulse generator 25, and a low-speed pulse signature is fed to changeover circuitry 26. This signiture is fed on the line 6 to the unit I and is transmitted thereby. The signature is also fed to the storage and comparison circuitry 22 over a line 28.
When the signature is received by the base station (not shown), it is retransmitted and is received by the unit 1, from which it is fed to the storage and comparison circuitry 22 over a line 29. The stored and received signatures are compared, and, if they correspond, a "ready" signal is fed, by the circuitry 22, over a line 30 to an audio selector 31. This selector passes a local "dial" tone from a generator 32 to an audio output 33. The "ready" signal is also fed via an OR-gate 34 to the selector 24 which selects the output of a "dial" pulse generator 35, allowing dialling to begin.
If the retransmitted signature does not agree with that sent, the circuitry 22 feeds a "cleardown a" signal to the selector 31 via a line 36. The selector 31 selects the output from a "number unobtainable" (NU) tone generator 37, and this tone is fed to the audio output 33. The "cleardown a" signal is also fed via an OR-gate 38 to the pulse selector 24, which therefore selects the output of a "cleardown" pulse generator 39. This pulse output is fed to the changeover circuitry 26.
The "cleardown" pulse generator 39 continues to generate, and locally store, the cleardown signal until agreement of the transmitted and retransmitted signatures is obtained.
The system then returns to idling.
If a "dial" tone is selected, dialling follows, and if at any time correspondence between the sent and retransmitted data compared by the circuitry 22 is lost, the cleardown sequence is initiated in the manner described above, and the "NU" tone is sent to the subscriber. If dialling tone is obtained, a "proceed" signal is fed from the circuitry 22 to the selector 24 via a line 40 and the gate 34, and allows the pulse selector to remain switched to the "dial" pulse generator 35.
The "proceed" signal is also fed over the line 40 to the audio selector 31, which connects the receiver audio output to the subscriber in place of the local "dial" tone.
At the successful completion of the dialling sequence, an audio connection exists, and speech interchange between the stations may proceed in the normal way.
At the completion of the conversation, the subscriber feeds a "cleardown b" signal to the gate 38, which initiates the cleardown sequence described above.
If the remote station is called from the base station, audio tone selection is used and activates a ringer 41 via a tone filter 42 in the remote station.
The remote station apparatus shown in the drawing can be made quite small, and is very suitable for use as a portable (or "walk about") telephone.
WHAT WE CLAIM IS: 1. A method of transmitting speech signals together with supervisory signals for supervising establishment and subsequent release of a connection to a selected subscriber in an automatic telephone system in which communication is effected by transmission of signals via a radio link, the method comprising generating a carrier signal; linearly modulating the carrier signal with the speech signals to produce speechrelated sideband energy; imposing the supervisory signals on the carrier signal so that a characteristic of the carrier signal assumes a plurality of discrete states to represent the supervisory signals at a low baud rate thereby producing supervisory signal related sideband energy containing frequencies all of which are closer to the frequency of the
**WARNING** end of DESC field may overlap start of CLMS **.

Claims (9)

**WARNING** start of CLMS field may overlap end of DESC **. phase state representing a different data code element. For example, the coding may be effected by the switching on and off of the carrier signal in accordance with the coded output signal from the network 7. The switching of the carrier signal will produce sideband energy related to the supervisory data. The data rate is relatively slow, and will not normally exceed 250 bauds. This means that the frequencies in the supervisory signal sideband energy will be closer to the carrier frequency than the closest speech sideband frequency, and the transmitted supervisory signals will therefore not encroach on the transmitted speech signal frequencies. The modulated carrier signal is fed by the modulator 5 to an amplifier 9 and thence to a combined transmit/receive aerial 10. The receiver section 3 comprises an amplifier 11 connected to the aerial 10 and including radio-frequency and intermediatefrequency amplifier stages with an associated local oscillator. Outputs from the amplifier 11 are fed to a speech detector 12 and a data detector 13. These detectors could alternatively be replaced by a single dual-purpose detector. The detected speech signals are then fed via an audio processor 14 to a "speech out" line 15. The detected data signals are similarly fed via a data processor 16 to a "data out" line 17. Referring now to Fig. 2 of the drawings, the speech output of the transmitter/receiver unit 1, in quiescent conditions, is ineffective, whilst the carrier output feeds to storage and comparison circuitry 22 and to an "initiate" signal gate 23 information relating to channel occupancy. If the channel is occupied by another signal, the "initiate" signal is inhibited. Upon receipt of an "initiate" signal when the channel is unoccupied, a pulse selector 24 selects the output of an "initiate" pulse generator 25, and a low-speed pulse signature is fed to changeover circuitry 26. This signiture is fed on the line 6 to the unit I and is transmitted thereby. The signature is also fed to the storage and comparison circuitry 22 over a line 28. When the signature is received by the base station (not shown), it is retransmitted and is received by the unit 1, from which it is fed to the storage and comparison circuitry 22 over a line 29. The stored and received signatures are compared, and, if they correspond, a "ready" signal is fed, by the circuitry 22, over a line 30 to an audio selector 31. This selector passes a local "dial" tone from a generator 32 to an audio output 33. The "ready" signal is also fed via an OR-gate 34 to the selector 24 which selects the output of a "dial" pulse generator 35, allowing dialling to begin. If the retransmitted signature does not agree with that sent, the circuitry 22 feeds a "cleardown a" signal to the selector 31 via a line 36. The selector 31 selects the output from a "number unobtainable" (NU) tone generator 37, and this tone is fed to the audio output 33. The "cleardown a" signal is also fed via an OR-gate 38 to the pulse selector 24, which therefore selects the output of a "cleardown" pulse generator 39. This pulse output is fed to the changeover circuitry 26. The "cleardown" pulse generator 39 continues to generate, and locally store, the cleardown signal until agreement of the transmitted and retransmitted signatures is obtained. The system then returns to idling. If a "dial" tone is selected, dialling follows, and if at any time correspondence between the sent and retransmitted data compared by the circuitry 22 is lost, the cleardown sequence is initiated in the manner described above, and the "NU" tone is sent to the subscriber. If dialling tone is obtained, a "proceed" signal is fed from the circuitry 22 to the selector 24 via a line 40 and the gate 34, and allows the pulse selector to remain switched to the "dial" pulse generator 35. The "proceed" signal is also fed over the line 40 to the audio selector 31, which connects the receiver audio output to the subscriber in place of the local "dial" tone. At the successful completion of the dialling sequence, an audio connection exists, and speech interchange between the stations may proceed in the normal way. At the completion of the conversation, the subscriber feeds a "cleardown b" signal to the gate 38, which initiates the cleardown sequence described above. If the remote station is called from the base station, audio tone selection is used and activates a ringer 41 via a tone filter 42 in the remote station. The remote station apparatus shown in the drawing can be made quite small, and is very suitable for use as a portable (or "walk about") telephone. WHAT WE CLAIM IS:
1. A method of transmitting speech signals together with supervisory signals for supervising establishment and subsequent release of a connection to a selected subscriber in an automatic telephone system in which communication is effected by transmission of signals via a radio link, the method comprising generating a carrier signal; linearly modulating the carrier signal with the speech signals to produce speechrelated sideband energy; imposing the supervisory signals on the carrier signal so that a characteristic of the carrier signal assumes a plurality of discrete states to represent the supervisory signals at a low baud rate thereby producing supervisory signal related sideband energy containing frequencies all of which are closer to the frequency of the
carrier signal than are the frequencies in the speech-related sideband energy, whereby the supervisory signal-related sideband energy is entirely separate in the frequency domain from the speech-related sideband energy; and transmitting at least the sidebands via the radio link.
2. A method as claimed in Claim 1, wherein the transmission of the speechrelated sideband energy is inhibited during the transmission of the supervisory signalrelated sideband energy.
3. A method as claimed in Claim 1 or Claim 2, wherein the characteristic is the amplitude of the carrier signal, and wherein the imposing of the supervisory signals on the carrier signal is effected by switching the carrier signal to a number of different peak amplitude values in accordance with the supervisory signals to be transmitted.
4. An automatic telephone system in which communication is effected by transmission of signals via a radio link, comprising means to generate a carrier signal; means to produce speech signals; means to modulate the carrier signal linearly with the speech signals to produce speech-related sideband energy; means to produce supervisory signals for supervising establishment and subsequent release of a connection to a selected subscriber; means to impose the supervisory signals on the carrier signal so that a characteristic of the carrier signal assumes a plurality of discrete states to represent the supervisory signals at a low baud rate thereby producing supervisory signal related sideband energy containing frequencies all of which are closer to the frequency of the carrier signal than are the frequencies in the speech-related sideband energy, whereby the supervisory signal-related sideband energy is entirely separate in the frequency domain from the speech-related sideband energy; and means to transmit at least the sidebands via the radio link.
5. A system as claimed in Claim 4, wherein the means to impose the supervisory signals on the carrier signal comprises means to key the carrier signal on and off in accordance with the supervisory signals.
6. A system as claimed in Claim 4 or Claim 5, further comprising means to store supervisory signals as transmitted to a remote station; means to receive return signals from the remote station; means to compare the stored and return signals; and means to provide a "dial" tone if the stored and return signals correspond.
7. A system as claimed in Claim 6, further including means to provide a "number unobtainable" tone is the stored and return signals do not correspond.
3. A method as claimed in Claim 1 and substantially as hereinbefore described with reference to the accompanying drawings.
9. A system as claimed in Claim 4 and substantially as hereinbefore described with reference to the accompanying drawings.
GB1388377A 1978-05-23 1978-05-23 Transmission of speech and supervisory signals Expired GB1602461A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB1388377A GB1602461A (en) 1978-05-23 1978-05-23 Transmission of speech and supervisory signals

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
GB1388377A GB1602461A (en) 1978-05-23 1978-05-23 Transmission of speech and supervisory signals

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
GB1602461A true GB1602461A (en) 1981-11-11

Family

ID=10031087

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
GB1388377A Expired GB1602461A (en) 1978-05-23 1978-05-23 Transmission of speech and supervisory signals

Country Status (1)

Country Link
GB (1) GB1602461A (en)

Cited By (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4485270A (en) * 1981-09-30 1984-11-27 Fujitsu Limited Method for transmitting a charging signal
EP0399610A2 (en) * 1989-05-26 1990-11-28 Philips Electronics Uk Limited Improvements in or relating to digital cordless telephone systems

Cited By (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US4485270A (en) * 1981-09-30 1984-11-27 Fujitsu Limited Method for transmitting a charging signal
EP0399610A2 (en) * 1989-05-26 1990-11-28 Philips Electronics Uk Limited Improvements in or relating to digital cordless telephone systems
EP0399610A3 (en) * 1989-05-26 1992-05-20 Philips Electronics Uk Limited Improvements in or relating to digital cordless telephone systems
AU626768B2 (en) * 1989-05-26 1992-08-06 Philips Electronics N.V. Digital cordless telephone systems

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US4783844A (en) Apparatus for transmitting and recording signals
US3876984A (en) Apparatus for utilizing an a.c. power line to couple a remote terminal to a central computer in a communication system
GB2193064A (en) Cordless telephone
US3406344A (en) Transmission of low frequency signals by modulation of voice carrier
NL193098C (en) Cordless phone.
US4355401A (en) Radio transmitter/receiver for digital and analog communications system
US3806804A (en) Radio telephone system having automatic channel selection
US3949172A (en) Telephone extension system utilizing power line carrier signals
US4495386A (en) Telephone extension system utilizing power line carrier signals
US4574163A (en) Digital radio telephone
US4280020A (en) Radio telephone system with direct digital carrier modulation for data transmission
US4159448A (en) Communication systems
EP0218450B1 (en) Control system of a radio telephone apparatus
US2547024A (en) Selective calling system
US2599097A (en) Radiotelephone station identifying system
NO144045B (en) SELECTION AND DRIVING DEVICE FOR NAILS IN A TUBE MACHINE
US3631497A (en) Duplex radiocommunication equipment
US3840811A (en) Duplexer type radio-telephone data receiver and transmission system
JPH02252329A (en) Radio telephone system
US4646358A (en) Signaling arrangement for two-way radio communication
US5583885A (en) Method and apparatus for encoding and decoding automatic radio indentification data
US2483445A (en) Transmitter system
CA1318402C (en) Signal communication capable of avoiding an audible reproduction of a sequency of information signals
GB1602461A (en) Transmission of speech and supervisory signals
US3731200A (en) Subaudible remote control tone encoding system

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
PS Patent sealed
PCNP Patent ceased through non-payment of renewal fee

Effective date: 19940523