AISG Definitions
AISG (--aisg.org.uk) current standard AISG 2.0 (2006) and extensions AISG 2.1.0 (2013), adding new parameters such as Temp, Voltage, Position and more.
AISG Cable, Connector:
Cases are connected over the cable shield.
Pin # Pin Function 1 +13V DC (+12V Nominal) 2 - not used 3 RS-485 B 4 - not used 5 RS-485 A 6 +29V DC (+24V Nominal) 7 DC Return 8 - not used
AISG Signal Repeater: a passive device splitting an (input) AISG cable multiple ways so that several AISG devices can be copied in a 'star' configuration.
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ALD or Antenna Line Devices, family members include:
- RET (Remote Electrical Tilt; single/dual)
- TMA (Tower Mounted Amplifier; dual, multi-band)
- Smart Bias-T
- Signal Splitter (passive device)
- Lightning Protection Devices
- Mounting Hardware; grounding plates, brackets, cable clamps
RET: an electric-motor driven device that turns a worm-gear, which in turn is mechanically coupled to the Antenna mount (top or bottom); such that the motor turning in one direction (clockwise; anti-clockwise), pushes the linkages of the movable end out, while the other end of antenna remains pivoted. The overall effect being that the Antenna may be tilted through a small (5-10°) angle. The motor turning in the reverse direction produces the opposite effect; pulling the Antenna mount in and reducing the tilt.
TMA: is a single- or pair-, RF Low Noise Amplifiers (LNA), with a switchable gain of 12dB. The TMA is placed close to the Antenna up on the tower, and offsets the Antenna RF Cable loss which otherwise would reduce the Receiver Sensitivity (Si) dB for dB. For Example Rx Si of -100dBm, will be reduced by a long cable running from Antenna over the length of the tower, over ground all the way into the equipment hut, where the Radio may be located. The loss can add up to 4-6dB or more, depending on cable spec; and reduces the receiver sensitivity by that amount. In turn the lower sensitivity reduces the coverage distance on ground by 2-4 times or even more; of what an original -100dBm Sensitivity Rx might deliver, for the given Antenna tower height.
The TMA of fixed 12dB (switchable to 0dB); requires that the left over gain such as 6dB for a -6dB cable loss; must be compensated (dropped to 0dB) before hitting the Rx internal input, which otherwise would bring on Receiver's Front-End saturation early, and end up in Inter-Modulation (IM) distortion. The uncompensated TMA gain therefore reduces the Third-Order Input Intercept Point or Rx IIP3, shrinking the Receiver Dynamic Range (DR), the most important Receiver attribute.
The other TMA criterion is the faithful transfer of DC supply (24-30V by AISG spec), usually residing in the Radio, and which also powers the other ALDs, RET(s) and all, in the AISG network. The DC is sent either over the AISG Cable or routed over AISG and Rx Antenna Cable in a way that the wireless traffic is not obstructed.
Smart Bias-T: is a (plain) Bias-T along with embedded AISG Signal Modem (AISG carrier 2.176MHz; using OOK or On-Off Keying Modulation). The Bias-T helps both in adding and separating the Modulated AISG Carrier Signal to and from, the wireless traffic (hi-frequency carrier) going over the same RF cable.
Lightning Protection: a means for providing a (quick; DC) path to ground for lightning induced potential on exposed conductors. Electronic equipment with inputs coming in over exposed conductors or cables are usually protected internally; such as Antennas, TMAs, and Smart Bias-Ts.
AISG 2.1.0: Extensions (2013) providing more parameters such as Temp, Voltage, Alignment, and more.
AISG Carrier 2.176MHz
OOK Modulated AISG Carrier; (On-Off-Keying)
RS-485: AISG communications is carried over a twisted-pair using a differential RS-485 (higher speed RS-232 type) HDLC signaling conforming.
HDLC: a communications protocol commonly used in Serial Communications.
RAS: Remote Azimuth Steering; an acronym associated with Antenna Beam Steering; also RAB Remote Azimuth Beamwidth; standard AISG-ES-RAS, and AISG-ES-RAB v2.1.0 (2007), Vienna.