Thursday, 16 February 2012

Chapter 18


MMDS and LMDS



      The  Multichannel Multipoint Distribution Service (MMDS) is a broadcasting and communications service that operates in the ultra-high-frequency (UHF) portion of the radio spectrum between 2.1 and 2.7 GHz. MMDS is also known as wireless cable. It was conceived as a substitute for conventional cable television (TV). However, it also has applications in telephone/fax and data communications. Allows two-way voice, data and video streaming. It operates at a lower frequency than LMDS (typically within specified bands in the 2-10GHz range) and therefore has a greater range and requires a less powerful signal than LMDS. MMDS is a less complicated, cheaper system to implement.
     
         MMDS band uses microwave frequencies from 2 GHz to 3 GHz in range. Reception of MMDS-delivered television signals is done with a special rooftop microwave antenna and a set-top box for the television receiving the signals. The antenna usually has an integrated down-converter to transmit the signals at frequencies compatible with terrestrial TV tuners down on the coax (much like on satellite dishes where the signals are converted down to frequencies more compatible with standard TV coaxial cabling), some larger antennas utilise an external down-converter. The receiver box is very similar in appearance to an analogue cable television receiver box. is a wireless telecommunications technology, used for general-purpose broadband networking or, more commonly, as an alternative method of cable television programming reception.


Transmission line
   Transmission line is a specialized cable designed to carry alternating current of radio frequency, that is, currents with a frequency high enough that their wave nature must be taken into account. Transmission lines are used for purposes such as connecting radio transmitters and receivers with their antennas, distributing cable television signals, and computer network connections.


        
          Local Multipoint Distribution Service (LMDS) is an ideal solution for bringing high-bandwidth services to homes and offices within the last-mile—an area where cable or optical fibre may not be convenient or economical. Having architectural similarities with cellular networks, LMDS is a fixed (non-mobile) point-to-multipoint wireless access technology that typically operates in the 28 GHz band and offers Line-of-Sight (LoS) coverage up to 3-5 km. Depending on the local licensing regulations in a country, such broadband wireless systems may operate anywhere from 2 to 42 GHz. Though data transfer rates for LMDS can reach 1.5 to 2 Gbps, in reality it is designed to deliver data at speeds between 64 Kbps to 155 Mbps (as against 9.6 Kbps offered by 2G cellular networks like GSM), a more realistic downstream average being around 38 Mbps. At such speeds, LMDS may be the key to bringing multimedia data—supporting voice connections, the Internet, videoconferencing, interactive gaming, video streaming and other high-speed data applications—to millions of customers worldwide over the air.



              
The services possible with LMDS include the following:
· Voice dial−up services
· Data
· Internet access
· Video


Head-End Equipment
The Head-End equipment can be broken down into two main categories:
Digital television equipment and Internet and VoIP equipment.
   
     The digital television equipment can provide MPEG-2 encoded video/audio streams from live television feeds, and optionally from video servers with VOD or other pre-recorded content.  The encoded streams are multiplexed into a DVB compliant MPEG-2 ASI transport stream and delivered to the transmission site through a variety of distribution networks including IP networks, microwave links and satellite delivery.

          The Internet and VoIP Head-End equipment requires a robust IP network connection to the DOCSIS 2.0/3.0 Wireless Modem Termination System at the transmission site.  The connection must exceed the total bandwidth   (>30Mbit/sec) of the wireless data network.









8 comments:

  1. LMDS and MMDS use different areas of the spectrum. and also the bandwidth tnx for that info. keep it up

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  2. While the spotlight in the fixed wireless space recently has focused on the failures of local multipoint distribution service players Teligent and Winstar Communications, multichannel multipoint distribution service providers have kept a low profile. Steering clear of the limelight has fared well for MMDS players such as Sprint and WorldCom, which instead have been able to make sure their business plans are solid and their network buildouts are on track. n the meantime, broadband wireless equipment manufacturers such as Cisco Systems and ADC are gaining ground with non line-of-sight technology, which also is boosting the outlook for MMDS... Great great work!!

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  3. LMDS and MMDS is both a good communication tool that can really help us to evolve for the nearer future.

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  4. aside from what you have posted,LMDS have a tunable receivers/transmitters to easily adjust the receiving and transmit frequency.

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  5. One of the advantage of the MMDS is that its propagation is over long distance up to 100km. with single tower. If you imagine that it is fairly long anyway..Thank you for the blog..

    KUDOS!!

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  6. which is better of the two system LMDS or MMDS.??
    by the way nice blog pal..keep it up ;)

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  7. MMDS and LMDS both gives help in wireless data transmission.. MMDS is capable of handling large data.. LMDS is also the same..

    tnx for the info.. keep it up

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  8. The advantage of LMDS is that it has huge chunks of under-utilized spectrum ready to go, more than to satisfy pent-up demand for voice, private data networks, and high speed internet access.

    Thanks for the information Ron..
    Keep it up..

    ReplyDelete