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#1
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1. what will happen when you have two transmitters(digital spectrum) @
the same carrier freqeuncy and is received by a superhet receiver exactly at the same time, although unlikely (2.4ghz ISM band) 2. what are ways and means to prevent this collision?csma/ca?rts/cts setup?how? |
#2
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In article . com,
mazerom wrote: 1. what will happen when you have two transmitters(digital spectrum) @ the same carrier freqeuncy and is received by a superhet receiver exactly at the same time, although unlikely (2.4ghz ISM band) The same thing that happens in any similar situation at lower frequencies. The two carriers will interfere. Unless they are accurately locked to a common frequency reference (unlikely) there will be a significant beating between them. The information-carrying sidebands of the two transmissions are likely to interfere, and the transmissions are likely to be garbled at their intended reception points. The degree of garbling/interference will depend on the signal strengths and also on the modulation scheme used. 2. what are ways and means to prevent this collision?csma/ca?rts/cts setup?how? There are several approaches which have been used. The simplest is probably CSMA/CA, where each stations listens, doesn't transmit when it detects a carrier, and waits for some variable amount of time (often randomly-chosen) after carrier goes away before it starts transmitting. You'll tend to find this used in ad-hoc networks of various sorts, where there's no central coordinating authority for the right-to-transmit. For example, most amateur-radio AX.25 packet networks here in the US work this way. Collision rate tends to go up, and bandwidth utilization maxes out and decreases when there are many stations trying to operate on a single frequency. The classic problem with CSMA/CA on radio is the "hidden node" problem. If two nodes can't hear one another, they can't avoid one another... and their transmissions can often both be heard at other stations and will interfere. A second approach is an RTS/CTS system, coordinated by a central node which can be heard by all other nodes. This is a common mode on 802.11b networks, where coordination is performed by the 802.11b access point. A third approach is a polling approach, where the outlying nodes never transmit (not even an RTS) until specifically polled by the central authority-node. I believe that many of the AX.25 packet networks in Europe use this approach, in order to minimize collisions and improve bandwidth utilization over what's possible with CSMA/CA. If there's no central authority to handle polling or RTS/CTS, then some form of ad-hoc "token passing" can be used, where each node receives an explicit handoff of the right-to-transmit from another node, and either sends what it has to send, or forwards the right-to- transmit packet to the next node in the sequence. Time-division multiplexing (e.g. slotted Aloha) is another method... nodes coordinate to agree on which time slots each is allowed to transmit in. This can minimize or eliminate collisions (except perhaps during setup) but it can waste bandwidth, because timeslots can go unused if the nodes which "own" them don't have anything to say at the moment. So - there are lots of approaches - which one is best depends a great deal on the environment and application. -- Dave Platt AE6EO Hosting the Jade Warrior home page: http://www.radagast.org/jade-warrior I do _not_ wish to receive unsolicited commercial email, and I will boycott any company which has the gall to send me such ads! |
#3
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On 25 Apr 2006 05:18:31 -0700, "mazerom"
wrote: 1. what will happen when you have two transmitters(digital spectrum) @ the same carrier freqeuncy and is received by a superhet receiver exactly at the same time, although unlikely (2.4ghz ISM band) You will hear noise. Of course, with only one signal you will hear noise. 2. what are ways and means to prevent this collision?csma/ca?rts/cts setup?how? Slip the gold code. 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC |
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