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On 6/30/07 10:44 PM, in article
et, "DTC" wrote: Mike Kaliski wrote: ELF communications are carried out at very slow data rates, only a few characters per hour at best. Actually its on the order of several characters per minute using a 64 character "alphabet". It is possible to communicate at a base band frequency of 0Hz. This is what happens when you talk down a hard wired telephone or intercom. At a telephone exchange (switching centre), the signals from each line are modulated onto a higher frequency for onward transmission down a trunk wire cable or fibre optic cable. The multiplexed high frequency modulated signals are down converted back to audio frequencies once they reach the intended destination. In the old T carrier (before 24 channel digital T1) carrier, each telephone conversation was modulated onto a low frequency radio frequency AM signal ranging from (and don't quote me as its been over thirty years since I worked T spans) 50 KC to 200 KC. Very similar in principle to the 5 kc wide AM radio station signals on the 530 kHz to 1700 kHz AM broadcast band. The O Carrier systems went from a low of about 32 kHz up to 164 kHz if I remember right. And the mainstay of long-haul communications (L Carrier) channel bank, was 64 - 108 kHz. One of the most strange Carrier Systems I worked with was a 1930s vintage H Carrier, one channel ssb "system" operating at about 12 kHz, and it ran without automatic synchronization. That was in the 60s. We used it as a maintenance channel in a voice over data configuration for a gap-filler radar site. I've never seen a more extreme merging of old and new technologies. Don |
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