CT2
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CT2 is a cordless telephony standard that was used in the early 1990s to provide short-range proto-mobile phone service in some countries in Europe and in Hong Kong. It is considered the precursor to the more successful
Overview
CT2 is a digital
- Standardized on 864–868 MHz
- 500 frames/second (alternately base station and handset)
- 100 kHz carriers
- 32 kbit/s ADPCMvoice channel compression
- 10 mW maximum power output
- GFSKdata encoding
- Up to 100 metre (300 ft) range
Unlike DECT, CT2 was a voice-only system, though like any minimally-compressed voice system, users could deploy
Deployment and usage
CT2 was deployed in a number of countries, including Britain and France. In Britain, the
Outside Europe, the system achieved a certain amount of popularity in Hong Kong with three operators offering service from 1991, until licenses were terminated in 1996.[6] A CT2 service was offered in Singapore from 1993 to 1998 by Telecommunications Equipment under the brand name Callzone,[7][8] using Motorola's Silverlink 2000 Birdie handset.
Typical CT2 users were sold a handset and base station which they could connect to their own home telephone wiring. Calls via the home base station would be routed via the home telephone line and in this configuration the system was identical to a standard cordless phone, for both incoming and outgoing calls.
Once out of range of the home, the CT2 user could find signs indicating a network base station in the area, and make outgoing calls (but not receive calls) using the network base station. Base stations were in a variety of places, including high-streets and other shopping areas, gas stations, and transport hubs such as rail stations. In this configuration, callers would be charged a per-minute rate which was higher than if they made calls from home, but not as high as conventional cellular charges.
The advantages to the user were that the rates were generally lower than cellular, and that the same handset could be used at home and away from home. The disadvantages, compared to cellular, were that many networks did not deliver incoming calls to the phones (Bi-Bop was an exception), and that their areas of use were more limited.
There are no known open CT2 networks still running.
Similar systems
Japan's
The
Canada adopted an enhanced version of CT2, known as CT2Plus, in 1993, operating in the 944–948.5 MHz band. CT2Plus class 2 systems benefited from the use of common signalling channels and offered multi-cell hand-off as well as tracking of devices. Incoming calls could be received anywhere within a multi-cell system.
In the United States, a system similar to DECT and PHS called PACS was developed but never deployed commercially.
CT2, as used in Europe and Hong Kong, required adherence to the MPT 1322 and MPT 1334 technical standards. Most striking was the use of TDD (time-division duplex) channels where one radio channel carried both sides of a duplex telephone conversation. This solved the problem of different propagation paths between two widely separated channels (up to 45 MHz in some cellular systems), but also placed an upper limit on the range of CT-2 signaling, since the speed of light (and radio signals) prevented long transmission paths. However, the use of TDD made available many frequency bands for CT-2 use, since a "paired" return path was not needed.
An American company, Cellular 21, Inc. (later to become Advanced Cordless Technologies, Inc.) headed by broadcaster Matt Edwards, petitioned the FCC to permit the use of CT2 technology in the US. ACT built two active test systems which were located in Monticello, New York (outdoor), and outside and inside the South Street Seaport complex in lower Manhattan. The Monticello public field trials used Timex technology which was incompatible with the trans-European standard, while the South Street Seaport indoor test used equipment from Ferranti, GPT, and Motorola, which at the time manufactured CT2 equipment for the Singapore and Hong Kong markets. GPT and Motorola both provided CT2 equipment for the Rabbit system rollout (GPT handset and charger shown above). All the testing was under an FCC Experimental license. The ACT/Cellular 21 "Petition for Rulemaking" (RM-7152), along with a later petition by Millicom, became the basis of the FCC's PCS initiative (FCC GEN Docket 90-314) which resulted in the allocation of frequencies in the 1.7 to 2.1 GHz band as spectrum expansion for the crowded 800 MHz cellular band. The FCC used the acronym PCS to designate Personal Communications Services, separate and distinct from cellular service which was 800 MHz analog at the time. PCS was to be digital-only, and has progressed through several "generations" (mostly marketing designations) such as G3 and G4.
See also
References
- ^ Wikipedia France on CT2
- ^ Cisco's Stephen Wolff on PHS Archived 2006-08-19 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Report on Digital Cordless Networks from 1992 (Dr. Walter H. W. Tuttlebee)
- ^ Telepoint Services
- ^ "PTT haalt Kermit van de markt". 14 January 1994.
- ^ OFTA Hong Kong milestones Archived 2009-07-08 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Ure, John (1995). Telecommunications in Asia: Policy, Planning and Development. Hong Kong University Press. p. 32.
- ^ SingTel to Scrap Uncompetitive Callzone
External links
- Cordless Telephony: The Future of Analogue and CT2 Cordless Telephony in the United Kingdom, UK OFCOM plans for phasing out of CT2
- Apple PowerBop in pictures