T1 clock recovery equipment requires that transmitted data not contain long sequences of 0 bits. For this reason, equipment that interfaces to T1 networks must meet a ones-density specification that ensures that 1 bit occurs frequently enough. Most schemes for meeting this specification require a substantial amount of overhead that consumes a significant portion of the available bandwidth. In this paper, and approach that meets the ones-density requirement with very little wasted bandwidth is described. Two practical coding schemes based on the approach are presented. The first, a block coding scheme, requires an overhead rate on the order of one bit per T1 frame, along with a delay of several frames. In an error-free channel, it introduces some errors, the rate of which is made acceptably low by using sufficient delay and overhead. In an errored channel, extension of errors is negligible. The second scheme, a sliding code scheme, requires an overhead rate on the order of a fraction of a bit per T1 frame, along with a delay of only several bit times. In an error-free channel, the rate of errors introduced is negligible. In an errored channel, approximately one out of every 2000 channel errors is extended into a burst, the length of which can be made acceptably low by using sufficient overhead
Published in:
Communications, IEEE Transactions on
(Volume:38
,
Issue:
6
)
Date of Publication:
Jun 1990
- Page(s):
-
906
-
914
- ISSN :
-
0090-6778
- INSPEC Accession Number:
-
3758514
- Digital Object Identifier :
-
10.1109/26.57483
- Date of Current Version :
-
06 August 2002
- Issue Date :
-
Jun 1990
- Sponsored by :
-
IEEE Communications Society