
1022410 – 0001 Rev. 2
3–22 UMOD hardware theory of operation
both D&I multiplexers are operate at the same rate, however, the
GIM is designed to allow for a mixed-rate operation. For
example, the user can set up the drop multiplexer (SD and DDO
ports) to operate in T1 mode, and the insert multiplexer (RD and
IDI ports) to operate in E1 mode. For E1 operation a mixture of
balanced and unbalanced interfaces is allowed. The selection of
one of the appropriate coding schemes (AMI, B8ZS, or HDB3) is
independent for every port.
For more information on the GIM daughtercard, refer to
section 3.6 on page 3–41, “Terrestrial data interface
daughtercard.”
The CIM is the interface between the UMOD and the user’s
equipment. Receive data from the UMOD can be output to the
user DTE device in the following electrical interface formats.
•
EIA RS-232, EIA RS-422/449, or CCITT V.35. These
formats are supported by the 37-pin connector labeled TO
DTE.
•
CCITT G.703. This format supports balanced T1 (also
called DS1), balanced or unbalanced E1 (also called CEPT),
balanced or unbalanced T2 (also referred to as DS2), and
unbalanced E2 electrical interfaces. The balanced G.703
port is labeled G.703 BAL, the unbalanced G.703 ports are
labeled SD (send data) and RD (receive data).
The CIM provides ports for drop-and-insert (D&I) multiplexing
and a port for Engineering Service Channel (ESC) signals for use
with an optional internal framing unit (IFU). The D&I ports on the
CIM are labeled SD (send data), RD (receive data), IDI
(insert-data-in) and DDO (drop-data-out). ESC signals (including
audio ESC, octet alignment, and backward alarms) are supported
by the CIM port labeled ESC SIGNALS.
The CIM also has a station clock port (labeled STATION CLK) that
can receive a 1 MHz to10 MHz TTL or 0 dBm to +25 dBm level
input.
Customer interface
module