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-
- /-/ Understanding PBX Systems /-/
-
- Presented by Brainstorm Elite
-
- ------------------
- Computer Based PBX
- ------------------
-
- To get a better understanding of what a PBX can do, here are a few basic
- fundamentals. The modern PBX is a combined computer, mass storage device, and
- of course a switching system that can:
-
- {1} Produce itemized,automated billing procedures, to allow the
- identification and management of toll calls.
-
- {2} Combine daytime voice grade communication circuits into
- wideband data channels for night time high speed data transfers.
-
- {3} Handles Electronic Mail {including office memos}.
-
- {4} Combine Voice channels into a wideband audio/visual conference
- curcuit, with the ability to xfer and capture slides, flipcharts, pictures
- of any kind.
-
- Both the external and internal calling capacity of the PBX System must be
- carefully considered because many business operations run a very high ratio of
- internal station to station dialing and a low capacity system will not handle
- the requested traffic load.
-
- A critical factor is the number of trunks and the Central Office Facilities
- that are used for outside connections. Another is the number of junctions or
- {links} that make up the internal calling paths.
-
-
- To understand the services available on a typical computer run PBX it is
- necessary to introduce the subject of time division switching. In a time
- division switching network all connections. Called (of course) a
- time-division bus.
- Every line trunk that requires a connection with another is provided
- with a port circuit. All port circuirs have access to the time division bus
- through a time division switch.
- [When two ports require connection,their time division switches operate at
- a very high frequency (16,000 times per second). This technique, which is
- called 'speech sampling', allows many simultaneous connections over the same
- time division bus.
- The next critical item is circuit PACKS. The system elements that we will be
- describing in future tutorials {lines/trunks/switches,memory and control} are
- contained on plug in circuit packs. Each line circuit pack contains a number
- of lines, in example, four. But tha assignment of station numbers to actual
- phone line circuits is flexible.
- The system memory is contained in circuit packs which provide the call
- processing functions. The circuit packs are held in small frames called
- 'carriers'. Within each carrier, the circuit packs are plugged into positions:
- the 'slots'. Every circuit can be addressed by, say a five digit number which
- tells its location by carrier-slot-circuit.... {starting to get the idea?}
- There can be three types of carriers in a modern PBX system:
-
- o Line Carriers
- o Trunk Carriers
- o Control Carriers
-
- The line carriers contain station lines. In AT&T's "Dimension" model, for
- example, a total of 52 to 64 lines are provided. The trunk carriers contain
- slots for 16 trunk circuit packs. The control carrier includes processor,
- memory, contvol circuitry, data channels for attendant console control and
- traffic measurement outputs.
-
-
- PBX Systems will directly reflect the types of services offered at the C.O.
-
- o CCSA
- o CCIS
- o Picturephones {sooner than you tlink my phriends}
-
- Common Control Switching Arrangements ( CCSA ) permit any unrestricted tele-
- phone station to call any othet internal or external system station by using
- the standard seven digit number. Alternate routing is a feature of CCSA service
- The interfacility, alternate routed calling paths are accomplished at the
- telephone company central office level, not at the PBX level.
-
- A system of interest to large scale telephone users is Common Channel Inter-
- office Signalling (CCIS). Ty0ically, this technique employs common channels to
- carry all interfacility signalling instructions: dial pulses, on hook (idle),
- off hook (busy), and so on, between two switching centers. { getting warm }.
- CCIS replaces older methods of interoffice signalling such as 'in band' and
- 'out of band' techniques. By the way, real phreaks are selling their boxes
- to idiots who still think the're worth a lot...The former (in band) transmits
- signalling data within the normal conversation bandwidth. It's shortcoming is
- that false information may be transmitted due to unique tone or noise
- combinations set up in the talking path. {this is the official reasoning}
- Out of Band signalling techniques placed the interoffice data in special
- channels, generally adjacent to and immediately above the voice path. To pre-
- serve interchannel integrity,out of band signalling requires very effecient
- filtering or greater 'band guard' seperation between channels.
-
- ** Brainstorm Elite 612-345-2815 **
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