Electronic Switchin Notes
Electronic Switchin Notes
Electronic Switchin Notes
com
ELECTRONIC SWITCHING (EEC 802)
UNIT -1
Content:
Evolution of switching systems: Introduction: Message switching, circuits switching, functions of a
switching system, register-translator-senders, distribution frames, crossbar switch, a general trunking,
electronic switching, Reed electronic system, digital switching systems.
INTRODUCTION TO SWITCHING SYSTEMS:
In telecommunications, an electronic switching system (ESS) is a telephone switch that uses digital electronics and computerized
control to interconnect telephone circuits for the purpose of establishing telephone calls.
The generations of telephone switches before the advent of electronic switching in the 1950s used purely electro-mechanical relay
systems and analog control electronics. The first generation of electronic switching systems in the 1960s were not entirely digital in
nature, but used reed relay-operated metallic paths or crossbar switches operated by stored program control (SPC) systems.
Later electronic switching systems implemented the digital representation of the electrical audio signals on subscriber loops by
digitizing the analog signals and processing the resulting data for transmission between central offices. Time-division multiplexing
(TDM) technology permitted the simultaneous transmission of multiple telephone calls on a single wire connection between central
offices or other electronic switches, resulting in dramatic capacity improvements of the telephone network.
Message Switching
1.
The source and destination are connected temporarily in realtime during data transfer.
2.
Before path set up, delay may be there due to busy destination
node. Once the connection is made, the data transfer takes
place with negligible propagation delay.
3.
4.
PACKET SWITCHING:
(a)
(b)
(c)
(d)
(e)
HEADER
Destination ID
Source ID
Message ID
Packet ID
Control
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REGISTER-TRANSLATOR SENDERS:
When the subscriber is in off hook condition (pick up the hand set) the switching system or the exchange gets the calling
location and mark for the dial tone. Register finder is activated to seize the free register and identify the category of dialing.
An appropriate free register according to the line which is based on the dialing is chosen and the register sends the dial tone
to the calling subscriber. After that, when the subscriber dial initial digits which identifies the exchange goes to the register.
As soon as possible register sends this number to initial translator for further processing. The remaining number goes to
register.
DISTRIBUTION FRAME:
(a) Main distribution frame: The main distribution frame is the place where the cables of the customers distribution network
terminate. the arrangement of terminals on the line side of the MDF corresponds to the street cabling and so reflects the
geography of the area. The terminals on the exchange side of the MDF are arranged in directory number (DN) order.
(b) Intermediate distribution frame (IDF): Traffic originated by customers has bigger gap i.e. much traffic or very little traffic.
On the multiple side of the IDF, lines are arranged in directory number (DN). On the local side, the order can be arbitrary to
obtain the desired result. The terminals on this side of the IDF can be said to correspond to equipment number (EN) of this
line.
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STROWGER
STROWGER SWITCHING SYSTEM:
(a) Introduction: Almon B. Strowger developed a system of automatic switching using an electromechanical switch based around
electromagnets and pawls. With the help of his nephew (Walter S. Strowger) he produced a working model in 1888 (US Patent
No. 447918 10/6/1891). In this selector, a moving wiper (with contacts on the end) moved up to and around a bank of many other
contacts, making a connection with any one of them.
(b) Dialing: A selector starts in the 'home' position and with each 'impulse' the wiper contacts would progress rounds the output bank
to the next position. Each output would be connected to a different subscriber, thus the caller could connect to any other
subscriber who was connected to that bank, without any manual assistance from an operator.
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The type of selector shown above is known as a Final Selector as it takes the final two digits of the number dialed. Most
numbers dialed are several digits longer, and therefore pass through a chain of selectors. Selectors previous to the Final Selectors are
different; they are called Group Selectors. Group selectors take only ONE digit from the caller, and step up the number of levels
according to the digit dialed. The rotary movement is then automatic; the wipers search around that level to find a free outlet - i.e. the
next free selector in the chain. This is covered in more depth later.
The uniselector: While simple in concept, uniselectors gave automatic exchanges a new economic edge: first
selectors - complex and expensive pieces of electro-mechanical equipment - could be placed in a common pool,
instead of one being permanently attached to a single line.
Widely used in the early days of automatic telephony, such an exchange - using telephone numbers of only four digits - could
handle up to 10,000 lines. And, as early as 1904, switching in such exchanges had been streamlined by the new uniselector.
(b)
The step-by-step process: The call begins when the caller lifts a telephone handset. This action closes a springoperated switch in the telephone, completing an electrical circuit. The exchange receives the signal that a caller
wishes to dial a number.
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(c)
To deal with 8 or 10-digit numbers, step-by-step exchanges need many more stages and many more selectors. Nor are calls
limited to selectors in the same exchange: long-distance calls may need to pass through several exchanges.
(d)
In Strowger's system, selecting digits to dial was done by a complicated system involving five separate wires. Later, the
system of Timed Pulse (TP) dialling was inventned using a rotary dial. With TP dialling, only one pair of wires is required for a
telephone, the speech pair. To dial a digit, the circuit is interrupted according to the number dialled so, for example, if you dialled a '4'
then the line would be pulsed four times, quickly in succession. After a moment, it was assumed that the digit was complete and that
any further pulses belonged to the next digit. In order to ensure that successive digits didn't come too soon and thus be mistaken for
pulses belonging to the previous digit, the finger stop on the dial was put some way round so that after removing your finger from the
dial, there was a minimum time taken for the dial to return to the home position. It is important to note here that for the purposes of
dialling, the digit '0' sends TEN pulses for dialling - i.e. the selector will step around to the 10th position.
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Features of Strowger Switching System:
The required features of any automatic switching system are as follows:
Function
Performed by
Dial Tone
Group Selectors
Final Selector
To either return Busy Tone if busy or apply ring signal to the called party's phone
Final
and ring tone to caller and then cease ringing when the called party answers
To detect the answering of the call and register it against the caller's account
Metering Circuits
Selector
Fig: Crosspoint
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Crossbar Switching Configuration:
Except for the very smallest PAX systems, matrix switches on their own are not large enough to provide a complete telephone
exchange and it is neither economic nor practical to keep increasing the size of the matrix, so crossbar switches are usually connected
together in a form known as Link Trunking. The outlets of the first stage of switching are connected to the inlets of a second stage. By
careful design of the links, it is possible to provide an overall switching matrix that provides degrees of concentration or expansion
and different blocking probabilities. By blocking, we mean the possibility of their being no available path between a given inlet and a
required outlet, i.e. the Grade of Service.
One way to create a matrix switch would be to employ a relay at every cross point, but this would be expensive and the
number of relays goes up as a square law. Nevertheless, as we shall see, all-relay systems were built. Indeed, the reed-electronic
systems TXE2 and TXE4 used one reed relay per crosspoint, though the switch matrices were kept fairly small. A crossbar switch is
an electromechanical switch that aims to create a matrix switch without needing a relay at each cross point. Instead, while having a set
of relay contacts at each cross point, they are operated by an electromagnetic coil associated with each column and each row.
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A GENERAL TRUNKING:
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The reed switch is an electrical switch operated by an applied magnetic field. It was invented at Bell Telephone Laboratories in 1936
by W. B. Ellwood. It consists of a pair of contacts on ferrous metal reeds in a hermetically sealed glass envelope. The contacts may be
normally open, closing when a magnetic field is present, or normally closed and opening when a magnetic field is applied. The switch
may be actuated by a coil, making a reed relay, or by bringing a magnet near to the switch. Once the magnet is pulled away from the
switch, the reed switch will go back to its original position.
Description: The reed switch contains a pair (or more) of magnetizable, flexible, metal reeds whose end portions are separated by a
small gap when the switch is open. The reeds are hermetically sealed in opposite ends of a tubular glass envelope.
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