2. A radio signal from the donor site one mile away will reach the target building much earlier than the signal from the donor site located 15 miles away. A two-way radio inside the building can receive and process both signals, but at different times, creating delay and causing quality issues.
However, there is always a chance that the signal from a donor site located further away will be strong enough to penetrate the building. TDI negatively impacts call quality when a first responder radio inside a building receives and processes both signals because one signal will be greatly delayed.
And to make things even worse, if the structure has an in-building coverage enhancement system, (i.e., DAS), there is a strong likelihood that the first responder radio will attempt to receive and process three signals: one from the DAS and one from each of the two donor sites. This compounds the TDI situation and makes call quality even worse.
There are a number of ways to mitigate TDI effects on a public safety DAS system in order to minimize the delay levels to an acceptable level.
Solution providers and DAS installers should offer the following items to ensure public safety call quality:
- Ensure appropriate isolation between the interior service antennas installed in the building, either by adjusting the quantity and physical location of the antennas or by making adjustments in the signal levels delivered to the antennas in what is called “link budgeting.” A good design for 700/800 MHz DAS systems calls for isolation of 47 dB; UHF systems call for 42 dB of isolation; and VHF calls for 33 dB of isolation.
- Keep system delay as low as possible. System delay within the DAS system can come from the active equipment. It can also stem from passive components like splitters and couplers, and especially from filters that may be required to accommodate the specific channel requirements. The majority of the 800-MHz networks in use today are P25 Phase I or Phase II. These services require a maximum allowable delay between 15 µs for Phase II to 33 µs for Phase I.
Many commercially available bi-directional amplifiers (BDAs) used in public safety DAS systems are available as Class A narrowband devices that can provide delays as low as 15 µs. However, Class B devices provide delay figures as low as 6.5 µs. The solution provider who is deploying BDAs will select the correct model (Class A or B) depending on several criteria, including the desired delay level.
To reduce delay, designers must decide between two possible DAS configurations:
- One that meets the maximum tolerable delay levels through the methods described above, or;
- One that asserts “dominance” over the signal from the macro towers that might be penetrating the building.
If the best available delay level of the DAS exceeds the maximum figure that can be tolerated, the DAS must be configured for dominance. Increasing the strength of the RF signal that emanates from the DAS antennas allows it to become stronger than the RF signal from the macro tower that is penetrating the building—i.e., the DAS is “dominant” over the penetrating macro signal.
A two-way radio receiver is designed to “reject” the weaker signal. So when a DAS is configured for dominance, the weaker signal from the penetrating tower will not cause TDI problems. An engineer configures this by measuring the strength of the penetrating tower signal, and then calculating how much stronger the signal from the DAS antenna needs to be so that it rejects the weaker one.
Figure 3 indicates the amount of signal level dominance required in order to overcome the TDI issues.