|
Frequently Asked Questions
1.
What does VSAT stand for?
VSAT stands for Very Small Aperture Terminal
2. What is a VSAT?
VSATs are small earth stations (normally 1.4 - 2.4 meters) that are
utilized for reliable transmission of data, voice and fax via
satellite. VSAT Terminal Equipment consists of two units - an indoor
unit and an outdoor unit.
The outdoor unit is placed outdoors for a line-of-sight to the
satellite and the indoor unit interfaces with the user's
communications device (e.g. data terminal equipment). The outdoor
unit consists of a small antenna, mount and electronics for signal
reception and transmission. The indoor unit consists of a satellite
modem and demodulators and a network access device to interface with
data LANs and PBXs.
3.
For what are VSAT is used?
VSAT systems generally connect a large number of geographically
dispersed sites to a central location. VSAT networks may transmit
voice, data, fax, or video conferencing.
4. What are the components in a VSAT site?
A typical VSAT site consists of a parabolic-shaped antenna mounted
on the roof of a building, connected by a cable to a chassis inside
the building. Operators install these antennas at customer sites and
buy transmission capacity on satellites.
5. What does the VSAT unit contain?
A typical VSAT unit contains a modem for translating satellite
transmissions back into data (and vice versa) and terrestrial
interfaces for connecting customer equipment.
6. What is a satellite transponder?
A satellite transponder is a combination receiver, frequency
converter, and transmitter package. It is physically part of a
communications satellite. Communications satellites typically have
12 to 24 onboard transponders.
7. What are the typical VSAT network
configurations?
VSAT networks can be arranged in point to point, star, mesh,
star/mesh, and broadcast configurations. The preferred arrangement
depends on the kind of information flow the network will service.
8. What is a point to point VSAT network?
A point to point network allows two-way communications between two
VSAT sites.
9. What is a star VSAT network?
A star network allows any number of VSAT sites to have two-way
communication with a central hub.
10.What is a mesh VSAT network?
A mesh network allows two-way communications between any VSAT sites
in a network. A central hub is not necessary. Each site communicates
to another site with a single satellite hop.
11.What are the different VSAT transmission
methods?
There are three basic VSAT transmission types: TDMA, time-division
multiple access; DAMA, demand-assigned multiple access; and SPCP/MCPC,
single/multiple channels per carrier.
12.What are the characteristics of a TDMA
transmissions type?
TDMA is a form of multiple access in which a single carrier is
shared by many users. When signals from earth stations reach the
satellite, they are processed in time segments without overlapping.
TDMA is typically used in a packet switched environment when small
or moderate amounts of data are to be transferred.
13.What are the characteristics of a DAMA
transmission type?
The DAMA protocol is used to share bandwidth in a time division
mode. Typically DAMA transmission is used in a packet-switched
environment when large amounts of data are to be transferred. Is a
highly efficient means of instantaneously assigning telephony
channels in a transponder according to immediate traffic demands.
DAMA is also applicable in a circuit-switched environment and is
usually characterized by allowing each user a variable slot of time
on a demand (or request) basis.
14.What are the characteristics of a SCPC/MCPC
transmission type?
SCPC/MCPC systems use a dedicated satellite link between a few
distinct locations. These links can support either a single
telephone line or several telephone or data lines. Such links
generally are permanently assigned with no carrier switching or
rerouting over the satellite.
15.What is SCPC-DAMA transmission?
SCPC/DAMA systems provide a control network on top of an SCPC
network. When a particular station wishes to make a telephone call,
the control network is used to forward that request to a central
processor that sets up a dedicated SCPC link between the two sites.
When the call is finished, the link is taken down and the satellite
resources can be used for a different call.
16. What is TDM-TDMA transmission?
TDM-TDMA networks are designed for interactive data applications.
TDM-TDMA systems feature a large expensive hub that provides basic
data communications to very inexpensive remote sites. The
architecture supports many remote stations using a small amount of
satellite bandwidth. Data rates supported at the remote sites are
typically between 1.2 kbps and 9.6 kbps; however, this type of
traffic has a very low average data rate. Each station may transmit
bursts of 9.6 kbps data, but they generally average less than 100
kbps. Typical applications are transactional in nature. Examples
include credit card verifications, point of sale systems, SCADA
systems, and inventory control.
17. What is TDMA-DAMA transmission?
TDMA-DAMA networks have the same demand assignment capability as
SCPC-DAMA networks, but also have division multiplexing to reduce
the need for multiple modems at each site. TDMA-DAMA networks allow
many telephone calls to be placed simultaneously to different
destinations through a single station.
18. What is FDMA transmission?
FDMA (Frequency Division Multiple Access) uses a single modem for
all communication from a site and transmits for very short interval
and at higher rates. FDMA uses multiple carriers within the same
transponder within which each uplink has been assigned frequency
slot and bandwidth. It is usually used in conjunction with frequency
modulation.
19. What is the advantage of a TDMA-DAMA
system?
TDMA-DAMA systems support many telephone lines with very little
incremental cost. E1 or T1 interfaces can be provided for direct
digital connections to PBXs or telephony switches. TDMA-DAMA systems
are also flexible in supporting applications such as data, video
conferencing, broadcast, and the like. In addition, TDMA networks
are hubless, which eliminates the high cost of a hub and a single
point of failure within the network.
20. What applications do TDMA-DAMA networks
best support?
TDMA-DAMA networks support applications with mesh connectivity and
applications that require multiple services that are integrated into
a single network such as telephony, low to high-speed data imaging,
fax, and interactive video conferencing.
21. What are the advantages of VSAT?
1. A VSAT Network can be provided
through a lease arrangement with fixed transmission costs regardless
of distance. This provides for substantial communication cost
savings. The user retains complete control of the way information is
communicated within the network.
2. This generates flexibility,
particularly where new VSAT sites need to be added, or existing
sites need to be moved or removed from the network.
3. High availability and excellent
transmission quality is provided by the VSAT Network.
4. VSAT Networks also guarantee the
highest performance levels (99.5%) among all communication
alternatives.
5. VSAT Networks provide fast data
transmission for POS applications to improve customer service.
6. VSATs can be installed anywhere
the business has a site irrespective of the terrestrial
communications infrastructure.
7. VSAT Networks offer - a single
vendor for equipment service, installation & maintenance of the
entire network.
8. VSAT Networks offer superior
flexibility and performance. Adding a site is quick and easy, and
higher network availability levels are easy to obtain.
9. VSAT as a broadcast medium
supports business objectives to improve customer service and
quality. Reliable data broadcast, audio broadcast for in-site music
and video broadcast for sales training are all available on a single
platform.
10. Prices of VSAT Networks compete
favorably against terrestrial alternatives including dial-up. The
costs are predictable and stable.
11. VSAT Networks can be secured with
VPNs (Virtual Private Networks) using industrial strength
encryption. |