232 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
232 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
NOTE CAREFULLY:-
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The "call waiting" and "call forwarding" information in this article is
|
|||
|
correct for Bell Canada's territory which is primarily the provinces of
|
|||
|
Quebec and Ontario in CANADA. It has not been checked in areas controlled
|
|||
|
by other telephone companies.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
|
|||
|
MODEM COMMUNICATIONS PROBLEMS
|
|||
|
=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Written by Graham Newton
|
|||
|
P.O. Box 672
|
|||
|
Don Mills, Ontario M3C 2T6
|
|||
|
C A N A D A
|
|||
|
Occasionally on Compuserve;- 71076,111
|
|||
|
Also on Canada Remote Systems
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Some people have experienced trouble (typically, being 'dumped' in mid-
|
|||
|
transmission) with some systems yet have not had similar problems with others.
|
|||
|
The natural thing is to blame the system BUT before you do, read the following
|
|||
|
information. You may be surprised that there could be a very simple cure for
|
|||
|
your problem:-
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The various telephone companies have been offering a useful service called
|
|||
|
'Call Waiting' which for practical purposes gives you two phone lines on one
|
|||
|
phone. In other words, if you are on the phone, and someone else calls you,
|
|||
|
they hear a 'ring' instead of getting a busy signal. You (but not the person
|
|||
|
you are presently talking to) hear a momentary 'beep' to tell you that
|
|||
|
another call is waiting and you can then answer their call by momentarily
|
|||
|
depressing the hook-switch which puts the current caller 'on hold' while you
|
|||
|
talk to the new caller. You can switch back and forth between callers also by
|
|||
|
momentarily depressinmg the hook-switch each time.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
This is a great service, BUT IT HAS A SERIOUS PROBLEM FOR MODEM USERS! That
|
|||
|
'beep' you hear to signal that another call is waiting ALSO momentarily
|
|||
|
'blacks out' the audio... and if it is a modem at the other end, yours or the
|
|||
|
other end, will think it has lost carrier for that brief duration, and it MAY
|
|||
|
DISCONNECT, depending on the terminal software and/or modem types involved!
|
|||
|
Fortunately, there is a cure for this problem within another service, 'Call
|
|||
|
Forwarding' that the phone company usually offers in a package deal with the
|
|||
|
'Call Waiting', and this method DOES work!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
NOTE: There is mis-information being circulated to the effect that Call
|
|||
|
Waiting can be disabled by a simple user code *70 or 1170. This
|
|||
|
comes from a hackers BBS in the USA and may work there, but it does
|
|||
|
DOES NOT WORK here!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
This service allows you to 'forward' calls coming in for you, to another phone
|
|||
|
number that you can enter whenever you activate the service. Once forwarded,
|
|||
|
your phone rings a 'half ring' once only on every call forwarded to the
|
|||
|
number you have entered, just to remind you that your line is 'on forwarding'.
|
|||
|
Your line can then be used for outgoing calls WITHOUT causing a 'busy' to the
|
|||
|
forwarded calls!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Now the interesting point... once on forwarding, your outgoing calls are no
|
|||
|
longer interrupted in any manner, so your modem calls will now, not be
|
|||
|
affected. You must, however, originate the call since incoming calls are now
|
|||
|
forwarded to another number AND YOU CAN'T ACCESS THEM. If you don't have a
|
|||
|
second line in the house to forward to, (whereupon, you could still answer the
|
|||
|
forwarded calls) you can also 'forward' calls to your own number, which will
|
|||
|
then ring 'busy' to anyone calling you WHETHER OR NOT YOU ARE ON THE LINE.
|
|||
|
If you are not using the line, it will do a 'half ring' everytime someone
|
|||
|
attempts to reach you to remind you that your line is 'on forwarding'.
|
|||
|
A simple code entered to the phone line disconnects forwarding and all becomes
|
|||
|
normal again.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Some troubles of the 'I got dumped' variety can be traced to carrier
|
|||
|
levels that are too low, either at the sending end (yours!) or the receiving
|
|||
|
end (the system you are calling). Remember that there is a telephone line
|
|||
|
between that does have a variable amount of signal loss depending how many
|
|||
|
exchanges the call passes before reaching the desired destination. You don't
|
|||
|
have any control over this aspect, but it seems that people who operate from a
|
|||
|
Touch Tone equipped line do consistantly better than those who have a simple
|
|||
|
'basic black' dial telephone service! The reason, it appears, is that Touch
|
|||
|
Tone lines are more carefully controlled than the dial pulse lines, and hence
|
|||
|
they are more consistant.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Another common problem appears in acoustic coupled modems. Those are the ones
|
|||
|
where you stuff the handset into an earmuff type of receptacle after you dial
|
|||
|
and hear a carrier being sent to you by the system you have called).
|
|||
|
Your telephone mouthpiece can suffer from 'compacted carbon granules' which is
|
|||
|
the modem users equivalent of going deaf in both ears! In a word, the
|
|||
|
mouthpiece becomes insensitive to sound and the distant end hears a low level
|
|||
|
carrier. There is a quick and easy cure for this, but unfortunately it only
|
|||
|
works with the older model 500 type telephones which use a carbon type of
|
|||
|
microphone. Simply unscrew the mouthpiece and remove the little round capsule
|
|||
|
(it will fall out into your hand) and rap it sharply a few times around its
|
|||
|
perimeter and replace it. This will shake loose the carbon granules and make
|
|||
|
for better transmission levels.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
In some cases, with lower speed modems (110 - 300 baud) it is possible to have
|
|||
|
undesirable differences in your modem mark and space tones, thus making the
|
|||
|
receiving end modem appear deaf to yours, or your modem putting out a lower
|
|||
|
level than is needed, making your operation mariginal, subject to the small
|
|||
|
variations in amplitude of one telephone line vs another. In some of the
|
|||
|
cheap modems, these are very real problems because the manufacturer can't pay
|
|||
|
attention to these matters without raising the price substantially. This is
|
|||
|
partly the reason why good modems cost money.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
If you have a frequency counter and audio generator available, you can check
|
|||
|
your low speed send and receive frequencies from the following list:-
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
ORIGINATE MODE: MARK = 1270 Hz
|
|||
|
============== SPACE = 1070 Hz
|
|||
|
(YOU)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
ANSWER MODE: MARK = 2225 Hz
|
|||
|
=========== SPACE = 2025 Hz
|
|||
|
(SYSTEM)
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
You can see that there is only 200 Hz difference between the MARK and SPACE
|
|||
|
frequencies and only 755 Hz between the originate and answer filters. This
|
|||
|
means that the filters MUST be accurate and that very little variance can be
|
|||
|
tolerated.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Another possible problem, but less likely, is a mis-match of word length, stop
|
|||
|
bits and parity check or no parity check in the coding your modem sends to the
|
|||
|
system you are calling. Most systems default to 8N1 or 8 bit words, no parity
|
|||
|
and one stop bit to make up each information transfer 'word' that the system
|
|||
|
deals with. If your equipment isn't set to match this format, then you should
|
|||
|
adjust your settings to conform.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
An insideously subtle problem is the possibility of YOUR LOCATION being
|
|||
|
responsible for revealing an apparent fault in the design of your modem, which
|
|||
|
the supplier may not know about, or even think about, when trying to duplicate
|
|||
|
the fault conditions under testing. This can be caused by you being in close
|
|||
|
proximity to an A.M. broadcast transmitting station (in the case of low
|
|||
|
frequencies) and paging, F.M. or T.V. Broadcast or other 'common carrier'
|
|||
|
service transmitters (in the case of high frequencies).
|
|||
|
By way of an example, in one case a modem user was close (within a few miles)
|
|||
|
to a 50,000 watt A.M. radio station transmitter which operates on 1010 kHz.
|
|||
|
His modem was constantly acting up at his home, but worked OK at his office
|
|||
|
much further away from the transmitter. The tip off was that he could hear
|
|||
|
music and voice on his telephone line corresponding to the programs on the
|
|||
|
station and, of course, this should not be happening to any self-respecting
|
|||
|
telephone.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
A complaint call to the Phone Repair Service got a service man to install
|
|||
|
surpressors, at no charge, curing the music and spurious talk problem. The
|
|||
|
modem, however, was still acting up, although substantially less than before
|
|||
|
the Phone Companys fix was applied. This now confirmed the fact that the
|
|||
|
entire problem was due to 'Rectification' or 'Break Through' of the radio
|
|||
|
signal into the audio circuits of the modem. There are various ways this can
|
|||
|
be 'cured' but they all boil down to the necessity of locating the stage where
|
|||
|
the rectification is taking place and eliminating it at that point. There is
|
|||
|
usually only one place in the circuit where the problem originates and it most
|
|||
|
frequently is a high gain stage like a preamplifier or an active filter.
|
|||
|
'Shot-in-the-dark' band-aid fixes usually only reduce the problem, but don't
|
|||
|
eliminate it, where proper diagnostic techniques applied will result in a
|
|||
|
complete fix for the problem.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
More recently, with the advent of higher speed modems that use complex
|
|||
|
algorithms to code the data, there are problems with line noise that did not
|
|||
|
appear to substantially affect the slower speed modems. There is a lot
|
|||
|
of comment regarding 'line noise' and related problems, but there is also a
|
|||
|
great deal of mystery surrounding the mechanism of how and where the noise
|
|||
|
originates and what the user can do about it, if anything.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Noise will usually take the form of short 'impulse' or clicking noises and
|
|||
|
longer crackling or 'static' noises. The effect of the noise can be directly
|
|||
|
seen on your monitor and gives a clue to the type of noise and its probable
|
|||
|
origin. The following quote from the Hayes Smartmodem 1200 Owners Manual
|
|||
|
shows what happens when noise corrupts data transmission:-
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"If an error occurs or a data bit is lost at the low speed (300 baud), the
|
|||
|
result on the terminal screen or printer is a single error - either an
|
|||
|
incorrect or missing character. The same error at the high speed (1200
|
|||
|
baud) is multiplied, however, due to the path that characters take before
|
|||
|
being output for printing or display. At least two and often three
|
|||
|
characters are incorrect as a result of a single bit error. The
|
|||
|
descrambling algorithm alters the data so that an error is often produced
|
|||
|
as a left brace '{' or a lower case letter 'i'. Do not interpret this to
|
|||
|
be a hardware defect."
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The impulse noise will often produce the single bit error described above,
|
|||
|
however, if the problem encountered is a 'burst' of anywhere from a few to ten
|
|||
|
or more characters, you can assume that you are plagued with the 'static'
|
|||
|
noise variety.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
There is an alternate path selection used by the phone company for local and
|
|||
|
long distance call completion. The equipment tries to complete the call a few
|
|||
|
different ways by 'Alternate Routing' through other available central offices
|
|||
|
if it finds trunks to the desired end office are busy, before it abandons the
|
|||
|
call and gives you a fast (trunk busy) busy signal. Alternate routing MAY
|
|||
|
run your call through an older, noisy office, and hence one possible answer to
|
|||
|
why hanging-up and redialing often gets you a better line!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The cause of the noise determines the type of noise, and in the phone company
|
|||
|
central office, some impulse noise is produced by older switching equipment.
|
|||
|
If your call to a system is routed through one of these older offices, chances
|
|||
|
are it may pick up some of this impulse noise. Natural phenomenon such as
|
|||
|
static discharges and lightning contribute to this as well as man made noise
|
|||
|
from electrical switching circuits that may induce impulse noise into the
|
|||
|
nearby phone line anywhere along the way. These problems are usually minimal
|
|||
|
because the phone lines are balanced to ground and thus tend to cancel this
|
|||
|
kind of common-mode noise.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
One very likely cause of the 'static' variety of noise is the 'line protector
|
|||
|
block' which is installed at every phone line terminating location. It is
|
|||
|
designed to be a surge protector for lightning etc., and it has carbon fuse
|
|||
|
elements in it which have been known to become noisy. The problems caused
|
|||
|
are not consistant because the higher ringing voltage and normal switching
|
|||
|
transients when you pick up your line will clear the problem temporarily, for
|
|||
|
minutes, hours, days or maybe even months!
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
If you experience the 'static' problem described, then a call to the telephone
|
|||
|
repair service is in order. Simply tell them you are hearing loud static
|
|||
|
noises on your line which sometimes go away if you bounce the switch-hook up
|
|||
|
and down a few times and you suspect the line protector block is defective
|
|||
|
and would like it replaced. Don't mention modems or computers or they
|
|||
|
will start suggesting that you get an expensive data line which isn't needed!
|
|||
|
Just make sure that you remove any and all attachments that aren't approved
|
|||
|
when the phone company employee comes to do the job, just to avoid any likely
|
|||
|
problems with them complaining that you were the cause and not their line.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Come to think of it, are you SURE you, or equipment that you have connected to
|
|||
|
the line, are NOT the cause of your problems? If the noise goes away when you
|
|||
|
have all your gadgets disconnected, then one of them is the cause, and not the
|
|||
|
phone company supplied equipment.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|