Atec Acterna-JDSU-SDA-5000 User Manual

Page 3

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Normalized sweep

To ensure that network specifications

are maintained, starting from the

headend to the subscriber, each

section of the network has its own set

of specifications. A normalized sweep

divides the network into easily man-

aged sections. Each of these network

sections can be designated to an

individual team or contractor and

tested to its own specifications and

quality standards.

The SDA Series uses a variation of

Acterna original market-leading Stealth

Sweep technology. Existing video

carriers (analog, digital, or scrambled)

are referenced when possible, elimi-

nating any possibility of interference to

the subscriber services. Where carriers

are absent, the SDA-5500 transceiver

at the headend transmits a sweep to

fill vacant spectrum areas. To remove

effects of headend level drift, the

SDA-5500 transceiver monitors the

levels and transmits new reference

information with every sweep. This

means that if the signal levels are

changing in the headend, they will not

affect the sweep response measure-

ment. The SDA-5500 transceiver has

all of the measurement capability of

the SDA-5000 receiver enabling the

technician to check headend levels.

The SDA Series also offers significantly

faster forward sweep speed than earlier

instruments, especially in systems that

include many digital signals. They can

reference 64/256 QAM signal types,

removing the need to worry about

subscriber interference, or injecting

sweep carriers in the guard bands.

Reverse sweep

The SDA-5000 (with option 1 installed)

enables simple and practical testing

of the reverse path frequency response,

regardless of the frequency (5 to

1000 MHz). It has a built-in reverse

sweep transmitter, which means

externally generated carriers are not

required. Furthermore, the SDA-5500

transmitter and field receivers have

frequency agile telemetry, enabling

them to communicate on both the

forward and reverse paths.

SDA Series instruments enable one

person to perform forward and reverse

path alignment simultaneously.

The operator simply indicates which

screen should be displayed – either

the response from the headend to the

testpoint, or the response from the

testpoint to the headend. A reverse

sweep can uncover mismatch prob-

lems, which reveal themselves as

standing waves, or diplex filter roll-offs

that can severely hamper the quality

of services in the reverse band.

3

Reverse ingress spectrum display

Constellation display with MER and

pre/post FEC BER

Multiple-user reverse testing

For intense reverse testing require-

ments, the rack mounted model

SDA-5510 Headend Reverse Sweep

Manager handles the reverse sweep

job for up to 10 different technicians

on the same cluster of nodes. Using

the SDA-5510 in conjunction with the

model SDA-5500 transceiver provides

a full forward and reverse sweep

alignment solution. The SDA-5510

can also stand alone in remote hub

sites for dedicated reverse alignment

applications.

Seeing headend/hub site accumulated

ingress in the field

The reverse noise feature of the

SDA-5000 enables easy reverse path

noise testing. The operator simply

presses the “noise” softkey while

reverse sweeping, and the display

changes to a noise/ingress response

indicating the noise level over

the entire reverse path spectrum

measured at the headend or hub site.

All SDA transmitters provide feedback

to the field regarding the current

condition of noise and ingress in the

headend, even when noise or ingress

is swamping the telemetry (Broadcast

mode). A picture of the headend noise/

ingress is sent out to the SDA receiver

via a special forward telemetry carrier.

Reverse Alignment mode prepares network for

cable modem deployment

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