US2069838A - Communication system - Google Patents

Communication system Download PDF

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Publication number
US2069838A
US2069838A US681482A US68148233A US2069838A US 2069838 A US2069838 A US 2069838A US 681482 A US681482 A US 681482A US 68148233 A US68148233 A US 68148233A US 2069838 A US2069838 A US 2069838A
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United States
Prior art keywords
cable
telephone
currents
telegraph
conductor
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Expired - Lifetime
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US681482A
Inventor
William A Knoop
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AT&T Corp
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Bell Telephone Laboratories Inc
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Priority to US681482A priority Critical patent/US2069838A/en
Priority to GB21228/34A priority patent/GB441396A/en
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Publication of US2069838A publication Critical patent/US2069838A/en
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    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04MTELEPHONIC COMMUNICATION
    • H04M11/00Telephonic communication systems specially adapted for combination with other electrical systems
    • H04M11/06Simultaneous speech and data transmission, e.g. telegraphic transmission over the same conductors
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04MTELEPHONIC COMMUNICATION
    • H04M11/00Telephonic communication systems specially adapted for combination with other electrical systems
    • H04M11/06Simultaneous speech and data transmission, e.g. telegraphic transmission over the same conductors
    • H04M11/062Simultaneous speech and data transmission, e.g. telegraphic transmission over the same conductors using different frequency bands for speech and other data

Definitions

  • This invention relates to electrical communication systems and more particularly to composite loaded communication systems for simultaneously transmitting both telegraph and telephone message currents.
  • Filters are usually employed to separate telephone and telegraph currents which lie in diierent frequency ranges but the filters are unable 'to attenuate those modulation products which have the same frequencies as the desired currents selected by the filters.
  • the object of this invention is to provide means for preventing the telegraph currents from modulating the telephone currents and at the same time to balance the modulation products of the telephone currents out of the telegraph receiving apparatus.
  • a feature of the invention is that the cable conductor is loaded in such a manner that telephone channel is effectively loaded while the telegraph channel is effectively non-loaded, so that telegraph message currents may be transmitted in both directions simultaneously with transmission of telephone message currents in either direction over the cable.
  • a further feature of the invention is that the loading is accomplished by loading coils and disturbances due to the Barkhausen effect in the magnetic material of the loading coil due to the telegraph currents are balanced out of the tele phone channel.
  • a deep sea submarine cable by providing special shore end sections to the cable having a telephone seavearth conductor or cable and a telegraph seaearth'conductor or cable in addition to the main cable or conductor.
  • the main cable conductor and the telephone sea-earth conductor are providedl with loading coils having mutual inductances between them.
  • the telegraph circuit is then taken from the midpoint of the main cable and the telephone sea-earth cable and the telegraph sea-earth cable.
  • Fig. l illustrates one embodiment of the invention as applied to a submarine cable
  • Fig. 2 illustrates another embodiment of thek invention in which the telegraph circuits which include a transmitting circuit, a receiving circuit, the artificial line circuit and the telegraph seaearth circuit are shown in detail.
  • the portion I of the main deep sea cable is preferably continuously loaded, but need not be.
  • a shore-end or terminal section as illustrated in Fig. l which is loaded with loading coils 'l having windings 5 and 6.
  • Non-loaded i cable sections 2 and l which are connected between loading coils l may be the conductors or cores of twin core cables or two individual core cables.
  • Conductors or cable sections 2 are connected in series with the windings 5 of the loading coils 'l and the main deep sea cable I.
  • Cable sections 4 are connected in series with windings 6 of loading coils 1 and the telephone sea-earth or balancing earth through a cable '30 section 3 which is preferably similar in construction to cable l and may extend a considerable distance beyond the loading coil most distant from the shore.
  • a cable '30 section 3 Connected to the shore-end of the cable sections 2 and l closest to the shore 35 is the primary winding I3 of a telephone transformer Il which is center tapped.
  • the second- .ary winding l2 of transformer Il is connected to the telephone iilters and switching circuits while the center tap of primary winding I3 of 40 transformer il is connected to the telegraph transmitting and receiving circuit through the telegraph low pass filters.
  • the shore-ends of the cable are coil loaded so that mutual coupling is pro-vided between the main cable and the sea-earth cable. It should be noted that the coils 5 and t are so connected to the main cable conductor and the sea-earth cable conductor so that they are series aiding for the telephone current, but series opposing for the telegraph circuit.
  • coils 5 and 6 are wound on the same core and are connected in series opposition to the telegraph currents no Barkhausen effects are produced in the telephone channel. Also since the coils are connected in series opposing for the telegraph current, these currents will produce no magnetic effects in the cores of the loading coils so that the Vtelegraph currents are unable to Vmodulate the telephone currents or to produce any harmonics in these cores which Y might disturb the'telephone current.
  • cable Y sections 2, 4, anda are non-loaded and may be its individual cables orV may beconductors or cores in a triple core cable or conductors ⁇ 2 and 4 may bein a twin core cable land 8 in an individual v unnecessary to provide variable inductances in' the ⁇ artificial line which istherefore'much easier to construct and maintain.
  • a communication system for simultaneously transmitting voice frequency telephone message currents and low frequency telegraph message currents comprising a main cable section, terminal cable sections connected to the ends of said main cable section, said terminal cables having ⁇ currents between said telegraph balancing earth conductor and the midpointrof said telephone 1.
  • a submarinecommunication system for simultaneously transmitting voice frequency tele- ⁇ phone message currents and low frequency telegraph message Vcurrents comprising a main cable section and terminal cable sections connected to the ends of said main cable section, characterized in this that said terminal cable sections comprise ductor and a telephone sea earth conductor.
  • a communicationV system comprising a main va main conductor, atelegraph sea earthr conf loaded single conductor cable,terminalsectionsV connected to the ends of said main cable comancing sea earth conductor, a telegraph balancing sea earth conductor, loading coilshaving a ⁇ coil connected in series with Vsaid main cable conductorrand anotherccoil connected in series with said telephone sea earth conductor ysaid coils hav.
  • a composite deep sea communicationsys-A ltem for simultaneouslyA transmitting and receiv' ing telegraph and telephone signal currents which comprises -a main loaded cable, short cable sections connected thereto having a main conductor and a telephone sea earth conductor, loading coils for loading said conductors for telephone currents having two windings mutually coupled together, one of the windings of each of said loading coils being connected in series with said main conductor and the other of said windings of each of said coils being connected in series with said telephone sea earth conductor, and means for applying said telephone signal currents between said conductors and additional means for applying said telegraph currents to said conductors equally and to ground.
  • a deep sea communication system comprising a deep sea cable section, a shore cable section connected to the ends of said deep sea cable section, said shore cable section comprising a main conductor, a telephone sea earth conductor and a telegraph sea earth conductor, loading coils having two windings mutually coupled together, one of which is connected in series with said main conductor, the other Winding of which is connected in series with said telephone sea earth conductor, and means for simultaneously transmitting and receiving voice frequency telephone message currents and low frequency telegraph message currents connected to the conductors of said shore cable section whereby the inductance for said telephone currents is increased but the inductance to said telegraph currents is not increased.
  • a deep sea communication system for simultaneously transmitting and receiving both Voice vfrequency telephone message currents and low frequency telegraph message currents, comprising a deep sea cable section, shore cable sections connected to the ends of said deep sea cable section, said shore cable sections comprising a main cable conductor, a first sea earth conductor and a second sea earth conductor, a plurality of loading coils having two windings mutually coupled together one of which is connected in series with said main conductor and the other of which is connected in series with said rst sea earth conductor, means for transmtting'and receiving one of said message currents to said main conductor and said rst sea earth conductor, and means for transmitting the other of said message currents equally over said main cable conductor and said first-mentioned sea earth conductor and over said second sea earth conductor.

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  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Computer Networks & Wireless Communication (AREA)
  • Signal Processing (AREA)
  • Cable Transmission Systems, Equalization Of Radio And Reduction Of Echo (AREA)
  • Radio Relay Systems (AREA)
  • Details Of Indoor Wiring (AREA)
  • Near-Field Transmission Systems (AREA)

Description

Feb. 9, 1937.
w. A. KNooP COMMUNICATION SYSTEM Filed July 2l, 1935 l llmwjvll. Il
A \S \S UV T Y 9,.
/NVE/vroR W. A. KNOOP BV W/ ATTORNEY Patented Feb. 9, 1937 UNITED OFFICE'- COMMUNICATION SYSTEM Application July 2l, 1933, Serial No. 681,482
o 6 Claims.
This invention relates to electrical communication systems and more particularly to composite loaded communication systems for simultaneously transmitting both telegraph and telephone message currents.
In electrical communication cables it may be necessary to load the cable by winding a tape of magnetic material about the conductor or inserting loading coils having cores of magnetic material. This loading reduces the ,attenuation of the cable to electrical currents, but due to the characteristics of the magnetic materials the signals are modulated and distorted. In addition, in composite systems, the modulation products of one set of currents may disturb the other sets of currents. This effect is greatest when the transmission of one set of currents (say the telephone currents) is in one direction and the transmission of the other set, (the telegraph signals in this case), is in the opposite direction.
Filters are usually employed to separate telephone and telegraph currents which lie in diierent frequency ranges but the filters are unable 'to attenuate those modulation products which have the same frequencies as the desired currents selected by the filters.
The object of this invention is to provide means for preventing the telegraph currents from modulating the telephone currents and at the same time to balance the modulation products of the telephone currents out of the telegraph receiving apparatus.
A feature of the invention is that the cable conductor is loaded in such a manner that telephone channel is effectively loaded while the telegraph channel is effectively non-loaded, so that telegraph message currents may be transmitted in both directions simultaneously with transmission of telephone message currents in either direction over the cable.
A further feature of the invention is that the loading is accomplished by loading coils and disturbances due to the Barkhausen effect in the magnetic material of the loading coil due to the telegraph currents are balanced out of the tele phone channel.
These objects are accomplished in one specific embodiment of the invention to a deep sea submarine cable by providing special shore end sections to the cable having a telephone seavearth conductor or cable and a telegraph seaearth'conductor or cable in addition to the main cable or conductor. The main cable conductor and the telephone sea-earth conductor are providedl with loading coils having mutual inductances between them. The telegraph circuit is then taken from the midpoint of the main cable and the telephone sea-earth cable and the telegraph sea-earth cable.
In order that the invention may be more fully understood two embodiments of the invention will now be described in connection with the attached drawing in which:
Fig. l illustrates one embodiment of the invention as applied to a submarine cable and,
Fig. 2 illustrates another embodiment of thek invention in which the telegraph circuits which include a transmitting circuit, a receiving circuit, the artificial line circuit and the telegraph seaearth circuit are shown in detail.
Referring now to Fig. 1, the portion I of the main deep sea cable is preferably continuously loaded, but need not be. Connected to each end of cable l is a shore-end or terminal section as illustrated in Fig. l which is loaded with loading coils ' l having windings 5 and 6. Non-loaded i cable sections 2 and l which are connected between loading coils l may be the conductors or cores of twin core cables or two individual core cables. Conductors or cable sections 2 are connected in series with the windings 5 of the loading coils 'l and the main deep sea cable I. Cable sections 4 are connected in series with windings 6 of loading coils 1 and the telephone sea-earth or balancing earth through a cable '30 section 3 which is preferably similar in construction to cable l and may extend a considerable distance beyond the loading coil most distant from the shore. Connected to the shore-end of the cable sections 2 and l closest to the shore 35 is the primary winding I3 of a telephone transformer Il which is center tapped. The second- .ary winding l2 of transformer Il is connected to the telephone iilters and switching circuits while the center tap of primary winding I3 of 40 transformer il is connected to the telegraph transmitting and receiving circuit through the telegraph low pass filters.
The shore-ends of the cable, are coil loaded so that mutual coupling is pro-vided between the main cable and the sea-earth cable. It should be noted that the coils 5 and t are so connected to the main cable conductor and the sea-earth cable conductor so that they are series aiding for the telephone current, but series opposing for the telegraph circuit.
Now let us consider what will happen in the rst loading coil. The telephone current from the primary winding i3 of transformer Il traverses winding 5 of the first loading coilA 1, ows 55 through the cable to ground, back through the c telephone sea-earthconductor and the other winding 6 Vof the rst loading coil ltothe pri- `mary winding I3 of telephone transformer II.
If the iterative irnpedancesA Ze andZs ofthe main cable conductor Yand. the sea-earth con-V ductor from points I1 and I8 to earth-respectively are equal and the windings 5 and 6 ofY loading coilV 1 areV identical, the midpoint of the primary I3 of transformer II will remain at earth potential during the reception and transmission of the telephone currents. Y
However Vdue to the characteristics of the magnetic loading material ZtY and ZS vary with the current flowing in the cable. This causes harmonic voltages or modulationproducts to be induced in the loading coils or in loaded conductors. A more detailed description of this type of distortion, modulation products and harmonic voltages may be found in an article Harmonic provductionin ferromagnetic materials by E. Peterson published in the Bell System Technical JournaL'vol. VII, pp. V762-796 for October 1928.
By vwinding the coils connectedk in the two conductors on the same core ZC and'Zs will Vary in the same manner and vamount if the two windings are identical and the modulation products or harmonic voltages will be equal in both coils and also have the same relative phase so that voltages will not appear at the center point of winding I3 of transformer II. Y Y
'.If there is no mutual coupling between the windings'E and 8 of the loading coils 1 or if the conductors 2 and 4 are continuously loaded by wrapping tape about them n'ot only must Zc and ZS be equal, but the modulation products which e are generated in each conductor due to magnetic loading material must be equal at each point along the cable and also be generated at the same phase at each point along the cable if the center tap of the primaryr winding I3 of the telephone transformer II is to remain at ground potential during the transmission and reception of the telephone currents. Since it is impossible to manufacture loaded conductors suiiiciently alike to meet these'requirements the advantage of a coil loaded shore sectionrinwhich the same mag-V netic material is employedl to load both the main cable andthe sea-earth cable becomes quite apparent.
, Furthermore, since coils 5 and 6 are wound on the same core and are connected in series opposition to the telegraph currents no Barkhausen effects are produced in the telephone channel. Also since the coils are connected in series opposing for the telegraph current, these currents will produce no magnetic effects in the cores of the loading coils so that the Vtelegraph currents are unable to Vmodulate the telephone currents or to produce any harmonics in these cores which Y might disturb the'telephone current.
Y Since the telegraph currents traverse the windings 5 and 6 in opposing directions, this shore section of the cable is effectively unloaded with vided which is connectedV through cable sectionsV 4'8 to the telegraph-articialfline andrtransmiti ting apparatus.
InY this case as in Fig. 1, cable Y sections 2, 4, anda are non-loaded and may be its individual cables orV may beconductors or cores in a triple core cable or conductors `2 and 4 may bein a twin core cable land 8 in an individual v unnecessary to provide variable inductances in' the` artificial line which istherefore'much easier to construct and maintain. However, it is necessary to include inductance elements which correspond to the in ductance elements of the loaded mainV cable I as shown in sections I6 of the articial line. However, since there is appreciable attenuation in the initial sections I5 corresponding to the non-loaded shore section, changes in the value of these inductances `or in the value of the inductance of the loaded cable do not appreciably affect the balance of the bridge I4 of the telegraph circuit. Y
While the drawing and above description disclose two specic embodiments of the invention, it is to be understood that they are 'not to limit the scope of the invention as defined in the appended claims. I
What is claimed is: Y
l. A communication system for simultaneously transmitting voice frequency telephone message currents and low frequency telegraph message currents comprising a main cable section, terminal cable sections connected to the ends of said main cable section, said terminal cables having` currents between said telegraph balancing earth conductor and the midpointrof said telephone 1.
transmitting .and receiving means.
2. A submarinecommunication system for simultaneously transmitting voice frequency tele-` phone message currents and low frequency telegraph message Vcurrents comprising a main cable section and terminal cable sections connected to the ends of said main cable section, characterized in this that said terminal cable sections comprise ductor and a telephone sea earth conductor.
3. A communicationV system comprising a main va main conductor, atelegraph sea earthr conf loaded single conductor cable,terminalsectionsV connected to the ends of said main cable comancing sea earth conductor, a telegraph balancing sea earth conductor, loading coilshaving a` coil connected in series with Vsaid main cable conductorrand anotherccoil connected in series with said telephone sea earth conductor ysaid coils hav.-
ing mutual inductancefbetween them, and means y,for transmitting andreceiving telephonersignal currents to and from said main cable section and said telephone sea earth conductor, and means for transmitting-and receiving telegraph current to and from said telegraph ,sea earth conductor andthe midpoint between said'main conductor Y and said telephone sea earthconductor;`
4..A composite deep sea communicationsys-A ltem for simultaneouslyA transmitting and receiv' ing telegraph and telephone signal currents which comprises -a main loaded cable, short cable sections connected thereto having a main conductor and a telephone sea earth conductor, loading coils for loading said conductors for telephone currents having two windings mutually coupled together, one of the windings of each of said loading coils being connected in series with said main conductor and the other of said windings of each of said coils being connected in series with said telephone sea earth conductor, and means for applying said telephone signal currents between said conductors and additional means for applying said telegraph currents to said conductors equally and to ground.
5. A deep sea communication system comprising a deep sea cable section, a shore cable section connected to the ends of said deep sea cable section, said shore cable section comprising a main conductor, a telephone sea earth conductor and a telegraph sea earth conductor, loading coils having two windings mutually coupled together, one of which is connected in series with said main conductor, the other Winding of which is connected in series with said telephone sea earth conductor, and means for simultaneously transmitting and receiving voice frequency telephone message currents and low frequency telegraph message currents connected to the conductors of said shore cable section whereby the inductance for said telephone currents is increased but the inductance to said telegraph currents is not increased.
6. A deep sea communication system for simultaneously transmitting and receiving both Voice vfrequency telephone message currents and low frequency telegraph message currents, comprising a deep sea cable section, shore cable sections connected to the ends of said deep sea cable section, said shore cable sections comprising a main cable conductor, a first sea earth conductor and a second sea earth conductor, a plurality of loading coils having two windings mutually coupled together one of which is connected in series with said main conductor and the other of which is connected in series with said rst sea earth conductor, means for transmtting'and receiving one of said message currents to said main conductor and said rst sea earth conductor, and means for transmitting the other of said message currents equally over said main cable conductor and said first-mentioned sea earth conductor and over said second sea earth conductor.
WILLIAM A. KNOOP.
US681482A 1933-07-21 1933-07-21 Communication system Expired - Lifetime US2069838A (en)

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US681482A US2069838A (en) 1933-07-21 1933-07-21 Communication system
GB21228/34A GB441396A (en) 1933-07-21 1934-07-20 Improvements in or relating to submarine cable signalling systems

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US441396XA 1933-07-21 1933-07-21
US681482A US2069838A (en) 1933-07-21 1933-07-21 Communication system

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