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Page 1: 03 gsmp&o b-en-gsm antenna system-word--201009

Antenna System Introduction

Course Objectives:

·Understand antenna principles

·Understand technical parameters of antenna

·Grasp antenna selection methods

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Contents

1 Antenna Overview...................................................................................................................................... 1

1.1 Antenna Development Overview ...................................................................................................... 1

1.2 Antenna Radiation Principles............................................................................................................ 2

1.2.1 Electromagnetic Wave Radiation of Electric Dipoles ............................................................ 2

1.2.2 Half-Wave Doublet ................................................................................................................ 3

1.3 Antenna Structure and Types............................................................................................................. 4

1.3.1 Directional Panel Dipole-Array Antenna ............................................................................... 4

1.3.2 Omni-Directional Series-Feed Dipole Antenna ..................................................................... 7

2 Antenna Technical Parameters ................................................................................................................. 9

2.1 Antenna Gain..................................................................................................................................... 9

2.2 Radiation Pattern............................................................................................................................. 10

2.3 Lobe Width...................................................................................................................................... 11

2.3.1 Horizontal Lobe Width......................................................................................................... 11

2.3.2 Vertical Lobe Width ............................................................................................................. 12

2.4 Frequency Band .............................................................................................................................. 12

2.5 Polarization Mode ........................................................................................................................... 13

2.6 Downtilt Mode ................................................................................................................................ 14

2.7 Antenna Front-to-Back Ratio .......................................................................................................... 15

2.8 Antenna Input Impedance Zin......................................................................................................... 15

2.9 Antenna VSWR............................................................................................................................... 16

2.10 Side Lobe Suppression and Null Fill............................................................................................. 17

2.11 Third-Order Intermodulation......................................................................................................... 18

2.12 Inter-Port Isolation ........................................................................................................................ 18

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3 Antenna Engineering Parameters ...........................................................................................................19

3.1 Antenna Azimuth .............................................................................................................................19

3.2 Antenna Height ................................................................................................................................20

3.3 Antenna Downtilt.............................................................................................................................22

4 Antenna Categories...................................................................................................................................25

5 Antenna Application Scenarios................................................................................................................31

5.1 Dense Urban Area............................................................................................................................31

5.2 Common Urban Area (Towns).........................................................................................................31

5.3 Suburb Area and Country ................................................................................................................32

5.4 Railways and Highways ..................................................................................................................32

5.5 Scenic Spots.....................................................................................................................................33

6 Antenna Selection .....................................................................................................................................35

6.1 Antenna Selection in Urban Area.....................................................................................................35

6.2 Antenna Selection in Suburb Area and Countryside........................................................................35

6.3 Antenna Selection in Railway/Highway Coverage Area .................................................................36

6.4 Antenna Selection in Mountain Coverage Area...............................................................................37

7 Antenna Installation and Debugging ......................................................................................................39

7.1 Pole Antenna Installation.................................................................................................................39

7.1.1 Keeping Pole Vertical ...........................................................................................................39

7.1.2 Lightning Protection .............................................................................................................39

7.1.3 Diversity Reception ..............................................................................................................40

7.1.4 Antenna Isolation ..................................................................................................................41

7.2 Antenna Installation at Iron Tower ..................................................................................................41

7.3 Summary..........................................................................................................................................42

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1

1 Antenna Overview

This chapter introduces antenna radiation principles, types, technical development, and

development trend.

1.1 Antenna Development Overview

In cellular mobile communication system, antenna functions as the converter between

the communication equipment circuit signal and the radiating electromagnetic wave.

The cellular mobile communication requires reliable communication between base

station and MS, which puts special requirement on antenna. The RF signal power

which is outputted by the radio transmitter is sent to antenna through feeder cable, and

then radiated in the form of electromagnetic wave by antenna. The electromagnetic

wave is received (only a very small part of the power) by antenna after arriving at the

destination, and then is sent to the radio receiver through feeder cable. Therefore,

antenna is an important radio device for sending and receiving the electromagnetic

wave. System communication performance is affected by many factors including

antenna gain, coverage direction, beam, available driving power, antenna configuration,

and polarization mode.

Technology and market situations of Chinese antenna enterprises

According to statistics, the market share of domestic antenna products accounts for

only 20% of the total antenna market shares in China in the following fields:

· Civil base station antenna, in which technologies of mobile communication,

spread spectrum, and microwave communication are applied

· Intelligent antenna

· Bluetooth antenna

Till the first half of 2002, there were over 100 domestic antenna enterprises in China.

However, according to the total amount of production and sales, only a few enterprises

owned 200 plus employees and 30 million plus RMB operating income.

Advantages of international antenna enterprises

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GSM Antenna system

2

International antenna enterprises own rich funds, enjoy well-known brands, and have

plenty of human resources and advanced technologies. Many of them boast a history of

more than 50 years and have an annual operating income of more than 2 billion dollars.

After China joined World Trade Organization (WTO), many famous international

antenna enterprises have made investment in China to establish factories, which put a

huge pressure on Chinese antenna enterprises.

Antenna industry development trend

In 1897, Marconi invented the antenna, realizing radio communication for the first time.

During the past 100 plus years, many countries attached great importance to this field

due to military applications such as Radar. At present, the antenna design is developed

towards the trend of broad-band, multifunction, and high-integrity. Various types of

antenna such as dual-polarized antenna, electrical downtilt antenna, and multi-band

multiplexing antenna are being put into commercialization. Also, great improvement

has been made in intelligent antenna technology.

Through the past 20 years of development, the technological gap between domestic

antenna products and international antenna products are being shortened. The

advantages of domestic antenna products include appropriate price, good service, and

satisfying practical requirement for communication construction.

1.2 Antenna Radiation Principles

The antenna performs conversion between circuit signals of the radio station and

electromagnetic wave in the air. The ways to improve the radiating electromagnetic

wave’s efficiency and intensity is related to microwave technology. This section

introduces the radiation principles of the most commonly used antenna dipoles.

1.2.1 Electromagnetic Wave Radiation of Electric Dipoles

If the distance between two electric points is far shorter than the wavelength λ, then the

two electric points are called electric dipoles. When there is AC current flowing in the

wire, the electromagnetic wave radiation is generated. The radiation intensity is

relevant to the wire length and shape. As shown in Figure 1.2-1, if the distance between

two wires is very short, then the electric field is restricted between the two wires, and

the radiation is weak. After expanding the distance between the two wires, the electric

field is distributed to the surrounding space, and the radiation is intensified.

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1 0BAntenna Overview

Figure 1.2-1 Relation between Dipole Angle and Electromagnetic Radiation Intensity

The following two points should be noticed:

· When the wire length is far shorter than the wavelength λ, the radiation is weak.

· When the wire length increases to be similar to the wavelength λ, the current in

the wire increases greatly and forms strong radiation.

1.2.2 Half-Wave Doublet

The doublet is a classical and most commonly used antenna. A single half-wave

doublet can be used independently or used as the feed of parabolic antenna. Also,

multiple half-wave doublets can be combined to form the antenna array.

Note: Doublet is also called balanced dipole somewhere in this document.

Dipole of which the two arms have the same length is called doublet. For half-wave

doublet, each arm is 1/4 λ long and the total length is 1/2 λ, as shown in Figure 1.2-2.

Wavelength

1/2λWavelen

WavelengthWavelength

1/2λWavelengthgth

Figure 1.2-2 Half-Wave Doublet

Besides, there is also a heterogeneous half-wave doublet, which can be considered as

folding the full-wave doublet into a narrow and long rectangle in which the two points

of the full-wave doublet are overlapped. The narrow and long rectangle is called folded

dipole, as shown in Figure 1.2-3.

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GSM Antenna system

Note: The folded dipole’s length is also 1/2 λ, that is why it is also called half-wave folded dipole.

Figure 1.2-3 Half-Wave Folded Dipole

1.3 Antenna Structure and Types

1.3.1 Directional Panel Dipole-Array Antenna

The directional panel antenna is the most commonly used antenna in base station

applications. It enjoys the following advantages:

· High antenna gain

· Good sector pattern

· Small back lobe

· Easy control of vertical-plane pattern depression angle

· Reliable encapsulation

· Long service life

Figure 1.3-1 shows the antenna appearance.

Figure 1.3-1 Directional Panel Antenna Appearance

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1 0BAntenna Overview

1.3.1.1 Panel Antenna High Gain Formation

Figure 1.3-2 Arranging Multiple Half-Wave Dipoles to Form a Vertical Linear Array

Figure 1.3-3 Adding Reflection Panel at One Side of Linear Array to Realize Horizontal Orientation

At present, the directional antenna design mainly adopts the panel dipole array

structure. The following two types of dipoles are often used:

· Balanced dipole

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GSM Antenna system

· Microstrip dipole

1.3.1.2 Balanced Dipole

In a standard half-wave doublet, an additional dipole is added to reduce the dipole’s

height above the ground, which reduces the antenna’s thickness.

Figure 1.3-4 Combining Multiple Half-Wave Dipoles to Form Directional Panel Antenna

1.3.1.3 Microstrip Dipole

The microstrip dipole is a variation of the half-wave dipole. It radiates according to the

1/4 λ transmission line principle.

Figure 1.3-5 Combing Multiple Microstrip Dipoles to Form Directional Panel Antenna

6

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1 0BAntenna Overview

1.3.1.4 Antenna Dipole Array Structure

Figure 1.3-6 Dipole Array Structures of Panel Antenna

1.3.2 Omni-Directional Series-Feed Dipole Antenna

The omni-directional antenna realizes radiation gain combination and enhancement

through the multi-half-wave-dipole series-feed mode.

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GSM Antenna system

Figure 1.3-7 Omni-Directional Antenna Series-Feed Dipole Structure

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2 Antenna Technical Parameters

This chapter explains concepts of antenna technical parameters and their applications

in network design.

9

2.1 Antenna Gain

Antenna gain is an important parameter for antenna system design. Its definition is

related to the half-wave dipole or the full-wave antenna. For omni-directional radiator,

it is assumed that the radiation power is same in all directions. The antenna gain in a

direction is equal to the field intensity it generates divided by the intensity generated by

the omni-directional radiator in this direction.

The unit of antenna gain is dBd or dBi. dBi represents the reference value of field

intensity in the direction with the maximum radiation, relative to the omni-directional

radiator (as shown in Figure 2.1-1 (middle)). For half-wave dipole (as shown in Figure

2.1-1 (left)), the antenna gain is represented by dBd. There is a fixed difference

between dBi and dBd (as shown in Figure 2.1-1 (right)), that is, 0 dBd = 2.15 dBi.

Figure 2.1-1 Reference for dBi and dBd

At present, the range of antenna gain is between 0 dBi ~ 20 dBi. For indoor micro-cell

coverage, the antenna gain is usually between 0 dBi ~ 8 dBi. For outdoor base stations,

applications mainly involve the omni-directional antenna (with a gain of 9 dBi) and the

directional antenna (with a gain of 18 dBi).

Antenna with a gain of 20 dBi and comparatively narrow beam is often applied in

highway coverage in areas with broad land and sparse population.

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2.2 Radiation Pattern

The base station radiation pattern includes the following two types:

· Omni-directional radiation pattern.

· Directional radiation pattern.

Figure 2.2-1 Field Intensity Distribution for Omni-Directional Antenna and Directional Antenna

As shown in Figure 2.2-1, the left figures are horizontal cross-section pattern and

three-dimensional radiation pattern of the omni-directional antenna. The right figures

are horizontal cross-section pattern and three-dimensional radiation pattern of the

directional antenna.

· Theoretically, the omni-directional antenna has the same radiation intensity in

all directions in the same horizontal plane. It is suitable for the omni-directional

cell.

· As shown in Figure 2.2-1, the red part represents the metal reflection panel in

the directional radome, which makes the antenna radiation in the horizontal

plane directional. The directional antenna is suitable for sector coverage.

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2 1BAntenna Technical Parameters

2.3 Lobe Width

2.3.1 Horizontal Lobe Width

For omni-directional antenna, the horizontal lobe width is 360° (as shown in Figure

2.3-1 (right)). For directional antenna, the common horizontal lobe 3dB width can be

20°, 30°, 65°, 90°, 105°, 120°, and 180° (as shown in Figure 2.3-1 (left)).

Figure 2.3-1 Antenna Horizontal Lobe 3dB Width

· For antennas with 20º or 30º 3dB width, the antenna gain is large, and such

antennas are often applied for coverage in long narrow area or highway.

· Antennas with 65º 3dB width are often applied for three-sector coverage in

dense urban area.

· Antennas with 90º 3dB width are often applied for three-sector coverage in

suburb area.

· Antennas with 105º 3dB width are often applied for three-sector coverage in

area with broad land and sparse population.

Figure 2.3-2 shows three-sector coverage applications of antennas with different 3dB

width.

Figure 2.3-2 Three-Sector Coverage

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GSM Antenna system

· Antennas with 120º or 180º 3dB width are often applied for coverage in sectors

with special shapes.

2.3.2 Vertical Lobe Width

Figure 2.3-3 Antenna Vertical Lobe 3 dB Width

The width of antenna vertical lobe 3dB, which is often 10°, is closely related to the

antenna gain and the horizontal lobe 3dB width. Usually, with the same antenna design

technology and the same antenna gain, the wider the horizontal lobe is, the narrower

the vertical lobe 3dB is.

The narrow width of vertical lobe 3dB might cause many coverage holes. As shown in

Figure 2.3-3, for the two non-downtilt antennas with the same height, the red one (with

wide vertical lobe) has a coverage hole range of OX’’ while the blue one (with narrow

vertical lobe) has a coverage hole range of OX.

Therefore, in order to guarantee good coverage and avoid coverage hole, it is advised

to select the antenna with wide vertical lobe 3dB width, on the premise of having the

same antenna gain.

2.4 Frequency Band

For base stations, the working band of the selected antenna must include the required

band.

· GSM 900 system: dual band antennas with working band of 890 MHz ~ 960

MHz, 870 MHz ~ 960 MHz, 807 MHz ~ 960 MHz, and 890 MHz ~ 1880 MHz

can be selected.

· CDMA 800 system: antennas with working band of 824 MHz ~ 894 MHz can be

selected.

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2 1BAntenna Technical Parameters

· CDMA 1900 system: antennas with working band of 1850 MHz ~ 1990 MHz

can be selected.

In order to reduce the out-of-band interference, it is advised to select antenna of which

the bandwidth just satisfies the band requirement.

2.5 Polarization Mode

At the base station, antennas often adopt the linear polarization mode, as shown in

Figure 2.5-1. Usually, the single-polarized antenna adopts vertical polarization mode

and the dual-polarized antenna adopts ±45° dual-linear polarization mode.

Figure 2.5-1 Common Polarization Modes for Antenna

A dual-polarized antenna consists of two perpendicular polarized antennas which are

encapsulated in the same radome as shown in Figure 2.5-2. It can reduce the number of

antennas greatly, simplifies the antenna installation, and reduce the cost and occupied

space of the antenna.

Figure 2.5-2 Dual-Polarized Antennas

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GSM Antenna system

2.6 Downtilt Mode

To avoid coverage hole near the base station and reduce the interference on other

adjacent base stations, it is advised not to mount the antenna in very high places. Also,

the downtilt mode is required.

As shown in Figure 2.6-1, the antenna mounted in low place (the yellow one) has a

coverage hole range of OX” while the antenna with downtilt (the green one) has a

coverage hole range of OX’. The coverage hole range of both are smaller than that of

the non-downtilt antenna mounted in high place (the blue one, the coverage hole range

is OX).

Figure 2.6-1 Antenna Downtilt Comparison

There are many downtilt modes for antenna, including mechanical downtilt, fixed

electrical downtilt, adjustable electrical downtilt, and remote-control adjustable

electrical downtilt.

For mechanical downtilt, the downtilt (often less than 10º) is set during antenna

installation. When increasing the downtilt, the front of the coverage area becomes

concaved and the two sides of the coverage area become flat, thus the antenna pattern

becomes distorted, as shown in Figure 2.6-2. All these cause insufficient coverage in

front of the antenna and enhance interference on base stations at the two sides.

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2 1BAntenna Technical Parameters

Figure 2.6-2 Antenna Downtilt Mode Comparison

For electrical downtilt, the downtilt range is comparatively large (might be larger than

10º). When the downtilt is increased, the antenna pattern will not be distorted, and the

antenna back lobe also becomes declined at the same time. Thus no interference will be

generated on surrounding users.

2.7 Antenna Front-to-Back Ratio

The antenna front-to-back ratio is relevant to the antenna reflection panel’s electrical

size. A large electrical size guarantees good front-to-back ratio. For example, horizontal

size of the horizontal lobe 3 dB antenna with 65º width is larger than that of the

horizontal lobe 3 dB antenna with 90 º width.

Usually, the front-to-back ratio of outdoor base station antenna should be larger than 25

dB. For micro-cell antenna, because its size is comparatively small, the front-to-back

ratio range can be large.

2.8 Antenna Input Impedance Zin

The antenna input impedance Zin is defined as the ratio of signal voltage to signal

current at the antenna input port. Zin has two components: the resistance component

Rin and the reactance component Xin, Zin = Rin + j Xin. The reactance component

helps to reduce extracting the signal power from feeder cable by antenna, thus it is

required to make the reactance component to be 0; in other words, to make the

antenna’s input impedance to be the pure resistance. Actually, even for a well-designed

antenna, its input impedance value still contains a small reactance component value.

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GSM Antenna system

The input impedance is relevant to the antenna structure, size, and working wavelength.

Among basic antennas, the half-wave doublet is the most important, and its input

impedance Zin = 73.1 + j 42.5 Ω. After making its length 3% ~ 5% shorter, its

reactance component is made to 0, that is, the antenna’s input impedance is pure

resistance, and the input impedance Zin = 73.1 Ω (nominal 75 Ω). The pure-resistance

impedance of antenna is only applicable for dot frequency.

Also, the input impedance of half-wave folded dipole is four times of half-wave

doublet’s input impedance, that is, Zin = 280 Ω (nominal 300 Ω).

However, impedance debugging can be performed for any antenna to make the input

impedance’s imaginary part very small and the real part approximate 50 Ω. In this way,

the antenna’s input impedance Zin = Rin = 50 Ω, which is necessary for antenna to

have a good impedance matching with the feeder cable.

2.9 Antenna VSWR

The antenna Voltage Standing Wave Ratio (VSWR) is the index which indicates the

matching between antenna feeder and base station (transceiver).

The VSWR is defined as:

0.1min

max ≥=UU

VSWR

Umax: anti-node voltage on the feeder cable.

Umin: node voltage on the feeder cable.

The process of VSWR generation is: The incident wave energy is not absorbed

(radiated) completely when it is transmitted to the antenna input port B, the reflection

wave is generated and superposed, which forms the VSWR. If the VSWR value is large,

the reflection is also large, and the matching is worse.

The lost energy and the manufacturing cost should be considered to decide whether a

VSWR is appropriate.

· VSWR > 1: It indicates that some input power is reflected back, which reduces

the antenna radiation power.

· Feeder cable loss is increased: The 7/8” cable loss is 4 dB / 100 m, which is

measured when VSWR is 1 (perfectly matched). With the reflection power, the

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2 1BAntenna Technical Parameters

energy loss is increased, and the input power to antenna from the feeder cable is

decreased.

2.10 Side Lobe Suppression and Null Fill

Usually, the antenna is installed on the iron tower or the top of a building to cover the

service area. Therefore, the upward side lobe on the vertical plane should be

suppressed, especially the larger first side lobe, to avoid unnecessary energy wastage.

Also, the null fill for the downward side lobe on the vertical plane should be

implemented to make the null depth level lower in the antenna pattern of this area, and

to improve coverage in areas near the base station. Figure 2.10-1 shows comparison

before and after the null fill is performed. The X-coordinate represents the distance

from the base station while the Y-coordinate represents the ground signal strength.

Figure 2.10-1 Coverage Comparison before and after Null Fill Is Performed

Antenna null-fill value

= (the first downward null amplitude value / amplitude value in the maximum radiation

direction)%

17

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GSM Antenna system

18

= 20 * log(the first downward null amplitude value / amplitude value in the maximum

radiation direction)dB

To ensure good coverage in the service area, antennas without side lobe suppression

and null-fill functions can not be used.

2.11 Third-Order Intermodulation

For most advanced international antenna products, the third-order intermodulation

value reaches -150dBC@2×43dBm. However, for common antennas, this index’s value

is only -130dBC@2×43dBm. It is related to the antenna design and connectors selected.

Because the base station’s received signal is much weaker than the transmitted signal,

the base station can not work normally once the intermodulation products of

multi-band transmitting signals fall into the receiving frequency band.

2.12 Inter-Port Isolation

For multi-port antenna, the isolation between different ports must be larger than 30 dB.

For example, the isolation must be larger than 30 dB in the following cases:

· Between the two polarized ports of dual-polarized antenna

· Between the two frequency band ports of outdoor dual-band antenna

· Between the four ports of dual-band dual-polarized antenna

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19

3 Antenna Engineering Parameters

This chapter introduces antenna engineering parameters and their influences on

coverage, and the ways to improve the network performance by using these

parameters.

3.1 Antenna Azimuth

The electromagnetic field of antenna radiation is a graph which is distributed in fixed

distance according to the angle coordinate. The graph is called antenna pattern.

· The antenna pattern which is expressed by the radiation field intensity is called

field intensity pattern.

· The antenna pattern which is expressed by the power density is called power

pattern.

· The antenna pattern which is expressed by the phase is called phase pattern.

The antenna pattern is a three-dimensional graph. It is often expressed in the form of

directional patterns in two perpendicular main planes, which are called vertical

directional pattern and horizontal directional pattern. There are two types of horizontal

directional pattern: omni-directional-antenna-based and directional-antenna-based.

Directional-antenna-based horizontal pattern also has many types, such as heart-shaped

type and 8-shaped type.

The directional characteristic of an antenna is caused by changes in the dipole array

and the dipole feeding phase. Theoretically, it is similar to the optical interference

effect, thus energy in some directions might increase while energy in some other

directions might decrease, forming the lobe (or beam) and null. The lobe with the

strongest energy is called the main lobe, the upward/downward lobe with the second

strongest energy is called the first side lobe, and so on. Directional antenna has the

back lobe.

The antenna azimuth adjustment is very important for improving communication

network quality. Accurate antenna azimuth guarantees normal network running and that

the actual coverage is the same as the expected coverage. On the other hand, adjusting

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GSM Antenna system

20

the antenna azimuth according to the traffic and actual network situation can better

optimize the current mobile communication network.

According to the ideal cellular mobile communication model, signals at the boundary

of a cell are mutually complementary. In current GSM systems (here, mainly refers to

ERICSSON equipment), a directional site usually has three cells:

· Cell A: Azimuth is 0º, the antenna points to the north.

· Cell B: Azimuth is 120º, the antenna points to the southeast.

· Cell C: Azimuth is 240º, the antenna points to the southwest.

In GSM planning and construction, antenna azimuth is strictly set according to the

above specification during antenna installation. Inaccurate antenna azimuth setting

might cause the actual coverage different from the design, which might result in

unexpected co-frequency interference and adjacent-frequency interference.

In practical GSM network applications, the actual coverage might be different from

that expected in the ideal model. It is often caused by signal refraction or signal

reflection due to buildings, water, or mountains, which results in signal strength

differing in different area. In such cases, we can adjust the antenna azimuth to ensure

signal strength in different areas to optimize the network. Besides, the traffic in cells

corresponding to different antennas might be different due to different population

density. We can also adjust the antenna azimuth to equalize the traffic.

In normal cases, it is not advised to perform antenna azimuth adjustment, which might

cause intra-system interference. However, in some particular cases, such as at an

emergency meeting or a large social gathering where traffic might be heavy in some

cells. Temporarily adjust the antenna azimuth to equalize traffic and optimize the

network. Antenna azimuth adjustment can also be performed in some coverage holes or

areas with weak signals to optimize the network performance, and field intensity test

can also be performed at the same time to guarantee the network quality.

3.2 Antenna Height

The signal power received by the receiver is related to the following two types of

factors:

· Parameters at the transmitting end and the receiving end

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3 2BAntenna Engineering Parameters

· Interference due to landform and obstacles

Parameters at the transmitting end and the receiving end include:

· Transmission power

· Antenna gain

· Feeder cable loss

· Antenna height

· Working band

· Distance between the transmitter and the receiver

All propagation models are related to the height of transmitting antenna and the

receiving antenna. Therefore, the antenna height has an important influence on the path

loss.

The coverage distance from the transmitting end to the receiving end is as follows:

( ) ( ) 414

12

14

1

][ αLGGhhPP

trtrr

t⎟⎟⎠

⎞⎜⎜⎝

⎛≈

th

rG

tG

αL

D

rP Receiving power

tP Transmission power

rh Antenna height at the receiving end

Antenna height at the transmitting end

Receiving antenna gain

Transmitting antenna gain

Path loss correction factor

With fixed transmitter and receiver parameters, the coverage area is in direct proportion

to the antenna height and antenna gain.

During the early GSM network construction, there are not so many sites, and antennas

are installed in high places in order to have good coverage. With the rapid development

of mobile communication, the number of sites increases greatly, there are about one

site every 500 m in urban area. Therefore, the coverage area of a site must be reduced

21

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GSM Antenna system

22

by lowering the antenna; otherwise, the network quality will become worse, with the

following negative influences:

· Traffic is not equalized.

If the antenna is too high, then the site’s coverage area will become too large. It

causes heavy traffic at this site; meanwhile, the adjacent site’s coverage area

becomes small and has low traffic. In other words, the traffic is not equalized.

· Intra-system interference

If the antenna is too high, then cross-site radio interference will be generated,

including co-frequency interference and adjacent-frequency interference. It

causes problems such as call drop, cross talk, and noise, and the entire

communication network quality degrades.

· Isolated island effect

The isolated island effect is relevant to site coverage. If a site covers water area

or mountainous area, then, on the premise of the original coverage area not

being changed, the remote part of the coverage area becomes an isolated island

due to reflection by water or mountain. Moreover, adjacent sites, to which

handover could be performed before, now have no handover relationships with

the site. When a handset occupies signal in the isolated island, call drop often

occurs due to no handover relationship.

3.3 Antenna Downtilt

Through adjusting the antenna main lobe’s downtilt to a certain angle, the power level

of adjacent site can be reduced, which then reduces the interference.

The antenna downtilt is related to the following parameters:

· Antenna height

· Coverage radius

· Antenna vertical lobe

· Electrical downtilt

With the same coverage radius, the higher the antenna is, the larger the antenna

downtilt is. In other words, with the same antenna height, the smaller the coverage

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3 2BAntenna Engineering Parameters

23

radius is, the larger the antenna downtilt is.

Interference tends to exist in urban area with many sites. In order to make most energy

radiate in the coverage area and reduce interference on adjacent cells, it is required to

make the half-power point on the antenna main lobe to aim at the coverage area edge.

The calculation formula of antenna downtilt is as follows:

α = arctg (2H/L) × (180/π) + (β/2) – γe

In suburb, country, road, or sea area, to make the coverage as remote as possible,

reduce the initial downtilt, and make the point on antenna main lobe with the maximum

gain to aim at the coverage area edge. The calculation formula of antenna downtilt is as

follows:

α = arctg (H/L) × (180/π) + (β/2) – γ e

In the above two formulas:

α: The initial mechanical downtilt of antenna, the unit is degree (º).

H: Valid height of the site. It is the difference between the average antenna height and

the average ground elevation of surrounding coverage area, the unit is meter (m).

L: Distance between antenna and the edge of coverage area, the unit is meter (m).

β: Vertical lobe width of the antenna, the unit is degree (º).

γ e: Electrical downtilt of the antenna, the unit is degree (º).

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4 Antenna Categories

There are various types of antennas, which are suitable for different situations.

Antennas can be categorized according to different standards:

· By usage

Communication antenna, television antenna, radar antenna, and so on

· By working band

Short-wave antenna, super-short-wave antenna, microwave antenna, and so on

· By appearance

Linear antenna, panel antenna, and so on

· By direction

Omni-directional antenna, directional antenna, and so on

At present, the working band, gain, and front-to-back ratio of various types of antennas

are similar, and all satisfy the network performance requirement. This chapter mainly

analyzes the above antennas according to antenna downtilt influence on the antenna

pattern and the radio network.

Omni-Directional Antenna

For omni-directional antenna, the radiation is evenly distributed in 360° in the

horizontal pattern. In the vertical pattern, the radiation is represented in the form of

beam with certain width. Usually, the smaller the lobe’s width is, the larger the antenna

gain is. The omni-directional antenna is often applied in sites which are designed for

large cells in suburb, with large coverage area.

Directional Antenna

For directional antenna, the radiation is distributed within a certain range of angles in

the horizontal pattern. In the vertical pattern, the radiation is represented in the form of

beam with certain width. Similar to the omni-directional antenna, the smaller the lobe’s

width is, the larger the antenna gain is. The directional antenna is often applied in sites

which are designed for small cells in urban area, with small coverage area, high

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subscriber density, and high frequency utilization ratio.

Different types of sites are established according to different networking requirements,

and different site types require different antenna types according to technical

parameters mentioned previously.

· For omni-directional site, the omni-directional antenna with the same gain at

various horizontal directions is selected.

· For directional site, the directional antenna with different gain at different

horizontal directions is selected.

· In urban area, the antenna with a horizontal beam width B of 65º is selected.

· In suburb, the antenna with a horizontal beam width B of 65º, 90º, or 120º

(according to actual site configuration and geographical environment) is

selected.

· In rural area, the omni-directional antenna that realizes large coverage area is

preferred due to its economy.

Mechanical Antenna

For mechanical antenna, the antenna downtilt is adjusted mechanically.

After the mechanical antenna is installed vertically on the ground, the downtilt can be

changed by adjusting the bracket position on the rear side of antenna. During the

process, the amplitude values of vertical component and horizontal component of the

antenna do not change although the main lobe’s coverage changes. Therefore, the

antenna pattern tends to be distorted.

It is found through practical cases that:

· The best downtilt for mechanical antenna is 1º ~ 5º.

· When the downtilt changes between 5º ~ 10º, the antenna pattern is slightly

distorted, but the distortion is not serious.

· When the downtilt changes between 10º ~ 15º, the antenna pattern distortion is

large.

· When the downtilt reaches 15º, the shape of antenna pattern changes greatly

(from the pear-shape to spindle-shape). The coverage distance in the main lobe

direction becomes much shorter, and the entire antenna pattern is not within the

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4 3BAntenna Categories

27

site’s sector. Therefore, signal of this site can also be received in the adjacent

site’s sector, which causes serious intra-system interference.

During the daily maintenance, the system should be powered off before adjusting the

mechanical antenna downtilt, and system monitoring can not be performed during the

antenna downtilt adjustment. Maintenance personnel should climb to the place where

the mechanical antenna is installed and perform the downtilt adjustment. Moreover, the

mechanical antenna downtilt is a theoretical value calculated through the emulation

software, and has some difference from the best downtilt in practice. The step in

mechanical antenna downtilt adjustment is 1º, and the third-order intermodulation

value is -120 dBc.

Electrical Antenna

For electrical antenna, the antenna downtilt is adjusted through changing the phase of

antenna dipoles in the same antenna array. During the process, the amplitude value of

vertical component and horizontal component of antenna are changed, which causes

the combined field intensity and the antenna downtilt to change. Because the field

intensity in all directions of the antenna increases or decreases simultaneously, it

guarantees that the antenna pattern does not change much after the antenna downtilt is

changed. The coverage distance in the main lobe direction is shortened, and the

coverage area within the sector of service cell is reduced without generating

interference.

It is found through practical cases that:

· When the downtilt changes between 1º ~ 5º, the antenna pattern is similar to that

of the mechanical antenna.

· When the downtilt changes between 5º ~ 10º, the antenna pattern is improved

compared with that of the mechanical antenna.

· When the downtilt changes between 10º ~ 15º, the antenna pattern change is

larger than that of the mechanical antenna.

· When the downtilt reaches 15º, the antenna pattern differs greatly from that of

the mechanical antenna. The shape of antenna pattern does not change much.

The coverage distance in the main lobe direction becomes much shorter, and the

entire antenna pattern is within the site’s sector. Increasing the downtilt helps to

reduce the coverage area within the sector without causing interference.

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Therefore, the electrical antenna can reduce the call loss and interference.

Moreover, the electrical antenna allows downtilt adjustment during the system running,

thus real-time monitoring can be performed for the downtilt adjustment. The step in

electrical antenna downtilt adjustment is 0.1º, which guarantees precise adjustment.

The third-order intermodulation value is -150 dBc, with a 30 dBc difference from the

mechanical antenna. All these factors help to eliminate adjacent-frequency interference

and spurious interference.

Dual-Polarized Antenna

A dual-polarized antenna contains two perpendicular polarized antennas (+45º and -45º)

which simultaneously work in the transceiving duplex mode. It saves the number of

antennas for single directional site.

Generally, a directional site (three sectors) in GSM system requires nine antennas, each

sector using three antennas (space diversity, one for transmitting and two for receiving).

If the dual polarized antenna is adopted, each sector only uses one antenna. Meanwhile,

the ±45º polarized perpendicularity ensures that the isolation between the +45º antenna

and the -45º antenna satisfies the requirement for antenna intermodulation (≥ 30 dB).

Therefore, the spatial distance between dual-polarized antennas is only 20 cm ~ 30 cm.

The dual-polarized antenna also enjoys advantages of the electrical antenna, which can

reduce the call loss and interference and improve the entire network service quality.

The dual-polarized antenna installation does not require iron tower and only requires

an iron column with a diameter of 20 cm. The antenna is fixed on the iron column

according to coverage direction, saving the construction cost and making the site

address selection much easier.

Summary

The antenna selection depends on actual conditions such as the network coverage,

traffic, interference, and network service quality.

· In areas with low traffic, the traditional mechanical antenna is preferred.

· In areas with heavy traffic, the dual-polarized antenna and the electrical antenna

are preferred.

In areas with heavy traffic, the call loss rate is high and the interference is large.

It is mainly due to the large mechanical antenna downtilt, which might cause the

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29

distortion of antenna pattern. To solve this problem, the distance between sites

must be shortened to increase the antenna downtilt. However, if the mechanical

antenna is used, the antenna pattern becomes distorted when the downtilt is

larger than 5º and the distortion becomes worse when the downtilt exceeds 10º.

Thus it is advised to use the electrical antenna or dual-polarized antenna in areas

with heavy traffic.

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5 Antenna Application Scenarios

This chapter explains the coverage area types and radio environment with pictures of

practical application scenarios.

5.1 Dense Urban Area

Figure 5.1-1 shows the application scenarios in dense urban area.

Figure 5.1-1 Dense Urban Area

5.2 Common Urban Area (Towns)

Figure 5.2-1 shows the application scenarios in common urban area, such as towns.

Figure 5.2-1 Common Urban Area (Towns)

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5.3 Suburb Area and Country

Figure 5.3-1 shows the application scenarios in suburb area and country.

Figure 5.3-1 Suburb Area and Country

5.4 Railways and Highways

Figure 5.4-1 shows the application scenarios in area with railways and highways.

Figure 5.4-1 Railways and Highways

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5 4BAntenna Application Scenarios

5.5 Scenic Spots

Figure 5.5-1 shows the application scenarios in scenic spots.

Figure 5.5-1 Scenic Spots

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6 Antenna Selection

This chapter introduces antenna selections for different coverage areas.

6.1 Antenna Selection in Urban Area

In urban area, sites are densely distributed. The coverage area of a single site should be

small to avoid the phenomenon of cross-area coverage, to reduce interference between

sites and increase the frequency multiplexing ratio.

Antenna selection rules

· Polarization mode: The antenna installation space is limited in urban area, and it

is advised to use the dual-polarized antenna in urban area.

· Antenna pattern: In urban area, the frequency multiplexing ratio should be

increased, and the directional antenna is often adopted.

· Half-power beam width: To control the cell coverage area and to reduce

interference, the horizontal half-power beam width of antenna in urban area is

usually set between 60º ~ 65º.

· Antenna gain: Because the site coverage area in urban area is usually not large,

it is advised to use antenna with medium gain (15 dBi ~ 18 dBi). For micro-cell

used to supplement coverage for coverage hole in urban area, antenna with

lower gain can also be selected.

· Antenna downtilt: In urban area, the antenna downtilt adjustment is more

frequent compared with other areas. Moreover, the antenna downtilt is large in

some cases, and the mechanical downtilt can not reduce interference effectively.

It is advised to use antenna with preset downtilt, such as the antenna with fixed

electrical downtilt.

6.2 Antenna Selection in Suburb Area and Countryside

In suburb area and the countryside, sites are sparsely distributed, with low traffic. The

coverage area should be broad in such areas.

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Antenna selection rules

· Antenna pattern: If it requires that the site covers surrounding area without

direction specification and the traffic distribution is dispersed around the site,

then it is advised to adopt the omni-directional site coverage. It should be

noticed that the omni-directional site has small gain, thus it has shorter coverage

distance than the directional site. Also, the tower’s influence on coverage should

be considered during the omni-directional antenna installation, and the antenna

must be perpendicular to the ground level. If it requires that the site coverage

distance is long, then it is advised to use the directional antenna, and usually, the

directional antenna with a horizontal half-power beam width of 90º, 105º, or

120º is recommended.

· Antenna gain: The antenna gain is selected according to actual coverage

requirement. In suburb area and the countryside, it is advised to adopt

directional antenna with a higher gain (16 dBi ~ 18 dBi) or omni-directional

antenna with a gain of 9 dBi ~ 11 dBi.

· Antenna downtilt: The antenna downtilt adjustment is not frequent in suburb

area and the countryside, and the requirement for adjustment range is not very

strict. Therefore, the mechanical downtilt antenna is recommended. Also, if the

antenna height is over 50 m and coverage is required for the near-end area, then

the antenna with null-fill feature is preferred, to avoid coverage hole under the

tower.

6.3 Antenna Selection in Railway/Highway Coverage Area

In railway/highway coverage areas, the traffic is low and handsets move rapidly.

Usually, the coverage area is strip-shaped, thus the bidirectional cell is often applied.

However, the omni-directional cell is also adopted in places passing towns or scenic

spots. The antenna type selected depends on the site address and site type. Because

wide coverage is required in railway/highway coverage areas, the high-gain antenna

that can realize wide coverage is often selected.

Antenna selection rules

· Antenna pattern: In railway/highway coverage areas, the narrow-beam high-gain

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6 5BAntenna Selection

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directional antenna can be used.

· Antenna gain: For directional antenna, the antenna with a gain of 17 dBi ~ 22

dBi can be selected. For omni-directional antenna, the antenna with a gain of 11

dBi can be selected.

· Antenna downtilt: In railway/highway coverage areas, the antenna downtilt is

usually not set, and the cheap mechanical downtilt antenna is recommended.

Also, if the antenna height is over 50 m and coverage is required for the

near-end area, then the antenna with null-fill feature is preferred to avoid

coverage hole under the tower.

· Front-to-back ratio: Because most users in railway/highway coverage areas are

rapidly moving users, the front-to-back ratio of directional antenna should not be

set too large, to guarantee normal handover.

6.4 Antenna Selection in Mountain Coverage Area

In remote mountainous area, the electric wave attenuation is large during propagation

due to blocking of mountains, and it is difficult to realize coverage. Wide coverage is

required in this area. Users are sparsely distributed in the large coverage area, with low

traffic. The site is usually established on the mountaintop, mountainside, or at the foot

of mountain. The site address, site type, and antenna type are selected according to

actual user distribution and landform.

Antenna selection rules

· Antenna pattern: The antenna pattern is selected according to the site address,

site type, and coverage requirement. Both omni-directional antenna and

directional antenna can be used. For sites established on the mountain, if the

coverage area is at comparatively lower place, select the antenna pattern with

large vertical half-power angle to satisfy the coverage requirement for the

vertical direction.

· Antenna gain: The antenna with intermediate gain is selected for such area:

omni-directional antenna (9 dBi ~ 11 dBi); directional antenna (15 dBi ~ 18

dBi).

· Antenna downtilt: For sites on the mountain, if the coverage area is at the foot of

mountain, select antenna with the null-fill feature or of which the downtilt can

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be preset. The preset downtilt depends on the site’s relative height above the

coverage area. The larger the relative height is, the larger the preset downtilt is.

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7 Antenna Installation and Debugging

This chapter introduces methods for antenna installation and debugging.

7.1 Pole Antenna Installation

7.1.1 Keeping Pole Vertical

If the pole is bent or slanting, it might directly influence the directional antenna

downtilt precision and the omni-directional antenna receiving effect.

Therefore, it should be ensured that the pole on which the antenna is installed is

vertical. Use the plummet to check the antenna verticality and ensure that the

omni-directional antenna is perpendicular to the ground. For directional antenna, the

downtilt is measured with the downtilt tester, and the mechanical downtilt should

include the slanting angle or bending angle of the pole.

7.1.2 Lightning Protection

To protect the site (especially the antenna system) in mountainous area from lightning

attack, the lightning protection design must be considered in antenna installation to

ensure operation safety and normal system running.

For a complete lightning protection device, the following factors should be considered:

· Lightning rod design: to control the lightning attack point to avoid lightning

attack at dangerous places.

· Good grounding structure and appropriate grounding resistance value.

· Good down lead.

· Reliable equipotential bonding, to avoid high-voltage lightning attack.

· Preventing from leading in lightning high-voltage surge.

The RF antenna is installed within the 45º protection range of the lightning rod, which

is connected with the down lead through reliable soldering. The down lead is made of

40 mm × 40 mm galvanized flat steel. The distance between the down-lead connection

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point and the grounding inlead in the ground net should be not less than 10 m.

7.1.3 Diversity Reception

In mobile communication, the multipath transmission causes rapid signal fading, and

the fading signal level range can reach 30 dB, approximately 20 times per second. The

antenna diversity technology can greatly reduce the signal fading extent and improve

the link quality. The distance between antennas is decided based on the principle that

branch signal fading of all antennas are uncorrelated or approximately uncorrelated.

The signal independence is evaluated by the coefficient of correlation of branch signals.

The coefficient of correlation of the receiving signal must be less than 0.7.

Diversity distance for single-polarized antenna

The distance between horizontal diversities is 20 λ, and the distance between vertical

diversities is 15 λ. On the premise of not changing the distance between antennas, the

correlation between antenna receiving signals can be reduced by increasing the antenna

height. The gain of horizontal space diversity is about 3 dB ~ 5 dB, and the gain of

vertical space diversity is about 2 dB ~ 4 dB. The horizontal space diversity

performance is better than the vertical space diversity performance.

In practical applications, the minimum distance between horizontal space diversities of

two single-polarized antennas in the same sector must be larger than or equal to 10 λ.

Table 7.1-1 Distance between Antenna Horizontal Diversities

Distance between Horizontal Space

Diversities

Distance between Vertical Space

Diversities Working

frequency Minimum Value

Recommended

Value Minimum Value

Recommended

Value

450 MHz 6.7 m 13 m 10 m

800 MHz 3.6 m 7 m 5.4 m

1.9 GHz 1.6 m 3 m 2.4 m

2 GHz 1.5 m 3 m 2.3 m

Diversity of dual-polarized antenna

For two antennas at the same place of which the polarization directions are

perpendicular, the signal fading is mutually uncorrelated. The dual-polarized antenna

uses this feature to realize diversity reception. In other words, after installing ±45º

polarized antennas on the receiving-end antenna, polarization diversity can be realized

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7 6BAntenna Installation and Debugging

for the two ways of received signals of which the signal fading is mutually

uncorrelated.

The polarized diversity antenna obtains independent fading signal through the

perpendicular polarized antenna, thus the space diversity is not required. For sites in

urban area, it is difficult to install antennas that satisfy the space diversity distance

requirement. Thus the polarization diversity becomes an important approach to realize

diversity reception.

It should be noticed that the distance between two single-polarized antennas is the

vertical distance between two parallel lines in the antenna direction, not the direct

distance between the two antennas. For dual-polarized antenna, the distance

measurement is not required.

7.1.4 Antenna Isolation

Antenna isolation within the same system demands that the distance between antennas

in different sectors of the same system must be larger than 0.6 m. In practical

applications, the 1-meter antenna pole arm is installed on the arm bracket, and the

antenna is installed on the antenna pole, as shown in Figure 7.1-1.

Figure 7.1-1 Three-Dimensional Diagram and Planform

7.2 Antenna Installation at Iron Tower

In practical applications, the antenna is mounted on the arm over 1 m above the iron

tower platform. The vertical distance between antennas on different platforms is larger

than 1 m.

The following cases should be noticed during antenna installation on the iron tower:

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· Installing directional antenna at the iron tower

To reduce the iron tower influence on the antenna pattern, make the distance

between the directional antenna center and the iron tower to be λ/4 or 3/4 λ. It

helps to get maximum directions.

· Installing omni-directional antenna at the iron tower

To reduce the iron tower influence on the antenna pattern, ensure that the iron

tower is not the antenna reflector, and the minimum distance between antenna

and anywhere of the iron tower must be larger than λ.

· Multiple antennas sharing the same iron tower

To reduce the coupling interaction and mutual influences between transceiving

antennas of different networks, increase the isolation between antennas. It can be

realized by increasing distance between antennas. Vertical installation is

preferred in this case.

7.3 Summary

Distance from the iron tower platform: > 1 m

Distance between antennas:

· Diversity reception antenna within the same cell: > 3 m

· Omni-directional antenna (horizontal distance): > 4 m

· Directional antenna (horizontal distance): > 2.5 m

· Antennas at different platforms (vertical distance): > 1 m

The transceiving antenna can not be arranged upside down except for special

specification.

The antenna should be arranged within the lightning rod protection range.

Antenna azimuth (for directional antenna):

· Sector 1: 60° north by east

· Sector 2: south

· Sector 3: 60° north by west

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The actual antenna downtilt should satisfy the engineering design requirement and the

error must be less than 2°.

Except for sites with antenna downtilt, the antenna verticality must be smaller than 2°.