Persistent Connection & Disconnect Problems
Your modem must connect to our modem and remain connected throughout
your session. This page is for people facing problems making or holding
good modem connections. It is about difficulty in connecting, about disconnects,
and about low speed connections.
This page is also about persistent problems. There are
many causes of connection problems that are not covered here, such as those
due to dieing modems or modems that for some reason aren't up to par.
Things covered here can cause you connection problems even with first-class
modems in perfect condition.
This page is not about problems logging in or making network
connections once good modem-modem communication is established. Those problems
are of a different nature
Some people connect at the maximum speed their modem can work at and
never get disconnected. A few have trouble connecting at all, and a great
many are not getting all they could out of their Internet connections.
Virtually all major problems and most minor problems can be eliminated.
As 56k modems become more common, the things causing even minor problems
now will loom larger in their impact. Every user who wants to enjoy the
benefits of these faster modems should become familiar with where the limitations
on modem connection speed and robustness come from.
Brief Summary
Modems have to transmit precise data over a telephone network designed
to transmit only a rough approximation. To send anything at all they have
to encode it as tiny changes in an already small electrical signal and
send that signal through a sea of interference, hoping the tiny changes
are larger than the interferences picked up along the way. It is common
for the signal to arrive at a home in nearly perfect condition only to
undergo substantial degradation inside the home. Much of this degradation
stems from the use of the wrong kind of wire or from wiring practices not
suitable for quality telephone wiring.
Mission Impossible
Modems are trying to use the telephone system for something it was
not designed for.
The telephone's basic job is to receive sound at one end and reproduce
it at the other. It can only reproduce an imperfect copy though, not nearly
as good a reproduction as a stereo system can do, and certainly not an
exact copy. The telephone is a compromise between sound quality and cost.
Telephone sound transmission was designed to be low cost and "good enough"
- good enough for the telephone's intended purpose, people talking to each
other.
Computers need to transmit digital data to each other exactly.
There's no scale of poor, fair, good, excellent for digital transmission,
no "good enough". There are only correct and incorrect.
The job of a pair of modems then is to receive digital data at one end,
convert the data to sound, transmit an approximation of the sound, and
recover an exact copy of the original digital data from the approximation
of the original sound. The modems must transmit the data perfectly in a
form that is trasmitted only approximately.
Changes for the better
The role of a telephone isn't just sending sound, it's sending the
series of changes in sound that make up speech. The changes in speech
are, for the most part, rather large changes, so even though the telephone
does not reproduce them exactly, we can understand what is said.
Modems also use changes in sound, to transmit digital data. Very old
modems used large changes to transmit data. A time where the sound changed
could represent a bit that's on (a one bit) and a time when the sound didn't
change would be a bit that's off (a zero bit). This kind of one bit per
change only works for slow speeds; it ran out of speed with 2400 bps modems.
A 28.8Kbps modem runs 12 times faster by using subtle changes to represent
12 bits at a time. These changes are far smaller than the large changes
making up most of speech. They are nuances of change at the very limit
of what telephones are capable of.
To use such nuances requires a telephone connection that can reproduce
these subtle changes at the remote end and one that does not introduce
any extraneous changes of its own. The connection must be both very high
fidelity (for a phone call) and free of noise.
To transmit sound over wires, telephones convert it to an electrical
signal. Originally, modems used to generate sound they wanted to transmit,
and a telephone listened to the sound and converted it to an electrical
signal. Modern modems directly generate the electrical telephone signal
representing the changing sound.
Changes for the worse
When modems are first establishing a connection, some of the hissing
and other noises you hear are the modems testing the phone connection to
find out how good it is. A lot of times they find that either the signal
changes are not transmitted with enough fidelity or that additional signals
corresponding to noise are present.
The problems modems find can be divided roughly into categories:
-
Problems that are mild and stable cause low speed connections.
-
Problems that are severe cause failure to connect.
-
Problems that are unstable cause disconnects.
Mild and stable problems are usually poor phone-line fidelity
or low-level noise on the phone line. Modems can adapt to these
by not trying to make the phone line carry data as fast. In other words,
they deliberately reduce the speed, similar to the way you adapt to a rough
road by driving more slowly.
Mild, stable problems are often in the phone company's network, and
whether they are rightly called "problems" is sometimes a matter of interpretation.
For example, modems capable of 33.6k often will connect at only 28.8k on
calls from one telephone exchange to another, because many of the trunk
circuits that carry calls between telephone switches can't carry calls
with the fidelity needed for 33.6k connections. While these older
trunks are digital, they only guarantee 7 out of every 8 bits.
Human hearing cannot detect this difference in fidelity, but modems
trying to push the telephone network to the absolute limits can. They detect
the slight loss of fidelity and back off on the speed to what the circuit
can support. Since the phone network is a mixture of newer and older trunks,
the digital fidelity you get may vary from call to call.
People living in some suburban housing developments can have a similar
fidelity loss. Instead of having copper wires running from their homes
to the telephone switch (which is often a long ways away), their lines
may come from a small telephone outpost right at the housing development,
with a fiber connection from that outpost to the telephone switch.
Some of these remotes only have fidelity adequate for 26.4k modems connections.
If you get solid connects but always at 26.4, ask your phone company if
your phone service is via an SLC remote.
Severe or unstable phone problems, the kind that cause
disconnects or failure to connect at all, are nearly always problems with
the wiring right in user's homes. Many of these problems come from not
knowing the special needs of telephone wiring and treating telephone wiring
like electrical wiring. So let's look at why good telephone wiring takes
special care you wouldn't expect.
Signals vs. electricity
Stand up! Well, ok, just imagine you're standing then.
Now look down at your feet, and imagine there's an ant on the floor
by your foot. It's a tiny little thing compared to you, isn't it?
In fact, you are about 100 times as tall as the ant is long. That difference
in size between you and the ant is what it means to be 100 times larger
than something.
The electricity in your house is 110 volts. The electrical signal on
your phone line is in the vicinity of 1 volt. Your electrical power compares
to a telephone signal about the way you compare to that ant.
Now let's go for a walk. Bring your ant along. As you stroll across
a lawn and gravel driveway, you don't even notice blades of grass and lumps
of gravel, but your ant does. The lawn that's a nice smooth carpet to you
is a forest of obstacles to your ant. Life is different when you're tiny.
In the same way, slight wiring defects like imperfect or loose connections
that wouldn't matter a bit for electrical power wiring can be big obstacles
to telephone signals.
However, the real problems with most house telephone wiring aren't with
the wiring connections. They are with interference, or "pickup", and it's
here where telephone wiring really differs from electrical wiring.
Interference vs. signals
Because 28.8 modems encode 12 bits into a single change in signal,
those changes occur in steps about 1/12th the size of the signal. This
means interference as small as 1/12th the signal can change every bit.
It will totally destroy the tranmission.
In fact, so will interference only half that size, because if the signal
plus interference change by half a step, the remote modem can't tell if
the signal changed by 1 step or didn't change at all. For the remote modem
to know reliably the number of steps of change in the signal, the peak
interference must be no more than about 1/8th the step size. 1/8th
of 1/12th of the signal is 1/96th of the signal, so the interference must
be about 100 times smaller than the signal.
So when you look down at your ant representing the signal size, imagine
it looking down at an ant's ant representing the interference limit.
Now that we know just how small the interference has to be, let's look
at some of the places it comes from.
Unwanted signals
Interference is just another name for an unwanted signal, and
you live in a constant bath of signals ready to become interference. You
know some of them are there, because you can detect them with electrical
devices called radios and televisions.
They're weak enough so that when you want to detect them you have to
do special things. One of those things you do is use antennas to
capture them. The first antennas were called aerials and were just
long wires, the longer the better so the signal could build up over a long
distance.
Now go outside and look at the telephone wires.
So you have a modem that's trying to communicate using a method that's
sensitive to tiny interferences, and you attach an aerial to it?
A lot of the basics of getting good connections can be summed up by
saying don't attach an antenna to your modem. Although the phone
wires look like aerials, the only antenna attached to your modem is one
of your own making, or at least one you can unmake.
A twist
When you looked at those phone wires, what you didn't realize is that
even though they're long wires, they're not aerials or antennas. If they
were, even your telephone wouldn't work.
Inside a phone company's cables, each telephone line's two wires are
slowly twisted. This means that the interference picked up at one place
is cancelled by that picked up one twist later. Interference can't build
up down the length of the pair, and this way the phone company can carry
phone signals for miles along wires and still deliver them to your home
essentially free of interference buildup.
You can deliver this signal to your modem still free of interference
if you maintain the proper twist on the wiring inside your home and use
a little care in routing your wiring. If you had done that you probably
wouldn't be reading this page.
Internal telephone wiring done by a professional telephone installer
will be done using wire manufactured with the proper twist. However, if
you did it yourself or had an electrician do it, chances are that it was
treated like electrical wiring, as if all that mattered was electrical
connection. You used flat untwisted wire to install an antenna in
your house and connect it to your modem.
Modems often come with a 6-foot cable to connect the modem to the wall
jack. These cables are flat, with untwisted side-by-side wires.
Just that single 6-foot section of untwisted wire can be the difference
between connecting at 31.2 and 33.6.
Your home as an antenna array
If you've ever tried to adjust a small indoor antenna, such as a "rabbit
ears" tv antenna, you know it's a maddening job, because when you walk
close you affect what you're trying to adjust. That happens because you
are an antenna also, and antennas near each other affect each other. (In
fact, the twist of phone company wires in their cables is mostly to cancel
their effects on each other. The main cables carrying many wires are shielded
in metal jackets to isolate the wires from the outside interference.)
Your entire home is full of antennas - phone wires, power wires, pipes,
metal parts of appliances and furniture, you, other people, animals, houseplants,
toys, etc. Most of these are pretty poor antennas, and their influences
are so random that they mostly cancel each other out anyway. However, if
you've done your phone wiring with untwisted wire, it's about the best
antenna of the lot, and if it winds its way very far through your house,
it can pass near all sorts of other antennas, each adding its bit of interference
as if they were all one big antenna.
Even so, most of the bath of interference in which you exist is so weak
that all this still wouldn't matter if you didn't have your own interference
transmitters right in your own home, in the midst of your antenna array.
Just about everything electrical is a transmitter of interference: fluorescent
lights, radios, televisions, stereo systems, refrigerators, water pumps,
microwave ovens, even telephones and computers. Your own home is a gauntlet
of sources of the interference you need to avoid picking up.
Some people actually attach interference transmitters called wireless
telephones directly to their phone wires.
Detours
If you have extension phones in various rooms in your house,
the wires to them are all branches on your main antenna. You are really
trying to make sure you pick up every bit of interference.
In addition, branches to extensions have another effect. As your phone
signal comes in or goes out, it also travels down each of these side branches.
When it gets to the end, some of it is reflected back and added back into
the phone signal. The signal is then the sum of what it is supposed to
be plus an electrical echo of what it was a moment before.
The signal travels very fast, so the echo times are extremely short.
They don't matter one whit when you're talking on the phone, but they matter
to your modem. They make listening for the signal sent by the other modem
similar to you listening to what someone is saying in an echo chamber or
when a microphone is picking up the sound from a speaker.
Another twist
There's another kind of echo influencing your phone line. Just as the
end of a branch wire to an extension reflects some of the signal, so does
every kink, bend, or twist in the wire. Yes, every twist of twisted
wire causes a tiny echo.
With properly twisted wire the echos of the echos cancel each other
out. This is very important, so don't try to twist your own wire.
If you do your own telephone wiring:
-
Use real telephone wire.
-
Avoid kinking it or bending it sharply.
-
Try to keep it a few inches away from metal objects.
-
Avoid routing it near electrical appliances.
-
Forego extension phone branches if you can.
Good evening,
today is: Tuesday, September 30, 2008
Any questions or comments should be directed to International OnLine
Copyright© 2007 International OnLine Inc.
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