5 02, 2009

DOCSIS and Cable Modems – How it works :: Upstream RF

2021-08-17T13:29:04-04:00February 5th, 2009|

Cable modems use RF (radio frequency) signals to transport data over hybrid-fiber coax (HFC) networks according to the DOCSIS® specification. This blog will discuss the finer points extracted from the DOCSIS specification related to how cable modems communicate with the headend Cable Modem Termination System (CMTS), allowing two-way transport of Ethernet traffic over a cable TV network. There are currently three major revisions and one sub-revision of the DOCSIS specification; DOCSIS 1.0, 1.1, 2.0 and 3.0. With each major revision came significant changes to the cable modem upstream specification because the upstream has typically been the bottleneck in terms of data through-put rates as will be discussed.

2 02, 2009

DOCSIS and Cable Modems – How it works :: Advanced RF

2021-08-17T13:36:52-04:00February 2nd, 2009|

In high speed data communications, the industry has evolved and implemented complex modulation schemes which vary a signals voltage (amplitude), phase, and frequency in order to transmit more data, faster. The following will cover these methods in order to describe how Quadrature Amplitude Modulation (QAM) works in DOCSIS communications. We live in an analog world. Sure, [...]

27 01, 2009
  • DOCSIS

DOCSIS and Cable Modems – How it works :: Introduction

2021-08-26T08:28:17-04:00January 27th, 2009|

Over the past several years of training people on troubleshooting DOCSIS® networks and explaining how DOCSIS cable modems and CMTSs work, I have been asked numerous times - "Why don't you write a book on this?" You see, there is no definitive book, guide or manual that explains the Data-over-Cable Service Interface Specification (DOCSIS) other than the several hundred page specification...

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