Dispatch Solutions Using Voice Over IP: A Catalyst Communications Technologies White Paper
Dispatch Solutions Using Voice Over IP: A Catalyst Communications Technologies White Paper
Dispatch Solutions Using Voice Over IP: A Catalyst Communications Technologies White Paper
Architecture
The first step to understanding how Dispatch solutions can be improved by using Voice
over IP technology is to understand the network architecture of how these systems are
built. The underlying concept of Dispatch Voice over IP is that Dispatch communications
1
can be located anywhere with this technology and utilize the IP backbone network to
connect to radios that transmit over the air to portable and mobile radios. Catalyst
Communications Technologies provides a simple user interface on a personal computer
that communicates using Voice over IP to Gateways that interface to radios. There are
other products in the market that adopt the same basic architecture, which is the
translation of voice and control signals from some console device into packets to be sent
over an IP network and reassembled into audible voice and control to be presented to a
radio for transmission over the air. The diagram below presents the basic concept, using
the Catalyst scheme as a model.
Remote
Mobile
Radio
In this diagram, Remote personal computers with headsets, speakers, microphones, and
VoIP Dispatch software translate the voice and Push To Talk (PTT) control into packets
that are sent over the IP backbone network the Wide Area Network. The Radio
Gateway translates these packets back into voice and control signals and interfaces to the
radio, which send the voice out over the air. Of course, many PCs can interface to the
network, and the Wide Area Network gives each of them access to many Radio Gateways
- and many Radios - dispersed geographically.
There is an additional concept that is important to understanding the Dispatch application
use of Voice over IP technology, and that concept is that Voice over Internet Protocol IS
NOT Voice over the Internet. It is critical to understand that, although this application
uses an Internet derived technology to accomplish its mission, the transmission occurs
over private, managed, backbone networks. These include networks that serve a
community, such as in the case of public safety applications, and enterprise networks that
support utility operations and government agencies but these are not the Internet.
Today, the Internet has delay, insufficient security, and unreliability, which together
make this network a poor choice for critical Dispatch communications. All of the early
adopters of Voice over IP Dispatch solutions described in this paper operate their
Dispatch operations over their own private, secure, managed networks. (For more
information on this topic, see the Catalyst White Paper Security Considerations on Voice
over IP Networks at our website www.catcomtec.com/whatsnew.)
Technology
Understanding the technology of Radio/Voice over IP is very straightforward. The key
concepts to understand are Voice transmission and signaling. To understand the
transmission of voice, one needs only to understand the basics of digital voice, which has
been with us since the early 1960s.
Voice is an analog signal, represented electrically as a sine wave. Digital interpolation
samples this sine wave at tiny increments 8,000 times a second for telephony and
represents the position of the sine wave as an 8-bit code. This 8-bit code represented
8,000 times a second is where 64,000 bits per second comes from, a universal standard
for representing voice in digital form. New voice compression techniques can reduce the
bandwidth requirements of transmitting voice, and Catalyst and other manufacturers use
these techniques effectively.
Once this information is digitally represented, it is easy to comprehend that it can be
placed in a packet an envelope really, with an address that can be read and forwarded
to its correct destination. The Internet Protocol is a set of rules for interpreting the
addresses on these envelopes and correctly forwarding them to their precise destination.
The tricky part of mobile radio over IP is the concept of signaling. In telephony, signaling
information includes the number you dial, ringing tones, busy tones and other status
information. In mobile radio, the signals we need to send include Push-To-Talk (PTT),
release PTT, change channel, send emergency indication, turn on/off scan, and a number
of other activities unique to land mobile radio. This is why Voice over IP solutions
designed for telephony are ill equipped to manage the requirements of Radio over IP
operations. Fortunately, there are companies, including Catalyst, dedicated to meeting the
needs of mobile radio applications that can take advantage of IP technologies.
Applications
Interestingly, while not universal, the application uses for Dispatch Voice over IP
segregate by industry. In the public safety segment, Voice over IP is used primarily to
backup the primary dispatch operation. New concerns for terrorism or sabotage, coupled
with longstanding fears of natural disasters wiping out a dispatch center, are fueling a relook at Dispatch. Many public safety departments that review their terrorism/disaster
recovery operations have concluded that (1) often two way mobile radio is the only
3
effective communication that exists during these events, and (2) they cannot afford to be
without their Dispatch operation, which plays a key role in coordinating and directing
response and recovery activities.
Duplicating an existing Dispatch operation is not cost practical, however. Consoles alone
cost up to $50,000 each; and the expense of connecting them to the radio network, the
creation of secondary facilities, and the ongoing maintenance of a system everyone hopes
will never be used is prohibitive. In contrast, the VoIP Dispatch system provided by
Catalyst utilizes existing personal computers and the existing agency or community data
network to provide a cost effective backup Dispatch operation. Dispatch can be
performed from any computer equipped with our software on the network, and new
computers can be brought online for Dispatch in a matter of minutes, offering significant
flexibility during times of disaster.
Utility and government mobile radio operations are more prone to using Voice over IP
for primary Dispatch operation. These organizations are interested in consolidating
Dispatch operations into a single operation without consolidating people physically. For
example, American Electric Power had dispatch operations over four geographic areas,
but the Dispatch personnel in one area could not communicate with field personnel in
other areas. Using Dispatch Voice over IP, Dispatchers located anywhere on the network
now can communicate to any field personnel over a four state region.
Similarly, in the Tongass National Forest in southeast Alaska, Voice over IP is allowing
Dispatchers in the southern region of Saint Petersburg or Sitka to communicate with field
personnel fighting fires outside Yakutat in the north, over 400 miles away. Forest Service
office personnel use the existing Forest backbone network to connect their personal
computer VoIP Dispatch application to field radio users for fire control, law enforcement,
public safety, flight tracking, and other mobile radio applications.
Benefits
From reading this White Paper, you should now have an overall understanding of how
Voice over IP can be used to provide and enhance Dispatch operation in land mobile
radio networks. The next question to answer is Why would you do this? Weve already
touched on one of the major benefits of VoIP technology, and that is cost. Establishing a
backup system that takes advantage of existing personal computers and existing network
infrastructures is much less expensive than duplicating an existing Dispatch Center to be
used solely for backup. And, using an existing network infrastructure to provide
connectivity between Dispatch operations and radios, towers, and base stations is much
less expensive than leasing Telco circuits or constructing microwave links to make these
connections.
Diversify your assets to reduce risk. Use different types of equipment, different types of
connections. Therefore a failure mode, like Y2K that takes down the primary system is
less likely to also take down the backup.
Another major benefit of using VoIP for Dispatch is that communications between office
and field personnel can be expanded and enhanced. Using the model described in this
paper, office workers can be added to the network for a few hundred dollars, and these
workers can be geographically dispersed anywhere on the network.
There are a number of other benefits derived from implementing VoIP for Dispatch. In
addition to the low cost of adding Dispatch locations, these locations can be added
We invite you to learn more about how Voice over IP can improve your Dispatch
operations and how a system design might be constructed for your particular application.
Call Catalyst the leader in IP based Dispatch solutions - or visit our web site for more
information at www.catcomtec.com.
For more information about Catalyst Communications Technologies and our products,
please visit www.catcomtec.com or call us at 434.582.6146.