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  2. Digital Signal Designation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Digital_Signal_Designation

    Digital Signal Designation Bandwidth/data rate Channels (DS0s) Carrier designation DS0 64 kbit/s 1 DS1: 1.544 Mbit/s 24 T1 DS1 3.152 Mbit/s 48 T1c

  3. Digital Signal 3 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Digital_Signal_3

    Digital Signal 3 (DS3 or T3 line) is a digital signal level 3 T-carrier. The data rate for this type of signal is 44.736 Mbit/s (45 Mb). It can transport 28 DS1 level signals within its payload. It can transport 672 DS0 level channels within its payload. [1]

  4. Digital Signal 1 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Digital_Signal_1

    Digital Signal 1 (DS1, sometimes DS-1) is a T-carrier signaling scheme devised by Bell Labs. [1] DS1 is the primary digital telephone standard used in the United States , Canada and Japan and is able to transmit up to 24 multiplexed voice and data calls over telephone lines.

  5. Comparison of T-carrier and E-carrier systems - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_T-carrier...

    Strictly speaking, a DS1 is the data carried on a T1 circuit, and likewise for a DS3 and a T3, but in practice the terms are used interchangeably. There are other data rates in use, e.g., military systems that operate at six and eight times the DS1 rate.

  6. Digital cross-connect system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Digital_cross-connect_system

    A SONET 3/1 DCS will transmux and carry DS3 signals as STS-1 signals and groom TDM DS1/T1s using VT1.5 signals. The Central Office is where signals are generally switched and groomed to route DS1s needing to be mapped to other Optical or Electrical signals to get to different equipment or sent along to other Central Offices.

  7. T-carrier - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/T-carrier

    The T-carrier is a hardware specification for carrying multiple time-division multiplexed (TDM) telecommunications channels over a single four-wire transmission circuit. It was developed by AT&T at Bell Laboratories ca. 1957 and first employed by 1962 for long-haul pulse-code modulation (PCM) digital voice transmission with the D1 channel bank.