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GPRS bitrates » History » Revision 1

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laforge, 02/19/2016 10:47 PM


PageOutline = GPRS and EDGE bit-rates =

This page tries to outline the possible achievable GPRS bit-rates.

There are multiple aspects that relate to the problem * channel coding, which in turn depends on * capabilities of the BTS and MS * performance of the radio channel * multi-slot operation, which depends on * capabilities of the BTS and MS * contention on the radio channel / resource sharing by multiple phones

channel coding === GPRS channel coding ===

Each of the 8 GSM time-slots can operate i a number of different coding schemes:

Coding Scheme kbit/s
CS-1 8.0
CS-2 12.0
CS-3 14.4
CS-4 20.0

=== EDGE channel coding ===

Each of the 8 GSM time-slots can operate i a number of different coding schemes:

Coding Scheme kbit/s
MCS-1 8.80
MCS-2 11.20
MCS-3 14.80
MCS-4 17.60
MCS-5 22.40
MCS-6 29.60
MCS-7 44.80
MCS-8 54.54
MCS-9 59.20
multi-slot capabilities

BTS equipment is normally capable to run all timeslots in GPRS mode. If you're running a single-TRX small BTS, the first timeslot is always allocated for the BCCH/CCCH, leaving 7 time-slots available for voice (TCH) and data (PDTCH).

For example, a total of 7 time-slots in MCS-9 coding scheme would render
59.20 kbps * 7 = 414.40 kbps

On the MS (phone) side, things are not that simple. Normally, phones can not decode all 7/8 time-slots, as they operate in half-duplex mode and need some time for transmit, too. The capabilities of each phone are specified as so-called ''multislot class''

For a table of multislot classes, please see 3GPP TS 45.002, or a summarized version at [https://secure.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/wiki/GPRS#Multislot_Class wikipedia].

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