Mean Square Error (MSE) is similar to Signal-to-Noise Ratio (SNR) except that it accounts for distortion and interference in addition to noise power.
Distortion may come from several sources such as bad Ethernet cables (poor shield, damaged, or low quality), path degradations such as multipath, or Fresnel zone encroachment.
Interference can come from other transmitters on the tower, as well as from sources inside an indoor shelter. High power transmitters inside a shelter can cause interference when near the PoE device or when located very close to the cabling.
There are maximum acceptable MSE values for each modulation which are useful in determining the quality of the link. The MSE value reported is only relevant to one tx-rx path, so the MSE of each tx-rx path must be evaluated to verify the link is operating as expected. The lower the number the better, so a -35dB is better than a -30dB. The table below shows the maximum MSE value to expect in IF Loopback, Normal Operation, and Absolute Maximum.
MSE Expected and Maximum Values (dB) |
||||||
|
QAM256 |
QAM128 |
QAM64 |
QAM32 |
QAM16 |
QPSK |
Maximum Expected value IF loopback |
-36 |
-36 |
-36 |
-36 |
-36 |
-36 |
Maximum Expected valueNormaloperation at max power |
-34 |
-33 |
-32 |
-30 |
-30 |
-29 |
Absolute Maximum for 1E-6 BER Sensitivity Threshold |
-28 |
-25 |
-22 |
-19 |
-16 |
-9 |
Comments
0 comments
Please sign in to leave a comment.