DELAWARE COUNTY SYSTEM ASSESSMENT AND CONCEPTUAL … · 12/2/2019 · brandywine lima 911 med a,...
Transcript of DELAWARE COUNTY SYSTEM ASSESSMENT AND CONCEPTUAL … · 12/2/2019 · brandywine lima 911 med a,...
DELAWARE COUNTYSYSTEM ASSESSMENT AND
CONCEPTUAL DESIGN REPORT
DECEMBER 2, 2019
Table of Contents■ Executive Summary
■ Recommendations
■ Short-Term Analysis
■ Spectrum Analysis
– Existing System Spectrum
Assessment
– Conceptual System Spectrum
Analysis
■ Radio Frequency (RF) Propagation
– Existing RF Sites Assessment
– Conceptual RF System Design
■ System Infrastructure
– Existing Site Survey Assessment
– Conceptual Infrastructure
Requirements
■ Subscriber Inventory
– Existing Subscriber Units
Assessment
– Conceptual Subscriber Unit
Analysis
■ Backhaul Analysis
– Existing Backhaul Assessment
– Conceptual Backhaul
Architecture
■ Dispatch Analysis
– Existing Dispatch Assessment
– Conceptual Dispatch Design
■ Alarming and Interoperability
■ Budgetary Analysis
■ Conclusions
1
Executive Summary■ Existing systems at end of life and UHF-T Spectrum set to be vacated by
Public Safety users in 2023
– Based on analysis, V-COMM recommends pursuing 700 MHz
Spectrum
■ V-COMM proposes the implementation of a state-of-the-art P25 Phase 2
County-wide Trunked Communications System
– Conceptual System will consist of 24 Transmit/Receive sites
throughout Delaware County
■ In the short-term, the County requires a back-up UHF solution to overcome
shortcomings of existing UHF-T systems
■ Conceptual System will require significant infrastructure upgrades to protect
new radio equipment investment
2
Executive Summary■ Conceptual System will require investment into new subscriber units for
portable and mobile use
– V-COMM recommends a user agency survey to confirm exact
subscriber unit quantities and types
■ Conceptual System will utilize existing microwave ring, as well as two
additional microwave rings, to backhaul all capable sites and minimize single
points of failure
■ Conceptual System will utilize existing dispatch equipment, as the County has
recently invested in dispatch upgrades
– V-COMM recommends the acquisition of new Dispatch furniture, as the
existing furniture is worn-out
■ The all-in budget for the conceptual system is estimated between $51.7M
and $69.9M
3
Recommendations Summary■ Pursue 700 MHz spectrum
■ Deploy a 24 site design to provide acceptable County-wide portable coverage
■ Invest in site infrastructure (towers, compounds, shelters, etc.) to support 24
site design and secure radio investment, including two core site locations
■ Execute a thorough user agency survey to confirm exact subscriber unit
quantities and types
■ Reuse existing microwave ring to leverage previous County investment
■ Supplement existing microwave ring with two additional rings, and add four
spurs to backhaul 23 RF sites
■ Replace existing dispatch furniture that is worn-out
4
Recommendations Summary■ Upgrade Zetron dispatch system to support P25
■ Deploy a network management system to monitor and protect future County
investment
■ Develop solutions with nearby agencies to provide interoperable
communications between agencies to leverage County investment
■ Short-Term Recommendations
– Analyze Channel availability in UHF
– Develop “system” design to utilize new channels
– Leverage existing system architecture
– Baseline existing system for moving forward
■ Verify existing subscriber equipment is operating correctly and to
specification
■ Verify all satellite receive sites are operating correctly and to specification
5
Short-Term■ County will exist on UHF-T Spectrum until new system can be deployed,
tested, and users cut-over
■ UHF-T Spectrum DTV interference will not go away (can potentially get worse)
■ County requires Short-Term Back-up solution
– UHF Channels only option that does not involve extreme cost burden to
user equipment
– UHF Spectrum Highly Congested
■ Potential to identify a few channels
■ Unlikely to be licensable county-wide
6
Existing System Spectrum Assessment
7
Existing Delaware County System■ Existing Delaware County System(s) operate on UHF-T Spectrum
– Existing system is over 20 years old and has reached its end-of-life
– Per the Middle Class Tax Relief and Jobs Creation Act of 2012, the
UHF-T spectrum is set to be vacated by 2023.
– In addition, the UHF-T band is hampered by interference from Digital
Television (DTV) Ducting, which can cause entire channels to be
unusable system wide
■ Delaware County Police Department utilizes 7 Primary and 7 Secondary
UHF-T channels to cover 7 Sectors within the County
■ Delaware County Fire Department utilizes 7 Primary, 4 Simplex , 3 Secondary
UHF-T Channels for 6 FD Zones within the County, with 2 Channels dedicated
for EMS
8
Existing Delaware County Licenses■ FCC Call Signs – WIJ815, WPPG323, KDK667, WPMP243, KYO878
9
Conceptual System Spectrum Analysis
10
Spectrum Bands Overview■ UHF (450 - 470 MHz)
■ UHF-T (470 - 512 MHz)
■ 700 MHz (769 - 775/799 - 805 MHz)
■ 800 MHz NPSPAC (851 – 854/806 - 809 MHz)
■ 800 MHz General/Vacated (854 – 860/809 - 815 MHz)
11
Spectrum Bands Overview■ UHF
– 450 - 470 MHz
– Good propagation conditions
– Shared with Non-PS entities
– Coordinated through multiple coordinator agencies
– HIGHLY CONGESTED LIMITED AVAILABILITY
■ UHF-T
– 470 - 512 MHz
– Only exists in certain major metro markets
– Philadelphia = 500-512 MHz (TV Channel 19-20)
– Currently subject to DTV interference from remote TV locations during
certain tropospheric conditions
– Currently scheduled to be removed from consideration for PS use via
Congressional Act; Future uncertain
– HIGHLY CONGESTED NO AVAILABILITY
12
Spectrum Bands Overview■ 700 MHz (769 - 775/799 - 805 MHz)
– Newest spectrum made available for PS Radio
– Controlled via Public Safety Defined Regions and respective Plans
– Pre-allocated on a County by County basis by “CAPRAD”
– Delaware County PA allocated 9 Channels
– Ability to acquire other channels is high, spectrum still available
– Spectrum Allocations Include predefined Interop, Ground, etc. channels
for all licensed users
13
Spectrum Bands Overview■ 800 MHz NPSPAC (851 – 854/806 - 809 MHz)
– Controlled via Public Safety Defined Regions and respective Plans
– Spectrum heavily used in the area; but individual channels can be
found to supplement 700 MHz if necessary
– 700/800 user equipment compatible/shared
■ 800 MHz General(854 – 860/809 - 815 MHz)
– Controlled via Frequency Coordinators
– Spectrum heavily used in the area; but individual channels can be
found to supplement 700 MHz if necessary
– Spectrum interleaved with Business pool and public safety channels
– Limitation on Power and Antenna Height
14
UHF Spectrum Analysis■ 40 Potential UHF channels were provided by Delaware County for analysis
■ 3 of 40 channels are County owned, remaining channels are mixture of
Township and “other County” entities
15
Call
Sign/Lease ID Name FRN
Radio
Service Status
Expiration
Date FrequencyKB65124 DELAWARE, COUNTY OF 3233723 PW Active 10/19/2024 460.0375/465.0375
KGB393 RADNOR FIRE COMPANY OF WAYNE INC 4447090 PW Active 4/30/2021 460.0875/465.0875
KQB37 HAVERFORD, TOWNSHIP OF 3235629 PW Active 3/5/2022 458.475
KQL750 HAVERFORD, TOWNSHIP OF 3235629 PW Active 3/5/2022 453.475
KQL751 HAVERFORD, TOWNSHIP OF 3235629 PW Active 3/5/2022 453.275
KRP852 MARPLE, TOWNSHIP OF 3237146 PW Active 5/4/2025 453.225/458.225
KVF546 MIDDLETOWN, TOWNSHIP OF 3237104 PW Active 6/9/2024 453.825/458.825
KYB967 RADNOR TOWNSHIP 3238458 PW Active 5/30/2025 453.5625/458.5625
KYK373 DELAWARE, COUNTY OF - WATER CONTROL AUTHORITY 9027467 PW Active 11/7/2024 453.975/458.975
KYK373 DELAWARE, COUNTY OF - WATER CONTROL AUTHORITY 9027467 PW Active 11/7/2024 460.300/465.3000
WNAC230 UPPER DARBY, TOWNSHIP OF 4937702 YW Active 4/4/2025 453.1625/458.1625
WNAC230 UPPER DARBY, TOWNSHIP OF 4937702 YW Active 4/4/2025 453.5375/458.5375
WNAC230 UPPER DARBY, TOWNSHIP OF 4937702 YW Active 4/4/2025 453.625/458.625
WNAC230 UPPER DARBY, TOWNSHIP OF 4937702 YW Active 4/4/2025 460.375/465.375
WNQZ797 Rocky Run Fire Company 3236981 PW Active 12/29/2024 460.575/465.575
Table of 15 of 40 UHF County provided Freq (information only)
453.8875 – Delaware County453.8875 - Channel Licensable
16
453.925 – Delaware County453.925 - Channel Compromised
17
460.0375 – Delaware County453.8875 - Channel Compromised
18
460.3 – DelCo Water Authority460.3 - Channel Compromised
19
453.975 – DelCo Water Authority453.975 - Channel Compromised
20
460.125 – Chester Heights Fire Co460.125 - Channel Compromised
21
453.325 – Chester Housing Police453.325 - Channel Compromised
22
453.7 – Eddystone453.7 - Channel Compromised
23
460.625 – Eddystone460.625 - Channel Compromised
24
453.275 – Haverford Twp453.275 - Channel Compromised
25
453.475 – Haverford Twp453.475 - Channel Compromised
26
453.225 – Marple Twp453.225 - Channel Compromised
27
462.975 – Media Borough Emer Services
462.975 - Channel Compromised
28
453.825 – Middletown Twp453.825 - Channel Compromised
29
453.5625 – Radnor Twp453.5625 - Channel Compromised
30
460.575 – Rocky Run Fire Co460.575 - Channel Compromised
31
460.375 – Upper Darby Twp460.375 - Channel Compromised
32
453.625 – Upper Darby Twp453.625 - Channel Compromised
33
453.1625 – Upper Darby Twp453.1625 - Channel Compromised
34
453.5375 – Upper Darby Twp453.5375 - Channel Compromised
35
460.0875 – Radnor Fire Co of Wayne460.0875 - Channel Compromised
36
453.025 – Riddle Memorial Hospital453.025 - Channel Compromised
37
460.1875 – 1st & 11th Dist. Fire Police Assoc.
460.1875 - Channel Compromised
38
UHF-T Spectrum Analysis■ Middle Class Tax Relief and Job Creation Act of 2012 is still the “Law of the
Land”
■ The FCC shall issue procedures to Auction off the T-Band “Public Safety”
Spectrum by February 2021
■ Within two years of the completion of the auction , Public Safety Agencies
must vacate T-Band
■ Only an Act of Congress can change the Law. The FCC has no say in this
area.
■ Large Users (LAPD, NYPD and Chicago PD) are pushing hard for repeal or
delay of the Law
39
UHF-T Spectrum Analysis■ In January, a Bill to repeal the T-Band Act was introduced in the US House;
H.R. 451. There are 18 co-sponsors, however it is still in Committee.
■ On Oct. 31, 2019, a companion bill was introduced in the US Senate
■ The FCC has frozen T-Band, no License renewals are being granted, renewal
requests will go into “pending status” permanently.
■ Once in this state, no license modifications can be made, even simple
emission designator changes.
40
UHF-T Band – The ACT■ The Middle Class Tax Relief and Job Creation Act of 2012 (Public Law 112-
96; “The Act”) requires the FCC to auction the T-Band spectrum assigned to
public safety users. Proceeds from this auction will then be used to relocate
the existing (incumbent) public safety users elsewhere.
■ “SEC. 6103. 470-512 MHZ PUBLIC SAFETY SPECTRUM. (a) In General- Not
later than 9 years after the date of enactment of this title, the Commission
shall-- (1) reallocate the spectrum in the 470-512 MHz band (referred to in
this section as the `T-Band spectrum') currently used by public safety
eligibles as identified in section 90.303 of title 47, Code of Federal
Regulations; and (2) begin a system of competitive bidding under section
309(j) of the Communications Act of 1934 (47 U.S.C. 309(j)) to grant new
initial licenses for the use of the spectrum described in paragraph (1). (b)
Auction Proceeds- Proceeds (including deposits and upfront payments from
successful bidders) from the competitive bidding system described in
subsection (a)(2) shall be available to the Assistant Secretary to make grants
in such sums as necessary to cover relocation costs for the relocation of
public safety entities from the T-Band spectrum. (c) Relocation- Relocation
shall be completed not later than 2 years after the date on which the system
of competitive bidding described in subsection (a)(2) is completed.”
41
700 MHz Spectrum Analysis■ V-COMM recommended solution for Delaware County
■ Nine (9) channel pairs with 25 kHz Bandwidth are allocated to Delaware
County by Region 28
■ Channels acquired via formal, defined Region 28 Application process
– No applications against these channels have yet been submitted
– Requires justification of need
– Requires design that meets Region guidelines for interference and
Responsible Radiation
– Frequency Coordination among Spectrum Coordinators (e.g. APCO)
– P25 System licenses - 12.5 KHz pairs
42
Delaware County CAPRAD Allotments
43
CLASS BANDWIDTH CHANNEL BASE FREQUENCY
General Use Voice 25KHz 373-376 771.3375 MHz
General Use Voice 25KHz 177-180 770.1125 MHz
General Use Voice 25KHz 245-248 770.5375 MHz
General Use Voice 25KHz 285-288 770.7875 MHz
General Use Voice 25KHz 433-436 771.7125 MHz
General Use Voice 25KHz 473-476 771.9625 MHz
General Use Voice 25KHz 541-544 772.3875 MHz
General Use Voice 25KHz 673-676 773.2125 MHz
General Use Voice 25KHz 741-744 773.6375 MHz
800 MHz Spectrum Analysis■ Unlikely To Find Enough Channels for a sole 800 MHz solution for Delaware
County; however 800 MHz spectrum can be used in conjunction with 700
MHz spectrum on the same system to increase capacity
■ NPSPAC Spectrum (851-854 MHz)
– Channels acquired via formal, defined Region 28 Application process
– Requires design that meets Region guidelines for interference
– Frequency Coordination among Spectrum coordinators (e.g. APCO)
■ 800 MHz General Spectrum (854-860 MHz)
– Channels acquired via Frequency Coordination among Spectrum
coordinators (e.g. APCO)
– Requires design that meets FCC guidelines for interference
– Must meet power and Antenna height requirements set by FCC
44
Current County Radio Usage Analysis■ County provided V-COMM with Radio Usage (Call Counts by Channel) for eight
(8) months in 2019
■ Current Maximum “Busy Hour” Channel use : 16 Resources
■ Table below shows the maximum number of PD and FD portables and
mobiles radio counts
45
AGENCY PD FD
Mobiles 775 829
Portables 2026 2965
Radio Capacity Overview■ System level overview affecting traffic of conceptual system design:
– Trunked Technology
■ “Control Channel”
– Frequency channel radio contacts network on to receive traffic
channel
■ “Traffic Channel”
– Frequency channel on which modulated voice signals are
transmitted on
■ All Traffic Channels are shared across network
■ Each voice transmission carries a data tag corresponding to the talk group
the call was made on
■ Only Radios included in the same talk group will playback the repeated
voice transmission
46
P25 Phase 2 TDMA Overview■ System level overview affecting traffic (cont’d):
– Time Division Multiple Access (TDMA)
■ Each channel is 12.5 kHz wide
■ Each channel will be split into interleaving timeslots
■ (2) Voice transmissions will be split into small sections and interleaved into
one contiguous
■ Results in 2 talk paths per 12.5 kHz channel
47
Officer runs plates for traffic stop. Dispatch asks officer to return to HQ.
stop.to HQ.trafficto returnforofficerplatesasksrunsDispatchOfficer
Conversation A: Conversation B:
Conversations Interleaved via 2:1 TDMA on traffic channel X:
Time
Radio Capacity Analysis Results
■ Assumed the number of Active users during busy hour to be 30 % to 50% of
the total number of radios used by individual agencies
■ Model also considered Total PTT per Hour, PTT Duration, Allowable Delay and
Hang-Time
■ The model is designed for also considered 1% Grade of Service (GOS)
■ The increased number of channels guarantee approximately 25 % growth
■ 10 Voice Channels + 1 Control Channel
48
Talk paths Required No. of Channels Required V-COMM Comments
V-COMM
Traffic Model20 11
Relatively conservative
model, prepares for high traffic throughout County
Existing RF Assessment
49
Existing RF Sites Overview■ Delaware County operates two conventional UHF-T systems across multiple
zones
– PD utilizes 14 channel, 7 Sector system (1 primary channel and 1
secondary channel per Sector)
– FD utilizes 10 channel, 6 zone system (6 primary channels and 4
backup channels shared across multiple zones)
– EMS operates on 2 shared Fire channels
– Sets up well for transition to trunked talk group system
■ 43 unique site locations, 33 of which are shared by PD and FD
– PD equipment located on 41 of 43 sites (8 PD only sites)
– FD/EMS equipment located on 35 of 43 sites (2 FD only sites)
– At 3 locations (WPLY, Marple, and Springfield) the County has Tx and
Rx equipment located on separate towers
50
Existing PD Network■ 41 total site locations
– Split into 7 Sectors
– Some sites are shared across Sectors
– PD Utilizes 12 Transmit Sites, 41 Receive sites
■ State Police Patrol Following Townships: Chadds Ford, Concord, Thornbury,
Chester Heights, Middletown, Edgemont, Rose Valley
■ Utilizes 2-channel UHF-T Spectrum, Analog Conventional System
■ Site Breakdown by Zone:
51
Zone 1 Zone 2 Zone 3 Zone 4 Zone 5 Zone 6 Zone 7
# Transmit / Receive Sites 4 4 1 1 2 1 3
# Receive Only Sites 8 10 4 9 6 12 8
# Transmit Only Sites 0 2 0 0 0 0 0
Total 12 16 5 10 8 13 11
PD Sectors Map
52
PD All Sectors and Sites
53
PD Sector 1 Sites
54
PD Sector 2 Sites
55
PD Sector 3 Sites
56
PD Sector 4 Sites
57
PD Sector 5 Sites
58
PD Sector 6 Sites
59
PD Sector 7 Sites
60
Existing FD Network■ 35 total site locations
– Split into 6 Zones
– Some sites are shared across Zones
– FD Utilizes 9 Transmit Sites, 35 Receive sites
■ Utilizes 10 Channel UHF-T Spectrum, Analog Conventional System
– Fire 2 used as backup channel for Fire 1 and Fire 10
– Fire 6 used as backup channel for Fire 5
– Fire 9 used as backup for Fire 4
■ Site Breakdown by Zone:
61
Fire 1 Fire 3 Fire 4 Fire 5 Fire 7 Fire 8 Fire 10
# Transmit / Receive Sites 1 3 5 3 1 1 1
# Receive Only Sites 8 9 7 4 8 7 10
# Transmit Only Sites 0 0 1 0 0 0 0
Total 9 12 13 7 9 8 11
FD Zones Map
62
FD All Zones and Sites
63
FD Fire 1 Sites
64
FD Fire 3 Sites
65
FD Fire 4 Sites
66
FD Fire 5 Sites
67
FD Fire 7 Sites
68
FD Fire 8 Sites
69
FD Fire 10 Sites
70
Existing Network Deficiencies■ Frequent sporadic coverage issues due to:
– DTV Ducting in 500 MHz spectrum
– High number of satellite receive-only sites
– System infrastructure and subscriber equipment at end-of-life
– Poor backhaul reliability, outages
71
Conceptual RF System Design
72
■ Proposed P25 Phase II 700 MHz Digital Communications System
– Will combine all County operations onto single system, including PD, FD, and EMS
■ System designed for 97% reliable, Delivered Audio Quality (DAQ) 3.4 coverage throughout Delaware County, including in-building coverage
■ Conceptual design consists of 24 Tx/Rx sites
– Leverages mainly existing TX/RX and Rx only sites
– Leverages eight (8) existing sites at which Delaware County does not currently have infrastructure
– Conceptual design utilizes only existing infrastructure (i.e. no new tower builds) and assumes collocation availability
Area Coverage Reliability and DAQ are functions of radio service to determine optimum Channel Performance Criterion ( CPC)
– 97% Area Coverage Reliability is the probability that the measured coverage within 97% of the service area is greater than or equal to predicted signal strength
– Service Area will be tested as a uniform test grid of 1/2 mile by 1/2 mile test tiles (1/4 mile square) that covers the entire COUNTY geographic area
– In each test tile, RSSI and BER measurements shall be taken. The mean BER value of all collected data points shall be 2.4% or better, median RSSI value shall be equal to or greater than the faded signal strength required to achieve the CPC.
– DAQ 3.4 is comparable to 20 dB SINAD equivalent intelligibility, i.e. Speech understandable with repetition only rarely required. Some Noise/Distortion
73
Conceptual Design Overview
Conceptual Design Sites
Proposed SitesLima Middletown Fire Millbourne Monopole
Prison Eddystone Upper Darby
Brandywine Youthway Water Tank Marple
Chadds Ford Power Tower Springfield Broomall Fire
Bethel Ridley Highway Haverford State Tower
Aston Tower Smart Park Water Tank Haverford Township Admin
Twin Oaks Burlington Radnor 2 Iven
Chester Township Tower Fitz Hospital WPLY
74
Conceptual System Design
75
Pink Line =
County
Border
Red Line =
“First Due”
Border
Yellow Pins =
Proposed Site
Locations
Mobile Coverage Parameters■ Single-color coverage plots
– Depict areas of reliable mobile on-street coverage ■ Blue = Reliable Mobile On-Street Coverage
■ RF Modeling Parameters
– Receiver Path Tower Mounted Amplifiers (TMAs)
– Omnidirectional, 9 dBd Gain antennas used for TX and RX
– Downlink ERP: 200W; Uplink ERP: 30W
– Mobile RX antenna assumes unity gain antenna mounted at 2m (6 ft.)
– Assumes no body loss
– Final licensable ERP to be determined on a site-by-site basis as part of
the FCC licensing process
76
- Reliable
Mobile Coverage
Conceptual Mobile Coverage
77
Portable Coverage Parameters■ Multi-colored coverage plots
– Depict levels of reliable portable in-building and on-street coverage ■ Blue = Reliable Commercial and Industrial Predicted In-Building Coverage
■ Green = Reliable Residential Predicted In-Building Coverage
■ Yellow = Reliable Predicted On-Street Coverage
■ RF Modeling Parameters
– Receiver Path Tower Mounted Amplifiers (TMAs)
– Omnidirectional, 9 dBd Gain antennas used for TX and RX
– Downlink ERP: 200W; Uplink ERP: 2.5W
– Portable RX antenna assumes unity gain antenna mounted hip-level at
1m (3 ft.)
– Assumes 10.3 dB Body loss, to model hip-mounted portable with
shoulder microphone
– Final licensable ERP to be determined on a site-by-site basis as part of
the FCC licensing process
78
Conceptual Portable Coverage
79
- Reliable 20
dB In-Building
Coverage
- Reliable 10
dB In-Building
Coverage
- Reliable On-
Street Coverage
Building Penetration Losses■ TSB-88 defines a generalized median in-building penetration loss across all
building types
– 700 MHz median value = 14.5 dB
– 700 MHz standard deviation = 7.8 dB
– Most buildings exist between 6.7 and 22.3 dB (1 standard deviation)
– In order to better quantify in-building attenuation, V-COMM breaks
down the in-building penetration levels into 2 categories
■ Higher attenuation “Commercial / Industrial” type buildings
■ Lower attenuation “Residential” type buildings
80
Building Penetration Losses■ Commercial and Industrial Type Building
– Assumed margin of >20 dB above on-street predicted levels
– Building types
■ Hospitals, factories, malls, schools, large department stores (e.g. Home
Depot, Walmart), large apartment complexes, older, heavy concrete
facilities (e.g. courthouses, municipal buildings), large office complexes
■ Residential Type Building
– Assumed margin of >10 dB above on-street predicted levels
– Building types
■ Residential houses, wood frame structures, small apartment complexes,
smaller commercial buildings (e.g. restaurants, local businesses, small
office buildings), fire and police stations
81
Existing Site Survey Assessment
82
Site Survey Overview
■ Included visits to sites with existing UHF County equipment
■ Did not include sites that were not considered feasible for a P25 Tx/Rx site
on the new system
■ Survey focused on general site conditions including the “tower”, shelter, and
compound area(s).
■ A matrix was developed to document the conditions and suitability of the site
for future use
■ The matrix is used during the budget phase to develop a per site budget
estimate to improve the site conditions to support the new P25 System
including proposed microwave backhaul
83
Site Survey Summary Matrix
■ 3-Day Site Walks
84
Tower
Height
Existing Tenants /
Space Available
Shelter
Space
Ground
SpaceGrounding
Power /
Generator
Battery/
UPSHVAC
16 RX WPLY#1 (RX) Others/Mark Humphries) 3 1 1 1 1 1
16a TX WPLY#2 (TX) Others/Mark Humphries) 2 2 2 2 2 3 1 2
9 RX Mercy Fitzgerald Hospital Trinity Health 3 1 1 1 1 1, 4 1 1
24 TX/RX Upper Darby ( VZW Shelter) County Tower / Verizon Shelter 3 1 3 2 3 3 1 1
24a TX/RX Upper Darby ( State Police Shelter) State police Shelter 2 2 2 2,4 1 2
5 TX/RX Burlington Crown Castle 806203 3 3 2 2 2 2 1 2
22 RX Springfield#1 AMT PA308504 / ATT Shelter 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0
22a TX Springfield#2 ATC PA-000087 / County Shelter 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 1
13 TX/RX Lima#1 County Tower/County Shelter 3 1 2 2 2 3 1 1
13a TX/RX Lima#2 County Shelter 2 2 2 1 1 1
18 TX/RX Delco County Prison County Tower & Shelter 3 2 2 2 2 2 2 1
2 RX Bethel AMT ASSET 10318 3 3 3 2 2 2,4 3 2
1a TX/RX Aston Tower SBA PA20091-A Tower/Shelter 2 2 2 2 2 2,4 2 2
23 TX/RX Twin Oaks SBA PA15846-A Tower/Shelter 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3
7 TX/RX Eddystone AMT ASSet 10317/ RSC Shelter'? 3 2 2 2 1 2,4 1 2
34 RX Chestnut Ridge (building) Residences at Chestnut Ridge 2 1 1 1 2 1,4 2 1
21 RX #21 Scott Paper/International Pl Buidling 3 1 1 1 2 1,4 1 1
6 TX/RX Darby Tower Crown Castle 807044 1 1 1 1 2 2 2 2
11 TX/RX Haverford Township Admin AMT PA-91596 / Shelter TBD 1 1 1 1 1 1,4 1 1
14 TX/RX Marple #1 Crown Castle 806218 / County? 2 2 2 2 1 2,4 1 1
Marple #2 County / County 3 0 2 2 1 2 1 1
19 TX/RX Radnor #1 (Radnor House Condos) Buidling 3 1 1 1 1 2,4 1 1
19R TX/RX Radnor Remote PECO Tower / County Cabinet 1 1 1 1 2 0 2 0
27 TX/RX Radnor #2 IWG Towers Asset/Radnor Police 3 1 1 1 2 2,4 1 1
31 TX/RX HVD State Haverford Township 3 1 1 2 1 1,4 1 1
KEY
4- Generator Needed
Ancillary Systems
Ownership
0 - Other solution needed
1 – Below standard, requires improvement
2 – Adequate, some improvement may be required
# TYP Site Name
Tower ReviewGrounds / Shelter
Space
3 – Meets standard, no improvement required
Site Survey High Level Evaluation
■ Day 1
– WPLY – WPLY#2 shelter on site looks clean and has sufficient space
for new equipment. Shelter to tower has room for new lines. Towers are
in good location and grounding looks intact. Towers have good height
– Mercy Fitzgerald Hospital – Good height and location. Very poor
conditions for equipment. Numerous 3rd party antenna on roof and
unsafe RF conditions
– Upper Darby – Site equipment currently in Verizon shelter. Limited
space for growth. State Police shared shelter on site looks clean and
grounding intact; will need generator for backup
85
Site Survey High Level Evaluation
■ Day 1
– Burlington – Shelter looks clean and grounding looks to be in good
condition and intact. Crown Castle Tower database search shows
Delco with 2 microwave dishes at 157’ and Delaware has space above
170’
– Springfield#1 and #2– Site #1 is American Tower asset. Unable to
access shelter. Site #2 is also American tower asset. Shelter is very
small but could support more equipment. Shelter is not behind a fence
and does not have proper cable routing to tower. Grounding, proper ice
bridge, compound fencing are needed and a larger shelter if
recommended. Tower has height and ATC records show room. ATC
database does not show Delco as a tenant
– Lima #1 & #2 – New shelter to be placed on site. Tower has good
height and location. Structural analysis for this tower shows it is failing.
No documentation provided to show that it has been fixed or off
loaded
86
Site Survey High Level Evaluation
■ Day 2
– Prison –T-Mobile built new Tower and would own for first 5 years from
what we were told. Need to get ownership changed if this is case on
ASR. Shelter on site clean but needs some external repairs on facial
due to storm damage. Grounding on door needs to be repaired and
grounding should be checked. Last structural shows tower at 100% or
105% capacity. Old ASR on fence, needs to be removed and FCC
notified it has been decommissioned
– Bethel – American Tower and shelter Assets. Shelter clean and
grounding intact. ATC database does not show Delco as a tenant and
limited space on tower
– Aston Tower – SBA asset. Shelter clean and has space. Site will need a
generator. Guyed Tower has AM protection on lower 2/3s of tower
87
Site Survey High Level Evaluation
■ Day 2
– Eddystone – Site clean and has space to grow. Grounding looks to be
intact. Old cabling and equipment on tower should be removed before
tower assessment. ATC database shows space available.
– Chestnut Ridge – Tall building in good location and view of surrounding
area. Roof very busy but has space. Space on upper floor for
equipment area. Current equipment is out in open. If site chosen will
need to get a fenced/secure area.
– Scott Paper/International Plaza – Equipment in open unconditioned
area. Site has good height and close to airport. This site would need
better space for equipment.
– Darby Tower – Shared shelter space with Verizon. Very limited space
and very low monopole. Do not recommend keeping this site.
88
Site Survey High Level Evaluation
■ Day 3
– Haverford Township Admin – County equipment located in basement
(building maintenance room) and not conditioned. Building has been
sold and County looking to add shelter outside in American tower
compound. Monopole is very full
– Marple #1 & #2 – Marple Tower #1 is in Crown Castle database. Crown
Castle says they no longer manage this tower and did not have any
record of County on tower. Shelter A/C in very poor condition and
grounding has been cut away and requires repair. Higher fencing and
barbed wire/camera network recommended. Marple #2 has height,
but tower failed Structural analysis and can not be used. Site shelter
grounding in serious need of repair and has been cut away outside of
building
89
Site Survey High Level Evaluation
■ Day 3
– Radnor #1 – Good location and height to building. Equipment room is
full and not conditioned. No room to expand. Roof top very full,
additional antenna co-location doubtful. Existing landlord relationship
poor(no access to roof at time of visit)
– Radnor Remote – Delco using PECO power tower and has cabinet on
ground. Plenty of space on ground for more cabinets. Current antenna
is below power lines
– Radnor #2 – Sharing shelter space with Radnor police. One small air
conditioner for 10x10 room. No space to grow. Recommend installing
new shelter on Radnor police grounds if possible with generator
– HVD State – Site appears to have been abandoned at one time, all
grounding was cut out and door is rusting away. Site needs grounding
repaired and checked. Top of tower looks available. Site needs
generator and shelter repairs
90
Conceptual Infrastructure Requirements
91
Infrastructure Summary
■ New P25 Phase 2, simulcast base equipment
■ New P25 Phase 2, subscriber equipment
■ New IP-based microwave backhaul equipment
– Maximize reuse of existing equipment and licensed frequencies
– Maximize site interconnect via Microwave, eliminate current copper
backhaul infrastructure
■ Improved site conditions to house and protect new equipment
– Shelters
– Grounding
– HVAC
– Electrical
– Tower structural upgrades likely for many sites
■ Dispatch furniture replacement and integration into new radio system to support
P25
92
P25 Equipment
■ Vendors supporting County needs for base radio infrastructure:
– JVCKENWOOD
– L3Harris
– Motorola
– Tait
■ Vendors supporting County needs for subscriber equipment:
– Includes base radio manufacturers above
– Includes other manufacturers
93
Microwave Backhaul Equipment
■ Numerous vendors available
■ Typically, procured via the primary radio infrastructure vendor
■ Can be procured separately
■ Current radio vendor is Alcatel Lucent
94
Site Equipment
■ Shelters preferred if space allows
– Outdoor cabinets are an additional option where shelters are impractical
– Numerous shelter suppliers
■ Site condition upgrades require A&E vendor as well as construction contractors to
execute work
– Electrical, HVAC, Grounding, Structural
– Numerous companies that can serve Delaware County in Tri-State Area.
95
Tower Upgrades
■ Requires initial structural analysis (SA) to account for proposed equipment with
existing tower-mounted equipment
■ SA typically executed by tower-owner preferred vendor; otherwise, contracted via
County
■ If SA failure, Tower Structural Upgrade Design required
– Design typically via original tower manufacturer
– Design includes specific strengthening methods and locations
– May or may not include foundation improvements
– Materials for upgrade often procured from original tower manufacturer
■ Installation executed by experienced tower contractors - will require final
inspection
96
Dispatch Upgrades
■ Many furniture vendors available
■ Furniture should support 24/7 operation
■ Upgrades to existing equipment should be procured through existing vendors
97
Existing Subscriber Unit Assessment
98
Existing Subscriber Unit Counts
■ Police (Includes PD, Constables, MIRT, Rangers, Sheriff, and Prison)
– 735 Mobiles
– 1877 Portables
■ Fire
– 675 Mobiles
– 2721 Portables
■ Ambulance
– 105 Mobiles
– 223 Portables
99
Note: Radio counts provided by Delaware County.
Existing Subscriber Unit Counts
■ Other (Includes Municipal Gov’t, Maintenance, Animal Control, CID, Emergency
Management and Communications, Training, Game & Fish Commissions)
– 85 Mobiles
– 157 Portables
■ Contractor (Includes HMHTTC, Radio Communications Service, Witco Chemical,
and Penstar Flights)
– 4 Mobiles
– 13 Portables
■ 100 Control Stations
100
Note: Radio counts provided by Delaware County.
Conceptual Subscriber Unit Analysis
101
Proposed Subscriber Units
■ The following lists features and accessories recommended for each of the six
categories previously listed (Police, Fire, Ambulance, Other, Contractor,
Control Station)
■ Items Common to ALL Subscriber Units
– Features: P25 Phase 2, Authentication, Factory Programming, Standard Service
and Warranty
– Mobile Accessories: Mobile Antenna Kit, Palm Microphone, Remote Mount Kit
– Portable Accessories: Carry Holder, Standard Antenna
102
Proposed Subscriber Units (Cont’d)
■ Fire and Contractor Subscriber Units
– Common Features: Data and GPS
– Chief-Only Features: AES Multi Key
– Common Mobile Accessories: Dual Head Radio, Aux Speaker, and GPS Antenna
– Chief-Only Mobile Accessories: Single Portable Charger
– Apparatus-Only Mobile Accessories: Dual Gang Chargers
– Common Portable Features: Noise Cancelling, Rugged IP68, Intrinsically Safe,
and Partial Keypad
– Chief-Only Portable Features: Full Keypad
– Common Portable Accessories: Shoulder Strap Carry Holder, GPS Antenna, and External Mic
103
Proposed Subscriber Units (Cont’d)
■ Police Subscriber Units
– Common Features: Data, GPS, and AES
– Commander-Only Features: AES Multi Key
– Common Mobile Accessories: Aux Speaker, GPS Antenna, and Single Portable
Charger
– Chief-only Mobile Accessories: Dual Head Radio
– Common Portable Features: Noise Cancelling, Rugged IP67, and Partial Keypad
– Chief-only Portable Features: Full Keypad
– Common Portable Accessories: Carry Holder, GPS Antenna, and External Mic
104
Proposed Subscriber Units (Cont’d)
■ Ambulance Subscriber Units
– Common Features: Data and GPS
– Common Mobile Accessories: Aux Speaker, GPS Antenna, Dual Portable Charger,
Remote Mount Kit, Dual Head Radio
– Common Portable Features: Noise Cancelling, Rugged IP67, Partial Keypad
– Common Portable Accessories: Carry Holder, GPS Antenna, External Mic
■ Control Stations
– Features: P25 Phase 2, Data, Radio Authentication, AES, Multi-key Encryption,
Full Keypad, Multi-Band Factory Programming, Standard Service and Warranty
– Accessories: Antenna Kit, Desktop Microphone, Desk Mount Kit
105
Existing Backhaul Assessment
106
Backhaul Assessment■ Backhaul is all the components and paths to carry radio (and other) traffic
from the “tower” sites (transmit, transmit/receive, and receive sites) to the
central communications center at Lima
■ Currently System Utilizes
– Licensed Microwave
– Leased “Copper”
■ T1
■ RTNA
■ Non-Conditioned 4W
107
Licensed Microwave Assessment■ Provides most reliable interconnect
■ Allows for County control of asset
■ Must be designed to ensure proper “five 9’s” reliability (99.999 is less than
5.26 minutes of outage per year)
■ Adds weight and lease cost (typ) on rented towers
■ Upfront CAPEX cost, relative small OPEX cost
■ Potential for carrying other County traffic
■ Current Architecture
– Has evolved overtime to improve design/performance
– All planned (and licensed) improvements have not been completed
108
Microwave Review■ All Call Signs pulled for FRN 3233723
■ Microwave Call Signs are created by anchor site
■ Paths are licensed Transmit to Receive Site only
■ Current Microwave Licenses Listed Below
109
KEP26 DELAWARE COUNTY EMERGENCY SERVICES 3233723 MW Active 6/5/2028
WNTP976 DELAWARE, COUNTY OF 3233723 MW Active 11/27/2021
WNTP977 DELAWARE, COUNTY OF 3233723 MW Active 11/27/2021
WNTP978 DELAWARE COUNTY EMERGENCY SERVICES 3233723 MW Active 6/5/2028
WPNC643 DELAWARE, COUNTY OF 3233723 MW Active 11/27/2021
WPNC644 DELAWARE, COUNTY OF 3233723 MW Active 11/27/2021
WPQQ800 Delaware, County of 3233723 MW Active 8/21/2020
WQUJ342 DELAWARE, COUNTY OF 3233723 MW Active 7/22/2024
WQUJ345 DELAWARE, COUNTY OF 3233723 MW Active 7/22/2024
WQUJ390 DELAWARE, COUNTY OF 3233723 MW Active 7/23/2024
110
Architecture Original Design
■ Original Licensed Design – WNTP978
■ Spoke Design with Lima being the Center
■ Links no Longer used in this configuration
111
Architecture - Licensed
■ Red-Colored Paths never completed
112
Architecture – Licensed Links
Call Sign Owner
Licensed Site /
Anchor Site Path 1 Path 2 Path 3 Path 4 Path 5 Path 6 Path 7
KEP26DELAWARE COUNTY
EMERGENCY SERVICES Prison Lima
WNTP976 DELAWARE, COUNTY OF Eddystone Lima Twin Oaks Burlington
WNTP977 DELAWARE, COUNTY OF Upper Darby HS Lima Burlington
WNTP978DELAWARE COUNTY
EMERGENCY SERVICES Lima Upper Darby HS Eddystone Prison Radnor Twin Oaks Prison WPLY2
WPNC643 DELAWARE, COUNTY OF Radnor Lima WPLY2
WPNC644 DELAWARE, COUNTY OF Twin Oaks Lima Prison Eddystone
WPQQ800 DELAWARE, COUNTY OF Burlington Lima Upper Darby HS Eddystone
WQUJ342 DELAWARE, COUNTY OF Media Lima
WQUJ345 DELAWARE, COUNTY OF Prison Twin Oaks Lima
WQUJ390 DELAWARE, COUNTY OF WPLY2 Radnor Lima
■ Paths that were not built per FCC construction date, and confirmed via County/vendor
inquiry, are highlighted in Orange
113
Architecture – Existing Microwave
■ Active Ring & Spur Paths
■ Yellow site pins are current transmitter locations
Leased Lines■ Leased lines historically unreliable
– Subject to outages, single points of failure
– Poor support from provider(s)
– Older technology, being replaced at provider’s pace
– Low CAPEX Cost; High OPEX cost
■ High Capacity Leased Line - T1
– Fairly reliable copper interconnect
– Outage not controlled, but typically under TOS
■ Radio Tie line (RTNA)
– Unreliable interconnect
– Support is waning or non-existent
■ 4-Wire
– Non-conditioned point-to- point 4-Wire circuit which is set up with 0dB
transmit and -16dB receive transmission levels
114
115
Architecture – T1
■ 11 T1’s in service as of August 2019
116
Architecture – RTNA Lines
■ RTNA Lines – 122 in service as of August 2019
117
Architecture – Conditioned 4W
■ Verizon FDDA Circuits - 4 Wire non-conditioned circuits (6)
118
Architecture – Documented links
■ Circle represents microwave ring
■ Media, Radnor and WPLY have microwave equipment but no paths per documentation provided.
■ Sites labeled A and Z and color coded to show where they are connected (core vs remote site)
■ Remote sites have RTNA connections that are then backhauled to Lima over T1
SITE A SITE Z Circuit USE TYPE TYPE SITE A SITE Z Circuit Use
ASTON TWP LIMA 911 F6 RTNA RTNA FOLCROFT PD UPPER DARBY S4
ASTON TWP LIMA 911 F5 RTNA RTNA HIGHLAND PK UPPER DARBY S6,F10
ASTON TWR LIMA 911 Verizon T1 Backhaul T1 T1 HVD STATE LIMA 911 T1 Backhaul
BETHEL TWP LIMA 911 F5,M1,S1,MED B RTNA MEDIA - 3 RTNA INTERBORO SCH LIMA 911 S5
BETHEL TWP PRISON F6 RTNA RTNA INTERBORO SCH BURLINGTON M5
BETHEL TWP LIMA 911 OPS-D / 4W 4W RADNOR #1 - 2 RTNA INTERBORO SCH EDDYSTONE F7
BEVERLY SCH UPPER DARBY S6, F10 RTNA RTNA LANSDOWNE PD UPPER DARBY S4,S6,F10
BEVERLY SCH BURLINGTON F2 RTNA WPLY - 0 RTNA MANOA FC LIMA 911 F4,F9,S7,M7
BEVERLY SCH BURLINGTON M6 / 4W 4W RTNA MANOA FC HVD MUN HVD PD
BRANDYWINE LIMA 911 S1 RTNA RTNA MANOA FC HVD MUN HVD FIRE
BRANDYWINE PRISON F6,F5 RTNA T1 MARPLE #2 LIMA 911 T1 Backhaul
BRANDYWINE LIMA 911 MED A, MED B RTNA RTNA MEDIA CRTHSE LIMA 911 MED B, S6,F4,MED A,S2,CMD,DATA,M2,F3,COUNTY
BROOKHAVEN FC LIMA 911 S1,F3 RTNA RTNA MEDIA CRTHSE MARPLE #1 F9
CARDINGTON FC UPPER DARBY S6, F10 RTNA 4W MEDIA CRTHSE BURLINGTON M6 / 4W
CCMC TWIN OAKS M3 RTNA SITE A SITE Z CIRCUIT TYPE RTNA NEWTOWN FC LIMA 911 S2
CCMC LIMA 911 S1,F3,F8,MED A,CMD RTNA HVD MUNICIPAL LIMA 911 T1 Backhaul RTNA NOTRE DAME LIMA 911 S7
CCMC EDDYSTONE F7, S3 RTNA LIMA - 16 MARPLE #1 LIMA 911 T1 Backhaul RTNA NOTRE DAME RADNOR #2 M7
CHESTNUR RIDGE LIMA 911 T1 Backhaul T1 RTNA RADNOR FC LIMA 911 33.90 PAGE
COLLINGDALE PD UPPER DARBY S4 RTNA RADNOR #1 LIMA 911 T1 Backhaul (x2) RTNA RADNOR REM RADNOR #1 F4R
COMMUNITY EDDYSTONE S3,F7,F8 RTNA RADNOR #2 LIMA 911 T1 Backhaul RTNA RIDLEY TWP BURLINGTON M4,M5
COMMUNITY TWIN OAKS M3 RTNA UPPER DARBY - 3 RTNA RIDLEY TWP EDDYSTONE F7
COMMUNITY LIMA 911 S1 RTNA RTNA RIDLEY TWP UPPER DARBY F1,S4
DARBY BORO PD UPPER DARBY S4 RTNA RTNA RIDLEY TWP EDDYSTONE F8
DARBY TWP BURLINGTON F2,M4,M5 RTNA BURLINGTON - 2 RTNA RIDLEY TWP LIMA 911 MED A,DATA,S5,COUNTY,F3
DARBY TWP EDDYSTONE F7 RTNA RTNA ROSE TREE PK LIMA 911 COUNTY
DARBY TWP UPPER DARBY F1,S4 RTNA RTNA SCOTT PLAZA BURLINGTON M4,M5
DARBY TWP EDDYSTONE F8 RTNA EDDYSTONE - 2 RTNA SCOTT PLAZA EDDYSTONE F7,F8
DARBY TWP LIMA 911 DATA,S5,MED A RTNA RTNA SCOTT PLAZA UPPER DARBY F1,S4
DREXELINE UPPER DARBY S6, F10 RTNA RTNA SCOTT PLAZA LIMA 911 DATA,S5
DREXELINE BURLINGTON F2 RTNA TWIN OAKS - 2 RTNA SEPTA BURLINGTON F2
DREXELINE BURLINGTON M6/4W 4W RTNA SEPTA UPPER DARBY F10, CMD,S6,MED A
DREXELINE LIMA 911 S2 RTNA RTNA SEPTA BURLINGTON M6 / 4W
FAIR ACRES LIMA 911 VHF PAGE (X2), 46.48 PAGE RTNA T1 SPRINGFIELD #2 LIMA 911 T1 Backhaul
FITZ HOSP BURLINGTON M4,M5,F2 RTNA PRISON - 2 RTNA UPPER CHI PD LIMA 911 S1
FITZ HOSP UPPER DARBY S6,F1,S4,F10 RTNA RTNA UPPER PROV PD LIMA 911 S2
FITZ HOSP LIMA 911 DATA,S5,MED A, COUNTY RTNA RTNA WAYNE HOTEL RADNOR #2 M7
FITZ HOSP BURLINGTON M6 / 4W 4W RTNA WAYNE HOTEL LIMA 911 S7
T1 WPLY #2 LIMA 911 T1 Backhaul
Microwave Site -
T1's on Back bone
Remote Sites
Core MW Sites on ring
MW Sites with equipment but no defined links
119
Architecture All Links – Summary
■ Microwave network equipped for 16 T1 ports
■ Verizon T1’s - 11
■ Verizon RTNA lines - 122
– 57 RTNA lines come directly to Lima
– 59 RTNA lines come into microwave core sites shown in yellow
– 6 RTNA lines come into other sites and backhauled to Lima via T1
■ 4W non-conditioned circuits – 6 (considered at RTNA cost)
MW T1
16
LIMA UPPER DARBY BURLINGTON EDDYSTONE TWIN OAKS PRISON Other
57 28 14 12 2 3 6
RTNA on MW RTNA On Backhaul T1
59 6
VERIZON T1 TO LIMA
11
4W non-conditioned Circuits
6
MICROWAVE - 16 T1 PORTS Equipped Per Records
RTNA CIRCUITS TO CORE MW SITES
ALLOCATION BY SITE
PRISON- 2, TWIN OAKS -2, EDDYSTONE - 2, BURLINGTON -2, UPPER DARBY -3, MEDIA - 3, RADNOR -2
120
Leased Circuit Cost Provided
Cost Data Provided by County
■ Monthly Reoccurring Cost - $38,492
■ Yearly Estimated Cost – $461,904
COST: MONTHLY COST: QTY: TOTAL COST:
EACH RTNA CIRCUIT $189.00 128 $24,192.00
EACH T1 CIRCUIT $1,300.00 11 $14,300.00
BEST ESTIMATE $38,492.00
121
Architecture All Links – Summary■ System has a lot of backhaul methods
■ System has many potential points of failure
■ County is paying large sums (OPEX) for “copper” backhaul
■ New System should look to migrate to Microwave as much as possible
■ New system will not require the number of interconnections as current system
■ If microwave interconnect not possible, County Fiber or other third-party Fiber should
be considered
– County Fiber
■ Limited availability (geographically) for sites
■ Exact locations TBD
– Could be provided via third party
■ Higher OPEX vs. County-owned fiber
■ Similar or lower OPEX vs. existing copper backhaul
■ Minimum bandwidth costs far exceed need
■ May not be available at all site locations
Conceptual Backhaul Architecture
122
Design Approach■ Maximize Microwave Interconnect
– Provides most reliable interconnect
– Allows for County control of asset
– Minimizes single points of failure
■ Eliminate as much as possible existing leased “copper” circuits
– Expensive OPEX
– Unreliable
– Large potential savings >>$350K-$400K+/year
123
Microwave Design Assumptions■ Links greater than 6 miles or greater than maximum tower height removed
■ Assumed all 11 GHz paths
■ Assumed 100’ clearance criteria to terrain
■ Assumes Lima as core location
■ Link antenna heights represent minimum requirements for 100’ clearance
– Does not represent actual location availability on tower
– Does not include real-world obstruction, reflection, or path reliability
analyses
124
Potential Link Analysis
125
126
Conceptual Architecture
Conceptual Architecture■ Assumes Lima as core location
■ Conceptual Architecture consists of 3 rings
– Existing Ring
– North Ring
– South Central Ring
■ Additionally, there are 4 spur paths which cannot be located on a ring
– Marple – Upper Darby
– Brandywine – Prison
– Haverford State – Broomall Fire
– Millbourne Monopole – Fitz Hospital
■ Chadds Ford Power - Tower has no “visibility” to any sites based on the
assumed criteria. Other backhaul solutions required for this site.
127
Existing Ring
128
Existing Ring Analysis■ Conceptual Architecture keeps the existing ring as is operating currently
■ Connects Sites:
– Lima
– Prison
– Twin Oaks
– Eddystone
– Burlington
– Upper Darby
129
North Ring
130
North Ring Analysis■ Conceptual Architecture consists of 6-path ring of sites in the northern half of
Delaware County
■ Connects Sites:
– Lima
– WPLY
– Radnor 2 Iven
– Broomall Fire
– Haverford Twp
– Youthway Water Tank
131
South-Central Ring
132
South-Central Ring Analysis■ Conceptual Architecture consists of 9-path ring of sites in the south-central
part of Delaware County
■ Connects Sites:
– Lima
– Aston Tower
– Bethel
– Chester Township
– Middletown Fire
– Ridley Highway
– Smart Park Water Tank
– Fitz Hospital
– Springfield
133
Spur Sites
134
Spur Analysis■ Conceptual Architecture includes 4 spur paths which cannot be located on a
Ring
■ Existing Ring Spurs:
– Marple – Upper Darby
– Brandywine – Prison
■ North Ring Spurs:
– Haverford State – Broomall Fire
■ South – Central Ring Spurs:
– Millbourne Monopole – Fitz Hospital
135
Existing Dispatch Assessment
136
Existing Dispatch Assessment■ Eventide Logger (Cabling)
■ Zetron Acom Dispatch System
■ Vesta 911
■ CAD System
■ Dispatch Furniture
■ Incoming Building Electrical
■ Core Equipment Room- HVAC , Flooring , Room Space
■ UPS – Battery Backup
137
Existing Dispatch Assessment■ Adequate
– Newly Updated Vesta - Text to 911 by end of 2019
– Eventide logger
■ All relatively new CAT5/6 cabling ; 3 years old/redundant
■ Requires expansion to support integration with new P25 radio network
– Zetron Acom Dispatch System– upgradable to support integration with
new P25 radio system
– Video feeds from Penn DOT, Housing projects come into
Communications Center
– Separate phone system for PSAP interaction
– UPS at each dispatch station
138
Existing Dispatch Assessment■ Unsatisfactory
– Worn furniture
– Electrical Maxed Out in the Dispatch but satisfactory for current
configuration
– Equipment Room
■ Current equipment room crowded and requires multiple HVAC units
■ New room (IT room) identified for the new P25 System Equipment
installation
139
Conceptual Dispatch Analysis
140
Conceptual Dispatch Analysis■ Dispatch Room Recommendations
– Update furniture/flooring– ensure upgrade is rated for 24/7
continuous usage
– Zetron Upgrade to support P25, Traffic Growth
■ Equipment Room Recommendations
– Install new 700 MHz System Equipment in IT room which to beconverted to new Equipment Room
■ Includes HVAC, UPS, Flooring Upgrade, Fire Suppression
■ Alleviate space issues within main equipment room.
■ Additional space allows for optimal layout of equipment
■ No disruption to current dispatch during construction
– If IT Room cannot be achieved:
■ Existing equipment reconfiguration to optimize floor space to install newP25 system equipment
■ HVAC fix in existing equipment room
141
Alarming and Interoperability
142
Alarming Summary■ Delaware County has no existing NMS system for its radio network and
infrastructure
■ Every radio vendor will have an in-house NMS system that will monitor that
vendor’s radio and networking equipment
■ Large systems typically also use environmental alarms to monitor site
conditions
– Intrusion/Door Sensors
– Temperature/Smoke/Fire/Hydrogen Sensors
– DC power plant and main power sensors
– Water Sensors
■ The radio vendor NMS will be capable of monitoring environmental alarms as
well as third-party equipment (e.g. existing microwave network equipment)
that contains non-proprietary monitoring interfaces (e.g. SNMP or dry
contact)
143
Alarming Recommendations■ The County should deploy full system alarming to remotely monitor its
network.
■ Such monitoring includes
– Radio equipment status and configuration
– Network equipment status and configuration
– Site environmental status
– 3rd Party equipment status (configuration is possible)
144
Network Management Operations■ NMS access should be provisioned for persons in charge of managing any
portion of the radio network with appropriate access granted based on the
accessor’s role
– Most monitors would only need visibility, not configuration ability
– Remote access should be granted through the firewall so such persons
need not be connected within the radio network WAN
■ Alarming would be monitored by a dispatch supervisor 24/7 who would take
action based on alarms noticed
– Request patrol to check site status
– Request IT to troubleshoot down link
– Report to radio vendor equipment warnings
145
Interoperability■ V-COMM’s understanding is that all municipalities within Delaware County will
use its new P25 radio system, leaving no need for inter-County
■ Delaware County should negotiate with the states of Delaware and
Pennsylvania as well as surrounding PA counties for an ISSI link with their
P25 systems.
– PA: Chester, Montgomery, Philadelphia
– State of Delaware
– State of Pennsylvania
– State of New Jersey
– Delaware River Port Authority
– NJ: Gloucester
■ Recommend consoles patching for outside municipalities that do not
implement P25 or cannot afford an ISSI
146
Interoperability■ ISSI
– Most expensive interoperability option
– Most complete interoperability option
– Allows a user to automatically roam from their primary radio network to
an ISSI-connected radio network
– There must be a physical backhaul link between the connected
systems (e.g. leased line, microwave)
– Agencies using an ISSI link must carefully plan sharing of fleet
mapping to ensure functioning roaming
– Allows for automatic connectivity between talk groups of disparate
systems
147
Interoperability■ Console Patch
– Typically, least expensive interoperability option
– Provides minimal support for roaming users
– Requires manual intervention by a dispatcher
– There must be a physical interfaces between the radios, often a
control station with a yagi pointed towards the partnering agency
– Agencies must setup careful procedures for sharing of the patch to
prevent inadvertent use of a channel on a connected system
148
Budgetary Analysis
149
150
Budget
■ Pricing based on researched State Contract Pricing data
– State contract typically 20% off vendor list*
– Additional discounts MAY be offered over State
– User equipment pricing uses “blended” amounts from three primary vendors
■ System “inclusions” based on Delaware County discussions and V-COMM experience
■ Standard Warranty is included in the budget for Primary Radio Vendor Estimate
■ Standard Warranty terms are different for End user Equipment ( 3 years typical) and network infrastructure( 1 to 2 years typical)
■ The OPEX costs will vary from Vendor to Vendor
■ V-COMM recommends that County requires Primary vendors to include the OPEX for up to 20 years (5, 10 , 20 years) as optional pricing when specification is developed
Note – JVCKENWOOD base station infrastructure is currently not on PA state contract; however, JVCKENWOOD subscriber equipment is currently on PA state contract.
151
Budget Details - Overview
Note: Operational Costs (OPEX) are not included.
Network
Infrastructure
Subtotal
Dispatch Area
Subtotal
Vendor Services
Subtotal
End User
Equipment
Subtotal
Site Make Ready
Subtotal
Professional
Services TOTAL
$19,538,125 $288,000 $6,523,159 $34,404,865 $8,101,100 $1,030,740 $69,885,989
Primary Radio Vendor Estimate: $60,754,149
■ Network Infrastructure, End User Equipment, and Make Ready are further detailed in
subsequent pages
152
Budget Details – Network
Note: Operational Costs (OPEX) are not included.
■ Control Equipment - Site controllers, central servers, interoperability costs, and
dispatch center control stations
■ Backhaul Network – Microwave and one-time leased line costs
■ Radio Network – P25 base repeaters and antenna system
■ UPS – Site DC batter backup
■ All categories include relevant mounting hardware and licenses
Control
Equipment
Backhaul
Network Radio Network UPS Total
Per RF Site Average 166,210.74$ 77,346.00$ 529,392.00$ 41,139.80$ 814,089$
For 24 Sites 3,989,058$ 1,856,304$ 12,705,408$ 987,355$ 19,538,125$
153
Budget Details – User Equipment
Note: Operational Costs (OPEX) are not included.
■ Averages are weighted based on different subscriber equipment categories (e.g. a fire
portables vs a police portable)
■ See subscriber unit section for additional detail
Quantity Weighted Average Total
Portable 4991 4,691.30$ 23,415,236$
Mobile 1604 6,085.10$ 9,761,718$
Control Station 100 5,679.00$ 567,900$
Fixed Chargers and
Programming Accessories - -$ 660,011$
Total 6695 -$ 34,404,865$
154
Budget Details – Make Ready
Note: Operational Costs (OPEX) are not included.
■ Tower – Structural analysis and estimate of current necessary work
■ Shelter/Room – Shelter/room construction/remediation, generator, room grounding,
and HVAC
■ Compound – Fencing, landscaping, ice bridges, cameras
■ Electric and Grounding – External power service, power panels, grounding system
analysis, compound grounding, tower grounding, UPS (core only)
Tower Shelter/Room Compound
Electric and
Grounding Total
Per RF
Site
Average 49,958.33$ 181,625.00$ 34,066.67$ 65,645.83$ 331,296$
Per Core
Site
Average -$ 38,500.00$ -$ 36,500.00$ 75,000$
For 24
Sites and
2 Cores 1,199,000$ 4,436,000$ 817,600$ 1,648,500$ 8,101,100$
155
Budget Summary
Note: Discount not applied to all items such as site make ready and professional services.
Potential
Vendor
Discount 0% 10% 20% 30%
Primary Radio
Vendor
Estimate $60,754,149 $54,678,734 $48,603,319 $42,527,904
Estimated
Project Total $69,885,989 $63,810,574 $57,735,159 $51,659,744
156
Budget Inclusions
■ 24 Site, P25 Phase 2, Simulcast Radio Network
– Geographically Diverse Core Equipment
– Geographically Diverse Prime Site Equipment
– 24 Radio Sites and Equipment
– 4991 Portables
– 1604 Mobiles
– 100 Control Stations
– License Key Management
– Microwave Backhaul
– Vendor Engineering
– Equipment Staging
– Equipment Programming
– Equipment Test & Optimization
– Training / Spares
– Engineering, Furnishing & Installation
157
Budget Inclusions
■ Dispatch Updates
– Updated Console Furniture
■ Site Make Ready Work
– UPS Backup at all Sites
– Generator Backup at all Sites
■ Site Construction Drawings
■ Professional Services
■ Microwave Path Licensing
■ Frequency Licensing
■ Developing Bid Specifications
■ Bid Review and Contract Negotiation
■ System/Site Project/Construction
Management
■ System Acceptance/Cutover Support
■ Site Acquisition Support
■ Acceptance and System Testing
Conclusions
158
159
Conclusions
■ Based on the above analyses and assessments, V-COMM concludes that the current
County UHF-T system is insufficient for Public Safety communications
– The system contains too many single points-of-failure and suffers from
extended outage periods which prohibit effective communications
– The UHF-T spectrum is prone to DTV ducting interference, and is set to be
vacated by Public Safety users by 2023
– The inefficient system site configuration and geographic distribution results in
unnecessary expenses and unreliable communications
■ V-COMM recommends the pursuit and deployment of a state-of-the-art, 700 MHz, P25
Phase 2 Digital Communications System to consolidate County-wide public safety
communications, including investment into radio, site, and subscriber infrastructure
■ V-COMM recommends taking immediate short-term action to identify specific
equipment and infrastructure issues
■ V-COMM recommends identifying, licensing, and deploying a UHF-based backup
system for operations during UHF-T degradation events
160
Conclusions
■ V-COMM has conceptually designed a 24-site solution to provide reliable, in-building
portable communications throughout Delaware County
■ V-COMM has conceptually designed a multi-ring IP-based microwave backhaul
solution to aggregate radio traffic for the proposed 24-site solution
■ V-COMM recommends pursuing 11 700 MHz radio channels via the Region 28
application process
■ The all-in budget for the conceptual system is estimated between $51.7M and
$69.9M