User's Manual

Use the information in this table to determine the number of cells that require
reengineering.
Determining cell reengineering
T
able 12: Example of a completed estimate table
Estimate for: 1C1 1C2 1C3 1C4 1C5 1C6 1C7
Users inside the cell with
an of
fice
8.4 0.7 21.0 14.7 0.7 4.9 2.1
Users with an office
outside of a cell who walk
into the cell
3.2 3.7 2.3 2.7 3.7 3.4 3.6
Users without an office 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Users in a cell 11.6 4.4 23.3 17.7 4.4 8.3 5.7
Table 13: Example of a completed telephone types table
Telephone type 1C1 1C2 1C3 1C4 1C5 1C6 1C7
User telephone types H&W H&W M M H&W H&W H&W
Table 14: Cell reengineering
Estimate for:
Users with both a
handset and a wired
telephone
Users with only a handset Action
From 0 up to 20 From 0 up to 12 Keep cell size as deployed.
Greater than 20 Greater than 12 Subdivide the cell
a
to meet the
preceding conditions.
a. For information about how to subdivide cells, see High handset density deployment on
page 71
.
Use Table 14: Cell reengineering on page 68 only for user types H&W and H. For user type M
see A mix of users with and without wired telephones in a cell on page 69.
Determining cell reengineering
1.
Find the number of users for users in the first cell.
In the example shown in
Table 12: Example of a completed estimate table on
page 68
, the handset estimate is 11.6.
2. Determine the telephone types in the first cell.
In the example shown in
Table 12: Example of a completed estimate table on
page
68, the telephone type is H&W.
Site planning and hardware deployment
68 SIP DECT Fundamentals October 2012
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