Manual

P ack et B T S shutdown procedures Chapter 3: R eference Procedures P erformed A t OMCR
Procedure 3 -2 Shutdown site signaling functions procedure for a pack et B T S
(Continued)
5
This step edits the REDIRECT parameters so that the Global Service Redirect
Message to be broadcast on the paging channel redirects all subscribers away from
the BTS and onto a different BTS or system.
Enter the following command at the prompt:
omc-000000> EDIT BTS-<bts#> REDIRECT!
The system prompts to enter each command parameter value one at a
time. Answer the prompts in the following order with the entries shown:
<accolc0> enter Y , <accolc1> enter Y , . . . <accolc15> enter Y
(All Access Overload Classes must be set to yes to ensure that all subscribers are redirected.)
<returniffail> enter N
( Must be set to no to ensure that subscribers do not return if redirect is unsuccessful.)
<recordtype> enter 1 or 2
(A value of 2 will invoke REDIRECT2 which is used to
redirect subscribers to a CDMA channel at a neighbor site.
<expectedsid> enter 13
(Use the Area ID the subscriber units should expect to find on the system where they are
being redirected. This example uses 13. The valid range is 0–32767; the default is 0.)
<ignorecdma> enter Y
<sysordering> enter CUSTOM
(The system acquisition ordering value tells the mobiles the order to use when attempting to
obtain service on the different analog systems. V alid values are:
CUSTOM use custom system selection
AONL Y try the A system only
B ONL Y use the B system only
AFIRST try the A system first. If unsuccessful, try the B system
BFIRST try the B system first. If unsuccessful, try the A system
AORB try A or B. If unsuccessful, try the alternative system
CUSTOM is the default.)
<rotatetimer> enter 4
(Call processing continuously rotates in circular right-shifts, the Y/N values of Access
Overload Class Redirect Flags 0 to 9. V alues are shifted one flag at the end of the timer
period; then timer restarts. V alid values are 0–255; 4 is the default.)
Continued
3 -6 68P09283A64 -3
FOA SEP 2007