Abstract:
A method for conveying over telephone lines digitized voice signals simultaneously with digital data signals by means of a communication system, having a transmitter having a discrete multi-tone unit yielding a plurality of carriers of different frequency, several of which are assigned to the voice signals and others to the data signals. The carriers for transmitting voice are selected on the basis of their signal-to-noise ratio characteristics, which carriers can be reallocated dynamically to data transmission. A first tone ordering circuit assigns data streams to data carriers, and a second tone ordering circuit assigns voice streams to voice carriers. Each carrier is modulated by QAM modulation, the data carriers by a sequence of QAM symbols representing data and the voice carriers by a sequence of QAM symbols representing voice. QAM modulation is carried out by a first constellation encoder that modulates the data carriers and a second constellation encoder that modulates the voice carriers.

Description:
FIELD OF THE INVENTION  
         [0001]    This invention relates generally to a method and to a communication system based thereon for simultaneously conveying over standard telephone lines both voice and digital data signals, and in particular to an arrangement in which these signals are conveyed by means of an asymmetric digital subscriber line over a single twisted pair telephone cable.  
         BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION  
         [0002]    In carrying out voice communication by means of a conventional telephone network, the telephone set at the premise of each subscriber is linked by a twisted pair cable to the central office of the network. This office acts to interconnect all subscribers to the network so that they can communicate with each other via twisted pair cables.  
           [0003]    In this modern age of information, a typical telephone subscriber has available at his residence or office not only a telephone set but also a fax machine, a desktop computer and other electronic devices capable of transmitting and receiving digital data to and from other telephone subscribers in the network as well as to Internet websites and other sites capable of processing digital data.  
           [0004]    In order to be able to transform an existing telephone network which conveys voice signals over twisted pair lines into a multi-media network it is known to provide for tis purpose as asymmetric digital subscriber line (ADSL). An ADSL is a point-to-pint connected circuit which affords each subscriber to the network with a high-speed communication link that in addition to the usual telephone services affords many other services such as video-on-demand, conference video phone communication and high-definition TV as well as a full range of Internet services.  
           [0005]    When an ADSL is associated with a telephone network, it then becomes necessary to place a modem at either end of the existing twisted pair telephone line conveying the voice signals. This modem serves to establish the following three channels of information:  
           [0006]    Channel A: a high-seed downstream channel running form the central office of the network to an end user.  
           [0007]    Channel B: a medium-speed upstream channel running from the end user to the central office.  
           [0008]    Channel C: a conventional voice channel, commonly referred to as POTS, meaning Plain Old, Telephone Service.  
           [0009]    In this arrangement, voice channel A is segregated from data channels A and B by bandpass filters to assure uninterrupted voice telephone service even in the event of a circuit failure in the ADSL system.  
           [0010]    Currently available are two ADSL systems which comply with current regulatory telephone standards, namely: a split-type ASL and a splitterless type. In an ADSL of the split-type, also known as a Full-Rate type, the voice signals which are produced concurrently with the digital data signals are split therefrom and conveyed to the central station of the network over a twisted par cable, whereas the data signals are conveyed over another twisted pair cable.  
           [0011]    This split is effected by a POTS splitter placed at each end of the telephone line, the splitter being provided with a low bandpass filter to permit only voice signals to be supplied to one of the twisted pair lines, and a high bandpass filter to permit only digital line signals to be fed to the other twisted pair cable.  
           [0012]    As ADSL of the split type cannot be installed i residences or offices having the usual two-wire internal telephone line wiring. It is necessary in order to install a split-type ADSL in this facilities to provide an additional two wire line running from the modem to the splitter. Such rewiring substantially raises the expenses incurred in installing an ADSL system.  
           [0013]    In a multiple apartment building the incoming telephone lines go into a central box in the building, from which box extend telephone lines leading to each apartment. The cost of rewiring this building to accommodate a split-type ADSL system could be considerable and possibly prohibitive.  
           [0014]    Existing ADSL systems of the “splitterless” type which function to convey both digital data and voice signals simultaneously over a single twisted pair telephone cable include either a POTS splitter to separate the voice form the data or a POTS Line Card for this purpose. These are relatively expensive components.  
           [0015]    In order to obviate the need to include a POTS splitter in the digital signal processor of ADSL, U.S. Pat. No. 5,889,856 discloses an Integrated ADSL Line Card capable of processing both data and voice signals on the same board. But while this ADSL Line Card reduces the total cost of the unit, the card is difficult to apply, for it must transmit a composite signal containing both the high-frequency digital data and low-frequency voice signals by way of the same driver circuits.  
           [0016]    Another limitation of existing ADSL splitterless systems is that they include an interleaving device which introduces substantial delays in the transmission of digital data.  
           [0017]    However the greatest practical drawback of existing splitter ADSL system is that it gives the telephone subscriber only a single baseband channel for voice communication. In many cases, this signal channel falls short of satisfying the subscriber&#39;s voice communication requirements.  
         SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION  
         [0018]    In view of the foregoing, the main object of this invention is to provide a method and a communication system for carrying out the method adapted to convey simultaneously voice and digital data signals over a single twisted pair telephone cable whereby an existing telephone network can without rewiring be transformed into a multi-media network.  
           [0019]    More particularly, an object of this invention is to provide a system of the above type which includes a splinterless asymmetric digital subscriber line (ADSL) that obviates the drawbacks of prior art a ADSL system.  
           [0020]    A significant feature of an ADSL system in accordance with the invention is that it incorporates therein a discrete multi-tone (DMT) unit producing a plurality of carriers having different frequencies, some of which are modulated by digitized voice signals, other carriers being modulated by digital data signals, which voice and data-modulated carriers are conveyed over a common twisted pair telephone line without interference therebetween.  
           [0021]    Briefly stated, a method in accordance with the invention and a communication system based thereon for conveying simultaneously both voice and data signals via a common twisted pair line includes a splinterless ADSL having incorporated therein a discrete multi-tone (DMT) unit. The DMT unit yields a plurality of carriers some of which are assigned to and modulated by digitized voice signals, others being assigned to and being modulated by digital data signals.  
           [0022]    The DMT carriers for carrying the voice signals are selected on the basis of their signal-to-noise ratio characteristics and they can be reallocated dynamically for data transmission. A first tone ordering circuit assigns data streams to data carriers, and a second tone ordering circuit assigns voice streams to voice carriers. Each carrier is modulated by QAM modulation, the data carriers by a sequence of QAM symbols representing data, the voice carriers by a sequence of QAM symbols representing vice. QAM modulation is carried out by a first constellation encoder that modulates the data carriers and a second constellation encoder that modulates the voice carriers. 
       
    
    
     BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS  
       [0023]    For a better understanding of the invention as well as other objects and features thereof, reference is made to the annexed drawings wherein:  
         [0024]    [0024]FIG. 1 is a block diagram of a prior art ADSL system of the splinterless type;  
         [0025]    [0025]FIG. 2 is a flow chart of the processing steps carried out in a prior art system;  
         [0026]    [0026]FIG. 3 shows the frequency spectrum of the upstream and downstream carriers in the prior art system;  
         [0027]    [0027]FIG. 4 is a frequency spectrum graph showing bit loading of carriers in a system in accordance with the invention;  
         [0028]    [0028]FIG. 5 is a time base diagram illustrating synchronization of the voice encoder with the frame rate of the ADSL system;  
         [0029]    [0029]FIG. 6A schematically illustrates a constellation pattern of PCM words and a derived QAM vector;  
         [0030]    [0030]FIG. 6B schematically illustrates the bit significance in a PCM word derived from a voice channel;  
         [0031]    [0031]FIG. 7 is a block diagram showing a subcentral station and a central station in an ADSL system in accordance with a preferred embodiment of the invention;  
         [0032]    [0032]FIG. 8A is a flow chart illustrating a sequence of data processing events in this preferred embodiment;  
         [0033]    [0033]FIG. 8B is a flow chart illustrating a sequence of the voice processing events in this preferred embodiment;  
         [0034]    [0034]FIG. 9 is a flow chart illustrating the sequence of the voice processing events in a multi-voice channel in the transmitter;  
         [0035]    [0035]FIG. 10A is a flow chart illustrating the sequence of processing events in data processing in he transmitter;  
         [0036]    [0036]FIG. 10B is a block diagram illustrating dynamic allocation of void carriers;  
         [0037]    [0037]FIG. 11 is the incorporation of a PCM digital telephone signal from a frame relay;  
         [0038]    [0038]FIG. 12 schematically illustrates the incorporation into several channels of the system a data stream; and  
         [0039]    [0039]FIG. 13 is a block diagram illustrating the incorporation of several voice channels at a subscribers premise.  
     
    
     DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION  
       [0040]    Prior Art: An ADSL system for carrying out a communication method in accordance with the invention is of the splinterless type, thereby making it possible to convey both voice and data signals over a single twisted pair telephone cable.  
         [0041]    Inasmuch as the present system is an improvement over a prior art ADSL system of the splinterless type and uses many of the same components, the present system and its advantages over an existing system can best be understood by first considering the prior art system illustrated FIGS. 1, 2 and  3 .  
         [0042]    [0042]FIG. 1 is a block diagram illustrating an existing splitterless ADSL system  101 . The subscriber premises is connected to a central office  109  (CO) by a twisted wire pair  107  telephone cable  107 . At subscriber premises  103 , the twisted wire pair  107  is connected to a fax machine  121 , to a telephone set  123 , and to a remote ATU-R  105  (ADSL Transceiver Unit), using for this purpose internal telephone lines  117 . ATU-R unit  105  is connected directly to telephone line  117  and to a PC  125  (personal computer) by an Ethernet cable  124 . The fax machine  121  and telephone set,  123  are connected to telephone line  117  by microfilter  219 . Central Office  109  includes an ATU-C  111  (CO ADSL Transceiver Unit) a POTS-splitter  131 , a POTS Line Card  108 , a data switch  135 , a telephone switch  137 , a data network  115 , and a telephone network  113 .  
         [0043]    The subscriber twisted pair  107  is coupled to POTS-splitter  131  which separates data and voice signals. The data signals pass through data switch  137  to ATU-C transceiver  111 . Voice signals from voice network  113  go through a POTS Line Card  108  via telephone switch  137 .  
         [0044]    Voice signals are conveyed via telephone switch  137  and through POTS splitter  131  as baseband signals from which they are applied to twisted pair  107 . Data signals conveyed through data switch  135  are modulated in a frequency range higher than that of the base band POTS signals and are applied through POTS splitter  131  to twisted pair wire  107 . Since the data communication signals are transmitted in a frequency range different from that of the voice communication signals, FDM (frequency-division-multiplexing) makes possible simultaneous transmission of both POTS signal and data communications over the same single twisted pair  107 .  
         [0045]    [0045]FIG. 2 is a flow chart of the processing steps carried out in an ATU (ADSL Transceiver Unit) reference in ITU (International Telecommunications Union) recommendation G.992.2, referring to the splitterless ADSL.  
         [0046]    Data  153  is processed in ATM Cell Formation step  151  by an interface port resulting in a sequence of ATM (Synchronous Transfer Mode) cells. In step  155  the cells are RS (Reed—Solomon) encoded and scrambled. The ADSL system employs FEC (Forward Error Correction) based on RS encoding to reduce the effect of the impulse noise. In step  157  an interleaver mixes data bits to protect the encoded data cells from impulse noise. In step  159  tone ordering is calculated for the interleaved encoded data and the data is distributed amount 128 tones (carriers) of multitone line signal. In step  161 , modulation parameters are calculated by a constellation encoder and a gain scaler for each carrier. In step  163  the modulation parameters of all carriers are transformed by an IDFT (Inverse Discrete Fourier Transformation) processing to produce digital samples of DMT (Discrete MultiTone) signals. In step  165  the digital samples are written into an output buffer. In step  167  a DTA (Digital To Analog) converter transforms the digital samples to analog DMT line signal.  
         [0047]    The ADSL is an adaptive system. During an initialization Communication phase, an ADSL system measures the SNR (signal-to-noise ratio) for each carrier and defines the number of bits that may be loaded on the carrier.  
         [0048]    [0048]FIG. 3 illustrates the frequency spectrum of the ADSL carriers, the figure showing a typical graph of ADSL downstream and upstream carriers (shown on the graph as bars) bit per symbol loading. In practice, for cable length of up to 9000 feet, many carriers may be loaded with a high number of bits per symbol (up to 12-14 bits).  
         [0049]    As previously pointed out, an existing ADSL system of the type shown in FIG. 1 has several drawbacks. The most serious of which is that the system provides the telephone subscriber with only a single base band voice channel which for many subscribers is inadequate. And the inclusion of a POTS Line Card in this prior art system adds substantially to its cost.  
         [0050]    The Invention: In a method in accordance with the invention and in a slinterless ADSL system for carrying out this method to convey voice and data signals simultaneously out single twisted pair telephone cable, the disadvantage of prior art systems are overcome, particularly in regard to voice transmission. Instead of a single voice channel, an ADSL system in accordance with the invention has inserted therein several high quality telephone channels.  
         [0051]    Them multi-tone modulation technique included in a system in accordance with the invention acts to separate the available bandwidth in to a multiplicity of distinct carriers, each functioning as a communication channel. This makes it possible to convey voice and digital data signals simultaneously on different channels. In practice the DMT-ADSL splinterless system for short distances such as 9000 feet can support up to 8 telephone channels upstream with a bit rate of up to 250 Kb/s, and downstream with a bit rate of up to 6 Mb/s.  
         [0052]    [0052]FIG. 4 illustrates the frequency spectrum of a typical graph of ADSL downstream and upstream carrier bit-loading in a system in accordance with the invention. In the upper graph in FIG. 4, the frequency of the upstream carriers is plotted against the maximum bits per symbol. In the lower graph, the frequency of the downstream carriers is plotted against the maximum bits per symbol.  
         [0053]    Two upstream carriers and two downstream carriers are utilized for one voice channel and are hereinafter called “voice carriers” (VCs). The VCs are not determined before the onset of communication. During an initialization process in the ADSL system measures the (SNR) signal-to-noise ratio for each carrier and defines the number of bits that may be loaded on respective carriers. Two downstream and two upstream carriers having the highest SNR which are able to carry more than 8-bits are then assigned for voice transmission. The selected carriers can carry more than 8 bits for each symbol, nevertheless are only loaded with 8 bit symbols, as can be seen in black shading in the graph.  
         [0054]    The assignment of VCs does not interfere with the ADSL function because the working standard does not imply a definite number of carriers for use in data transmission, a situation which likewise allows disabling of some carriers with low SNR by the ADSL transmitter during the intialization process. In accordance with the present invention VCs assigned by the ADSL system are not used for data transmission. The ADSL system can therefore utilize the other DMT carriers for data transmission in accordance with G.992.2 standard.  
         [0055]    Before being transmitted, a voice signal is converted by a PCM (Pulse Code Modulation) encoder into a 8-bit digital words with frequency of 8 kHz in accordance with existing standard for PCM telephone system (ANSI T 1  or E 1 ).  
         [0056]    Referring to FIG. 5 shown therein is a time base diagram illustrating the correlation between the PCM encoded voice signal and the DMT frames. Because the sampling rate of the PCM encoder is 8 kHz and the DMT-ADSL frames shown in row A operate as a frequency of 4 kHz, it is necessary to use two upstream VCs and two downstream VCs for transmitting one telephone channel. In row B, voice signal samples  2  and  3  are assigned to tow different VCs in row C 1  and row C 2  which correspond exactly to the DMT-ADSL frames in row A. The PCM encoder is therefore synchronized with the DMT-ADSL frame rate.  
         [0057]    Each carrier of the DMT-ADSL system undergoes modulation by a sequence of QAM symbols. This is achieved by operating a QAM constellation encoder. Each 8-bit PCM word is transformed in to 8 bit QAM vector, following which odd QAM symbols modulate a first VC, and even QAM symbols modulate a second VC.  
         [0058]    [0058]FIG. 6A illustrates the derivation of a QAM vector in the context of a constellation encoder according to the present invention. The constellation encoder calculates real and imaginary components of the QAM vector using odd bits of PCM word for the real component of the vector, and even bits of PCM word for the imaginary component of this vector.  
         [0059]    As can be seen in FIG. 6B, more significant bits of a PCM word correspond to the more significant bits of real and imaginary components of the respective QAM vector. Errors may be produced by channel noise only in the less significant bits of the PCM words because of the short distance between consecutive QAM vectors. As a result, errors in low significant bits of PCM words produce only small additional noise in the voice signal. As a consequence, the present invention promotes a high quality voice signal transmission over an ADSL system without implementing error correction coding and without significant delay. An ADSL communication system i accordance with the invention may be extended to effect simultaneous transmission of several voice channels.  
         [0060]    The Basic System: FIG. 7 illustrates schematically a communication system  201  in accordance with a preferred embodiment of the present invention. A subscriber premise  103  is coupled to the CO (central office)  109  of a telephone network by a twisted wire pair telephone cable  107 . At the subscriber&#39;s premise  103 , the twisted wrie pair  107  is connected to ATU-R transceiver unit  205 . A fax machine  121  and a telephone set  123  are connected to a voice interface port  203  of ATU-R  205 , using for this purpose internal telephone lines  117 . A PC  125  (personal computer) is connected to a digital interface port  204  of ATU-R  205  by an Ethernet cable  124 .  
         [0061]    Central Station  109  contains an ATU-C transceiver unit  211 , a data switch  135 , a telephone switch  137 , a data network  115 , and a telephone network  113 . A subscriber twisted pair cable  107  is coupled directly to ATU-C  211  and carrier data and voice on (DMT) discrete multi-tone line carriers. Data signals flow from data interface port  209  of ATU-C  211  to the data switch  135 . Voice signals flow from voice interface port  207  of ATU-C  211  to telephone switch  137 . Telephone switch  137  is coupled to telephone network  113  whereas data switch  135  is coupled to data network  115 .  
         [0062]    The communication system  201  shown in FIG. 7 does not entail an expensive POTS-splitter nor a POTS Line Card. In accordance with the present invention, voice signals are transmitted in digital form using a portion of the capacity of the ADSL link. System  201  uses for transmitting voice and data signals different carriers (VCs and “data carriers” respectively) of the DMT-ADSL line signal.  
         [0063]    Data Processing: FIG. 8A is a flow chart of the data processing events implemented in an ATU transmitter (ADSL Transceiver Unit) according to the present invention. Data  153  is processed in step  151  by an interface port resulting in a sequence of ATM (Asynchronous Transfer Mode) cells. In step  155  these cells are scrambled and RS encoded. In step  157 , an interleaver mixes data its to protect the encoded blocks of data from impulse noise. In step  263  tone ordering is calculated for the interleaved encoded data and the data is distributed to 126 tones or carriers of the multitone line signal.  
         [0064]    In step  265 , modulation parameters are calculated by a constellation encoder and a gain scaler for each data carrier. In step  163  the modulation parameters of all carriers are transformed by IDFT (Inverse Discrete Fourier Transformation) processing to produce digital samples of the DMT (Discrete MultiTone) signal. In step  165  the digital samples are written into an output buffer. In step  167  a DTA (Digital To Analog) converter transforms the digital samples to an analog DMT line signal.  
         [0065]    Voice signal  251  undergoes a different set of processing steps. FIG. 8B shows schematically the sequence of these processing events within the ATU. In step  252 , the signal is amplified and filtered by a voice interface port. In step  257  the voice signal is transformed by PCM encoding into a 64 kbit/sec sequence of 8-bit PCM words, the sampling rate of the PCM encoder is 8 kHz. It uses for this purpose standard A-Law OR μ-Law coding, identical to the routine used by the PCM telephone systems ANSI T 1  or E 1 . In step  259 , tone ordering is calculated for the PCM word stream, and the PCM stream is distributed between two VCs of the DMT SIGNAL. In step  261  each 8-bit PCM word is transformed into one 8-bit QAM symbol by a VCs constellation encoder and gain-scaler. A fixed 8-bit loading on each “voice carrier” is then provided. In step  355  the sampling of the PCM encoder is synchronized with the frames of the DMT line signal.  
         [0066]    Data and multiple voice channels: An ADSL transmitter in accordance with the invention can support a number of telephone channels. Data is processed in the ATU transmitter along the same lines set forth in FIG. 8A. Data  153  is processed in step  151  by an interface port resulting in a sequence of ATM cells. In step  155  the cells are scrambled and RS encoded. In step  157  an interleaver mixes data bits to protect the encoded blocks of data from impulse noise. In step  263  tone ordering is calculated for the interleaved encoded data and the data is distributed to data carriers of the multitone line signal. In step  265  modulation parameters are calculated by a constellation encoder and a gain scaler for each carrier. In step  267  the modulation parameters of all the carriers are transformed by IDFT processing to produce digital samples of DMT (Discrete MultiTone) signal. In step  269  the digital samples are written into an output buffer. In step  272  a DTA converter transforms the digital samples to analog DMT line signal.  
         [0067]    [0067]FIG. 9 illustrates the sequence of processing event which a voice signal that is one of several incoming signals undergoes in the ATU transmitter, starting with a voice signal  251 A flowing into an individual interface port. In step  252 , the signal is amplified and filtered by one of the interface ports available. In step  257  the voice signal is transformed by PCM encoding into a 64 kbit/sec sequence of 8-bit PCM words, the sampling rate of the PCM coder is 8 kHz using for this purpose standard A-Law or μ-Law coding, much the same as is used by the PCM telephone systems ANSI T 1  or E 1 .  
         [0068]    In step  259 , tone ordering is calculated for the PCM word stream, and each 64 kb/sec PCM stream is distributed between two VCs or DMT signal. In step  260  parity bytes are calculated by an RS encoder for PCM words of all the voice channels, which are then loaded on an additional “voice carrier”. In step  261  each 8-bit PCM word is transformed into one 8-bit QAM symbol by a VCs constellation encoder and gain-scaler. A fixed 8-bit loading on each “voice carrier” is consequently provided. In step  278  the sampling of the PCM encoder is synchronized with the frames of the DMT line signal.  
         [0069]    Data communication over silent voice carriers: FIG. 10A illustrates the sequence of processing events involved in data processing within the ATU transmitter in accordance with another embodiment of the present invention. Data  153  is processed in step  151  by an interface port resulting in a sequence of ATM cells. In step  155  the cells are scrambled and RS encoded. In step  157  an interleaver mixes data bits to protect the encoded blocks of data from impulse noise. In step  380 , the interleaved data steam is distributed between “data carriers” and silent VCs.  
         [0070]    To illustrate the way in which the allocation of data carriers is interactively changed, reference is now made to the embodiment of the invention shown in FIG. 10B which illustrates the voice processing block layout in a dynamic VCs allocating procedure. A carrier allocator  301  receives allocation instructions from a processor  303 . This processor conducts periodic analyses of the voice signals at voice interface port  253 A. Upon the identification of a silent voice channel, it instructs carrier allocator  301  to reassign the respective VCs to data communication, in addition to those assigned to data exclusively. Interface ports  253 A and the others, amplify and filter the corresponding voice signals respectively. PCM encoders such as  257 A sample the voice signal coming from the corresponding voice interface port at a sampling rate of the 8 kHz, transforming the analog voice signal into a 65-kbit/sec sequence of 8-bit PCM words. Each PCM encoder uses standard A-Law or μ-Law coding, the same used in PCM telephone systems ANSI T 1  or E 1 . The PCM words of active voice channels pass then to carrier allocator  301  and then to VCs tone-ordering block  259  that distributes each 64 kbit/sec PCM word stream of busy telephone channels between two VCs of DMT signal. Carrier allocator  301  passes on to the “voice carriers” tone ordering block  259  only those PCM signals originating from such PCM encoders that are connected to active voice interface ports. Inactive PCM coders that are not currently in use by telephone lines are not connected to “voice carriers” tone ordering block  259 .  
         [0071]    A RS encoder calculates parity bytes for PCM words of active voice channels and puts these parity bytes on additional “voice carrier”. A VCs constellation encoder and gain-scaler transforms each 8-bit PCM word into one 8-bit QAM symbol and provides fixed 8-bit loading on each “voice carrier”. Sampling rate of each PCM coder is synchronized with the frame rate of DMT line signal.  
         [0072]    A communication system in accordance with this embodiment of the invention can potentially transmit more data because a portion of the telephone channels which is not busy, for example during off-peak hours, can be utilized for communicating data coming from data interleaver  357 .  
         [0073]    Incorporating a digital voice channel of the CO: An ATU-C transmitter in accordance with the invention is well adapted to incorporate electronic communication equipment of the CO, such as PCM telephone switch (frame relay). According to a preferred embodiment of the invention, a stream of PCM telephone words of the CO is readily processed and communicated through the ADSL system. Data is processed in the same way as in example 1. FIG. 11 to which reference is now made, illustrates schematically the incorporation of a PCM digital telephone signal form a frame relay. A telephone signal comes in form frame relay  282  in the form of a 64 kbit/s PCM stream. It is sent to an input of a PCM interface  283  that synchronizes the DMT signal frames with the 8-bit PCM words. The 64 kb/s PCM stream is then distributed between two VCs or DMT signal as in a previous example. To synchronize the PCM stream with the DMT signal frames, a main 8-kHz clock  285  of the frame relay is connected to the synchronizer  255  and to the PCM interface  283 . The synchronizer  255  is also connected to the ADSL  400  to synchronize between the data and the T 1  voice source.  
         [0074]    Incorporating several digital voice channel of the CO: An ATU-C transmitter in accordance with the invention is well adapted to incorporating electronic communication equipment of the CO, such as PCM telephone switch (frame relay) having an ANSI T 1  interface. According to a preferred embodiment of the invention, several steams of PCM telephone words of the CO are readily processed and communicated through the ADSL system.  
         [0075]    Data is processed in the same way as in the first example. FIG. 12 illustrates schematically the incorporation of a T 1  format data stream containing several digital telephone channels into the ADSL system. First, the data stream  271  coming from a frame relay in T 1  format is split into several channels by a T 1  interface  277 . Each such channel carries a sequence of 8 bit PCM words at a bit rate of 64 kb/s of a respective telephone channel. In the next step, each PCM stream  279  A, B, . . . is modulated by VCs DMT modulator  259 , that distributes each 64 kb/sec PCM stream between two VCs of DMT signal. In the next step, A VCs QAM modulator and gain-scaler  261  transforms each 8-bit PCM word in one 8-bit QAM symbol and provides a fixed 80-bit loading on each one of the VCs. A synchronization block  255  synchronizes T 1  system clock with the frames of the DMT signal.  
         [0076]    Incorporation of several voice channels at a subscriber premise: Data is processed and transmitted in an ATU-R in the same way as described in the first example 1. Referring now to FIG. 13, it will be seen that voice channel  251 A is connected to a voice interface port  253 A which is one of several identical ports, where the necessary amplifying and filtering is performed. A PCM encoder  257 A is connected to the respective voice interface ports  253 A. Each PCM on the encoders has a sampling rate of 8 kHz and transforms an analog voice signal into a 64-kbit/sec sequence of 8-bit PCM words. The PCM coders use standard A-Law or μ-Law coding, which is the same one used in PCM telephone systems T 1  or E 1 .  
         [0077]    All PCM encoders are connected to a PCM concentrator  309 . The output of concentrator  309  is connected to a VCs tone-ordering block  259  that distributes each 64 kbit/sec PCM stream between two VCs of DMT signal. A single PCM concentrator  309  is able to support several telephone channels simultaneously. Thus, for example, 8 PCM coders may be connected to one PCM concentrator that uses only four voice carriers to provide two telephone channels simultaneously.  
         [0078]    While there has been described and illustrated methods for simultaneously conveying both data and voice sequels over a twisted pair telephone line and various systems for carrying out these method, it must be understood that many changes may be made thereon without departing from the spirit of the claims.