Duration: 1 Day
Description
Indoor wireless connectivity has become a critical element of modern communications infrastructure, supporting enterprise digitisation, passenger connectivity, public safety, operational radio and mission-critical services across buildings, campuses, venues, transport hubs and enclosed environments.
However, reliable indoor and enclosed-area coverage can be difficult to achieve. Building materials, complex layouts, tunnels, underground areas, multi-operator requirements, interference, capacity demand and operational resilience all influence the choice of radio solution.
Distributed Antenna Systems (DAS) provide a proven approach for extending and managing radio coverage and capacity across complex environments. This overview course introduces the role of Indoor DAS (iDAS), how different DAS architectures are used, how they compare with alternatives such as small cells, repeaters, radiating cable and private networks, and what should be considered when scoping, procuring or evaluating a deployment.
The course deliberately includes rail, transport and critical communications applications, including stations, depots, tunnels, TETRA/PMR environments, emergency services coverage, public mobile services, GSM-R/FRMCS migration context and future mission-critical broadband considerations. The emphasis is on practical awareness rather than detailed engineering design.
This programme is suitable as a standalone technical overview and as a progression route into the full Indoor DAS - Design, Evaluation, Measurement and Optimisation course for delegates who require deeper practical design and performance-analysis capability.
Course Contents:
- Indoor and Enclosed-Area Coverage Drivers
- iDAS Fundamentals and Architectures
- DAS Alternatives, Complements and Hybrid Solutions
- Scoping and Design Considerations
- Rail, Transport and Critical Communications Applications
- Evaluation, Measurement and Acceptance
- Modernisation and Next-Step Decisions