The 300 bit/s modems used audio frequency-shift keying
to send data. In this system the stream of 1s and 0s in computer data
is translated into sounds which can be easily sent on the phone lines.
In the Bell 103 system, the originating modem sends 0s by playing a
1,070 Hz tone, and 1s at 1,270 Hz, with the answering modem
transmitting its 0s on 2,025 Hz and 1s on 2,225 Hz. These frequencies
were chosen carefully, they are in the range that suffer minimum
distortion on the phone system and not harmonics of each other.
In the 1,200 bit/s and faster systems, phase-shift keying
was used. In this system the two tones for any one side of the
connection are sent at similar frequencies as in the 300 bit/s systems,
but slightly out of phase. Voiceband modems generally remained at 300
and 1,200 bit/s (V.21 and V.22) into the mid-1980s. A V.22bis
2,400-bit/s system similar in concept to the 1,200-bit/s Bell 212
signaling was introduced in the U.S., and a slightly different one in
Europe. The limited available frequency range meant the symbol rate of
1,200 bit/s modems was still only 600 baud (symbols per second). The bit
rate increases were achieved by defining 4 or 8 distinct symbols, which
allowed the encoding of 2 or 3 bits per symbol instead of only 1. The
use of smaller shifts had the drawback of making each symbols more
vulnerable to interference, but improvements in phone line quality at
the same time helped compensate for this. By the late 1980s, most modems
could support all of these standards and 2,400-bit/s operation was
becoming common.
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