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From The Free On-line Dictionary of Computing (05 January 2017) [foldoc]:
T-carrier system
A series of wideband digital data
transmission formats originally developed by the Bell System
and used in North America and Japan.
The basic unit of the T-carrier system is the DS0, which has
a transmission rate of 64 Kbps, and is commonly used for one
voice circuit.
Originally the 1.544 megabit per second T1 format carried 24
pulse-code modulated, time-division multiplexed speech signals
each encoded in 64 kilobit per second streams, leaving 8
kilobits per second of framing information which facilitates
the synchronisation and demultiplexing at the receiver. T2
and T3 circuits channels carry multiple T1 channels
multiplexed, resulting in transmission rates of up to 44.736
Mbps.
The T-carrier system uses in-band signaling, resulting in
lower transmission rates than the E-carrier system. It uses
a restored polar signal with 303-type data stations.
Asynchronous signals can be transmitted via a standard which
encodes each change of level into three bits; two which
indicate the time (within the current synchronous frame) at
which the transition occurred, and the third which indicates
the direction of the transition. Although wasteful of line
bandwidth, such use is usually only over small distances.
T1 lines are made free of direct current signal components by
in effect capacitor coupling the signal at the transmitter and
restoring that lost component with a "slicer" at the receiver,
leading to the description "restored polar".
[Telecommunications Transmission Engineering, Vol. 2,
Facilities, AT&T, 1977].
(2001-04-08)