The data rate is just under 1Mbps. We're using ~480Kbps of it, TDMA, IIRC.
I am still trying to understand the RF-characteristics of the signal.
Is this direct TDMA like GSM mobile phone in which up to 8 handsets
share a common 200 kHz RF channel and each handheld sending the data
as a burst within the allocated time slot. This works well for GSM at
900 MHz and reasonably well at 1800 MHz, so with a significantly
larger bandwidth it should work well on 2G4.
Or are those individual signal time multiplexed into a single baseband
and the modulate a single spread spectrum "carrier".
How wide is the actual emission ? Asking in a different way, how many
(non-overlapping) RF channels can be selected ?
For SS, the spread signal (chip rate) should be one or two orders of
magnitude faster than the actual data.
It is (it's certainly not outside the dome, if that's what you mean). It's
been tried in the ceiling, on the field, in the stands... We've tried
directionals, omnis, amplified, padded, just about everything. One thing we
haven't done is separating the transmit and receive antennas (so they can be
padded differently). The solution, so far, is to abandon 2.4G, in favor or
900M, which works reasonably well (except for other system limitations - e.g.
bandwidth).
...been tried. We can get dome time just about anytime we need it.
A sports dome would be absolutely the last place I would use any ISM
band for any professional communication

.
Setting up your system before the event and everything seems to work
OK and there are plenty of SNR etc.
Then the huge public is admitted into the dome, each carrying one or
more ISM devices (Bluetooth, WLAN) etc. While with spread spectrum
emissions, you do not have a discrete frequency channel free/occupied
situation, but adding more and more spread spectrum devices into the
same frequency band will gradually increase the background noise level
and the SNR after despreading drops gradually, until the SNR drops too
low and the communication fails.
In the dome, the RF emitted from each device is bouncing around and
finally absorbed by some soft tissue (the spectators).
Sounds very much like NBFM (12.5/25 kHz BW) on 1.3 GHz (23 cm) that I
used a few decades ago.
As the theory predicts, a simple ground reflection will create a comb
filter like spectrum and for a specific narrow band signal channel,
there are deep nulls at very close distance from each other. Moving
just a meter and the signal drops several times. Stopping a car with a
fixed antenna at traffic light would almost always cause stopping at
the multipath null

. The only thing that helped, is moving the
antenna a few centimeters (spatial) or changing channel (frequency
diversity).
At highway speeds, the dropouts were so frequent (and short) that it
did not affect the readability of the speech (equivalent to
interleaving and ECC in digital communication).
It still sounds that you are suffering from a narrow band signal with
the RF field strength punctured by multipath nulls distributed close
to each other all over your area of interest. Of course, since some
data is lost, you must use quite a lot of error correction bits.
Since you are only using about half of the available capacity, why not
allocate the rest for ECC bits ? Since the multipath nulls create
burst errors, interleaving should be used to convert burst errors to
random errors that can then be corrected by ECC.
The problem with interleaving is that it adds delay, which is annoying
in two way conversation. As you said that the dropouts are frequent
(assuming several each second), this also means that they are short,
thus reducing the interleave delay needed.
Lock and negotiation takes longer than a single hop.
Those might be your worst problem.
I am still not sure what the emission is like. Do you first lock into
some direct sequence spread spectrum signal, then lock into TDMA frame
and finally lock to the individual signal ?
Or are each handset sending individual spread spectrum sequence during
short time slots in a TDMA way ?
I don't understand the
second question.
In a typical moving multipath situation, the signal is 80-95 % above
threshold and only 5-20 % below threshold. In an ideal receiver, the
recovery would be immediate and at least more than 80 % of the time
the signal would be good even with a single receiver. With diversity
reception with receivers, this time would be much closer to 100 %.
However, if a receiver takes more than 50 % of the good signal time to
relock, even two diversity receivers would not be enough to reach even
close to 100 % service times.