Skip to main content

Cellular coverage on trains to get boost

According to Ingo Flomer, director of Product Management of UK company Axell Wireless, UK transport secretary Patrick McLoughlin’s intention to upgrade the rail network to enable passengers to access high-speed mobile broadband does not go far enough to promote an integrated communications infrastructure that supports cellular (3G and 4G) coverage on-board trains. Flomer says the UK has significant technological hurdles to overcome to connect rail passengers to the cellular network. The coverage would ha
October 2, 2013 Read time: 2 mins
According to Ingo Flomer, director of Product Management of UK company 7510 Axell Wireless, UK transport secretary Patrick McLoughlin’s intention to upgrade the rail network to enable passengers to access high-speed mobile broadband does not go far enough to promote an integrated communications infrastructure that supports cellular (3G and 4G) coverage on-board trains.

Flomer says the UK has significant technological hurdles to overcome to connect rail passengers to the cellular network. The coverage would have to extend throughout the entire 14,480 kilometres of UK passenger and freight network, along with the notorious black spots found in cuttings and tunnels. UK rail operators, along with 5021 Network Rail, can overcome the particular logistical problems of installing cellular networks across such an extensive area.

There are also significant technical issues posed by modern train rolling stock. Radio frequency (RF) signals generally glance off the outside of multi-layered, metallic carriages, which results in a reduced level of RF signal propagation inside carriages and therefore, poor quality mobile coverage.

A distributed antenna system (DAS) enhances mobile phone reception in enclosed spaces such as train carriages or tunnels/metros, taking the signal either from a mobile operator’s base station or from an off-air repeater and amplifies it in hard to reach places such as tunnels.

For train operators, providing their passengers with a good cellular coverage on-board trains acts as a differentiator in a very competitive marketplace. They systems they choose to deploy should prepare them for coping with future technologies such as 4G, without having to replace equipment later down the line.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • UK railways to benefit from information upgrade
    January 3, 2013
    More than US$13.44 million funding will be spent by train companies to boost passenger information at stations across the UK. The funding will pay for a national roll-out to link customer information screens at stations to the latest live real time train information data, fed from a database developed and maintained by train companies. The upgrade will be rolled out in around 2,000 National Rail stations. The first stations will be switched on in summer 2014 and the whole project is anticipated to be comp
  • Houston’s Metro opts for Init upgrade
    November 24, 2022
    New contract will guarantee ease of travel for riders who do not use electronic payment
  • Huawei is accelerating intelligence
    April 9, 2025
    At MWC Barcelona 2025, Huawei released seven new smart transportation solutions and set out its philosophy for the use of AI to support safety and efficiency gains
  • Siemens to equip new metro line in Sofia
    March 30, 2016
    Metropolitan EAD, the metro operator in Sofia, Bulgaria, has commissioned a consortium of Siemens and the Polish train manufacturer Newag to equip the new metro line 3 in the city, which will create an 18 kilometre east-west link that will serve 18 stations. The order, valued at around US$158 million (EUR140 million), comprises the delivery of 20 Inspiro type metro trains and the Trainguard MT automatic train protection system, using wireless CBTC technology (communications-based train control) to provid