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The 5G Migration That’s Already Happening: RAN Vendors Launching 5G-Era Base Stations

Ed Gubbins – Senior Analyst, Mobile Access Infrastructure

Summary Bullets:

Everywhere you look, people are talking about the coming migration to 5G mobile networks. A much less talked about – but perhaps no less challenging – transition is the one radio access network (RAN) equipment vendors are making from base stations that were optimized for LTE to ones designed to lead operators into the 5G era. Yet, in the waiting period before 5G’s true arrival, marketing new base stations aimed at future networks alongside the current generation of base stations is a balancing act akin to stepping from an unmoored boat to a pier.

At Mobile World Congress earlier this year, Huawei promoted a new baseband unit that it had already been marketing quietly for several months. The vendor claimed that the BBU5900, part of the broader CBS5900 base station, would embody the CloudRAN vision of 5G networks that Huawei had set forth in 2016, in that it was software-upgradeable to a split architecture with virtualized control functions. In other words, some control functions could be run on commodity servers, whether Huawei’s or another vendor’s, driving down costs and increasing network efficiency by centralizing the coordination of large numbers of radios.

At Mobile World Congress and in conversations thereafter, Huawei said the new base station would be available at the end of 2017, though the vendor had previously indicated availability starting Q4 2016. As for when exactly that vRAN upgrade option in particular would be available, it was tough to get a firmer answer than “after 2017.”

As 2017 progressed, Huawei eventually revealed that market requirements had changed as it was developing the CBS5900 and the operators (or operator) which had expressed interest in that partially virtual architecture had subsequently had second thoughts.

This summer, Huawei began marketing (quietly, again) a new base station: the BTS5900 (or, in main/remote form, the DBS5900), which uses the same BBU5900 debuted at MWC, with increased capacity and other features – but without those split-off virtualized control functions. The new gear is compelling, to be sure, but doesn’t amplify the CloudRAN story so central to Huawei’s 5G messaging the way the CBS5900 did (the ‘C’ stood for ‘cloud,’ after all).

Of course, Huawei isn’t alone in facing the hurdles of introducing and messaging a new base station in the run-up to 5G:

These moves have highlighted a few lessons that may be applied to similar network infrastructure solution transitions:

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