To really make it work, they will have to have signal logging within the set,
with the transmitter routinly retransmitting
info,
so that the receiver can " toss" bad packets, or a duplicate one if the
preceeding one was sucessfully processed & wait for the next one to process.
This would cut down on fidelity, but for poor reception conditions, would make
the
" dead air" less noticeable, giving you less fidelity or no stereo or whatever
feature you toss..
( just my 2 cents worth.)
In article , "kev" writes:
I use an old Kenwood R1000 with a downconverter board to listen to DRM. When
you have a strong signal the audio quality is breathtaking for shortwave and
its amazing to hear transmissions in stereo. It doesn't take much QRM or
fading however before you get dropouts and lost audio and in practice you
need a strong signal to get reliable DRM results.
Kev
|