"Cecil Moore" wrote in message
...
Sal M. Onella wrote:
By the old TASO standards, you need over 40 dB s/n to get a nice
picture,
which requires a lot more peak RF power. By comparison, the digital
signal
needs only about 17 dB s/n.
What happens at a 12 dB s/n for both? That's probably
what happened here during Hurricane Ike.
--
73, Cecil http://www.w5dxp.com
Digital: No lock and no indication of trying to lock (which is provided on
some receivers)
Analog: Recognizable signal, possibly with sound, probably with no color
and so much snow as to be unwatchable.
For the analog experiance, I am relying on bench tests I did with a TV
servicing generator. For baseline, I advanced the RF amplitude just to the
point where I had a snow-free picture. Next, I added 10 dB attenuators and
noted the results with each addition.
One: observable snow, no big deal
Two: Objectionable snow, this ain't good
Three: horrible snow, I can't watch this.
Four: Is there even a picture?