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![]() "Richard Clark" wrote in message ... On Thu, 08 Nov 2007 00:40:50 -0000, MRW wrote: How is 19.2Mb/sec calculated? It's called digital compression. 73's Richard Clark, KB7QHC http://www.maxim-ic.com/appnotes.cfm/appnote_number/750 has an interesting chart that shows the analog bandwidth requirements for various resolutions, including the 1080i and 720p HD formats, which are both shown as 26 MHz. This is misleading, however, since digitizing the signal results in data rates in the range of 1 Gb/s to 1.6 Gb/sec before compression, according to one source. The compression algorithm can be "tweaked" to put the original program into almost any bandwidth. (The US Navy's "TV-Direct-to-Sailors" puts three TV programs into a 3.6 Mbps data stream. http://www.sia.org/2007DoDSatcomWork...y/DoD/Navy.ppt I've seen it and it's OK.) Most compression algorithms are termed "lossy" because they lose some of the original data. The resulting deficiencies, called "artifacts" may be visible, depending on the amount of compression, the observer and the program material. There are several modulation methods which will all put about the same data rate into a 6 MHz-wide channel. |
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