Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#11
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 17/03/2014 13:14, Jerry Stuckle wrote:
On 3/17/2014 3:45 AM, Jeff wrote: 7dBm is an absolutely colossal signal for a TV set. Even 0dBm is an absolutely colossal signal! Not in the United States. It was the minimum that the cable industry provides to the TV set. We are talking a signal 4.25Mhz wide signal, not SSB or CW. dBm is not a bandwidth dependant measurement such as CNR which is. Putting +7dBm into a tv receiver is madness, it would cause severe overload and inter mods. +7dBm is 50mW and that equates to about 61mV in a 75 ohm system which is an enormous signal. Jeff Wrong. TV's are made to handle at least 20 dbm. And cable tv companies must deliver at least 10 dbm to the premises. TV signals (at least in the U.S.) are not measured by CNR - they are measured by dbm. CNR is not important because the bandwidth does not change. Your insistence on using CNR shows you know nothing about how the industry measures signal strength. I have not insisted that CNR was used, it that was another poster who mentioned CNR, what I was pointing out was the error that you made in taking the 43db CNR value that was posted and then going on about dbMmlevels. I also dispute that televisions are made to handle +20dBm; that is 100mW far in excess of what a tv tuner can handle without overload!!!! +20dbmV may be but not +20dbm. Jeff |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Connecting coax shield to tower near top | Antenna | |||
High Quality {Low Noise} Coax Cable for Shortwave Listening (SWL) Antennas ? - - - Why Not Quad-Shield RG6 ! | Shortwave | |||
soldering coax shield | Equipment | |||
soldering coax shield | Homebrew | |||
soldering coax shield | Homebrew |