Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#22
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Ian Jackson wrote:
Here they went from 1 megawatt to about 50 kilowatt (ERP). And then there are several programmes on one transponder, instead of one analog programme. This gives significant savings in power. That's quite s drop in power. In the UK, it seems that the digitals are being run at 1/5th of what the analogues were. Certainly the main transmitter for London, Crystal Palace, was 1MW erp, but is now 200kW on the main six digital muxes. [There are also a couple more running around 10dB less.] When received with a similar quality setup as was required for longer distance analog reception, the power is adequate. Of course it does not allow indoor reception at 50km distance, but in the areas where indoor reception is advertised there are local transmitters. "the countryside" still needs a roof-mounted yagi, but they always did. (I think the spec was a yagi at least 1.5m above the roof and 12m above the ground) Of course the 1MW was peak envelope power (at the sync pulses), with a mean power a lot less than that (for typical content). |
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 |