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On 1 mayo, 13:43, _
wrote: ...and if so what can I do about it? I have a cobbled-together setup that almost works. I coach swimming, and I have a small video gadget that links to a Tivo and a TV via one of those video transmitters that you can get from ebay. I think it is a 1.2 gHz 50mw version. The kids swim and then watch, and having the Tivo means there's a continuous flow of action. The problem is that the picture quality is bad. I'm only 20 metres away and there is a direct line-of-sight from transmitter to reciever - ocassionally with a body or two in the way; but even without, there is considerable jumping and colour distortion and generally a bad picture. If I stand still at just about any distance I can find a place that gets a good picture, but moving - even turning - makes it change. The ceiling and the upper half of the inside walls of the pool are panelled with strips of aluminium sheathing - about 6 inches wide and 20 or more feet long. These are separated by about a 1-inch gap along the long edges, and mounted to a framework (which is mounted to concrete) with some sort of clip arrangement. This is a box about 220 feet long and 25 feet high. What's the best guess for improving the picture? More power? Different frequency? Antenna mounting (I could wear a beanie with it sticking up from the top - that'd be cool)? Hello, When the multi path effect only affects received signal strength, you can find many places with good reception and many with bad reception. Best thing is to try it in an empty swimming hall. Your environment is stable in that case. Move slowly 1"/s and see what happens. At 1.2 GHz (WL about 10", 0.25m), the distance between bad reception and good reception can be as low as some inches. 50mW is more then sufficient power for such an indoor application, so assuming reasonable receive and transmit antenna, increasing power will not help. You might switch to another channel or look to the picture with transmitter off to check for interference from a similar or other system sharing the same frequency. In case of severe multi path effects bad and good reception may alternate within a yard (1m). When in the good places the reception is noise free, signal will have sufficient strength. With severe multi path, where path via reflection can be many yards longer then the direct path, not only signal strength, but also received signal quality is affected (delay spread). In this case you will find few places with reasonable reception, even under good signal strength. Given your equipment (probably Frequency Modulated system with one receive antenna), a directional receive antenna may give improvement. The disadvantage is that you need a second person to have the antenna aimed at the transmitter (in case of moving setup). If this all is not possible and it must be wireless, you have to divert to multi antenna systems (space diversity) in combination with channel equalization or real wide band systems based on OFDM or other multi path resistant modulation scheme. Hope this helps you a bit. Wim PA3DJS www.tetech.nl please remove abc from the address in case of a direct reply. |
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