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![]() "Telamon" wrote in message ... In article , "David Eduardo" wrote: The general consensus as to why far less signal is about as effective has to do with noise. A digital signal can be correctly decoded even when there is noise just a few db below the signal itself. The claim here "can be correctly decoded even when there is noise just a few db below the signal itself" is no more possible than an analog signal can be heard a few dB over the noise floor. Now both these claims depend on the probability of the ratio of the instantaneous noise power over the instantaneous signal modulation power. The HD signal is digital. The noise is not, it is analog. As long as there is enough digital data to extract, the analog noise is not the issue. HD duplicates the same data on both sides of the carrier, so there is the ability to select the best data, much like diversity reception. And HD "dithers" in the case of small dropouts. This is a rational explanation based on the argument that the total bandwidth utilized by the digital mode may be better utilized over the analog mode but this depends on wether an analog radio output employing an envelope detector suffers when one side band degrades. Ask your engineering buddies. We are talking about the ability to receive a substantially intact digital data stream in an analog noise filled environment. This can be done with the noise floor just a few db below the digital data. In analog, the noise and the information you wish to recover are both analog and mix. So the signal has to be significantly, on the order of around 60 db, above the noise floor. So, tihe a difference of perhaps 57 db between digital and analog usability, low power on the digital can produce excellent results. BTW, I have been lead engineer for a group of a dozen stations, including building the transmitters and studio gear from scratch. I talk to our engineers often because we use technology to our advantage to create better radio stations. Analog requires something over a -57 db noise floor to be useful to the average listener, and something in the -60's for really nice FM reception. Arbitrary numbers that do not account for individual reception situations. Wrong. Analong noise and signal combine. Digital can be plucked out of the analog noise. And for analog, the noise has to be around -57 db or the average listener finds it noise and unlistenable. This is why below the 64 dbu contour of the average radio station there is essentially no listening... it is too noisy. All the engineers (and there are 8 of them for our 5 signals) believed, in conclusion, that the determining factor on usability on an analog signal is also noise, which is why in LA we get no listeing outside the 64 dbu on FM and about the 10 to 12 mv/m daytime and the 15 mv/m night on AM. OK it is fine to set limits on what is considered good or bad signal to noise but that does not change the fact that when the signal to noise is small both HD and analog are not easy to listen too. The HD digital stream can be picked out of the analog noise. The analog signal becomes a part of it and is inseparabble. The reality is that the HD data can be extracted and DACed when the noise is only a few db below the signal itself. What do you mean by "DACed." If you mean digital to analog converter I hope you understand that every time an analog signal goes through the process of analog to digital conversion at the transmitter and then digital to analog in the receiver that a set of errors and distortion is added to the resulting analog signal but that is not the argument you are trying to make. Of course I understand that. The fact is, the last step of a digital transmission system is to do a digital to analog conversion, since the ear is not digital. Can you understand that as the signal level approaches the noise floor that the probability of the 1/0 data stream being correctly detected decreases? If the data stream becomes corrupted and then converted to analog it will not represent the original programing now will it. Can you see the similarity to analog in this regard? No, I understand that the noise is analog. And the HD stream is digital, and once detected is separable from the noise. Not so in analog. The data stream is redundant (to each side of the carrier center, and has dithering as well. If the digital signal fails, it falls back to analog. However, as stated, the analog signal gets essentially no listening beyond the 64 dbu curve due to... you asked for it... NOISE! |
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