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#1
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Drewdove wrote:
IMHO too many people laughed off complaints that the digital carriers would cause interference to first adjacent analogs without realizing these same adjacent would interfere with the digital carriers rendering HD useless in certain (many?) situations. As far as I'm concerned, allowing a signal to be broadcast, at a frequency that is already allocated to something else, is always going to be a bad idea (unless it is a system using very directional antennas). From what I've read in this NG. HD-Radio does just that. It ends up allowing digital signals to be transmitted on frequencies already allocated to analogue signals. Whoever thought that would be OK, obviously either doesn't understand radio, or simply doesn't give a sh*t about the consequences. Richard E. |
#2
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On Sep 4, 9:40*pm, Richard Evans
wrote: Drewdove wrote: IMHO too many people laughed off complaints that the digital carriers would cause interference to first adjacent analogs without realizing these same adjacent would interfere with the digital carriers rendering HD useless in certain (many?) situations. As far as I'm concerned, allowing a signal to be broadcast, at a frequency that is already allocated to something else, is always going to be a bad idea (unless it is a system using very directional antennas). From what I've read in this NG. HD-Radio does just that. It ends up allowing digital signals to be transmitted on frequencies already allocated to analogue signals. Whoever thought that would be OK, obviously either doesn't understand radio, or simply doesn't give a sh*t about the consequences. Richard E. The whole IBOC system was puposely designed to jam the smaller adjacent-cheenl stations of the dial. |
#3
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DigitalRadioScams wrote:
The whole IBOC system was puposely designed to jam the smaller adjacent-cheenl stations of the dial. So is that why it's so spectrally inefficient? To use up more bandwidth, hence produce more jamming. |
#4
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In article ,
Richard Evans wrote: DigitalRadioScams wrote: The whole IBOC system was puposely designed to jam the smaller adjacent-cheenl stations of the dial. So is that why it's so spectrally inefficient? To use up more bandwidth, hence produce more jamming. The idea was to ultimately retire analog FM entirely, thus enabling iBiquity to capture a royalty on every bit of material on the FM band. iBiquity understated the amount of IBOC signal necessary to achieve "equivalent" coverage with the stations' FM signals so that it could get its foot in the door. When it became apparent that -20db was inadequate (even though there was still major interference with analog signals), they lobbied for -10db. That was an "oops" of an order of magnitude. They got -14db instead, but the deleterious effects on analog FM at that level remains to be seen, since most stations have yet to take advantage of it. -- John Higdon +1 408 ANdrews 6-4400 AT&T-Free At Last |
#5
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On 9/5/10 7:40 PM, John Higdon wrote:
iBiquity understated the amount of IBOC signal necessary to achieve "equivalent" coverage with the stations' FM signals so that it could get its foot in the door. I think we have seem the same thing for DAB and DRM. The low powers are just sales talk. gr, hwh |
#6
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hwh wrote:
I think we have seem the same thing for DAB and DRM. The low powers are just sales talk. Lower power would be fine, if DAB had better error correction. Although there is one situation where low power DAB works well, that is in the middle of an SFN with signals coming in from several different directions. This isn't much use however in the outer areas of a local multiplex. |
#7
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On 9/4/2010 6:40 PM, Richard Evans wrote:
Drewdove wrote: IMHO too many people laughed off complaints that the digital carriers would cause interference to first adjacent analogs without realizing these same adjacent would interfere with the digital carriers rendering HD useless in certain (many?) situations. As far as I'm concerned, allowing a signal to be broadcast, at a frequency that is already allocated to something else, is always going to be a bad idea (unless it is a system using very directional antennas). From what I've read in this NG. HD-Radio does just that. It ends up allowing digital signals to be transmitted on frequencies already allocated to analogue signals. Whoever thought that would be OK, obviously either doesn't understand radio, or simply doesn't give a sh*t about the consequences. Here's a book that you can read to understand how IBOC works (I mean if you actually want to understand it). "http://www.radioworld.com/article/8410". |
#8
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SMS wrote:
Here's a book that you can read to understand how IBOC works (I mean if you actually want to understand it). "http://www.radioworld.com/article/8410". Not especially interested in the details. But I'll take a look if I can find the time. |
#9
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I know how Reddifusion works.About ten years ago, that married Irish
woman (married to that Irish guy.She is from Cathair Chinn Lis, [Caherconlish, to you] he is from Fethard. http://www.fethard.com ) wayyyyyy over yonder across the big pond explained it to me.First time I ever heard of Reddifusion was in 1964 on my Hong Kong hotel room radio, when I did my five days R&R in Hong Kong. Wired Radio. cuhulin |
#10
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SMS wrote:
Here's a book that you can read to understand how IBOC works (I mean if you actually want to understand it). "http://www.radioworld.com/article/8410". So I have to buy a book, and find time to read through it, to find out about something I'm not especially interested in. Thanks for the link, but I think I'll pass on this one. |
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