Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Search this Thread Display Modes
  #31   Report Post  
Old June 29th 05, 02:47 AM
John S.
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Interestingly I was in Asheville, NC this weekend and experienced
dropouts in a city not known for high rises. And of course when out in
the hilly countryside reception on the XM receiver was disappearing
like a kid playing hand 'n seek. And all the while good old FM was
steady and I enjoyed bluegrass on an NPR station about 40 miles outside
of Asheville on the Blue Ridge Pkwy.

So far I'm not impressed with and an not sold on the value of
subscription satellite radio when standard FM and AM offer a wide range
of programming with stable reception.

  #32   Report Post  
Old June 29th 05, 04:01 AM
Peter Maus
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Mark S. Holden wrote:
matt weber wrote:

On Tue, 28 Jun 2005 11:23:37 -0400, "Mark S. Holden"
wrote:


John S. wrote:

I had my first taste of XM radio reception via satellite this past
weekend and was less than impressed because it drops the signal around
tall buildings and tall trees. For the Grundig to not have xm
capability is no great loss based on my experience.


On a portable, you'd probably have less frequent dropouts than in a
car because odds are you'll put it down in one spot while you listen.

Of course if you pick a spot that can't see the satellite, you'll
have to move or listen to something else.




Actually untrue. In major cities, XM has repeaters in the city proper
because all sat based services have problems with urban canyons.


It is true if you're in an area that isn't served by a repeater.

In my neck of the woods, trees are more likely to be a problem than
buildings.



Yeah, trees are a big problem at the house. Worse than the
canyons in the city.



My wife loves the XM radio in her car. If it was in my car I'd be
trying to figure out how to improve the signal to avoid the dropouts.




One of the guys at the airport has Sirius in his R-44. Patched
into the intercom, he can to tunes but gets a priority overide when
ATC needs his attention. Makes a lot more sense than the cassette
player in the Bonanza.






  #33   Report Post  
Old June 29th 05, 12:27 PM
Mark S. Holden
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Peter Maus wrote:
snip


Depending on the market, you may have local terrestrial repeaters to
fill in weak spots where satellite isn't visible to the receiver. We
have them in Chicago, so I rarely see dropouts even with underpasses,
and similar obstacles. Over the weekend I was on the road where
terrestrial repeaters were not available. Dropouts were moe common than
in the city.



Hi Peter

Nice to see you.

None of the areas I'm likely to spend much time in are apt to have
repeaters.

I haven't been able to find a signal strength map, but some areas get a
strong enough signal from the satellites to punch through a canopy of
trees. Rockland County NY is an example. Great place for HF too.

I'm somewhat surprised I haven't seen ads for "high performance" XM
antennas to reduce dropouts.

  #34   Report Post  
Old June 29th 05, 12:39 PM
Mark S. Holden
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Peter Maus wrote:
snip

One of the guys at the airport has Sirius in his R-44. Patched into
the intercom, he can to tunes but gets a priority overide when ATC needs
his attention. Makes a lot more sense than the cassette player in the
Bonanza.



Aircraft are probably the ideal vehicles for sat radio.

Odds are if trees or buildings are between you and the satellite, a
signal dropout will be the least of your worries.


  #35   Report Post  
Old June 29th 05, 03:09 PM
Peter Maus
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Mark S. Holden wrote:

Peter Maus wrote:
snip



Depending on the market, you may have local terrestrial repeaters
to fill in weak spots where satellite isn't visible to the receiver.
We have them in Chicago, so I rarely see dropouts even with
underpasses, and similar obstacles. Over the weekend I was on the road
where terrestrial repeaters were not available. Dropouts were moe
common than in the city.



Hi Peter

Nice to see you.



Thanks. And you.




None of the areas I'm likely to spend much time in are apt to have
repeaters.

I haven't been able to find a signal strength map, but some areas get a
strong enough signal from the satellites to punch through a canopy of
trees. Rockland County NY is an example. Great place for HF too.

I'm somewhat surprised I haven't seen ads for "high performance" XM
antennas to reduce dropouts.



They'd have to be larger. And more unsightly. Remember were
talking about a culture here that, in the main, prizes cosmetics
above everything else.

I've even heard complaints that the satellite antennae on cars
are too big, and too unsightly.






  #36   Report Post  
Old June 29th 05, 03:10 PM
Peter Maus
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Mark S. Holden wrote:

Peter Maus wrote:
snip


One of the guys at the airport has Sirius in his R-44. Patched into
the intercom, he can to tunes but gets a priority overide when ATC
needs his attention. Makes a lot more sense than the cassette player
in the Bonanza.



Aircraft are probably the ideal vehicles for sat radio.

Odds are if trees or buildings are between you and the satellite, a
signal dropout will be the least of your worries.



LOL! Talk about your pucker factors.


  #37   Report Post  
Old June 30th 05, 01:57 AM
Michael A. Terrell
 
Posts: n/a
Default

"Mark S. Holden" wrote:

My wife loves the XM radio in her car. If it was in my car I'd be
trying to figure out how to improve the signal to avoid the dropouts.



You would have to do it like the earth stations for tracking deep
space satellites. You use a diversity system built with two or more
receivers and a combiner.

--
Former professional electron wrangler.

Michael A. Terrell
Central Florida
Reply
Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search
Display Modes

Posting Rules

Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
The Eton E1 XM Radio -=V=- Grundig Satellite 800 M [ Plus Some History ] RHF Shortwave 10 January 6th 05 04:56 AM
DRM "MOD" for the Grundig Satellit 800 Millennium Radio . . . {Eton E1 XM Radio} RHF Shortwave 2 January 3rd 05 02:20 PM
Eton E10 & E100 eGroups at YAHOO! Members "Special Announcement" RHF Shortwave 0 October 23rd 04 03:23 PM
Eton ELITE "Series" Radio - News RHF Shortwave 8 June 15th 04 05:01 PM
Grundig Satellit 900 -=V=- Eton E1 XM Radio RHF Shortwave 5 February 5th 04 12:14 PM


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 05:46 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2025 RadioBanter.
The comments are property of their posters.
 

About Us

"It's about Radio"

 

Copyright © 2017