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The color difference channels are modulated in quadrature, but this has
nothing to do with the comb filter. The comb filter works exactly as explained in my other post. Look at this diagram: http://www-ccrma.stanford.edu/~jos/p...b_Filters.html The Z raised to the minus M is a generic delay of M samples. Basically you sum the real time signal with a delayed signal. It's that simple. matt weber wrote: On Sat, 03 Dec 2005 18:20:58 GMT, "FDR" wrote: "Carl" wrote in message ... I was looking at a receiver catalog, and some of the receivers were advertised as containing a "DSP comb filter" which could be turned on when needed. Can anyone tell me what a comb filter does and when it would be used? It's supposed to clean up the signal. Basically, the frequency response has many peaks and valleys that together resemble a hair comb. The Comb filter was developed for Television. The colour information in NTSC is transmitted in 3 parts. A B&W receiver only decodes one part. The other two called Chromiance and Luminance are not entirely seperated in the frequency domain, but are in the time domain. In lower cost Color TV's, there is simply a 'hard' filter and the chromiance and lumiance signals are processed as though they were fully seperated in the frequency domain, resulting in loss of colour detail and resolution. A comb filter performs the decoding effectively in the time domain, where full seperation is possible, resulting in higher detail and resolution. An example of such of a system is AM stereo, and some Modems (Milgo 4800 baud comes to mind). It is possible to generate independent sidebands, so a Double Sideband, Supressed Carrier, or Un-Suppressed carrier (AM stereo) overlap in the frequency domain, but the carriers used to produce them in the balanced modulator are at quadrature (i.e. one sideband was built with Sin (wt) and the other with Cos(wt)), the sidebands will also be a quadrature. This is in fact how the Telephone company used to transmit long distance calls. If you use an envelope detector with AM stereo you get L+R, however if you use two product detectors that use phase locked, and 90 degrees out of phase carriers, it is possible to get for example only Left Channel out of one, and only Right Channel out of the other detector. The Intergral over time (power in this case) of sin(wt)cos(wt) dt will always be zero. A comb filter generally involves some sort of phase locked, synhronous detection even if carried out digitally. |
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