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HDTV Audio and Anti-Glare
Wes Newell wrote:
Channels can be ntsc, 8vsb, qam, or any other modulation form. The channel number is locked to the frequency. So on channel 49 you can have anything. It's not locked to ntsc. It most certainly can be clear qam. Or it could be 8vsb, or any one of umpteen other modulations. Hogwash. Any TV with a "cable ready" tuner will tune channel 49 one way: with an AM audio carrier at 373.25MHz and an FM audio carrier at 377.75MHz. Please name one that doesn't. And please, no more yarns about how you have your OTA channels set up. It's quite irrelevant. |
HDTV Audio and Anti-Glare
Wes Newell wrote:
75.9 and 75.10 are numbers assigned to those channels *BY COMCAST* That doesn't qualify them as "Comcast channels" ?? They are more "Comcast channels than are 49 and 50, which are industry standard channels. No, it doesn't. They would be virtual channel numbers assigned to a real channel number. And they can also be used by anyone else. So can channel 49 and 50. So can *any* channel number. But 75.9 and 75.10 are the channel numbers assigned by Comcast to ESPN and ESPN2. That makes them as much "Comcast channels" as are 49 and 50 (which Rick termed "Comcast channels.") |
HDTV Audio and Anti-Glare
On Wed, 28 Oct 2009 21:59:23 -0700, UCLAN wrote:
Wes Newell wrote: Channels can be ntsc, 8vsb, qam, or any other modulation form. The channel number is locked to the frequency. So on channel 49 you can have anything. It's not locked to ntsc. It most certainly can be clear qam. Or it could be 8vsb, or any one of umpteen other modulations. Hogwash. Any TV with a "cable ready" tuner will tune channel 49 one way: with an AM audio carrier at 373.25MHz and an FM audio carrier at 377.75MHz. Please name one that doesn't. Did you see TV anywhere in my statement? And fwiw, the TV I'm watching doesn't have a valid channel 49, but it does have a 41, and when I enter 41, it actually tunes to real channel 35, and it's not NTSC. It's ATSC 8VSB. So this must have been one of the thousands of different TV's out there that you missed testing.:-) And please, no more yarns about how you have your OTA channels set up. It's quite irrelevant. And why is that? If my TV system will do it, so can any other one if implimented. I've already explained how the TV scans the channels when you set it up and stores virtual channel information from the scan in translation tables. It appears to me that you don't have the first clue how it works with new digital TV's. Tuning 49 on an old TV will get you only NTSC channel 49. This is not the case with newer TV's with digital channels. Converter boxes are one good example. Putting 49 into the remote will go to virtual channel 49.1. And that broadcast can be on ANY real channel number from 2 - 82. -- Want the ultimate in free OTA SD/HDTV Recorder? http://mythtv.org My Tivo Experience http://wesnewell.no-ip.com/tivo.htm Tivo HD/S3 compared http://wesnewell.no-ip.com/mythtivo.htm AMD cpu help http://wesnewell.no-ip.com/cpu.php |
HDTV Audio and Anti-Glare
UCLAN wrote:
RickMerrill wrote: You sure type a lot about something you totally don't want to understand. Yes, we could have made things clear to you by stating "virtual channel 49 a la Comcast listings for my area code" but you may not know French either. Channel 49 is *NOT* a virtual channel, no matter what language you mention. Channel 49 is a 6MHz wide channel with an AM video carrier at 373.25MHz and an FM audio carrier at 377.75MHz. Repetition does not make you right. Your concept of "channel" is understandable, but it is not what I was trying to talk about. An STB has NUMBERS that resemble freq based "channels" and the Comcast marketing people call those numbers channels. |
HDTV Audio and Anti-Glare
UCLAN wrote:
Wes Newell wrote: Channels can be ntsc, 8vsb, qam, or any other modulation form. The channel number is locked to the frequency. So on channel 49 you can have anything. It's not locked to ntsc. It most certainly can be clear qam. Or it could be 8vsb, or any one of umpteen other modulations. Hogwash. Any TV with a "cable ready" tuner will tune channel 49 one way: with an AM audio carrier at 373.25MHz and an FM audio carrier at 377.75MHz. Please name one that doesn't. And please, no more yarns about how you have your OTA channels set up. It's quite irrelevant. UCLAN, how old ARE you anyway? You're ripe! |
HDTV Audio and Anti-Glare
RickMerrill wrote:
UCLAN wrote: Wes Newell wrote: Channels can be ntsc, 8vsb, qam, or any other modulation form. The channel number is locked to the frequency. So on channel 49 you can have anything. It's not locked to ntsc. It most certainly can be clear qam. Or it could be 8vsb, or any one of umpteen other modulations. Hogwash. Any TV with a "cable ready" tuner will tune channel 49 one way: with an AM audio carrier at 373.25MHz and an FM audio carrier at 377.75MHz. Many cable system today have dropped analog altogether so those cable-ready sets now must have a STB. I'm 68 myself. And ripe too! |
HDTV Audio and Anti-Glare
RickMerrill wrote:
Repetition does not make you right. Your concept of "channel" is understandable, but it is not what I was trying to talk about. An STB has NUMBERS that resemble freq based "channels" and the Comcast marketing people call those numbers channels. Apparently I need software that lets me post in bold print. I couldn't care less about your Comcast box. When I refer to a 6MHz wide channel that can't be a QAM channel, I am referring, of course, to a TV tuned channel (as I have detailed many times.) But you knew that. |
HDTV Audio and Anti-Glare
Wes Newell wrote:
Channels can be ntsc, 8vsb, qam, or any other modulation form. The channel number is locked to the frequency. So on channel 49 you can have anything. It's not locked to ntsc. It most certainly can be clear qam. Or it could be 8vsb, or any one of umpteen other modulations. Hogwash. Any TV with a "cable ready" tuner will tune channel 49 one way: with an AM audio carrier at 373.25MHz and an FM audio carrier at 377.75MHz. Please name one that doesn't. Did you see TV anywhere in my statement? You were replying to my post which *was* clearly about TV tuned channels: UCLAN, Oct 28: "LOL! Wrong about what? I have maintained all along that whole numbers tuned by a TV like (49 and 50) *cannot* be QAM digital channels since they are NTSC analog channels. As it turns out, I was right. Or do you still maintain that his TV was tuning Clear QAM on channels 49 & 50?" Nice try, though. And fwiw, the TV I'm watching doesn't have a valid channel 49, but it does have a 41, and when I enter 41, it actually tunes to real channel 35, and it's not NTSC. It's ATSC 8VSB. So this must have been one of the thousands of different TV's out there that you missed testing.:-) No, it's just been set up to do so by you. Out of the box the above didn't exist. Nice try, again. And please, no more yarns about how you have your OTA channels set up. It's quite irrelevant. And why is that? If my TV system will do it, so can any other one if implimented. I've already explained how the TV scans the channels when you set it up and stores virtual channel information from the scan in translation tables. It appears to me that you don't have the first clue how it works with new digital TV's. Tuning 49 on an old TV will get you only NTSC channel 49. This is not the case with newer TV's with digital channels. Converter boxes are one good example. Putting 49 into the remote will go to virtual channel 49.1. And that broadcast can be on ANY real channel number from 2 - 82. OK. I'll try explaining the difference between OTA and cable to you. In brief: PSIP information is sent by each terrestrial broadcast as per the ATSC specification. This channel information is NOT sent by cable channels such as ESPN because a) their channel assignment varies from cable system to cable system, and b) they are not sent to the cable system via ATSC. Cable systems send channel numbering information to their STBs by way of what's called FDC (forward data channel.) The frequency at which it is sent varies from cable system to cable system, and therefore is not received by standard TV sets. Additionally, it is QPSK. So for receiving standard cable channels, whole number channels such as 49 and 50 are 6MHz wide NTSC channels with video and audio carriers. |
HDTV Audio and Anti-Glare
RickMerrill wrote:
UCLAN, how old ARE you anyway? You're ripe! Ah...can't argue specifics, so resorts to mindless blather. Typical... |
HDTV Audio and Anti-Glare
RickMerrill wrote:
Many cable system today have dropped analog altogether so those cable-ready sets now must have a STB. Not that many. Then there are alternatives. http://www.broadlogic.com/products/terapix.php |
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