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Delay on HD channels
BBC HD is currently showing the same as BBC 2, but with a delay of 21
seconds. What causes such a big delay? -- Richard |
Delay on HD channels
On Fri, 7 Sep 2012 17:53:07 +0000 (UTC), Richard Tobin
wrote: BBC HD is currently showing the same as BBC 2, but with a delay of 21 seconds. What causes such a big delay? A hard disk. |
Delay on HD channels
Richard Tobin wrote:
BBC HD is currently showing the same as BBC 2, but with a delay of 21 seconds. What causes such a big delay? -- Richard Because the information density of HD television is higher the signals interact with the atmosphere rather more. You can visualise it as the signal having a rougher 'surface' (because there are more bits sticking out). The effect of this is to delay the speed that the signal travels through the air. This is what we scientists call 'propagation delay'. So it might be 21 seconds where you are Richard, but for other viewers it could be much more or much less. The effect is much stronger in areas where the air is polluted, so in Barnsley programmes can arrive several days late. Unfortunately this effect causes (as Einstein predicted) a 'time dilation'effect, so people living on the other side of Barnsley (for example) receive signals that are bent around the Barnsley zone. Since the signals can go around Barnsley both ways (the new one-way system has no relevance) these viewers receive their signals twice. This explains all the +1 channels. Obviously satellite signals have to through a lot of atmosphere since they are very high up (probably ten miles or more), and this explains why the men in Top Gear on the satellite channels always have 1970s haircuts and are testing Ford Cortinas. There is a related problem called 'phase delay' in which the top of the picture is delayed more than the bottom. This is why people on Eastenders sometimes don't seem to know whether they're coming or going. Luckily the BBC Engineering Dept have found a complete solution to phase delay, involving a relatively simple alteration to the way television programmes are made. At first there were problems with the actors' uniion but these have been settled. Actors are paid to come and paid to go irrespective of which they do first, but where they are called upon to come and go simultaneously they get time and a half. Incidentally I just looked this up on Wikipaedia and found nothing. That's a gap in human knowledge that needs to be filled, so I'll be expanding the material I've covered here and making an entry. Can anyone else contribute to this as I feel that my knowledge, although extensive, is incomplete. Bill |
Delay on HD channels
On Sep 8, 2:21*am, Bill Wright wrote:
Richard Tobin wrote: BBC HD is currently showing the same as BBC 2, but with a delay of 21 seconds. *What causes such a big delay? -- Richard Because the information density of HD television is higher the signals interact with the atmosphere rather more. You can visualise it as the signal having a rougher 'surface' (because there are more bits sticking out). The effect of this is to delay the speed that the signal travels through the air. This is what we scientists call 'propagation delay'. So it might be 21 seconds where you are Richard, but for other viewers it could be much more or much less. The effect is much stronger in areas where the air is polluted, so in Barnsley programmes can arrive several days late. Unfortunately this effect causes (as Einstein predicted) a 'time dilation'effect, so people living on the other side of Barnsley (for example) receive signals that are bent around the Barnsley zone. Since the signals can go around Barnsley both ways (the new one-way system has no relevance) these viewers receive their signals twice. This explains all the +1 channels. Obviously satellite signals have to through a lot of atmosphere since they are very high up (probably ten miles or more), and this explains why the men in Top Gear on the satellite channels always have 1970s haircuts and are testing Ford Cortinas. There is a related problem called 'phase delay' in which the top of the picture is delayed more than the bottom. This is why people on Eastenders sometimes don't seem to know whether they're coming or going. Luckily the BBC Engineering Dept have found a complete solution to phase delay, involving a relatively simple alteration to the way television programmes are made. At first there were problems with the actors' uniion but these have been settled. Actors are paid to come and paid to go irrespective of which they do first, but where they are called upon to come and go simultaneously they get time and a half. Incidentally I just looked this up on Wikipaedia and found nothing. That's a gap in human knowledge that needs to be filled, so I'll be expanding the material I've covered here and making an entry. Can anyone else contribute to this as I feel that my knowledge, although extensive, is incomplete. Bill It's not April 1st is it? |
Delay on HD channels
Bill Wright wrote:
Can anyone else contribute to this as I feel that my knowledge, although extensive, is incomplete. Yes, you forgot to mention that electrons travel backwards in time in some parts of the country and turn into positrons. |
Delay on HD channels
harry wrote:
On Sep 8, 2:21 am, Bill Wright wrote: Richard Tobin wrote: BBC HD is currently showing the same as BBC 2, but with a delay of 21 seconds. What causes such a big delay? -- Richard Because the information density of HD television is higher the signals interact with the atmosphere rather more. You can visualise it as the signal having a rougher 'surface' (because there are more bits sticking out). The effect of this is to delay the speed that the signal travels through the air. This is what we scientists call 'propagation delay'. So it might be 21 seconds where you are Richard, but for other viewers it could be much more or much less. The effect is much stronger in areas where the air is polluted, so in Barnsley programmes can arrive several days late. Unfortunately this effect causes (as Einstein predicted) a 'time dilation'effect, so people living on the other side of Barnsley (for example) receive signals that are bent around the Barnsley zone. Since the signals can go around Barnsley both ways (the new one-way system has no relevance) these viewers receive their signals twice. This explains all the +1 channels. Obviously satellite signals have to through a lot of atmosphere since they are very high up (probably ten miles or more), and this explains why the men in Top Gear on the satellite channels always have 1970s haircuts and are testing Ford Cortinas. There is a related problem called 'phase delay' in which the top of the picture is delayed more than the bottom. This is why people on Eastenders sometimes don't seem to know whether they're coming or going. Luckily the BBC Engineering Dept have found a complete solution to phase delay, involving a relatively simple alteration to the way television programmes are made. At first there were problems with the actors' uniion but these have been settled. Actors are paid to come and paid to go irrespective of which they do first, but where they are called upon to come and go simultaneously they get time and a half. Incidentally I just looked this up on Wikipaedia and found nothing. That's a gap in human knowledge that needs to be filled, so I'll be expanding the material I've covered here and making an entry. Can anyone else contribute to this as I feel that my knowledge, although extensive, is incomplete. Bill It's not April 1st is it? I think this is an area of expertise that only Dennis is equipped to comment on. -- Ineptocracy (in-ep-toc’-ra-cy) – a system of government where the least capable to lead are elected by the least capable of producing, and where the members of society least likely to sustain themselves or succeed, are rewarded with goods and services paid for by the confiscated wealth of a diminishing number of producers. |
Delay on HD channels
Bill Absolutely brilliant. Well written. |
Delay on HD channels
"Bill Wright" wrote in message ... Richard Tobin wrote: BBC HD is currently showing the same as BBC 2, but with a delay of 21 seconds. What causes such a big delay? -- Richard Because the information density of HD television is higher the signals interact with the atmosphere rather more. You can visualise it as the signal having a rougher 'surface' (because there are more bits sticking out). The effect of this is to delay the speed that the signal travels through the air. This is what we scientists call 'propagation delay'. So it might be 21 seconds where you are Richard, but for other viewers it could be much more or much less. The effect is much stronger in areas where the air is polluted, so in Barnsley programmes can arrive several days late. Unfortunately this effect causes (as Einstein predicted) a 'time dilation'effect, so people living on the other side of Barnsley (for example) receive signals that are bent around the Barnsley zone. Since the signals can go around Barnsley both ways (the new one-way system has no relevance) these viewers receive their signals twice. This explains all the +1 channels. Obviously satellite signals have to through a lot of atmosphere since they are very high up (probably ten miles or more), and this explains why the men in Top Gear on the satellite channels always have 1970s haircuts and are testing Ford Cortinas. There is a related problem called 'phase delay' in which the top of the picture is delayed more than the bottom. This is why people on Eastenders sometimes don't seem to know whether they're coming or going. Luckily the BBC Engineering Dept have found a complete solution to phase delay, involving a relatively simple alteration to the way television programmes are made. At first there were problems with the actors' uniion but these have been settled. Actors are paid to come and paid to go irrespective of which they do first, but where they are called upon to come and go simultaneously they get time and a half. Incidentally I just looked this up on Wikipaedia and found nothing. That's a gap in human knowledge that needs to be filled, so I'll be expanding the material I've covered here and making an entry. Can anyone else contribute to this as I feel that my knowledge, although extensive, is incomplete. I don't know very much about the technical aspects of digital TV but have an interest in the subject. Quite a few posts on the newsgroup are uninteresting but those from Mr Wright are always succint and informative. Is is rare that someone with such a detailed grasp of things technical can explain things in a simple manner so that even people such as myself can begin to understand them. But there is still one thing which I do not comprehend at all about this. Is it not possible that the revolution of the sun round the earth may also be causing propagation delays? -- JohnT |
Delay on HD channels
John Legon wrote:
Bill Wright wrote: Can anyone else contribute to this as I feel that my knowledge, although extensive, is incomplete. Yes, you forgot to mention that electrons travel backwards in time in some parts of the country and turn into positrons. Ah yes! The 'Norfolk' effect. Bill |
Delay on HD channels
DerbyBorn wrote:
Bill Absolutely brilliant. Well written. Thank you. It's pretty easy though. The facts present themselves to me with crystal clear logic and certainty every Friday night. This is convenient because I'm usually far to drunk to watch telly, so writing them down gives me something to do. I often write letters to the newspapers at the same time, explaining really obvious ways that all the world's problems could be solved. Unfortunately vested interests conspire with the editors and my letters are rarely published. Bill |
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