![]() |
| If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|||||||
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
#1
|
|||
|
|||
|
Hello group,
When the time signal arrives, which is the accurate one. DAB or analogue? I listen to R4 before going to work in the morning. At the top of the hour, they have the pips. I have an analogue radio in the bedroom, another one in the bathroom, digital in the front room (freeview), all on at the same time as I'm running round getting ready for work.. and the time gap is very apparent. I'd guess the digital one is 7 seconds late. If the answer to the accuracy question is analogue, then is this the end of an accurate time signal on BBC radio when analogue transmission ends? When *everything* goes digital, is *everything* going to be 7s later than the actuality? -- comp.john |
|
#2
|
|||
|
|||
|
The message
from "comp.john" contains these words: Hello group, When the time signal arrives, which is the accurate one. DAB or analogue? I listen to R4 before going to work in the morning. At the top of the hour, they have the pips. I have an analogue radio in the bedroom, another one in the bathroom, digital in the front room (freeview), all on at the same time as I'm running round getting ready for work.. and the time gap is very apparent. I'd guess the digital one is 7 seconds late. If the answer to the accuracy question is analogue, then is this the end of an accurate time signal on BBC radio when analogue transmission ends? When *everything* goes digital, is *everything* going to be 7s later than the actuality? Ah! If it were only that simple. -- Regards, John. Please remove the "ohggcyht" before replying. The address has been munged to reject Spam-bots. |
|
#3
|
|||
|
|||
|
"comp.john" wrote in message
... Hello group, When the time signal arrives, which is the accurate one. DAB or analogue? I listen to R4 before going to work in the morning. At the top of the hour, they have the pips. I have an analogue radio in the bedroom, another one in the bathroom, digital in the front room (freeview), all on at the same time as I'm running round getting ready for work.. and the time gap is very apparent. I'd guess the digital one is 7 seconds late. If the answer to the accuracy question is analogue, then is this the end of an accurate time signal on BBC radio when analogue transmission ends? When *everything* goes digital, is *everything* going to be 7s later than the actuality? The number of seconds delay depends on your hardware as well as the transmission. I guess that when (and if) analogue radio transmissions end the BBC will give up the GMT pips. Most people have at least one radio controlled clock in the house. -- Max Demian |
|
#4
|
|||
|
|||
|
In article ,
comp.john wrote: When the time signal arrives, which is the accurate one. DAB or analogue? Rather obviously the earliest one - as you can delay something, but not make it happen before it does, as it were. If you could, you've just invented time travel. I listen to R4 before going to work in the morning. At the top of the hour, they have the pips. I have an analogue radio in the bedroom, another one in the bathroom, digital in the front room (freeview), all on at the same time as I'm running round getting ready for work.. and the time gap is very apparent. I'd guess the digital one is 7 seconds late. They will all be different - with DAB being the worst. But two receivers on DAB or FreeView can give different results too. If the answer to the accuracy question is analogue, then is this the end of an accurate time signal on BBC radio when analogue transmission ends? When *everything* goes digital, is *everything* going to be 7s later than the actuality? It's a function of all digital that it introduces a delay. Just how much depends on many things. -- *Marathon runners with bad footwear suffer the agony of defeat* Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
|
#5
|
|||
|
|||
|
On 2009-10-19, Max Demian wrote:
The number of seconds delay depends on your hardware as well as the transmission. oh, great so the pips are not equivalent on compliant hardware.What's the digital delay on high-end hardware? I guess that when (and if) analogue radio transmissions end the BBC will give up the GMT pips. That's a severe change. Pips have been around as long as radio. Aren't they meant to be accurate to within a second - I mean 7 seconds late then why have them at all. Most people have at least one radio controlled clock in the house. If you mean most people have a computer (ie NTP) then yeah I agree. But not clock as in clock on the wall or bedside clock. Why am I even concerned about this? It's because it seems to be a retrograde step. On analogue, if you have 5 radios of different makes and prices and quality all tuned to the same station, you'd notice little difference when the pips came on, and it's been that way for years. With DAB the difference is vast, comparitively. -- comp.john |
|
#6
|
|||
|
|||
|
On 2009-10-19, Dave Plowman (News) wrote:
In article , comp.john wrote: When the time signal arrives, which is the accurate one. DAB or analogue? Rather obviously the earliest one - as you can delay something, but not make it happen before it does, as it were. If you could, you've just invented time travel. ....well, yeah I should really have read that through, lol.They will all be different - with DAB being the worst. But two receivers on DAB or FreeView can give different results too. yeah, I have 2 DAB-only radios too but these aren't used as often as the analogues. If the answer to the accuracy question is analogue, then is this the end of an accurate time signal on BBC radio when analogue transmission ends? When *everything* goes digital, is *everything* going to be 7s later than the actuality? It's a function of all digital that it introduces a delay. Just how much depends on many things. http://www.radioandtelly.co.uk/timelag.html Yeah. No more pips! sniff -- comp.john |
|
#7
|
|||
|
|||
|
"comp.john" wrote in message
... Hello group, When the time signal arrives, which is the accurate one. DAB or analogue? I listen to R4 before going to work in the morning. At the top of the hour, they have the pips. I have an analogue radio in the bedroom, another one in the bathroom, digital in the front room (freeview), all on at the same time as I'm running round getting ready for work.. and the time gap is very apparent. I'd guess the digital one is 7 seconds late. If the answer to the accuracy question is analogue, then is this the end of an accurate time signal on BBC radio when analogue transmission ends? When *everything* goes digital, is *everything* going to be 7s later than the actuality? -- comp.john The pips on FM are quire accurate according to my MSF radio clock The pips on any digital service will be delayed. DAB contains a time stamp which a DAB radio may be able to diusplay and which might (ought to!) be more accurate. -- Michael Chare |
|
#8
|
|||
|
|||
|
"Dave Plowman (News)" wrote in message ... In article , comp.john wrote: When the time signal arrives, which is the accurate one. DAB or analogue? Rather obviously the earliest one - as you can delay something, but not make it happen before it does, as it were. If you could, you've just invented time travel. No, clever clogs, that's ********. The BBC could play the pips early so as to make them more-or-less right for DAB. In theory . . . Bill |
|
#9
|
|||
|
|||
|
comp.john wrote:
On 2009-10-19, Max Demian wrote: The number of seconds delay depends on your hardware as well as the transmission. oh, great so the pips are not equivalent on compliant hardware.What's the digital delay on high-end hardware? I don't think there's any correlation between the expence of a particular receiver, and its decoding delay. In short, forget about accurate time from digital broadcast radio or TV, and splash out on one of these:- http://www.argos.co.uk/static/Product/partNumber/2551966/c_1/1|category_root|Jewellery+and+watches|14416987/c_2/2|cat_14416987|Clocks+and+clock+radios|14417256/c_3/3|cat_14417256|Wall+clocks|14417259.htm -- Mark Please replace invalid and invalid with gmx and net to reply. http://www.paras.org.uk/ |
|
#10
|
|||
|
|||
|
"comp.john" wrote:
On 2009-10-19, Max Demian wrote: Most people have at least one radio controlled clock in the house. If you mean most people have a computer (ie NTP) then yeah I agree. But not clock as in clock on the wall or bedside clock. Google "radio controlled clock". I've an RC kitchen wall clock and two RC alarm clocks. Very cheap: http://www.amazon.co.uk/Cadiz-White-.../dp/B000H1QSIU -- Dave Farrance |
| Thread Tools | |
| Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads
|
||||
| Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
| channel delays | Trevor Wright | UK digital tv | 12 | November 16th 05 05:10 PM |
| lipsync delays | Tim S Kemp | UK home cinema | 5 | December 10th 04 03:25 PM |
| Korea delays decision again | Bob Miller | High definition TV | 0 | May 12th 04 09:18 PM |
| Need Recording delays Help | Ghurrian | Tivo personal television | 3 | April 22nd 04 02:12 AM |
| HD-811 / Superdish delays | Company Man | Satellite dbs | 0 | November 18th 03 12:09 AM |