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#1
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In 2004 we installed a complete new system at a development that had
six blocks, all well spaced in large grounds. The place was listed so we were only allowed one aerial and dish, so the system has quite long underground links, which are CT167 Direct Burial. At the time of installation I made myself unpopular with the builder by insisting on separate cables to each block. Recently the on-site manager reported problems with DTT. A lot of people were complaining about pixilation on the channels carried by mux 2. I started at the beginning. Signals from the aerial were fine. The head-end output was fine. Nothing had changed since installation. At the nearest repeater I found that losses on the underground link had increased a little, which is what you’d expect. Signal levels were still more than adequate though, since I plan my systems with a lot of signal in reserve, as it were. Well, I thought they were adequate. The output of the repeater on mux 2 was -6dbmV. That, I thought, must surely be adequate. But in the flats I found that the downlead losses, which should be between 3 and 7dB, had crept up and in some cases were 10 or 11dB. So? That’s still enough isn’t it? Well no. -17dBmV is borderline for a 64QAM mux, and of course after the system amplification the noise floor was somewhat elevated. Hence the pixilation, from what at first seemed like a healthy system. The combination of extra loss on the trunks and the downleads, although not being much when expressed as a percentage, was enough to bugger things up comprehensively. At the repeaters further from the head end, the problem was more obvious. When the system was new the analogue signal on ch67 arrived at the farthest repeaters at about the same level as the one on ch21. After equalisation at the head end to make up for transmitter changes it was now arriving 3dB down. The higher channel muxes were similarly afflicted. This is simply the effect of five and a half years’ aging on top quality trunk cable. Interestingly the satellite signals had dropped by 4 to 8dB, but this had had no effect on reception and there had been no complaints about ‘Sky’ – although the vast majority of them have got it. Presumably the downlead losses are in some cases astronomic, but, well, there are no complaints. I’m guessing that the levels at the outlets are in some cases 20dB below what we planned in 2004, but they are still adequate. When the problem arises I will fix it by brute amplification. This should get us through to the time when either (a) I am dead or (b) we are ripping it all out and putting fibre in. Each repeater had a terrestrial amplifier with 20dB gain. I replaced them all with amps having 30dB gain and the capability for 18dB equalisation across Bands I to IV, which I set at or near maximum. This gave a gain of 22dB on ch 21 and 30dB on ch67. It was about right. A rather modest increase in signal levels at the outlet took the difficult mux from severe pixilation to perfection. Comments anyone? Bill |
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#2
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" wrote in message ... In 2004 we installed a complete new system at a development that had six blocks, all well spaced in large grounds. The place was listed so we were only allowed one aerial and dish, so the system has quite long underground links, which are CT167 Direct Burial. At the time of installation I made myself unpopular with the builder by insisting on separate cables to each block. Recently the on-site manager reported problems with DTT. A lot of people were complaining about pixilation on the channels carried by mux 2. I started at the beginning. Signals from the aerial were fine. The head-end output was fine. Nothing had changed since installation. At the nearest repeater I found that losses on the underground link had increased a little, which is what you’d expect. Signal levels were still more than adequate though, since I plan my systems with a lot of signal in reserve, as it were. Well, I thought they were adequate. The output of the repeater on mux 2 was -6dbmV. That, I thought, must surely be adequate. But in the flats I found that the downlead losses, which should be between 3 and 7dB, had crept up and in some cases were 10 or 11dB. So? That’s still enough isn’t it? Well no. -17dBmV is borderline for a 64QAM mux, and of course after the system amplification the noise floor was somewhat elevated. Hence the pixilation, from what at first seemed like a healthy system. The combination of extra loss on the trunks and the downleads, although not being much when expressed as a percentage, was enough to bugger things up comprehensively. At the repeaters further from the head end, the problem was more obvious. When the system was new the analogue signal on ch67 arrived at the farthest repeaters at about the same level as the one on ch21. After equalisation at the head end to make up for transmitter changes it was now arriving 3dB down. The higher channel muxes were similarly afflicted. This is simply the effect of five and a half years’ aging on top quality trunk cable. Interestingly the satellite signals had dropped by 4 to 8dB, but this had had no effect on reception and there had been no complaints about ‘Sky’ – although the vast majority of them have got it. Presumably the downlead losses are in some cases astronomic, but, well, there are no complaints. I’m guessing that the levels at the outlets are in some cases 20dB below what we planned in 2004, but they are still adequate. When the problem arises I will fix it by brute amplification. This should get us through to the time when either (a) I am dead or (b) we are ripping it all out and putting fibre in. Each repeater had a terrestrial amplifier with 20dB gain. I replaced them all with amps having 30dB gain and the capability for 18dB equalisation across Bands I to IV, which I set at or near maximum. This gave a gain of 22dB on ch 21 and 30dB on ch67. It was about right. A rather modest increase in signal levels at the outlet took the difficult mux from severe pixilation to perfection. Comments anyone? Bill yes, yyyyaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaawwwwwwwwwwwwnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnn |
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#4
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On 17/02/2010 06:02, Brian Gaff wrote:
Well its obvious, and was to many when the terrestrial standard was brought in, that the robustness of the system is poor compared to analogue, which gracefully fails into noise. Still we are stuck with it, I suppose. I hate to think what it must be like in areas with multipath reflections or hills in the way like in parts of Wales! Brian Most of us here have given DVB-T the finger and have gone with S flavoured DVB... Rob. |
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#5
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Brian Gaff wrote:
Well its obvious, and was to many when the terrestrial standard was brought in, that the robustness of the system is poor compared to analogue, which gracefully fails into noise. I don't really think that is fair if you consider the signal level. The digital system is much more robust than analogue and will get perfect pictures when analogue has no picture atall, and in fact when most test equipment cannot even measure the signal (even if it says it does it is lying). The problem is of course like any newer system (eg ADSL) that robustness has been used to reduce signal levels or use spare characteristics that were not relied on before. So now when stuff goes out of spec on your system it doesn't work because there isn't enough signal level. Of course all that will change with DSO and TV should work perfectly with significantly degraded equipment. As we engineer things to be more efficient they will require more maintenance or better design for reliability. For example POTS is very robust, but ADSL is not so phone lines now are more sensitive to problems, increased maintenance was required, however fibre will be a longer lasting solution. My view is that analogue is very wasteful, and it is amazing that we have managed to squeeze in 30+ more channels when no more could be added with the existing analogue. It is a testament to digital that we have a reasonably workable system in tandem with analogue. With DSO we will get even more benefit. Still we are stuck with it, I suppose. Not with the lack of system margin, which will increase with DSO. I hate to think what it must be like in areas with multipath reflections or hills in the way like in parts of Wales! DVB-T is very good a dealing with multipath up to the guard band limit, aerial systems simply have to keep within it. -- Tony |
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#6
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"Tony" wrote in message . .. As we engineer things to be more efficient they will require more maintenance or better design for reliability. For example POTS is very robust, but ADSL is not so phone lines now are more sensitive to problems...... Well, just to nitpick a little: research conducted at BT Labs (no longer called that) at Martlesham (my workplace for many years) showed that ADSL was actually MORE robust than telephony to all the usual line faults, such as battery or earth contact, high resistance joints, noisy joints, and so on. It's one weakness arises from differential mode noise on the line in the frequency range used by ADSL, to which telephony is completely immune. This noise is usually induced at the customer premises from the bell wire, which is the third wire (terminal 3) running around your extensions in addition to the two legs (A leg and B leg, terminals 5 and 2 respectively) of the phone line itself. Its coupling to the A and B legs is unequal (to the B leg via a capacitor, to the A leg via a resistor), so any noise picked up by the bell wire (in effect, and end-fed long wire antenna) appears as a differential mode signal on the A and B legs, buggering up the ADSL. The easiest solution is simply to disconnect the bell wire (terminal 3) at the master socket, because the plug-in filters used for each extension phone regenerate that third wire for the phone anyway (furthermore, some phones don't even require the bell wire). BT make available a special master socket with a filter for the bell wire, which has a similar effect. Of course, I'm not talking about people suffering poor ADSL performance due to sheer line length - that is a systematic limitation in performance, rather than a resilience or reliability issue. SteveT |
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#7
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"Tony" wrote in message . .. Brian Gaff wrote: Well its obvious, and was to many when the terrestrial standard was brought in, that the robustness of the system is poor compared to analogue, which gracefully fails into noise. I don't really think that is fair if you consider the signal level. The digital system is much more robust than analogue and will get perfect pictures when analogue has no picture atall, and in fact when most test equipment cannot even measure the signal (even if it says it does it is lying). The problem is of course like any newer system (eg ADSL) that robustness has been used to reduce signal levels or use spare characteristics that were not relied on before. So now when stuff goes out of spec on your system it doesn't work because there isn't enough signal level. Of course all that will change with DSO and TV should work perfectly with significantly degraded equipment. As we engineer things to be more efficient they will require more maintenance or better design for reliability. For example POTS is very robust, but ADSL is not so phone lines now are more sensitive to problems, increased maintenance was required, however fibre will be a longer lasting solution. My view is that analogue is very wasteful, and it is amazing that we have managed to squeeze in 30+ more channels when no more could be added with the existing analogue. It is a testament to digital that we have a reasonably workable system in tandem with analogue. With DSO we will get even more benefit. Still we are stuck with it, I suppose. Not with the lack of system margin, which will increase with DSO. I hate to think what it must be like in areas with multipath reflections or hills in the way like in parts of Wales! DVB-T is very good a dealing with multipath up to the guard band limit, aerial systems simply have to keep within it. My own experience bears that out, my analogue Mendip reception was was always iffy WRT multipath, due to foliage, especially in windy and rainy conditions, which was on occasions so bad that the ghost images would pulsate in and out, I switched to digital Freeview almost as soon as it started and have never bothered with analogue since, because it works so well, despite the transmission power still only being at one tenth of its intended power after DSO. The only problem I've ever experienced was occasional impulse noise (due to a young neighbours motorcycle) this was completely eliminated with a new aerial and a CT 100 rewire from aerial to amplifier and all six outlets, and maybe even that would have disappeared of its own accord had I waited for Mendip to put out 100 kW and switch transmissions to 8K after DSO. |
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#8
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My own experience bears that out, my analogue Mendip reception was was
always iffy WRT multipath, due to foliage, especially in windy and rainy conditions, which was on occasions so bad that the ghost images would pulsate in and out, I switched to digital Freeview almost as soon as it started and have never bothered with analogue since, because it works so well, despite the transmission power still only being at one tenth of its intended power after DSO. The only problem I've ever experienced was occasional impulse noise (due to a young neighbours motorcycle) this was completely eliminated with a new aerial and a CT 100 rewire from aerial to amplifier and all six outlets, and maybe even that would have disappeared of its own accord had I waited for Mendip to put out 100 kW and switch transmissions to 8K after DSO. That bears out my experience on holiday below Caradon Hill. An indoor Silver Sensor aerial was useless on analogue, requiring tweaking between each channel change and giving at best really ghosty results. DTTV however was rock solid and I was very happy to have packed the set top box! |
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#9
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On 17 Feb, 19:08, "Doctor D" wrote:
My own experience bears that out, my analogue Mendip reception was was always iffy WRT multipath, due to foliage, especially in windy and rainy conditions, which was on occasions so bad that the ghost images would pulsate in and out, I switched to digital Freeview almost as soon as it started and have never bothered with analogue since, because it works so well, despite the transmission power still only being at one tenth of its intended power after DSO. The only problem I've ever experienced was occasional impulse noise (due to a young neighbours motorcycle) this was completely eliminated with a new aerial and a CT 100 rewire from aerial to amplifier and all six outlets, and maybe even that would have disappeared of its own accord had I waited for Mendip to put out 100 kW and switch transmissions to 8K after DSO. That bears out my experience on holiday below Caradon Hill. An indoor Silver Sensor aerial was useless on analogue, requiring tweaking between each channel change and giving at best really ghosty results. DTTV however was rock solid and I was very happy to have packed the set top box! Quite! Based on my experience with the Wales/SW England DSO, I think the sheer increase in signal levels post switchover will immediately remedy any problems caused by normal equipment wear and tear. Post DSO DTT is a real revelation compared to the flawed transitional system we've struggled with since 1998. |
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#10
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"Steve Thackery" wrote in message
... "Tony" wrote in message . .. As we engineer things to be more efficient they will require more maintenance or better design for reliability. For example POTS is very robust, but ADSL is not so phone lines now are more sensitive to problems...... Well, just to nitpick a little: research conducted at BT Labs (no longer called that) at Martlesham (my workplace for many years) showed that ADSL was actually MORE robust than telephony to all the usual line faults, such as battery or earth contact, high resistance joints, noisy joints, and so on. Someone should tell the Openreach engineers. I really had to fight to get them to accept that there was a fault in the ADSL equipment at the exchange, they kept whining about minute problems they'd detected on the line and tiny imbalances caused by one of my surge filters. -- Brian Gregory. (In the UK) To email me remove the letter vee. |
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