[opendtv] News: Mobile DTV Transmission Surprises
- From: Craig Birkmaier <craig@xxxxxxxxx>
- To: OpenDTV Mail List <opendtv@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Mon, 23 Feb 2009 10:40:23 -0500
http://www.televisionbroadcast.com/article/74800
Mobile DTV Transmission Surprises
(Feb. 20, 2009) PALM SPRINGS, CALIF.: There are a few bugs to be
worked out of mobile DTV transmissions, according to Merrill Weiss, a
veteran TV signal expert based in Middlesex County, N.J. Weiss
presented a summary of transmission test results at the Hollywood
Post Alliance Technology retreat on the high desert this week.
"There are so many reflections, there's no dominant path," he said.
Engineers conducting the tests found higher signal echoes than
originally expected. Weiss focused on a trial in San Francisco, but
results were reproduced elsewhere. Based on temporal deduction, the
test pattern revealed signals were bouncing off support structures on
the Bay Bridge.
"Longer and stronger echoes really do exist," he said, complicating
the prospect of urban transmissions of mobile DTV.
The tests were conducted by members of the Open Mobile Video
Coalition, a group formed to hammer out a transmission standard and
coordinate the roll-out of mobile DTV. Broadcasters mobilized on
mobile in the last 18 months or so, hoping to shore up local
over-the-air loyalty and create a new revenue stream. The standard
was rapidly established, and 63 stations are on deck to launch mobile
DTV service in 22 markets throughout this year.
Reaction within the broadcast community is enthusiasm versus raised
eyebrow. CBS is happy to let established carriers like Verizon and
Sprint chop the wood and haul the water. CBS's Bob Seidel notes that
no one is making money on mobile TV, and the carriers have two-way
service, where broadcasters could just offer one-way.
Jim Starzynski of NBC said, well oh, contraire. Broadcasters could
take some of the video load off of carriers in return for two-way
capability.
However the business model plays out, Weiss's presentation indicated
that more technical work may be in order. The receivers ready to come
to market can handle signal spread of up to 50 microseconds, but the
echoes were coming in at levels that could overpower some receivers,
both stationary and mobile. Weiss, who helped pioneer
multi-transmitter, single frequency networks for television, said the
SFN architecture is one way to solve the echo problem.
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- » [opendtv] News: Mobile DTV Transmission Surprises - Craig Birkmaier