SBE CHAPTER 40 NEWSLETTER

JUNE 1997

SAN FRANCISCO

Roy Trumbull - Editor [email protected]

Bill Dempster - Artist


BABES/SBE LUNCHEON ON WEDNESDAY JUNE 25TH

This month our speaker will be from Andrews and the topic will be tower loading. A comparison will be made between the historic standards and the current standards.
As usual our luncheon will be at Sinbad's. Sinbad's is just south of the Ferry Building on the Embarcadero near the foot of Mission Street. Please RSVP to Karen Prasek at Zack's: 408-324-0551 x126 as we've been running out of tables and chairs. We meet at 11:30 and are seated at 12:30.


WEB PAGES

The chapter 40 web page is at http://www.lns.com/sbe.


EMAIL MEISTER

The keeper of the chapter 40 email address list, Warren Reese his address is [email protected].


FUTURE MEETINGS

We will be having a joint meeting with SMPTE on the evening of July 24th. No details at this time. Check our web page and use the link to SMPTE for information.
July 30th - Fiber Optic Fundamentals will be presented by Rick Cabalka of ADC Telecommunications.


KTVU OPERATORS PASS

The news in the latest SBE newsletter is that all the operators and engineers, who took the Television Operator's certification test, passed. This was certainly the largest group I've given a cert test to in all the years I've been doing it. Congratulations!


TRANSLATION PLEASE

When I'm stuck on the highway I'm just as likely to listen to Spanish radio as gringo radio. One station has a logo they promote all the time and I just don't get it. It sounds like "La Seta" which I translate as "the mushroom". If that ain't it, what is it?


DTV - THE LATEST IN ANALOG TECHNOLOGY

Digital shares a problem with poets and botanists. It can't describe a rose in a few words. In fact its ability to turn a burp into a thousand bits is pretty much its undoing. We've spent years working on throwing as much of the signal away as we dare just to get it down practical communications pipes. Once we've run it through the MPEG trash compactor it's pretty much untouchable. Trying to break into the bit stream is like getting into Fort Knox.
When you consider that a HDTV camera can put out a bit stream of 1.2 to 1.6 gigabits and that somehow we get that down to 19.39 megabits (including audio) to plug it into the transmitter, it makes you wonder if we just couldnt cut to the chase and start out with a much more economic source. Frankly it looks like no one seriously contemplates replacing their baloney with prime rib any time soon.


GETTING THE PIG INTO THE CANNON

I knew that somehow they had managed to get the 19.39 MHz into the transmitter via a device called an 8VSB modulator but it was only last week that I figured out how. It's an analog system.
There are to damn many ones and zeros to deal with so the first step is to abandon binary. Each possible combination of two bits is used to generate a four level code. 00 = 0, 01=1, 10=2, 11=3. This has the advantage of cutting the frequency in half as one 4 level symbol is created in half the time required for two bits.The code passes through a device called a trellis coder whose function is to make the signal as goof proof as possible. Its output has 8 levels: -7, -5, -3, -1, 1, 3, 5, 7. The bit stream is split with one symbol taking the inphase path and the other the quadrature. By this time they have been converted to analogs of the 8 level signals and are used to modulate a suppressed carrier. The result of their modulation is a vector whose amplitude and angle define a particular value in a constellation chart. Once again weve cut the frequency rate in half.
The key factor in transmission is linearity. If we go for a 5 and overshoot to a 5.3 or undershoot to a 4.7 weve eaten up some of the margin the consumer needs for his decoder. It would be like reducing transmitter power.


DUES ARE DUE

We haven't heard from a few of you about renewing your membership! It's almost time when we are required to drop you from the member list. If you can't locate your membership renewal form, call Teresa Ransdell at the SBE National Office at (317) 253-1640 or e-mail Teresa at [email protected], as soon as possible. Payments can be by check, VISA, Mastercard or American Express.