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HDTV...
On Tue, 13 Nov 07, "BillP" wrote:
There is no combining of channels and your standard def TV can only display 480 lines Phantman: Why do they always transmit their Hi Def programs on two channels? On Wed, 14 Nov 07, "BillP" wrote: Which PBS is your local? Phantman: Mississippi Public Broadcasting, WMAH Channel 19 in Biloxi On Wed, 14 Nov 07, "BillP" wrote: From what I see, WMAH transmits three channels- 19 Analog 19.1 Digital 19.2 Digital HD You may be confusing "DT" with "HD" and seeing both channels as the same. On their website, I see only the schedules for Analog 19 and Digital 19.2. But on my TV, I'm picking up D19.1, D19.2, & D19.3 (plus analog 19). Analog 19 and D19.1 are always identical programing, even during breaks between shows. And D19.2 & D19.3 normally each broadcast their own unique programing. But just before a High Def show comes on, the announcement is "The following broadcast is in High Definition" (or words to that effect). At which point 19.1 and 19.2 and Analog 19 all broadcast the exact same programming simutaneously. I've never noticed simultaneous programming on D19.3. It's always doing it's own thing. I don't doubt I'm confused. I don't even know what "DT" stands for. Rick |
HDTV...
wrote in message ... On Tue, 13 Nov 07, "BillP" wrote: There is no combining of channels and your standard def TV can only display 480 lines Phantman: Why do they always transmit their Hi Def programs on two channels? On Wed, 14 Nov 07, "BillP" wrote: Which PBS is your local? Phantman: Mississippi Public Broadcasting, WMAH Channel 19 in Biloxi On Wed, 14 Nov 07, "BillP" wrote: From what I see, WMAH transmits three channels- 19 Analog 19.1 Digital 19.2 Digital HD You may be confusing "DT" with "HD" and seeing both channels as the same. On their website, I see only the schedules for Analog 19 and Digital 19.2. But on my TV, I'm picking up D19.1, D19.2, & D19.3 (plus analog 19). Analog 19 and D19.1 are always identical programing, even during breaks between shows. And D19.2 & D19.3 normally each broadcast their own unique programing. But just before a High Def show comes on, the announcement is "The following broadcast is in High Definition" (or words to that effect). At which point 19.1 and 19.2 and Analog 19 all broadcast the exact same programming simutaneously. I've never noticed simultaneous programming on D19.3. It's always doing it's own thing. I don't doubt I'm confused. I don't even know what "DT" stands for. Rick DT Stands for "Digital Television" What is going on in your case is 19.1 is probably always a digital simulcast of analog 19, 19.2 is the digital national PBS feed, and 19.3 is a separate sub channel that is carrying something such as local events, community access, announcements, weather, etc. When you see "The following broadcast is in High Definition" and you lose 19.3 this is most likely due to the station shutting it (19.3)down to free up the extra bandwidth necessary to transmit in HD. At this same time your local PBS also switches to PBS's national feed which is why you see the same show on 3 separate channels, analog, digital, and HD. Here's some info on DT subchannels- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Digital_subchannel also on this page- |
HDTV...
On Tue, 13 Nov 07, "BillP" wrote:
There is no combining of channels and your standard def TV can only display 480 lines Phantman: Why do they always transmit their Hi Def programs on two channels? On Wed, 14 Nov 07, "BillP" wrote: Which PBS is your local? Phantman: Mississippi Public Broadcasting, WMAH Channel 19 in Biloxi On Wed, 14 Nov 07, "BillP" wrote: From what I see, WMAH transmits three channels- 19 Analog 19.1 Digital 19.2 Digital HD You may be confusing "DT" with "HD" and seeing both channels as the same. Phantman: On their website, I see only the schedules for Analog 19 and Digital 19.2. But on my TV, I'm picking up D19.1, D19.2, & D19.3 (plus analog 19). Analog 19 and D19.1 are always identical programing, even during breaks between shows. And D19.2 & D19.3 normally each broadcast their own unique programing. But just before a High Def show comes on, the announcement is "The following broadcast is in High Definition" (or words to that effect). At which point 19.1 and 19.2 and Analog 19 all broadcast the exact same programming simutaneously. I've never noticed simultaneous programming on D19.3. It's always doing it's own thing. I don't doubt I'm confused. I don't even know what "DT" stands for. On Wed, 14 Nov 07, "BillP" wrote: DT Stands for "Digital Television" oh... lol.... -duh- What is going on in your case is 19.1 is probably always a digital simulcast of analog 19 Exactly 19.2 is the digital national PBS feed, and 19.3 is a separate sub channel that is carrying something such as local events, community access, announcements, weather, etc. Yup. 19.3 is something called "Create". It's mostly "How to" shows like Cooking, This Old House, .... like that. When you see "The following broadcast is in High Definition" and you lose 19.3 this is most likely due to the station shutting it (19.3)down to free up the extra bandwidth necessary to transmit in HD. At this same time your local PBS also switches to PBS's national feed which is why you see the same show on 3 separate channels, analog, digital, and HD. That all makes sense except I don't lose 19.3. It just keeps broadcasting its own thing no matter what the other channels are doing. I knew Hi Def takes more bandwidth though, and that's why it made sense to me when I was told HD broadcasts used 19.1 plus 19.2 simultaneously to get enough signal out. As an aside, analog always broadcasts the HD programming simultaneously but otherwise has nothing to do with Hi Def transmission. Here's some info on DT subchannels- http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Digital_subchannel also on this page- Thanks, I'll check it out. Rick |
HDTV...
wrote in message ... That all makes sense except I don't lose 19.3. It just keeps broadcasting its own thing no matter what the other channels are doing. They can do that too- it just means they must compress the signals more to support the 2 DT and 1 HD channels at the same time. |
HDTV...
PhantMan wrote:
That all makes sense except I don't lose 19.3. It just keeps broadcasting its own thing no matter what the other channels are doing. On Wed, 14 Nov 07, "BillP" wrote: They can do that too- it just means they must compress the signals more to support the 2 DT and 1 HD channels at the same time. Ok thanks. I think I've got it now. Rick |
HDTV...
"Eisboch" wrote in message ... Another somewhat annoying thing about the Toshiba.... It's one of the new models with a fully digital tuner although it still processes analog. When you turn it on a message appears on the screen, saying "Please wait". This lasts for a fews seconds as the tuner apparently "boots" up. Then, if you change the channel with the remote, there is a significant delay while it changes to the selected channel. Screen goes blank and you wait for a bit. Not good for serious clicker watchers. Eisboch Sounds like my Dishnetwork tuner. |
HDTV...
On Wed, 14 Nov 2007 12:03:22 -0800, "Calif Bill"
wrote: "Eisboch" wrote in message m... Another somewhat annoying thing about the Toshiba.... It's one of the new models with a fully digital tuner although it still processes analog. When you turn it on a message appears on the screen, saying "Please wait". This lasts for a fews seconds as the tuner apparently "boots" up. Then, if you change the channel with the remote, there is a significant delay while it changes to the selected channel. Screen goes blank and you wait for a bit. Not good for serious clicker watchers. Eisboch Sounds like my Dishnetwork tuner. Yes, I was thinking the same thing. I believe they buffer up a few seconds of programming in the receiver before they turn it loose to the television. |
HDTV...
"Wayne.B" wrote in message ... On Wed, 14 Nov 2007 12:03:22 -0800, "Calif Bill" wrote: "Eisboch" wrote in message om... Another somewhat annoying thing about the Toshiba.... It's one of the new models with a fully digital tuner although it still processes analog. When you turn it on a message appears on the screen, saying "Please wait". This lasts for a fews seconds as the tuner apparently "boots" up. Then, if you change the channel with the remote, there is a significant delay while it changes to the selected channel. Screen goes blank and you wait for a bit. Not good for serious clicker watchers. Eisboch Sounds like my Dishnetwork tuner. Yes, I was thinking the same thing. I believe they buffer up a few seconds of programming in the receiver before they turn it loose to the television. You hit it. |
HDTV...
On Wed, 14 Nov 2007 20:24:46 -0500, Wayne.B
wrote: On Wed, 14 Nov 2007 12:03:22 -0800, "Calif Bill" wrote: "Eisboch" wrote in message om... Another somewhat annoying thing about the Toshiba.... It's one of the new models with a fully digital tuner although it still processes analog. When you turn it on a message appears on the screen, saying "Please wait". This lasts for a fews seconds as the tuner apparently "boots" up. Then, if you change the channel with the remote, there is a significant delay while it changes to the selected channel. Screen goes blank and you wait for a bit. Not good for serious clicker watchers. Eisboch Sounds like my Dishnetwork tuner. Yes, I was thinking the same thing. I believe they buffer up a few seconds of programming in the receiver before they turn it loose to the television. I wonder if you can adjust that like you can with XM or Sirius? |
HDTV...
On Thu, 15 Nov 2007 01:46:28 GMT, Short Wave Sportfishing
wrote: It's one of the new models with a fully digital tuner although it still processes analog. When you turn it on a message appears on the screen, saying "Please wait". This lasts for a fews seconds as the tuner apparently "boots" up. Then, if you change the channel with the remote, there is a significant delay while it changes to the selected channel. Screen goes blank and you wait for a bit. Not good for serious clicker watchers. Eisboch Sounds like my Dishnetwork tuner. Yes, I was thinking the same thing. I believe they buffer up a few seconds of programming in the receiver before they turn it loose to the television. I wonder if you can adjust that like you can with XM or Sirius? Probably if you are a DishNetwork Receiver wizard but I'm certainly not. They don't exactly encourage customers to "explore" the box. |
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