fbpx
Wikipedia

ATSC tuner

An ATSC (Advanced Television Systems Committee) tuner, often called an ATSC receiver or HDTV tuner, is a type of television tuner that allows reception of digital television (DTV) television channels that use ATSC standards, as transmitted by television stations in North America, parts of Central America, and South Korea. Such tuners are usually integrated into a television set, VCR, digital video recorder (DVR), or set-top box which provides audio/video output connectors of various types.[citation needed]

Multiple MPEG programs are combined then sent to a transmitting antenna. In the US broadcast digital TV system, an ATSC receiver then decodes the TS and displays it on a TV.

Another type of television tuner is a digital television adapter (DTA) with an analog passthrough.[citation needed]

Technical overview edit

The terms "tuner" and "receiver" are used loosely, and it is perhaps more appropriately called an ATSC receiver, with the tuner being part of the receiver (see Metonymy). The receiver generates the audio and video (AV) signals needed for television, and performs the following tasks: demodulation; error correction; MPEG transport stream demultiplexing; decompression; AV synchronization; and media reformatting to match what is optimal input for one's TV. Examples of media reformatting include: interlace to progressive scan or vice versa; picture resolutions; aspect ratio conversions (16:9 to or from 4:3); frame rate conversion; and image scaling. Zooming is an example of resolution change. It is commonly used to convert a low-resolution picture to a high-resolution display. This lets the user eliminate letterboxing or pillarboxing by stretching or cropping the picture. Some ATSC receivers, mostly those in HDTV TV sets, will stretch automatically, either by detecting black bars or by reading the Active Format Description (AFD).[citation needed]

Operation edit

An ATSC tuner works by generating audio and video signals that are picked up from over-the-air broadcast television. ATSC tuners provide the following functions: selective tuning; demodulation; transport stream demultiplexing; decompression; error correction; analog-to-digital conversion; AV synchronization; and media reformatting to fit the specific type of TV screen optimally.[citation needed]

Selective tuning edit

Selective tuning is the process by which the radio frequency (RF) of the television channel is selected by a receiver from within a band of transmitted RF signals. The tuner usually performs the function of frequency-agile selection, along with rejection of unwanted out-of-band signals.[citation needed]

Demodulation edit

"Demodulation" means transforming the signal from the tuner into a signal that a TV set can use to produce images and sound without further consideration for the frequency at which it was transmitted. It is separation of a standard baseband signal from the RF carrier that was used to transmit it through the air (or down a coaxial cable or other long-distance medium.) ATSC as implemented in the US uses 8VSB modulation, which requires less power to transmit, as opposed to the also proposed COFDM modulation (used in European DVB-T, which is less prone to multipath distortion and therefore better received in mobile installations).[citation needed]

Transport stream edit

In the US, multiple digital signals are combined and then transmitted from one antenna source to create over the air broadcasts. By the reverse process (demultiplexing), an ATSC receiver first receives the combined MPEG transport stream and then decodes it to display one of its component signals on a TV set.[citation needed]

Decompression edit

Since digital signals that are broadcast over the air are compressed (packed smaller), once they are received by the ATSC tuner, these compressed packets of digital data are then decompressed (unpacked to their original size). The ATSC system uses lossy compression, so while the decompressed data size is the same as the original compressed data size, the data produced is not exactly the same as the original data fed into the system at the transmitting site, but it is close enough that most people will not notice a difference.[citation needed]

Error correction edit

Error correction is a technology that is used by the ATSC tuner to make sure that any data that is missing can be corrected. For instance, sometimes interference or a poor-quality signal will cause the loss of some data that the ATSC tuner receives. With error correction, the tuner has the ability to perform a number of checks and repair data so that a signal can be viewed on a TV set. Error correction works by adding some extra information to the signal before transmission that can be used upon reception to fill in gaps. Therefore, error correction has the opposite effect of compression—it increases the amount of data to transmit, rather than reducing it like compression does, and it improves the quality and robustness of the signal rather than reducing it. Compression removes redundant (and some non-redundant) data, while error correction adds some redundant data. The reason for using error correction rather than just using less compression and keeping the redundancy that was already there is that error correction systems are specially designed to get the maximum benefit out of a very small amount of redundant data, whereas the natural redundancy of the data doesn't do this job as efficiently, so with error correction the net amount of data needed is still smaller.[citation needed]

  • The ATSC standard (ATSC-E) has a subsection that allows broadcasters to add extra (and variable types) of error correction to their broadcast streams.
  • This error correction service is not mandatory in the US, nor is it mandatory in Canada.
  • It is not known how many HDTV receivers support this error correction standard.
  • For the transmission of HDTV at 720 or 1080, an extra 1% to 3% added error correction codes will help reduce some of ATSC's poorer performance with weak signals under adverse multipath conditions.
  • Reception is greatly reduced due to EMI in the shortwave to VHF and UHF bandwidth from nearby computers of all sorts [light], portable WiFi and Broadband internet [medium to strong], microwave ovens [burst while activated], cell phones and the towers they communicate with, and even power lines with electronic transmissions.

AV synchronization edit

AV synchronization is the coordination of audio and video signals being displayed on a digital TV in proper time. AV synchronization ensures that the audio does not lag behind the video that is being displayed on the TV set or vice versa, so that both audio and video are in sync.[citation needed]

Image reformatting edit

Media reformatting is extremely important because the formatting of images on TV sets differs significantly according to the technology employed. For instance, some televisions have an interlaced picture, whereas others have a progressive-scan picture. Different televisions have a different aspect ratio.[citation needed]

United States government mandates edit

The FCC has issued the following mandates for devices entering the US:[1][2][3]

  • By July 1, 2005 all televisions with screen sizes over 36 inches (91 cm) must include a built-in ATSC DTV tuner.
  • By March 1, 2006 all televisions with screen sizes over 25 inches (64 cm) must include a built-in ATSC DTV tuner.
  • By March 1, 2007 all televisions regardless of screen size, and all interface devices that include a tuner (VCR, DVD player/recorder, DVR) must include a built-in ATSC DTV tuner.

Devices manufactured before these dates can still be sold without a built-in ATSC DTV tuner; the lack of digital tuners legally must be disclosed to consumers and most name-brand retailers have incurred FCC penalties for non-compliance with these requirements.[4]

The current regulations are specified in the U.S. Code of Federal Regulations (CFR).[5]

Analog TV broadcast switch-off edit

In early 2006 the US Deficit Reduction Act of 2005[6] became law, which calls for full-power over-the-air television stations to cease their analog broadcasts by February 17, 2009[7] (this cut-off date had been moved several times previously). On February 11, 2009,[8] the mandatory DTV broadcast date was moved again to June 12, 2009, although stations were allowed to switch earlier. The delay enabled distribution of more coupons for purchase of converter boxes.[9]

As of June 12, 2009, TVs and other equipment with legacy NTSC tuners are unable to receive over-the-air broadcasts from United States TV stations, unless the broadcast is from a repeater or low-power transmitter. However, Class-A stations shut down analog transmissions on September 1, 2015 followed by a complete shutdown of all low-power and repeater stations by July 13, 2021. Canada had a similar analog TV termination date set to September 1, 2011 (except in some remote northern regions).[citation needed]

It was feared that the US switch-off would cause millions of non-cable- and non-satellite-connected TV sets to "go dark". Viewers who did not upgrade, either to a television with a digital tuner or a set-top box, ended up losing their only source of television, unless they relied only upon the aforementioned non-full-power broadcasters. A Congressional bill authorized subsidized converter boxes in a way that allowed viewers to receive the new digital broadcasts on their old TVs. The transition proceeded with about 235,000 people requesting coupons after the June 12, 2009, transition date.[10]

Two $40 coupons were made available per US address[11] nominally from January 1, 2008, through March 31, 2009; each coupon could be used toward the purchase of one approved coupon-eligible converter box. The coupons expired 90 days after initial mailing and were not renewable. All households were eligible to receive coupons from the initial $990 million allocated, after which an additional $510 million in coupons was to be available to households that rely exclusively on over-the-air television reception. On January 4, 2009, the coupon program reached its US$1.34 billion ceiling[12] and any further consumer requests were placed on a waiting list.[13]

Canadian government mandates edit

In Canada, the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) had set August 31, 2011, as the date on which over-the-air analog TV transmission service would cease in 31 major markets of the country, including all provincial capitals, plus Ottawa (the national capital), and most other major urban centers.[14]

As of the end of 2008, there were 22 Canadian DTV transmitters on-air and all existing digital transitional television licenses explicitly proscribe, as a condition of license, the broadcast of more than fourteen hours a week of programming not already on the analogue service. Unlike in the United States, there is no plan to subsidise ATSC converter purchases and no requirement that newly imported receivers decode the digital signal. Canadian retailers are also not required to disclose the inability of new equipment to receive DTV. The Canadian market therefore has been flooded with obsolete new NTSC equipment which lawfully cannot be exported to the US. A limited number of ATSC receivers are in Canadian retail stores as high-definition television (HDTV) receivers. ATSC CECB converter boxes were first carried nationally in October 2008, with chains such as Best Buy and Home Hardware offering limited selection at higher prices than in the US with no government subsidies. ATSC tuners may also be present in most recently manufactured televisions, as well as DVD recorders, HDTV FTA receivers, and personal computer TV tuner cards.[citation needed]

As of the beginning of 2012, almost all Canadian broadcasters are broadcasting an ATSC signal, with a handful of exceptions granted for low-power and regional stations. These signals can be reliably tuned in most cities with a good indoor antenna and an ATSC tuner. US-based ATSC signals can be reliably tuned with an outdoor antenna and an ATSC tuner in Canadian markets within 60 miles of the US broadcast towers. These markets include Toronto (from Buffalo), Windsor (from Detroit and Toledo), Vancouver (from Seattle and Tacoma), Montreal (from Burlington and Plattsburgh), Ottawa (from Watertown and Plattsburgh), and Fredericton (from Presque Isle). Indoor antennas (both passive and amplified) are easier to install, but outdoor antennas are better at tuning stations from further distances.[citation needed]

Setup and operation edit

Most ATSC tuners have relatively simple on-screen menus, and automatically bring the user to a setup screen when turned on for the first time. This allows the user to pick the time zone and daylight-saving time mode (as all stations transmit time in UTC), and bandscan for stations. The scan "listens" on every channel from 2 to 69, and pauses when it detects a digital carrier wave. If it is able to decode the station, it reads its PSIP data, and adds its virtual channels to the channel map. If no PSIP is transmitted, the physical channel number is used, and each transport stream is enumerated according to its TSID (converted from hexadecimal), or starting sequentially at .1, .2, .3, and so forth, depending on the tuner.[citation needed]

Several TV stations are using or have used a temporary channel to send their DTV signals and, upon terminating analog transmission, move their digital transmission either back to their old analog channel, or to a third channel (sometimes the former analog of another local station), chosen in the digital channel election in the U.S. This requires all viewers to re-scan or manually add the new channel and possibly delete the old one. Doing a full re-scan will usually cause other channels to be dropped if they cannot be received at the moment the scan passes their physical channel, so this is typically undesirable, although many ATSC tuners only have this option. Some have an "easy-add" feature which does not delete what is already mapped in memory. Some allow the user to enter the physical channel and an unmapped subchannel, causing the tuner to search the physical channel. Depending on the tuner, this may or may not automatically add the station and its digital subchannels to the map, and/or to the user's "favorites". This may also leave the old "dead" channel mapping in place, so that there is the new 8.1, dead 8.1, new 8.2, dead 8.2, etc. In most cases, TV stations will not have the actual frequency they are currently using on their website. If the auto scan does not pick up the signal and the tuner has manual frequency scan capability try to get the actual frequency from the station engineer. This may allow one to stay on one frequency (channel) versus "scanning" (moving too quickly through) and allow one to make antenna adjustments while observing only a problematic channel.[citation needed]

Other errors which appear to be in the tuner are actually the result of incorrect data sent by one or more stations, often including missing electronic program guide data. Many ATSC tuners will remember EPG info for each station, but only for a few hours after viewing a channel on that station. Some will not remember at all (displaying only the required channel banner), while a very few others will store data for days (although this requires staying tuned to each station for more than a few seconds in order to receive the extended info). DirecTV receivers with ATSC tuners can download the guide at any time, while other TiVo units download guide data separately. TV Guide On Screen can also be used for this, but very few if any ATSC tuners include this (which requires downloading all guide data for all channels from one particular station). Stations sending the wrong time are also a major problem, as this can skew or ruin guide data for all stations until the correct time is received again from a different and correctly set station.[citation needed]

Manual tuning edit

Each digital OTA channel number is composed of a main number and a subchannel, for example 4.1, 4.2, etc. A dash is an alternate form of representation: 4–1, 4–2... The dot and dash are interchangeable; they both mean the same thing. The main channel numbers refer to the same radio frequencies as previously. However, now "virtual channel" (technically known as logical channel number) numbers are common. So, Channel 4 digital signals may now actually be broadcast on channel 43, or any other frequency. When the ATSC tuner does a channel scan, it finds the signal on channel 43, learns that this material is called "Channel 4", and remembers that mapping. The user can tune to "4", and the tuner will know to tune in 43. Before a scan is done, it may be possible to access the programs directly by manual tuning, by entering 43–1, 43–2... After the scan, the programs would usually be accessed by entering 4–1, 4-2 etc., but it may still be possible to also access them directly at 43 as long as it is also not the same as an already assigned channel. If stations change their broadcast frequencies, it may be possible to access the new frequencies directly as long as it is also not the same as an already assigned channel in which case it will go to that channel instead of the frequency, but the usual procedure is to re-scan all of the channels which will just assign multiple version of any overlapping channels.[citation needed]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "FCC INTRODUCES PHASE-IN PLAN FOR DTV TUNERS" (PDF). FCC. 2002-08-08. Retrieved 2006-06-05.[permanent dead link]
  2. ^ (PDF). FCC. 2005-11-08. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2006-04-20. Retrieved 2006-06-05.
  3. ^ . TWICE. 2005-11-21. Archived from the original on 2007-02-05. Retrieved 2006-08-30.
  4. ^ FCC, April 10, 2008: FCC adopts DTV enforcement orders totaling over $6 million
  5. ^ "CFR Title 47: Telecommunication; PART 15—RADIO FREQUENCY DEVICES; § 15.117 TV broadcast receivers" (PDF). FCC. 2006-10-01. Retrieved 2015-11-23.
  6. ^ Pub. L. No. 109-171, 120 Stat. 4 (February 8, 2006).
  7. ^ "Senate approves 2009 for end of analog TV". NBC News. 2005-11-04. Retrieved June 5, 2006. Section 3002 of the Act amends 47 U.S.C. section 309(j)(14) to provide for the February 17, 2009, deadline.
  8. ^ Hachman, Mark (February 11, 2009). "Obama Makes DTV Delay Official". PCMAG. Retrieved February 12, 2009.
  9. ^ "Congress Delays Troubled Switch To Digital TV". The Washington Post. from the original on 2017-03-18.
  10. ^ "FCC CONTINUES DTV OUTREACH ACROSS THE NATION" (PDF) (Press release). Federal Communications Commission. June 15, 2009. Retrieved 2013-08-07.
  11. ^ "Commerce Department Issues Final Rule To Launch Digital-to-Analog Converter Box Coupon Program". NTIA. 2007-03-12. from the original on 14 March 2007. Retrieved 2007-03-12.
  12. ^ "Commerce's NTIA Welcomes Congressional Action on DTV Delay as Opportunity for More Americans to Prepare for the End of the Digital TV Transition".
  13. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2009-04-03. Retrieved 2018-06-03.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  14. ^ "Broadcasting Regulatory Policy CRTC 2010-167" (Press release). Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission. 2010-03-22. from the original on 2010-03-26. Retrieved 2010-03-22.

Bibliography edit

  • "Over the air digital television reception FAQ". AVS forum. 29 March 2002. from the original on 2006-05-22. Retrieved 2006-06-05.
  • . Digital TV Designline. 2006-05-17. Archived from the original on 2007-09-28. Retrieved 2006-06-05.
  • "Tentative Digital Television (DTV) Channel assignment". Retrieved 2009-06-16.
  • "Television Frequency Table". Retrieved 2009-06-16.

External links edit

  • The FCC's DTV information site 2011-07-25 at the Wayback Machine
  • Patent and royalty info 2006-12-27
  • Enabling TV Tuner Technology for All-Digital Cable Networks[permanent dead link]

atsc, tuner, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, november, 2019. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources ATSC tuner news newspapers books scholar JSTOR November 2019 Learn how and when to remove this message An ATSC Advanced Television Systems Committee tuner often called an ATSC receiver or HDTV tuner is a type of television tuner that allows reception of digital television DTV television channels that use ATSC standards as transmitted by television stations in North America parts of Central America and South Korea Such tuners are usually integrated into a television set VCR digital video recorder DVR or set top box which provides audio video output connectors of various types citation needed Multiple MPEG programs are combined then sent to a transmitting antenna In the US broadcast digital TV system an ATSC receiver then decodes the TS and displays it on a TV Another type of television tuner is a digital television adapter DTA with an analog passthrough citation needed Contents 1 Technical overview 2 Operation 2 1 Selective tuning 2 2 Demodulation 2 3 Transport stream 2 4 Decompression 2 5 Error correction 2 6 AV synchronization 2 7 Image reformatting 3 United States government mandates 3 1 Analog TV broadcast switch off 4 Canadian government mandates 5 Setup and operation 6 Manual tuning 7 See also 8 References 9 Bibliography 10 External linksTechnical overview editThe terms tuner and receiver are used loosely and it is perhaps more appropriately called an ATSC receiver with the tuner being part of the receiver see Metonymy The receiver generates the audio and video AV signals needed for television and performs the following tasks demodulation error correction MPEG transport stream demultiplexing decompression AV synchronization and media reformatting to match what is optimal input for one s TV Examples of media reformatting include interlace to progressive scan or vice versa picture resolutions aspect ratio conversions 16 9 to or from 4 3 frame rate conversion and image scaling Zooming is an example of resolution change It is commonly used to convert a low resolution picture to a high resolution display This lets the user eliminate letterboxing or pillarboxing by stretching or cropping the picture Some ATSC receivers mostly those in HDTV TV sets will stretch automatically either by detecting black bars or by reading the Active Format Description AFD citation needed Operation editAn ATSC tuner works by generating audio and video signals that are picked up from over the air broadcast television ATSC tuners provide the following functions selective tuning demodulation transport stream demultiplexing decompression error correction analog to digital conversion AV synchronization and media reformatting to fit the specific type of TV screen optimally citation needed Selective tuning edit Selective tuning is the process by which the radio frequency RF of the television channel is selected by a receiver from within a band of transmitted RF signals The tuner usually performs the function of frequency agile selection along with rejection of unwanted out of band signals citation needed Demodulation edit Demodulation means transforming the signal from the tuner into a signal that a TV set can use to produce images and sound without further consideration for the frequency at which it was transmitted It is separation of a standard baseband signal from the RF carrier that was used to transmit it through the air or down a coaxial cable or other long distance medium ATSC as implemented in the US uses 8VSB modulation which requires less power to transmit as opposed to the also proposed COFDM modulation used in European DVB T which is less prone to multipath distortion and therefore better received in mobile installations citation needed Transport stream edit In the US multiple digital signals are combined and then transmitted from one antenna source to create over the air broadcasts By the reverse process demultiplexing an ATSC receiver first receives the combined MPEG transport stream and then decodes it to display one of its component signals on a TV set citation needed Decompression edit Since digital signals that are broadcast over the air are compressed packed smaller once they are received by the ATSC tuner these compressed packets of digital data are then decompressed unpacked to their original size The ATSC system uses lossy compression so while the decompressed data size is the same as the original compressed data size the data produced is not exactly the same as the original data fed into the system at the transmitting site but it is close enough that most people will not notice a difference citation needed Error correction edit Error correction is a technology that is used by the ATSC tuner to make sure that any data that is missing can be corrected For instance sometimes interference or a poor quality signal will cause the loss of some data that the ATSC tuner receives With error correction the tuner has the ability to perform a number of checks and repair data so that a signal can be viewed on a TV set Error correction works by adding some extra information to the signal before transmission that can be used upon reception to fill in gaps Therefore error correction has the opposite effect of compression it increases the amount of data to transmit rather than reducing it like compression does and it improves the quality and robustness of the signal rather than reducing it Compression removes redundant and some non redundant data while error correction adds some redundant data The reason for using error correction rather than just using less compression and keeping the redundancy that was already there is that error correction systems are specially designed to get the maximum benefit out of a very small amount of redundant data whereas the natural redundancy of the data doesn t do this job as efficiently so with error correction the net amount of data needed is still smaller citation needed The ATSC standard ATSC E has a subsection that allows broadcasters to add extra and variable types of error correction to their broadcast streams This error correction service is not mandatory in the US nor is it mandatory in Canada It is not known how many HDTV receivers support this error correction standard For the transmission of HDTV at 720 or 1080 an extra 1 to 3 added error correction codes will help reduce some of ATSC s poorer performance with weak signals under adverse multipath conditions Reception is greatly reduced due to EMI in the shortwave to VHF and UHF bandwidth from nearby computers of all sorts light portable WiFi and Broadband internet medium to strong microwave ovens burst while activated cell phones and the towers they communicate with and even power lines with electronic transmissions AV synchronization edit AV synchronization is the coordination of audio and video signals being displayed on a digital TV in proper time AV synchronization ensures that the audio does not lag behind the video that is being displayed on the TV set or vice versa so that both audio and video are in sync citation needed Image reformatting edit Media reformatting is extremely important because the formatting of images on TV sets differs significantly according to the technology employed For instance some televisions have an interlaced picture whereas others have a progressive scan picture Different televisions have a different aspect ratio citation needed United States government mandates editMain article Digital television transition in the United States The FCC has issued the following mandates for devices entering the US 1 2 3 By July 1 2005 all televisions with screen sizes over 36 inches 91 cm must include a built in ATSC DTV tuner By March 1 2006 all televisions with screen sizes over 25 inches 64 cm must include a built in ATSC DTV tuner By March 1 2007 all televisions regardless of screen size and all interface devices that include a tuner VCR DVD player recorder DVR must include a built in ATSC DTV tuner Devices manufactured before these dates can still be sold without a built in ATSC DTV tuner the lack of digital tuners legally must be disclosed to consumers and most name brand retailers have incurred FCC penalties for non compliance with these requirements 4 The current regulations are specified in the U S Code of Federal Regulations CFR 5 Analog TV broadcast switch off edit For Low Power Television Stations see Digital television transition in the United States In early 2006 the US Deficit Reduction Act of 2005 6 became law which calls for full power over the air television stations to cease their analog broadcasts by February 17 2009 7 this cut off date had been moved several times previously On February 11 2009 8 the mandatory DTV broadcast date was moved again to June 12 2009 although stations were allowed to switch earlier The delay enabled distribution of more coupons for purchase of converter boxes 9 As of June 12 2009 TVs and other equipment with legacy NTSC tuners are unable to receive over the air broadcasts from United States TV stations unless the broadcast is from a repeater or low power transmitter However Class A stations shut down analog transmissions on September 1 2015 followed by a complete shutdown of all low power and repeater stations by July 13 2021 Canada had a similar analog TV termination date set to September 1 2011 except in some remote northern regions citation needed It was feared that the US switch off would cause millions of non cable and non satellite connected TV sets to go dark Viewers who did not upgrade either to a television with a digital tuner or a set top box ended up losing their only source of television unless they relied only upon the aforementioned non full power broadcasters A Congressional bill authorized subsidized converter boxes in a way that allowed viewers to receive the new digital broadcasts on their old TVs The transition proceeded with about 235 000 people requesting coupons after the June 12 2009 transition date 10 Two 40 coupons were made available per US address 11 nominally from January 1 2008 through March 31 2009 each coupon could be used toward the purchase of one approved coupon eligible converter box The coupons expired 90 days after initial mailing and were not renewable All households were eligible to receive coupons from the initial 990 million allocated after which an additional 510 million in coupons was to be available to households that rely exclusively on over the air television reception On January 4 2009 the coupon program reached its US 1 34 billion ceiling 12 and any further consumer requests were placed on a waiting list 13 Canadian government mandates editMain article Digital television in Canada In Canada the Canadian Radio television and Telecommunications Commission CRTC had set August 31 2011 as the date on which over the air analog TV transmission service would cease in 31 major markets of the country including all provincial capitals plus Ottawa the national capital and most other major urban centers 14 As of the end of 2008 there were 22 Canadian DTV transmitters on air and all existing digital transitional television licenses explicitly proscribe as a condition of license the broadcast of more than fourteen hours a week of programming not already on the analogue service Unlike in the United States there is no plan to subsidise ATSC converter purchases and no requirement that newly imported receivers decode the digital signal Canadian retailers are also not required to disclose the inability of new equipment to receive DTV The Canadian market therefore has been flooded with obsolete new NTSC equipment which lawfully cannot be exported to the US A limited number of ATSC receivers are in Canadian retail stores as high definition television HDTV receivers ATSC CECB converter boxes were first carried nationally in October 2008 with chains such as Best Buy and Home Hardware offering limited selection at higher prices than in the US with no government subsidies ATSC tuners may also be present in most recently manufactured televisions as well as DVD recorders HDTV FTA receivers and personal computer TV tuner cards citation needed As of the beginning of 2012 almost all Canadian broadcasters are broadcasting an ATSC signal with a handful of exceptions granted for low power and regional stations These signals can be reliably tuned in most cities with a good indoor antenna and an ATSC tuner US based ATSC signals can be reliably tuned with an outdoor antenna and an ATSC tuner in Canadian markets within 60 miles of the US broadcast towers These markets include Toronto from Buffalo Windsor from Detroit and Toledo Vancouver from Seattle and Tacoma Montreal from Burlington and Plattsburgh Ottawa from Watertown and Plattsburgh and Fredericton from Presque Isle Indoor antennas both passive and amplified are easier to install but outdoor antennas are better at tuning stations from further distances citation needed Setup and operation editMost ATSC tuners have relatively simple on screen menus and automatically bring the user to a setup screen when turned on for the first time This allows the user to pick the time zone and daylight saving time mode as all stations transmit time in UTC and bandscan for stations The scan listens on every channel from 2 to 69 and pauses when it detects a digital carrier wave If it is able to decode the station it reads its PSIP data and adds its virtual channels to the channel map If no PSIP is transmitted the physical channel number is used and each transport stream is enumerated according to its TSID converted from hexadecimal or starting sequentially at 1 2 3 and so forth depending on the tuner citation needed Several TV stations are using or have used a temporary channel to send their DTV signals and upon terminating analog transmission move their digital transmission either back to their old analog channel or to a third channel sometimes the former analog of another local station chosen in the digital channel election in the U S This requires all viewers to re scan or manually add the new channel and possibly delete the old one Doing a full re scan will usually cause other channels to be dropped if they cannot be received at the moment the scan passes their physical channel so this is typically undesirable although many ATSC tuners only have this option Some have an easy add feature which does not delete what is already mapped in memory Some allow the user to enter the physical channel and an unmapped subchannel causing the tuner to search the physical channel Depending on the tuner this may or may not automatically add the station and its digital subchannels to the map and or to the user s favorites This may also leave the old dead channel mapping in place so that there is the new 8 1 dead 8 1 new 8 2 dead 8 2 etc In most cases TV stations will not have the actual frequency they are currently using on their website If the auto scan does not pick up the signal and the tuner has manual frequency scan capability try to get the actual frequency from the station engineer This may allow one to stay on one frequency channel versus scanning moving too quickly through and allow one to make antenna adjustments while observing only a problematic channel citation needed Other errors which appear to be in the tuner are actually the result of incorrect data sent by one or more stations often including missing electronic program guide data Many ATSC tuners will remember EPG info for each station but only for a few hours after viewing a channel on that station Some will not remember at all displaying only the required channel banner while a very few others will store data for days although this requires staying tuned to each station for more than a few seconds in order to receive the extended info DirecTV receivers with ATSC tuners can download the guide at any time while other TiVo units download guide data separately TV Guide On Screen can also be used for this but very few if any ATSC tuners include this which requires downloading all guide data for all channels from one particular station Stations sending the wrong time are also a major problem as this can skew or ruin guide data for all stations until the correct time is received again from a different and correctly set station citation needed Manual tuning editEach digital OTA channel number is composed of a main number and a subchannel for example 4 1 4 2 etc A dash is an alternate form of representation 4 1 4 2 The dot and dash are interchangeable they both mean the same thing The main channel numbers refer to the same radio frequencies as previously However now virtual channel technically known as logical channel number numbers are common So Channel 4 digital signals may now actually be broadcast on channel 43 or any other frequency When the ATSC tuner does a channel scan it finds the signal on channel 43 learns that this material is called Channel 4 and remembers that mapping The user can tune to 4 and the tuner will know to tune in 43 Before a scan is done it may be possible to access the programs directly by manual tuning by entering 43 1 43 2 After the scan the programs would usually be accessed by entering 4 1 4 2 etc but it may still be possible to also access them directly at 43 as long as it is also not the same as an already assigned channel If stations change their broadcast frequencies it may be possible to access the new frequencies directly as long as it is also not the same as an already assigned channel in which case it will go to that channel instead of the frequency but the usual procedure is to re scan all of the channels which will just assign multiple version of any overlapping channels citation needed See also editATSC DVD recorders Digital broadcasting Digital switchover Digital terrestrial television High definition television in the United States QAM tuner Tuner radio Virtual channelReferences edit FCC INTRODUCES PHASE IN PLAN FOR DTV TUNERS PDF FCC 2002 08 08 Retrieved 2006 06 05 permanent dead link Requirements for Digital Television Receiving Capability PDF FCC 2005 11 08 Archived from the original PDF on 2006 04 20 Retrieved 2006 06 05 FCC Moves Up DTV Tuner Date Broadens Scope TWICE 2005 11 21 Archived from the original on 2007 02 05 Retrieved 2006 08 30 FCC April 10 2008 FCC adopts DTV enforcement orders totaling over 6 million CFR Title 47 Telecommunication PART 15 RADIO FREQUENCY DEVICES 15 117 TV broadcast receivers PDF FCC 2006 10 01 Retrieved 2015 11 23 Pub L No 109 171 120 Stat 4 February 8 2006 Senate approves 2009 for end of analog TV NBC News 2005 11 04 Retrieved June 5 2006 Section 3002 of the Act amends 47 U S C section 309 j 14 to provide for the February 17 2009 deadline Hachman Mark February 11 2009 Obama Makes DTV Delay Official PCMAG Retrieved February 12 2009 Congress Delays Troubled Switch To Digital TV The Washington Post Archived from the original on 2017 03 18 FCC CONTINUES DTV OUTREACH ACROSS THE NATION PDF Press release Federal Communications Commission June 15 2009 Retrieved 2013 08 07 Commerce Department Issues Final Rule To Launch Digital to Analog Converter Box Coupon Program NTIA 2007 03 12 Archived from the original on 14 March 2007 Retrieved 2007 03 12 Commerce s NTIA Welcomes Congressional Action on DTV Delay as Opportunity for More Americans to Prepare for the End of the Digital TV Transition Archived copy Archived from the original on 2009 04 03 Retrieved 2018 06 03 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Broadcasting Regulatory Policy CRTC 2010 167 Press release Canadian Radio television and Telecommunications Commission 2010 03 22 Archived from the original on 2010 03 26 Retrieved 2010 03 22 Bibliography edit Over the air digital television reception FAQ AVS forum 29 March 2002 Archived from the original on 2006 05 22 Retrieved 2006 06 05 Understanding broadband silicon tuners for broadband cable and TV apps A Tutorial Digital TV Designline 2006 05 17 Archived from the original on 2007 09 28 Retrieved 2006 06 05 Tentative Digital Television DTV Channel assignment Retrieved 2009 06 16 Television Frequency Table Retrieved 2009 06 16 External links editThe FCC s DTV information site Archived 2011 07 25 at the Wayback Machine Patent and royalty info 2006 12 27 Enabling TV Tuner Technology for All Digital Cable Networks permanent dead link Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title ATSC tuner amp oldid 1215830589, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.