#1
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A PSIP Whiskey Tango Foxtrot!
Here’s a bit of a PSIP frame oddity. (I know… very bad pun!) At my QTH in Virginia, I receive most of the D.C. market TV stations. I have two Haier portables (one for traveling), two Vizio ATSC converters (one for traveling), and an antique Sony 34XBR960 receiver. My antenna on the Sony and the Vizio is a two-bay bowtie aimed at 4010 Chesapeake Street N.W. in D.C. (for the comparatively QRPp signals of WJLA and WUSA) while the Haier’s are strictly on the factory bunny-ear.
On channel 34 (Virtual 66 –WPXW, also at 4010 Chesapeake (the old WUSA “transition” facility)) both of the Haier’s provide PSIP stream identifications that neither the Sony nor the Vizio receivers provide: 66-100 Airbox 66-101 Starz 66-200 NFL 66-201 RedZone 66-209 GolTV 66-300 TeleFor 66-301 TeleMex 66-302 Pasions Of course, I get “Failed to Receive Broadcast” whenever I “tune” to these. Any idea as to what’s going on here? Or, is this another example of why we should’ve gone COFDM? Thanks, John W3XWT/4
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Reception Reports for Channel 37 TVDX Can Not Only Get You a QSL Card, but a One-Way Trip to the Planet Davanna is a Real Possibility... |
#2
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Perhaps encrypted premium feeds? This wiki article says the channel is doing that as well as a Mobile/Handheld stream... but does not indicate the same programming sources:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WPXW-TV jr |
#3
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Unreal... and interesting! What gets me is that if the programming is transmitted at 3.68 mb/s, wouldn't the PSIP frame also be transmitted at the same rate? Since I'm decoding that frame, it must also be running at 19.2 mb/s.
Maybe my next smartphone will be able to receive these signals!
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Reception Reports for Channel 37 TVDX Can Not Only Get You a QSL Card, but a One-Way Trip to the Planet Davanna is a Real Possibility... |
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