F
FFoti
Guest
Re: DSP-X for AM?
Not necessarily so! Even though the breakpoint is high, it's not an absolute frequency limit. There is "spillage" between the bands as the slope of the x-over filters is gentile. Band #5 is still doing work. We've tested this, and it still effects the high frequencies even in narrow-band situations.
-Frank Foti
> Yes, and with the "brick-wall" filter, there is a trade-off
> between brightness, distortion/ringing, and overshoot
> control which needs to be fine-tuned, especially at lower
> frequencies (like the horribly low 4.5 kHz bandwidth that
> the ITU requires in Europe). Plus there is no point to
> having four or six bands of processing when the upper half
> of those bands will never be heard on the air! Thus,
> adjustable crossover frequencies between each band is a
> really nice thing to have, at least for users who are stuck
> with narrowband AM audio. For example, on the Omnia 5-EX,
> the highest band's crossover is at 4.8 kHz -- so if you're
> only transmitting 4.5 or 5 kHz's worth of audio, that
> processing band is rendered useless.
Not necessarily so! Even though the breakpoint is high, it's not an absolute frequency limit. There is "spillage" between the bands as the slope of the x-over filters is gentile. Band #5 is still doing work. We've tested this, and it still effects the high frequencies even in narrow-band situations.
-Frank Foti
> Yes, and with the "brick-wall" filter, there is a trade-off
> between brightness, distortion/ringing, and overshoot
> control which needs to be fine-tuned, especially at lower
> frequencies (like the horribly low 4.5 kHz bandwidth that
> the ITU requires in Europe). Plus there is no point to
> having four or six bands of processing when the upper half
> of those bands will never be heard on the air! Thus,
> adjustable crossover frequencies between each band is a
> really nice thing to have, at least for users who are stuck
> with narrowband AM audio. For example, on the Omnia 5-EX,
> the highest band's crossover is at 4.8 kHz -- so if you're
> only transmitting 4.5 or 5 kHz's worth of audio, that
> processing band is rendered useless.