The Sinclair test in Seattle was a text link they were broadcasting that pointed to their online radio streams. No audio was broadcast over the air. It was just a link in HTML that was embedded within the ATSC 3.0 signal. I received it on my HDHomeRun.
I think I may be the only person who actually checked into what the hype was about.
They supposedly had a “live” demo at CES of ota delivery as well.
Maybe at the time they were "messing with the thing"
They supposedly had a “live” demo at CES of ota delivery as well.
All digital FM also brings into a whole problem of what is a comparable power levels for full digital operations compared to hybrid or analog.
All digital FM also brings into a whole problem of what is a comparable power levels for full digital operations compared to hybrid or analog.
Because the theoretical TPO required to do DTV on VHF was much less than analog, the transmitter replacement cost was much less than a VHF station with a 'transition channel' UHF. And for "flash-cutting" stations, usually, they could get away with keeping their existing antenna. For example, a 5kW VHF DTV transmitter would likely cost less than $100K plus bandpass filters, whereas a 90kW UHF solid-state transmitter would be north of $650K, not including installation costs. Then you have to install a heavy high-power UHF antenna, supporting tower work, bandpass filters, TX line, installation, etc.What do you estimate, in a "flash cut" situation, the cost of the transmitter, antenna, tower work and related items would cost for both a low and high band VHF to have been?
The whole ATSC 3.0 thing in itself is/was a nothing burger. Unless the Commission wants to go through another round of spectrum auctions by taking big chunks of existing UHF DTV channels by requiring one ATSC 3.0 transmission that housed all the local stations per market, I don't see it ever gaining traction. And the whole radio on ATSC 3.0 was just another silly attempt by Sinclair to throw something at the wall to see if it stuck.The Sinclair test in Seattle was a text link they were broadcasting that pointed to their online radio streams. No audio was broadcast over the air. It was just a link in HTML that was embedded within the ATSC 3.0 signal. I received it on my HDHomeRun.
I think I may be the only person who actually checked into what the hype was about.
But that doesn't happen everytime...not all new autos have HD...I would bet less than 50%Anyone who buys a new car with built in HD radio.
But that doesn't happen everytime...not all new autos have HD...I would bet less than 50%
The whole ATSC 3.0 thing in itself is/was a nothing burger.
I'm assuming that they'd do what they're doing on AM, where a 1000 watt AM would become a 1000 watt All-Digital station.
If a 100,000 watt Class C FM station converted to digital, it would become a (mind-blowingly huge) 100,000 watt All-Digital signal. That's my assumption.
I don't think the 100,000 watt all-digital signal would be much huger than the existing analog signal, would it? The FM signal would still travel in straight line with its range limited by the horizon, whether it's analog or digital.
The problem is just managing interference, a powerful digital signal in fringe areas will take over a weaker analog signal in a adjacent area.I don't think the 100,000 watt all-digital signal would be much huger than the existing analog signal, would it? The FM signal would still travel in straight line with its range limited by the horizon, whether it's analog or digital.
The trouble with the current HD signals is that the digital portion is at such a low power it doesn't reach all the way to the horizon, or even much more than halfway out into the analog coverage area of smaller signals.
Actually most larger TV groups, especially O&O's aren't interested in killing-off OTA viewing anymore. If anything, they're seeing it as a parachute should cable subscribers and retrans fees continue to fall. One major thing that DTV OTA gives a group, network, or station, is the ability to carry programming that otherwise would be available to cable. Oxygen True Crime is a good example. None of the cable providers were interested in paying for Oxygen, so NBCU put it on all their O&O stations where it actually makes money with national ads. I heard somewhere that TelXidos, a Spanish language diginet version of Cozi or MeTV, clears over a million per year in national ad revenue for just old movies and reruns of Telemundo programming.The plus to ATSC 3.0 (for corporations, not the public) is that it has the potential to kill-off OTA viewing, which is the only form of content delivery that the major broadcast station owners can not monetize outside of advertising. I'm sure some executives see the "20% OTA" as a bad thing, with no re-transmission or subscription revenue.
Current estimates are that 50 million cars on the road are equipped with HD radio capability.But that doesn't happen everytime...not all new autos have HD...I would bet less than 50%
Or it could be that ATSC 3.0 keeps their options open, and we're both right!Actually most larger TV groups, especially O&O's aren't interested in killing-off OTA viewing anymore. If anything, they're seeing it as a parachute should cable subscribers and retrans fees continue to fall.
Oh yeah, I agree, the statutory benefits of OTA TV are great. But if they do decide that OTA is a detriment to their model, they could move everything over to ATSC 3.0 (and even encrypt it) and keep their retransmission and must carry rights (after the laws are adjusted to allow for ATSC 3.0 carriage). That would effectively kill OTA while keeping the legal benefits.One major thing that DTV OTA gives a group, network, or station, is the ability to carry programming that otherwise would be available to cable.