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Need help understanding relationship between NM db and Pwr dbm
My area seems to get pretty weak and unstable signal
I am 60 miles out and although the terrain is pretty flat here there are two metropolitan areas between me and the towers I am trying to understand the relationship between NM and Pwr from the reference PWR is the predicted signal power and NM is the predicted Noise Margin My strongest station at this time is showing a NM of 32 and a PWR of -58 the weakest station that I can sometimes pickup is showing NM of 15 and a PWR of -75 Being so far out and in the middle of nowhere and everything at the same time I am surrounded by 4-5 markets and I have a number of CoChannels I would guess that they also reduce or cancel out each other but the stations above are not CoChanneled and they are from one market. From reading the reference and I don't know if this is correct I must have a NM at the TV of over 0 to receive the station and the PWR is the strength of the signal to my home from the tower? so I think the PWR is more where I am getting confused but I am not sure. If I want to pickup a station that has NM of 15 and a PWR of -75 How do I understand what the Antenna and Amp should be theoretically rated at? Figuring I have a 10db rated uhf Antenna connected a RCA 22db uhf /16db vhf preamp then to 50' of coax to a 8 way distribution amp with 3-4db gain out and runs of 30' to each tv. guessing the Distribution Amp should cancel out most wire and splitter loss. from what I understand now between the 10db antenna and 22db of amp a station of NM of 15 means I should be good to go to watch that station But the PWR of -75 I am not sure how I account for that. the -75 seems to suggest that I probably shouldn't be able to get that signal very well if at all Since PWR is so low here with a conventional antenna I guess the most i can expect is about 15db gain at best which would compensate to bring the -75pwr up to -60 ? still not real great I am not sure ... anyway thanks my tvfool because I know you're gonna ask for it. http://www.tvfool.com/?option=com_wr...8e034e42ebcb68 |
Simple answer: NM=Rx Power - (-91.0). You can simplify that to be NM=91- absolute value (RX power) for RX Power < 0. You'd have to be less than a mile from a 1 MW station for Rx Power to be calculated to be greater than 0.
Signal power and ATSC: Doing some math (elsewhere), it can be calculated that the theoretical noise floor for a 6 MHz-wide channel is -106.2 dBm. ATSC specification requires a signal to noise ratio of 15.2 dB. Therefore, in a theoretical circuit, at the input to the decoder portion of the tuner, there must be a signal power > -91.0 dBm. The site's software establishes this as a 0 dB Noise Margin (NM) in that there's no margin for any additional reduction in signal power as that would cause decoding to fail. See FAQs for expansion of below. http://www.tvfool.com/index.php?opti...d=57&Itemid=78 Quote:
For an amplified system, the noise figure of the amplifier dominates the setting of the system noise figure. If you have a preamp with a 2 dB NF, a balun with 1 dB loss, and miscellaneous connector loss of .5 dB before the amp, the noise floor is raised by 3.5 dB at that point, all assuming that the gain of the amp is sufficient to cover the downstream losses by several dB. At the input to the decoder, the noise floor is a bit higher, you'd have to run the cascaded noise figure calculations to get a final estimate. I've found that 1-edge and 2-edge calculations in the simulator can be wildly inaccurate. My field tests have show results that vary by as much as 20 dB for 2-edge distant signals. For signal locations that "right behind" a significant terrain object like the back side of a hill or mountain, they're next to useless. Therefore, take those types of calculations to be worth less than a grain of salt. LOS signal calculations are usually close enough for government work. If you Have ANY impairments such as trees or buildings, the calculations cannot include them so any number calculated must be reduced by some "fudge factor" which one can develop after a while. |
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Hi, Zippy:
I see that ADTech beat me to it while I was typing, but I'll give you my answer anyway to supplement what he said. Maybe between the two of us we can turn on the light bulb for you. Quote:
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You can compensate for the Edge signal deficiency by using an antenna with a little more gain, but then the antenna will have a narrower beamwidth and must be aimed more carefully. That is the trade-off between gain and beamwidth. The antenna must be aimed at the transmitter for best signal quality to reject multipath reflections. Quote:
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I made this diagram to help me understand NM when I was learning about it: http://forum.tvfool.com/attachment.p...1&d=1438801537 And Calaveras made this NM chart: http://forum.tvfool.com/attachment.p...1&d=1438801722 Interpreting Noise Margin in the TV Fool Report http://www.aa6g.org/DTV/Reception/tvfool_nm.html When you are making an estimate of signals, you can make a similar one using signal PWR by adding your antenna gain and preamp gain to the dBm PWR in the report. I often like to do that because tuners drop out a signal around -85 dBm. Notice that the difference between NM dB and dBm PWR is a constant of 90.9 dB, which is another way of looking at the ~91 dB in ADTech's post. |
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You now have a feeling for the upper and lower limits for NM; here are the limits for dBm PWR:
ATSC Recommended Practice: Receiver Performance Guidelines Document A/74:2010, 7 April 2010 RECEIVER PERFORMANCE GUIDELINES 5.1 Sensitivity Quote:
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But your signal doesn't have a PWR of -75 dBm if the antenna is still in the attic. All of the impediments I listed can reduce the signal quality (as defined by SNR and errors), which increases the digital errors in the signal. The FEC (Forward Error Correction) has a limited ability to correct errors. Once that limit is reached, the signal reaches the "Digital Cliff" where you have pixilation, picture freeze, and finally dropout. If you are going to continue to do antenna experiments, you really need a way to measure signal strength and signal quality. My first way to do that was with an Apex DT502 converter box that has dual signal bars, one for signal quality and one for signal strength. Cost: a coupon and $10. http://forum.tvfool.com/attachment.p...1&d=1438807269 I now use the Diagnostics Screen of my Sony KDL22L5000. Calibration chart in attachment 5. Bad signal, picture freeze, SNR less than 15 dB and errors: http://forum.tvfool.com/attachment.p...6&d=1438807158 Good signal:. http://forum.tvfool.com/attachment.p...1&d=1438807603 My latest Sony, a KDL32R400A, has a much wider range signal strength scale, which is very useful for antenna experiments. See attachment 6. Some people use a USB tuner, but the software isn't user friendly for me: http://forum.tvfool.com/attachment.p...1&d=1438807864 |
thank you very much ADTech and Rabbit73
you both gave me very in depth answers that are very helpful in understanding signal power and noise. I will think about this for a while before I ask another question thanks again |
Feel free to ask whatever interests you whenever you wish. ;)
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