Originally posted by gurnemanz
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The Ten Myths of DAB
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Resurrection Man
Originally posted by An_Inspector_Calls View PostAnd the BBC has 93 % DAB coverage, soon to be 97 %
Looking good!
the CSPG has agreed that the value of outdoor location variation used in coverage predictions should be reduced
from 5.5 dB to 4.0 dB with what effect indoors on reception?
The BBC network has already reached the stage where its coverage is, in places, being
limited by self-interference
I could go on but it is pointless talking to someone who selectively quotes websites but clearly doesn't bother to read the text.
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An_Inspector_Calls
Originally posted by Resurrection Man View PostWhat tosh - unless there is a missing 'wink-eye' emoticon. Phrases like . . . the CSPG has agreed that the value of outdoor location variation used in coverage predictions should be reduced from 5.5 dB to 4.0 dB ]with what effect indoors on reception?
I could go on but it is pointless talking to someone who selectively quotes websites but clearly doesn't bother to read the text.
Since the publication of the first version of this document in June 2011, the CSPG has agreed that the value of outdoor location variation used in coverage predictions should be reduced
from 5.5 dB to 4.0 dB. The maps and tables of predicted coverage in this document have been revised to show the effect of that change.
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Resurrection Man
Originally posted by An_Inspector_Calls View PostUnfortunately, I did read the report I quoted, unlike you it seems, because the full paragraph you quote with relish, reads:
Oh, and Bryn knows full well that coverage maps (FM and DAB) have always been subject to, shall we say, interpolation, or modelling.
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostIf you can find a cheapish DAB radio with a digital output, that could well be fed to an external DAC to give as good as DAB has to offer (not a lot, really - Radio 3 at 192kbps mp2 is roughly equivalent in audio quality to 128kbps mp3).
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An_Inspector_Calls
Originally posted by Bryn View PostIf you can find a cheapish DAB radio with a digital output, that could well be fed to an external DAC to give as good as DAB has to offer (not a lot, really - Radio 3 at 192kbps mp2 is roughly equivalent in audio quality to 128kbps mp3).
You'd be better off buying a decent Freeview receiver and getting guaranteed 192 kbps mp2. Freeview receivers are usually very cheap as well. For that, the sound will have good dynamic range, and very low noise. The single problem, as we all know, is mp2 does not give a good sound on certain types of music such as some quiet string playing. Contrast that with the pathetic FM dynamic range, oodles of distortion all the time (albeit, nice, comforting second harmonic) and lots of noise. Hardly minor differences. This suggestion also deletes one external aerial from your house as it can share your DTT aerial. If you're exclusively on satallite, then a cheap satellite receiver would also do nicely.
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Resurrection Man
Another good website is here http://savefm.net/
As an aside, just before Christmas we bought a replacement CD./radio for the kitchen. After much searching, buying and rejecting for various reasons four different makes and types, we settled on a Philips DCB852. This is not cheap and to be honest I could have done without all the iPod/iPhone connectivity gizmo but there you go. Sound quality is extremely good especially for classical music. It does come with DAB as well as FM. So I tried DAB. It worked for a while but then boiling mud sound started to kick in. I brought in a Morphy Richards Ordio that was bought several years ago. That seemed to work fine on Radio 4 DAB. But then after a few minutes, the Philips seemed to settle down. So is it duff? Or just that the DAB signal is so pernickety.
And that, to my mind, sums up the difference between FM and DAB.
FM. Turn on. Listen. Enjoy
DAB. Turn on. Fiddle. ADjust. Fiddle some more.
Bit like the difference between Mac's and PCsLast edited by Guest; 02-01-13, 13:43.
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Originally posted by AuntyKezia View PostWere others on this board as irritated as I was by the number of plugs for digital radios the BBC gave airtime to in the run-up to Christmas, presenting them as an ideal gift? Not to mention the large picture of a DAB radio that adorns the programme info for the Media Show on R4 ...
This is the same 'BBC smartphone app' that, several months after its release, is still not available for Android users.The best music is the music that persuades us there is no other music in the world-- Alex Ross
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Resurrection Man
Originally posted by gingerjon View PostI'm judging this equal with the constant references on Five Live for the 'BBC smartphone app'.
This is the same 'BBC smartphone app' that, several months after its release, is still not available for Android users.
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Originally posted by gingerjon View PostI'm judging this equal with the constant references on Five Live for the 'BBC smartphone app'.
This is the same 'BBC smartphone app' that, several months after its release, is still not available for Android users.
After trying to load the app for my kindle fire for about a fortnight , I decided that there are CDs , youtube, spotify, R3 on DAB/car radio/FM, my MP3 player, or any number of other ways to listen to music.I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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Originally posted by Resurrection Man View PostI remember the flak that the BBC got when they brought out iPlayer and it only ran on Microsoft!I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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Originally posted by Resurrection Man View Post.
FM. Turn on. Listen. Enjoy
FM - turn on. Fiddle with tuner to try & get interference-free sound. Get it. Sit down to enjoy music. Change of position creates interference. Get up. Move arial. Get rid of interference. Sit down. Interference back again. Give up. Go to kitchen. Switch on radio. Pick up kettle to make a cup of tea. Storm on radio. Give up. Put on CD.
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Originally posted by Flosshilde View PostNot quite.
FM - turn on. Fiddle with tuner to try & get interference-free sound. Get it. Sit down to enjoy music. Change of position creates interference. Get up. Move arial. Get rid of interference. Sit down. Interference back again. Give up. Go to kitchen. Switch on radio. Pick up kettle to make a cup of tea. Storm on radio. Give up. Put on CD.
Three cheers for the iPlayer's Radio 3 HD Sound option, when, as is usually the case, it is working properly.
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Originally posted by Flosshilde View PostNot quite.
FM - turn on. Fiddle with tuner to try & get interference-free sound. Get it. Sit down to enjoy music. Change of position creates interference. Get up. Move arial. Get rid of interference. Sit down. Interference back again. Give up. Go to kitchen. Switch on radio. Pick up kettle to make a cup of tea. Storm on radio. Give up. Put on CD.I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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Originally posted by Flosshilde View PostNot quite.
FM - turn on. Fiddle with tuner to try & get interference-free sound. Get it. Sit down to enjoy music. Change of position creates interference. Get up. Move arial. Get rid of interference. Sit down. Interference back again. Give up. Go to kitchen. Switch on radio. Pick up kettle to make a cup of tea. Storm on radio. Give up. Put on CD.I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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