Over-the-air (OTA) HDTV becomes more and more popular. For someone
who is used to noisy analog TV pictures, it is hard to believe how
amazing a quality of HDTV broadcasts can be. In fact, HDTV channels
received over the air free of charge often have better quality than the
same channels received through a paid satellite HDTV subscription. All
you need to enjoy OTA HDTV is a HD television with a built-in HDTV tuner
and an HDTV antenna.
Huh?
Which kind of antenna?! If you have Ph.D in Electrical Engineering and
have never heard about the antenna type called "HDTV antenna", it's not
because you were a bad student. HDTV antenna has nothing to do with
physics and engineering. It was invented in marketing departments.
Marketing found an effective trick to boost TV antenna sales. HDTV is a
hot thing these days. Call essentially the same device HDTV antenna, and
it sells better. It makes people to believe they must buy an HDTV model
or HDTV optimized antenna to watch HDTV broadcasts. This is very far
from truth.
HDTV antenna hype created a huge misconception with
regard to TV antennas used for HDTV reception. This article is an
attempt to clarify this issue.
Do you know what a regular antenna
is? Antenna is a piece of metal designed to resonate at a specific
frequency and to be responsive over a certain range of frequencies. TV
antennas are designed to work either in the range of Ultra High
Frequencies (UHF), Very High Frequencies (VHF) or both. Any station
transmitting in the VHF/UHF frequency bands, can be picked up by a
VHF/UHF antenna and transferred to the TV set.
All television
broadcasts, digital and analog, are in the VHF and UHF bands. Over 90%
of the HDTV broadcasts are in the UHF, and less than 10% in the VHF
band. What is important from the antenna perspective is that HDTV falls
in the bandwidth of a regular VHF/UHF antenna. Not HDTV antenna, not
HDTV optimized antenna, just a normal regular TV antenna. What makes a
signal to be HD is its content, the way a signal is modulated, and not
the carrier frequency it is transmitted on. On the contrary, the antenna
knows nothing about the signal modulation and content. Hence, you don't
need an HDTV antenna to pick up the HD signal. An antenna has
absolutely no idea what the signal resolution is. It can be HDTV, SDTV,
NTSC, whatever. It is the job of a HDTV tuner and HD television set to
demodulate the signal and to present the actual content on the screen.
Well,
the antenna bandwidth and frequency response are not the only
parameters that are important for clear TV reception. An antenna has
other important electrical and spatial properties, such as antenna gain
(directivity) and high front-to-back (F/B) ratio. One might assume that
an HDTV antenna should be more powerful in terms of F/B and gain
parameters. Does HDTV reception impose more stringent requirements on
antenna gain and F/B ratio?
There is a wrong, yet widespread
belief that you need more antenna gain to receive digital television. I
don't know where the hell this belief comes from, cause the situation is
exactly the opposite. HDTV has much better noise and interference
immunity than the analog television and can produce high quality video
at significantly lower signal-to-noise ratios.
Another important
specification, F/B ratio, has to do with the antenna ability to cope
with a multi-path signal propagation from the towers to the receiving
antenna. The higher F/B ratio is, the better is multi-path rejection
(also known as ghost suppression). Without going into technical details,
we must say that HDTV signal is a bit more sensitive to multi-path
cause it has slightly larger bandwidth. Multi-path causes dips in the
signal spectrum, whereas we want to keep the spectrum as flat as
possible. When signal content is spread over a larger portion of
spectrum it is more likely to be distorted by multi-path. Basically,
what TV equipment manufacturers are trying to do in the so called HDTV
optimization is to keep the spectrum flat in the whole frequency band.
It is important for HDTV antenna to have a high F/B ratio in some areas
where ghosts may be a problem. The point is, however, that most
directional, old fashioned and cheap TV antennas have F/B ratio good
enough to handle multi-path propagation of HDTV signal and keep spectrum
distortion at minimum. If an antenna can handle an analog signal, it
can handle a digital signal as well.
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