1 / 13

USE OF THE HF BROADCASTING BANDS A SHORT OVERVIEW EBU TECHNICAL DEPARTMENT

USE OF THE HF BROADCASTING BANDS A SHORT OVERVIEW EBU TECHNICAL DEPARTMENT. TERRY O’LEARY. For associated text, see attached notes. HISTORY CONGESTION HFBC PLANNING PARAMETERS THE THREAT OF PLT DIGITAL FUTURE. HISTORY (1). BEFORE 1979 : 2350 kHz BELOW 10 MHz : 725 kHz

brosh
Download Presentation

USE OF THE HF BROADCASTING BANDS A SHORT OVERVIEW EBU TECHNICAL DEPARTMENT

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. USE OF THE HF BROADCASTING BANDSA SHORT OVERVIEW EBU TECHNICAL DEPARTMENT TERRY O’LEARY For associated text, see attached notes • HISTORY • CONGESTION • HFBC PLANNING PARAMETERS • THE THREAT OF PLT • DIGITAL FUTURE

  2. HISTORY (1) BEFORE 1979 : 2350 kHz BELOW 10 MHz : 725 kHz WARC–79 : + 780 kHz ( after 1996 ) BELOW 10 MHz : + 125 kHz WARC–92 : + 790 kHz ( after 2007 ) BELOW 10 MHz : + 200 kHz * excluding tropical bands : 2300-2498 MHz 3200-3400 MHz 3950-4000 MHz 4750-4995 MHz 5005-5060 MHz

  3. +150 +70 +125 +125 +200 +150 +100 +120 +50 +50 +100 +100 +100 +200 -70 HISTORY (2) BAND 6 MHz 7 MHz 9 MHz 11 MHz 13 MHz 15 MHz 17 MHz 19 MHz 21 MHz 26 MHz PRE – 79 5950 – 6200 7100 – 7300 9500 – 9775 11700 – 11975 – 15100 – 15450 17700 – 17900 – 21450 – 21750 25600 – 26100 WARC–79 5950 – 6200 7100 – 7300 9500 – 9900 11650 – 12050 13600 – 13800 15100 – 15600 17550 – 17900 – 21450 – 21850 25670 – 26100 WARC–92 5900 – 6200 7100 – 7350 9400 – 9900 11600 – 12100 13570 – 13870 15100 – 15800 17480 – 17900 18900 – 19020 21450 – 21850 25670 – 26100

  4. HISTORY (2´) BAND 6 MHz 7 MHz 9 MHz 11 MHz 13 MHz 15 MHz 17 MHz 19 MHz 21 MHz 26 MHz PRE – 79 5950 – 6200 7100 – 7300 9500 – 9775 11700 – 11975 – 15100 – 15450 17700 – 17900 – 21450 – 21750 25600 – 26100 WARC–79 5950 – 6200 7100 – 7300 9500 – 9900 11650 – 12050 13600 – 13800 15100 – 15600 17550 – 17900 – 21450 – 21850 25670 – 26100 WARC–92 5900 – 6200 7100 – 7350 9400 – 9900 11600 – 12100 13570 – 13870 15100 – 15800 17480 – 17900 18900 – 19020 21450 – 21850 25670 – 26100 BELOW 10 MHz :+ 125 + 200 ABOVE 10 MHz : + 655 + 590

  5. CONGESTION(1) BELOW 10 MHz DAYTIME : SHORT TO MEDIUM DISTANCE (  2000 km ) NIGHTTIME : LONGER DISTANCES LOCAL WINTER : FOR SHORT DISTANCES  6MHz BETTER ( THERE ARE NO BANDS AT PRESENT ) RELIABILITY : RECENT TENDENCY TO USE SHORT DISTANCE, SINGLE HOP  MORE CONGESTION CONGESTION : SOME USE OF WARC-92 BANDS ALLOWED ( RR 4.4 ); THESE BANDS NOW ALSO CONGESTED COORDINATION : IMPROVED SITUATION ( ARTICLE S12 ) NEVERTHELESS CONGESTION

  6. 6, 7 MHz could be used for shorter distances: • poorer quality • reduced reliability • increase congestion • create additional interference CONGESTION(2) CONDITIONS : December SSN = 20 Reliability = 90% MINIMUM HF TRANSMISSION DISTANCES

  7. BAND FREQ CHANS TROP. Tx-hrs/day WARC-77 Tx-hrs/day WARC-92 Tx-hrs/day OOB Tx-hrs/day TOT Tx-hrs/day 4 3900-3950 5 14 101 3950-4000 5 53 110hrs/ch 4000-4050 5 34 6 5700-5900 20 210 3328 105hrs/ch 5900-5950 5 345 5950-6200 25 2747 74hrs/ch 6200-6300 10 26 7 6850-6990 14 10 3065 7100-7300 20 2104 +17.8% +13.8% 7300-7350 5 289 7350-7600 25 662 9 9250-9400 15 209 3857 9400-9500 10 448 9500-9900 40 2970 9900-9990 9 230 TOT 213 53 7821 1082 1395 10351 STATISTICS (1) HFCC USAGE* : WINTER SEASON 2000 * WORLD WIDE EXCEPT CENTRAL AND SOUTH AMERICA AND MOST SOUTHERN AFRICAN COUNTRIES

  8. BAND FREQ CHANS TROP. Tx-hrs/day WARC-77 Tx-hrs/day WARC-92 Tx-hrs/day OOB Tx-hrs/day TOT Tx-hrs/day 4 3900-3950 5 14 101 3950-4000 5 53 (236/2747)25 = 2… 4000-4050 5 34 (672/2104)20 = 6 … 6 5700-5900 20 210 3328 5900-5950 5 345 5950-6200 25 2747 (439/2970)40 = ~6 6200-6300 10 26 7 6850-6990 14 10 3065 7100-7300 20 2104 7300-7350 5 289 7350-7600 25 662 9 9250-9400 15 209 3857 9400-9500 10 448 9500-9900 40 2970 9900-9990 9 230 TOT 213 53 7821 1082 1395 10351 STATISTICS (2) HFCC USAGE* : WINTER SEASON 2000 * WORLD WIDE EXCEPT CENTRAL AND SOUTH AMERICA AND MOST SOUTHERN AFRICAN COUNTRIES

  9. FS Wanted signal S/N = 34 10 dBV/m noise f HFBC PLANNING PARAMETERS • N (noise) : < ~10 dB(V/m) for HF between 1 - 10 MHz • RF S/N ratio : 34 dB • PR : 17 dB (fair) to 27 dB (good)

  10. proposed max.levels Noise levels ~43 THE THREAT OF PLT 34dB

  11. DIGITAL FUTURE (1) WRC-97 : HF DSB to cease by 31 Dec. 2015 - replace by SSB or other spectrum efficient systems (i.e., digital) (Res. 537) - replacement interference not to exceed DSB - Spectrum efficient techniques to be recommended by ITU-R - final date for cessation of DSB to be reviewed by future WRCs

  12. DIGITAL FUTURE (2) • Principles of the DRM Standard: • Single, universal (low cost) receiver • Applicable to HF, MF, LF (i.e. same receiver) • Compatibility with existing situation (analogue, channel spacing, frequency bands, …)

  13. DIGITAL FUTURE (3) • European HF broadcasters intend: • to use the HF bands for the foreseeable future • introduce DRM within the next 5 to 10 years • increase the # of programmes and services • UNLESS … • the spectrum below 30 MHz is turned into  a PLTPARADISE  a BROADCASTINGWASTELAND…

More Related