Yeah. I Guess. luvencl, WPTV Changed There Look On You Xfinity Box, After The DTV Switch All Your Programs Is Been Changed. But luvencl, You Are Watching WPTV 5 On Xfinity [Comcast], So That Means That You Are Not Effected!
I'm thinking that the chief engineer should have kept the station's signal output continuous by first firing up the VHF digital transmitter, then shutting down the analog transmitter, then putting the VHF digital transmitter on the tower, then finally shutting down the UHF digital transmitter.
Look at the clip again at 2:33 into it. He pressed the "operate" button and then the tranmistter came up about 10 seconds afterwards. It first started at 0% and went to 73% power and then he walked over to the old UHF DTV transmitter. By the time he turned the corner, the new RF CH 12 transmitter was already at 100 % power. The "warmed-up" period is actually putting RF out over the air, but not a full power for the first 15 seconds or so.
I saw that as well, my guess is that the ENG truck that was sending the feed to the studio might have had a glitch and it might be the way they try to correct frame loss or errors with some sort of repeat of a few frames prior. I hear this all the time with Sirius radio where they through in a little sample of the previous audio when you get frame loss. It sounds like reverberation effect added.
There is another video someone put up that is the actual analog recording, you should see that one.
I was watching the conversion on Comcast and everything was OK except just a few seconds after Dave switched off the analog, there was a sort of ghosting. It was more of an echo or adjustment of some sort. Do you know what that was? (It happens at 4:10 in the video)
Yeah. I Guess. luvencl, WPTV Changed There Look On You Xfinity Box, After The DTV Switch All Your Programs Is Been Changed. But luvencl, You Are Watching WPTV 5 On Xfinity [Comcast], So That Means That You Are Not Effected!
LiveToys247 3 weeks ago
That's good of you to switch before the big switch so you can see it for yourself!
MrKashmire123 11 months ago
I'm thinking that the chief engineer should have kept the station's signal output continuous by first firing up the VHF digital transmitter, then shutting down the analog transmitter, then putting the VHF digital transmitter on the tower, then finally shutting down the UHF digital transmitter.
denelson83 1 year ago
so cool!
pr53188 2 years ago
Comment removed
harleykman 2 years ago
Look at the clip again at 2:33 into it. He pressed the "operate" button and then the tranmistter came up about 10 seconds afterwards. It first started at 0% and went to 73% power and then he walked over to the old UHF DTV transmitter. By the time he turned the corner, the new RF CH 12 transmitter was already at 100 % power. The "warmed-up" period is actually putting RF out over the air, but not a full power for the first 15 seconds or so.
luvencl 2 years ago
@luvencl but did you see a black screen after he flip the old UHF?
DJPaul1195 1 year ago
This is the digital stream?
KeLopezCL 2 years ago
Yes, digital stream.
luvencl 2 years ago
I saw that as well, my guess is that the ENG truck that was sending the feed to the studio might have had a glitch and it might be the way they try to correct frame loss or errors with some sort of repeat of a few frames prior. I hear this all the time with Sirius radio where they through in a little sample of the previous audio when you get frame loss. It sounds like reverberation effect added.
There is another video someone put up that is the actual analog recording, you should see that one.
luvencl 2 years ago
I was watching the conversion on Comcast and everything was OK except just a few seconds after Dave switched off the analog, there was a sort of ghosting. It was more of an echo or adjustment of some sort. Do you know what that was? (It happens at 4:10 in the video)
dapet123456 2 years ago