Editor's Blog3 mins ago
Radio and TV transmissions
There is a few seconds delay in hearing someone live on radio and television. Why does this happen?
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by pirwany. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Richard1966 has hit in on the head, it's signal processing mainly (the satellite transmission delay is surprising low!)
almost everyone has digital TV now (sky, virgin cable, freeview.. what ever)
even with a lot of computing power it takes time to encode these signals to a digital format and transmit them
it can be upto about a 5 second delay on receiving a HD signal and re-processing into digital and sending it on again.
almost everyone has digital TV now (sky, virgin cable, freeview.. what ever)
even with a lot of computing power it takes time to encode these signals to a digital format and transmit them
it can be upto about a 5 second delay on receiving a HD signal and re-processing into digital and sending it on again.
Until a few years ago I used to watch the Last Night of the Proms on television and listen to the sound on radio 3 on my hi-fi.
You can't do that any more because the TV picture and the radio sound-track are no longer in sync. This is because one travels by land-line and the other by satellite.
A prime case of technological progress producing deterioration of service to the customer.
You can't do that any more because the TV picture and the radio sound-track are no longer in sync. This is because one travels by land-line and the other by satellite.
A prime case of technological progress producing deterioration of service to the customer.