Preliminary Results from the CDTV Ottawa Field Tests
Communications Research Centre
Canada
May 2000
Field tests
to measure how well the DTV 8-VSB system replicates the existing NTSC coverage are now
underway in Ottawa. The CDTV transmitter now operates on channel 67 with an average power
of 36 kW, and is expected to replicate the coverage of the existing NTSC station on
channel 65 (CITY TV, 741 kW peak). Both transmitters feed a 215 meter tall (705
feet) common antenna tower.
Outdoor
tests used a 6.35dBd directional antenna at height of 10 meters or 33 feet. Only 4 of the
50 sites were without DTV reception. The NTSC signal could synchronize however the picture
quality was around an ITU-R grade 1 and 1.5.
The most
significant C/N degradation of the DTV signal due to multipath in the outdoor tests was
2.7 dB for receiver F and 2.9 dB for receiver H, compared to laboratory tests of 1.8 dB
and 3.5 dB respectively.
The indoor
tests use two antennae: an aperiodical antenna with a 5 to 7.5 dB gain and an active one
with up to 30 dB gain. Each antenna is mounted on a tripod and oriented for maximum C/N.
At this point, 43 indoor sites have been visited. In
13 sites where there is no DTV reception, there is usually low field strength. In
addition, multipath seems to be a problem in regard to spatial availability within a room,
evidenced when reception is not possible is some locations but is in others, just few feet
away.
The DTV
receivers selected for the field tests were first characterized in the laboratory, and
were neither the best nor the worse of all the receivers available. It is hoped that new
DTV receivers may have a better performance in handling multipath conditions, in
particular long pre-echoes.
The results,
which have been presented, are only preliminary and based on analysis of a limited number
of sites. The Communications Research Centre is still in the process of collecting data
from the field tests and doing more analysis.