Reply to Re: Using an FM-Carrier for the Y [Luminance] Signal -- how to relieve the bandwidth issue?

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Posted by Green Xenon [Radium] on 09/29/07 23:53

On Sep 29, 10:11 am, tonsofpcs <tonsof...@gmail.com> wrote
http://groups.google.com/group/uk.tech.digital-tv/msg/5d3083e46aff377a :

> The only way I see of you getting something narrow in bandwidth to
> transmit video luma would be to take it, and create a digital system
> that has a very large number of discrete states, so large that the
> lines between them seem to blur, and transmit it at a very high
> frequency (or more, maybe even an ultra high frequency), with a large
> number of bits per symbol (8 seems like a good number) but a very high
> temporal resolution. You could even modulate a color subcarrier on
> and add in chroma information on two axis, lets call them I and Q.
> This will create a situation where the receiver will be receiving the
> data with interference, but since you are only sending a small amount
> of data at each temporal interval, any interference's effect within a
> decent area will be negligible and the viewer's eye's will compensate.
> On second thought, analog video is so much simpler (and exactly the
> same, except it lacks discrete levels).
>
> --
> A confused Eric, wondering why you're trying to do this....

Well, my goal was to somehow receive QM video signal on a
frequency-modulated ULF [radio-frequency between 300 and 3,000 KHz]
carrier -- in which the QM uses only 1 baud but shoves as many
bits-per-symbol mathematically possible while setting the maximum
voltage of the discrete states low enough not to cause any harm to
anyone or anything [including the equipment itself] -- and with as many
discrete states [between the highest and lowest voltage] as
mathematically-possible. Unfortunately, reality does not want me doing
this and reality always has the last word as to what does and what
doesn’t occur.

Anyways, my next question. Is it possible to split the symbol of a 1
baud, 8-bit-per-symbol signal into 8 bits? I.e. in this case, a single
symbol would be split into 8 different parts each carrying one of the
bits. Is this possible? If so, would this be of any assistance to me?

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