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Ouch who turned it up?
Seems to me that more and more radio channels of Freeview have high levels,
much higher than most tv stations. Time was when only rnib connect radio had this, but increasingly as more and more plump for mono, the volumes are creeping up. Should they not at least try to balance tem with the tv? Brian -- ----- - This newsgroup posting comes to you directly from... The Sofa of Brian Gaff... Blind user, so no pictures please! |
Ouch who turned it up?
In article ,
Brian Gaff wrote: Seems to me that more and more radio channels of Freeview have high levels, much higher than most tv stations. Time was when only rnib connect radio had this, but increasingly as more and more plump for mono, the volumes are creeping up. Should they not at least try to balance tem with the tv? Brian When digital first arrived, the EBU standard (or that's what it was known as here) was to line up to 18 dB below peak (unlike with analogue, where it was 8 dB below peak). The 10dB headroom being to allow for unavoidable overmods which digital may not handle as gently as analogue. And these levels continued to be used for digital TV sound transmission. But commercial radio are always going to want to peak as high as possible, so much of radio abandoned this. TV, in general, still sticks to it. And yes, 10 dB difference is more than enough to annoy. -- *When a man opens a car door for his wife, it's either a new car or a new Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
Ouch who turned it up?
Many of the stations are bbc local ones though, like surrey, London, three
counties, Essex etc. Brian -- From the Sofa of Brian Gaff Reply address is active Remember, if you don't like where I post or what I say, you don't have to read my posts! :-) "Dave Plowman (News)" wrote in message ... In article , Brian Gaff wrote: Seems to me that more and more radio channels of Freeview have high levels, much higher than most tv stations. Time was when only rnib connect radio had this, but increasingly as more and more plump for mono, the volumes are creeping up. Should they not at least try to balance tem with the tv? Brian When digital first arrived, the EBU standard (or that's what it was known as here) was to line up to 18 dB below peak (unlike with analogue, where it was 8 dB below peak). The 10dB headroom being to allow for unavoidable overmods which digital may not handle as gently as analogue. And these levels continued to be used for digital TV sound transmission. But commercial radio are always going to want to peak as high as possible, so much of radio abandoned this. TV, in general, still sticks to it. And yes, 10 dB difference is more than enough to annoy. -- *When a man opens a car door for his wife, it's either a new car or a new Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
Ouch who turned it up?
On Friday, 18 August 2017 03:51:33 UTC+1, Brian-Gaff wrote:
Many of the stations are bbc local ones though You've been around long enough to know the BBC no longer stands for technical excellence. Owain |
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