"Symmetrical noise" on H-field
#1
What causes this kind of noise? I'm seeing it frequently on my station and other stations as well.

[Image: Gt5zYp6.png]
Reply
#2
(2016-06-13, 22:00)Jorgeminator Wrote: What causes this kind of noise? I'm seeing it frequently on my station and other stations as well.

[Image: Gt5zYp6.png]

What you see isn't 'noise'... Your station signal data is compression encoded, and what you see is the result at the server. If I understand correctly, those areas indicate the part of that specific channel signal that wasn't sent. because it was noisy, or otherwise not used, or necessary. You see a server 'artifact' that restores the 'timing' between the used portions.  Saves bandwidth among other things. Whether it's visible or not is controlled by the server operation...


Stations: 689, 791, 1439, 3020
Reply
#3
It disturbs the view - I prefer a zero line Smile
Stations: 584, 585, 2017
Reply
#4
(2016-06-13, 22:43)Cutty Wrote:
(2016-06-13, 22:00)Jorgeminator Wrote: What causes this kind of noise? I'm seeing it frequently on my station and other stations as well.

[Image: Gt5zYp6.png]

What you see isn't 'noise'... Your station signal data is compression encoded, and what your see is the result at the server. If I understand correctly, those areas indicate the part of that specific channel signal that wasn't sent. because it was noisy, or otherwise not used, or necessary. You see a server 'artifact' that restores the 'timing' between the used portions.  Saves bandwidth among other things. Whether it's visible or not is controlled by the server operation...

Thanks. At least my station is working well. It's been online for a few hours and it's already at the top effectivity spot in my country.
Stations: 1481
Reply


Forum Jump:


Users browsing this thread: 3 Guest(s)