Whats
so new about DigiCeiver?
I own several Digital Radios.
While
there are millions of home and car radios with so-called Digital
AM/FM Tuners, these merely have digital station displays
and use digital circuits to generate analog reference signals,
and they never actually convert the radio waves into digital data.
Unlike DigiCeiver, those are really still analog tuners because
all the signal processing is analog.
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LAS VEGAS (1/08/03) -- In 1997, Blaupunkt introduced its first car stereo
with DigiCeiver®, the worlds first and still only widely available
AM/FM radio tuner that converts incoming analog radio waves into digital
data. By digitizing incoming radio frequency signals, DigiCeiver can use
advanced digital signal processing (DSP) techniques to refine the signal
quality in ways not possible using analog circuits. The result is outstanding
radio reception and sound quality delivered at greater distances. This
performance has been confirmed by dozens of reviewers, some of who said
DigiCeiver was superior to some expensive home reference tuners.
Now, Blaupunkt has introduced the next big step in digital radio processing,
TwinCeiver. TwinCeiver uses two DigiCeiver tuners and a Digital Directional
Antenna (DDA) to combine the signals from two antennas, and forms a virtual
directional antenna that provides a much stronger signal from the desired
direction, and an attenuated signal from unwanted directions. The result
is dramatically improved range, sound quality, and rejection of multipath
interference.
TwinCeiver operates on a completely different principle than the widely
used two-antenna diversity receivers, which merely compare
the signals from both antennas and then chooses the best one.
Since
the length of FM radio waves is very short, the only way the signals from
two antennas can normally be combined is if both travel the exact same
distance from the broadcast tower to the radio input. If the paths are
only a few inches different, the signals will arrive at the radio input
out of phase with each other and cause serious interference.
Blaupunkts Digital Directional Antenna (DDA) can combine two signals
that travel different distances while maintaining perfect phase alignment.
Not only does this phased array technique essentially double
the available signal strength, but it also creates a virtual directional
antenna that can aim toward weak stations and away from overly strong
multipath distortions. (Phased array is the same principle that allows
a modern fixed radar antenna to aim its beam in different directions without
physically rotating.)
While DDAs directional capabilities will eliminate most multipath
interference, there may be rare occasions when one antenna gets a fairly
good signal, while the others is totally unusable. In this case,
the inferior antenna is shut off to maintain the best signal in the tuner.
TwinCeiver also has Radio Data System (RDS) and Traffic Message Channel
(TMC) background reception mode that takes advantage of optimal reception
conditions to quickly and inaudibly access RDS channels on different frequencies
for station and format lists without interfering with the audio. (This
is more important in Europe and other areas where RDS capabilities are
much more widely used than in the USA. TMC is not used at all in the USA,
Canada or Mexico.)
Blaupunkt, the mobile electronics division of The Robert Bosch Corporation,
designs and manufactures high quality and high performance car audio,
video and navigation products for sale worldwide. For Blaupunkt dealer
locations and product information, call 1(800) 950-BLAU [2528] or visit
the company's web site at <www.blaupunktUSA.com>.
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