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by ndiddy
563 days ago
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You got me interested in how the signal was transmitted, so I looked a bit more into it (see https://segaretro.org/File:SegaChannel_Applications_Scientif... ). It turns out that the 8Mbps number I eyeballed from looking at newspaper coverage of the service was incorrect. When the cable provider received the Sega Channel data stream, they'd split it into two 6Mbps carriers. This allowed them to transmit Sega Channel data without having to dedicate a channel to data, as they could put the carriers between cable channels or in the portion of the spectrum used for cable FM radio. I updated the webpage with the corrected figures. |
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It's tempting to wrap it in fake horizontal/vertical blanking so it still looks like a TV signal (and you can send it through existing equipment that's expecting a TV signal). Essentially just Teletext but using every single line.
But what Scientific Atlanta created is much closer to cable internet. The total bandwidth number is notable, each 6Mbit carrier uses 3Mhz of bandwidth, so the two of them add up to 6Mhz, which is how much bandwidth a standard NTSC channel occupies.
I suspect this is because they have rented a single TV channel worth of bandwidth on the Galaxy 7 satellite for disruption to local cable companies.
Splitting into two 3Mhz carriers has the additional advantage of allowing the receiver design to be simpler, it only needs to tune into one at any time.