- Frequency extender
In
broadcast engineering , a frequency extender is an electronic device that allowshigh-fidelity analogue audio to be sent over regular POTStelephone line s, without the loss of higheraudio frequencies (treble). It is an extendedconcept of atelephone hybrid .The
concept uses frequency shifting, in order to overcome the narrow bandwidth of regular telephone systems. Theinput signal is sent to one telephone line as-is, or in some cases upshifted to provide extra low-frequency response, and sent to a second line shifted down by 3kHz , which is normally the upperbandpass limit in telephony. Thus, an audio frequency of 5 kHz is sent at 2 kHz. A receiver on the other end then shifts the second line back up and mixes it with the first. This results in greatly improved audio, adding a fulloctave of range, and pushing the total bandpass to 6 kHz. The sound is then acceptable for voice, if not formusic .It is also possible to add other lines, each increasing the bandpass by another 3 kHz. However, the law of diminishing returns takes over, because each successive octave is double the size of the last. A third line pushes the bandpass up 50
% to 9 kHz, equivalent toAM radio . A fourth line would push it up 33% to 12 kHz.FM radio quality would require five telephone lines to be installed, pushing the bandpass up 25% to 15 kHz. The audio is shifted down by 6,9, and 12 kHz respectively for each additional line.Frequency extenders have been nearly eliminated by
POTS codec s.ee also
*
telephone hybrid
*remote broadcast
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