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Toshiba RF Receiver for HDTV

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Toshiba RF Receiver for HDTV Presentation 1: 10/21/2004 Team: Josue Caballero, Brett DiCio, Daniel Hooper, Efosa Ojomo, George Sewell – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Toshiba RF Receiver for HDTV


1
Toshiba RF Receiver for HDTV
  • Presentation 1 10/21/2004

Team Josue Caballero, Brett DiCio, Daniel
Hooper, Efosa Ojomo, George Sewell
2
Work Accomplished in the Past Week
  • Met with our sponsor at Toshiba
  • Aaron Foster
  • Toured the factory and assembly line
  • Discussed the current situation and defined the
    problem to be addressed
  • Outlined and determined the work that needed to
    be done by the group

3
Description of the Problem
  • Toshiba currently uses an antenna attached to the
    end of a Coax line to broadcast to a TV with a
    small receiver antenna
  • Current Design
  • Transmission distance of 2 to 3 centimeters
  • Inefficient Tauroid-shaped transmission antenna
  • Problems
  • Signal is being broadcast indiscriminately, being
    received on TVs that are not being tested
  • Cannot determine the dB Gain of the received
    signal
  • Goal
  • Develop an antenna solution that can be used for
    multiple assembly lines without having to deal
    with errant signal noise and but with a
    consistent dB Gain

4
Left Side
5
Right Side
6
Top View
7
Current Setup
  • Workers unpack guts and chassis and assemble
    them.
  • TVs placed on a roller line
  • TVs move from one station to the next, stopping
    at each station
  • First half of testing line is automated

8
Automation
  • Each station has a small antenna that lines up
    with TV whip antenna
  • In front of TV, a computer makes adjustments
  • Digital video camera input
  • TV remote control output

9
Manual Cable Placement
  • Required because of antenna signal strength is
    unreliable
  • Need to test v-chip and closed captioning at
    various signal levels for certification

10
Motivation
  • Labor cost for a simple task like plugging in a
    cable is high
  • Automated adjustment is free of human variances

11
Introduction to Antennas
  • Electronic components designed to send and
    receive radio waves
  • Used for transmission and reception of radio
    frequency signals like TV signals (signals can
    pass through non-conducting surfaces _at_ speed of
    light)
  • HDTV antennas are the same as conventional TV
    antennas

12
Different Antenna models
  • Dipole Antenna
  • Simplest TV antenna
  • Omni-directional in plane perpendicular to axis
    of antenna
  • Variations include the folded dipole
    (efficiency), bowtie dipole (bandwidth), and loop
    dipole
  • Gain 2.5dBi
  • Example Rabbit ears on TV

13
Illustration of dipole antennas
14
Stacked Dipoles
  • Two heads are better than one
  • N dipoles will take in N times as much RF power
    as one dipole
  • Dipoles are commonly stacked horizontally
    (collinearly), vertically (broadside), and in
    echelon (end-fire).

15
Different stacking methods
16
Reflector Antennas
  • Radio waves reflect off a large conducting plane
    like a mirror
  • They are very common
  • Examples
  • Screen Reflector
  • Parabolic Reflector (high gain, expensive)
  • Corner Reflector (less gain more bandwidth)
  • Paraboloid Reflector

17
Illustration of reflector antennas
18
Fundamentals
  • Maxwells Equations
  • Understanding Transmission
  • Vocabulary
  • E Electric field
  • B Magnetic flux density
  • Curl and Divergence

19
Maxwell's Equations
20
Recieving
  • Maxwell transmissions
  • Antenna reacts
  • Electromagnetic energy
  • Current
  • Picture/Sound
  • Creating an antenna
  • Frequency design

21
Interference Shielding
  • The factory has several production lines running
    alongside each other, because of the wireless
    transmission there is a high probability of
    interference
  • The signals can interfere and tests might not
    return good results
  • One possible solution is shielding

22
Shielding
  • Two styles of design
  • Active Generating an opposing field
  • Passive Blocking stray fields
  • There are several materials that can be used in
    shielding including plastic, concrete and metal
  • Method and Material is a question of cost versus
    need
  • We are going to researching the need for
    shielding and determining the best solution

23
To-Do List for Next Week
  • Finish an outline and draft of the requirements
    document for Toshiba
  • Obtain an understanding on how the current
    Toshiba design works
  • Determine a list of possible antenna
    designs/structures to be researched
  • Continue researching methods for shielding a test
    station from noise

24
Resources
  • http//www-pw.physics.uiowa.edu/plasma-wave/istp/p
    olar/fig3.gif
  • http//scienceworld.wolfram.com/physics/MaxwellEqu
    ations.html
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