Spectrum reallocation and the TVBD ruling

Jun 1, 2009 12:00 PM, By Joe Ciaudelli

What does it mean for wireless microphone users?


             
Figure 1. With television’s transition to digital, wireless mic users will lose access to the 700MHz band. But it will also open some TV channels below 698MHz.

Figure 1. With television’s transition to digital, wireless mic users will lose access to the 700MHz band. But it will also open some TV channels below 698MHz.
Select image to enlarge.

Recent changes in FCC policy are affecting operation of wireless microphone and monitoring systems in the United States. It's important for production professionals to understand these changes and apply best practices to ensure reliable operation of their equipment.

Wireless mics primarily operate on frequencies in the UHF TV spectrum. They are considered licensed broadcast auxiliary devices a broadcaster or broadcast content provider may operate on locally vacant TV channels. For example, channel 25 (536MHz-542MHz) is not used for TV broadcast in Boston. Therefore production may operate approximately eight wireless mics tuned to different frequencies between 536MHz and 542MHz.

It's important to remember that two separate and distinct issues have been progressing in parallel: the digital dividend and the TVBD ruling, aka the white space debate.

Digital dividend

This relates to the reallocation of TV channels 52-69 (698MHz to 806MHz), generically called the 700MHz band. Once analog TV terminates, all full-power TV broadcast will be consolidated below channel 52. The 700MHz range will partially be used for emergency communications in channels 63, 64, 68 and 69. The rights to use the majority of the remaining channels were auctioned to telecom companies such as AT&T, Verizon and Qualcomm to provide what is being termed as advanced wireless services (AWS). This raised billions of dollars for the federal government and was therefore called the digital dividend. Although the FCC has not made a final ruling (as of this publication date), it looks imminent that wireless mics will have to vacate this range. The pro audio industry has been lobbying for a grace period to allow operation of existing equipment beyond the DTV transition date.

Figure 2. A city with three consecutive vacant channels should operate wireless mics in the middle channel.

Figure 2. A city with three consecutive vacant channels should operate wireless mics in the middle channel.
Select image to enlarge.

The 700MHz band can be subdivided as:

  • Emergency communication channels: 63-64 (764MHz-776MHz) and 68-69 (794MHz-806MHz).

  • TVBD ruling (the white space debate)

    Auctioned spectrum: 698MHz-758MHz and 776MHz-788MHz. The telecom companies have not completed building the infrastructure for their AWS. AWS will probably become active at the end of this year in major cities and will then eventually spread. Functional, 700MHz wireless mics will continue to work reliably for many months after the DTV transition date, maybe even years in some parts of the country.

  • Figure 3. Operating on the middle channel forces the TVBD to operate on an adjacent channel at its lower 40mW output power.

    Figure 3. Operating on the middle channel forces the TVBD to operate on an adjacent channel at its lower 40mW output power.
    Select image to enlarge.

    Block D: 758MHz-763MHz and 788MHz-793MHz scheduled for future auction. Block D was envisioned to be used as a private/public partnership. It did not solicit a minimum bid in the FCC auction, probably because the winner would have had to share it with municipal agencies. Therefore, it is not allocated to any one entity yet. Functionally, these frequencies look clear for wireless mics for the foreseeable future, until the FCC successfully auctions Block D.

The bottom line is wireless mic users will lose access to the 700MHz band. The bright side is that as more analog stations terminate their broadcasts, this will open some TV channels below 698MHz. (See Figure 1 on page 14. )

In November 2008, the FCC released its rules allowing a new class of unlicensed consumer electronic products to operate in locally unused TV channels, just as wireless mics have done for years. These forthcoming products have previously been referred to as white space devices (WSD) but are now called TV band devices (TVBDs). They will mainly be used as broadband access devices.

TVBDs are categorized as:

  • Fixed

    These are allowed to operate with effective radiating power up to 4W on channels 2-51, with the exceptions of channels 3, 4 and 37.

  • Personal/portable

    Due to their mobile nature, these devices are the most concerning for production professionals. However, portable TVBDs are restricted to channels 21-51 and are also not allowed in channel 37. (Channel 37 is a reserved channel for radio astronomy and medical telemetry.) They are limited to 100mW operating power or 40mW if operating in a channel adjacent to an active station. This moderate power will reduce their range and therefore the possibility to cause interference.

Licensed operation of wireless mics takes precedence over TVBDs. TVBDs must coordinate around active licensed wireless mic systems. The rules include several safeguards to avoid interference to wireless microphones.


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