No, but I've never noticed that effect on microphones. Normally the give
away on modern radio mikes not used for singers is a very gritty sound due
to the digital signal processing.
After a nearby storm the day before yesterday, I think the answer is some
kind of impulse disruption somewhere between the program source and the transmitter, since it only affects the one channel.
Living in or around London,I would expect this to be more of a problem
simply due to more feeds coming from there, before they get combined.
The effect seems to have gone away again now, so hopefully its been fixed.
Brian
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"John Hall" <
[email protected]> wrote in message news:
QfS1ovBUjQCjFwFt@jhall_nospamxx.co.uk...
Might the people speaking be using radio microphones, which might account
for it? Presumably you have no way of knowing.
In message <tea3s6$3ui53$[email protected]>, Brian Gaff
<[email protected]> writes
I notice sometimes for no reason that dialogue on some programmes do
momentarily stutter. Cannot see the picture, so do not know what effects
are going on there. Would in the opinion of the folk here be more likely
to be interference or signal level related. To me it seems channel
related, so that would seem to rule out either due to other services
being on the ame transmitted signal. It has got worse recently on W for
example, together
with the odd loud click.
--
John Hall
"Home is heaven and orgies are vile,
But you *need* an orgy, once in a while."
Ogden Nash (1902-1971)
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