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To: Gen.Blather

Just a technical point. The upper limit frequency on phone transmission is something less than 4 kHz.


65 posted on 06/22/2013 9:39:39 AM PDT by Cboldt
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To: Cboldt

“Just a technical point. The upper limit frequency on phone transmission is something less than 4 kHz.”

I used the mike specs from the FM radios I used to design. I didn’t think anything could be worse than that. I stand corrected. At 4k, with noise, compression hash, etc. the “experts” would be lucky to tell male from female.


71 posted on 06/22/2013 10:35:32 AM PDT by Gen.Blather
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To: Cboldt
The upper limit frequency on phone transmission is something less than 4 kHz.

Land-line phones pass through basically everything from about 300Hz to 3300Hz, since decades of research and usage have shown such range to be adequate for people's voices to sound the way people expect them to sound on a telephone. Digital phone systems have, for the last couple decades, sampled audio at an 8KHz rate with 8-bits per sample and sent is as a 64kbps stream of bits.

Digital mobile phones need to use lower data rates, so rather than trying to send all frequency components simultaneously, they identify the most important parts of the signal and just sent the characteristics of those. All other information in the signal is abandoned. Audio which has been processed in good enough for mobile subscribers to tolerate, but it often doesn't sound a whole lot like the original, and is basically useless for forensic analysis.

82 posted on 06/22/2013 7:15:59 PM PDT by supercat (Renounce Covetousness.)
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