QUOTE(Amish @ Jan 13 2007, 01:27 PM) [snapback]74901[/snapback]
SNR margin is NOT the difference as you said but its tolerance level.
How much decrease (difference) in SNR can be tolerated from exchange
to your modem. More the tolerance wud mean if noise is high it wud try
to re-correct the packets sent/received but that would mean speed will
decrease as same data is sent again. But then to achieve faster speeds
this tolerance should be decreased.
Noise here is not just noise created by voice but it cud be additional
disturbance caused in waves travelling through tel wire. Say by cable
TV wires, LAN cables etc. immitting signals and hindering tel signals,
inspite of insulation there still exists some disturbance.[/b]
Problem with u is that u start posting without first comprehending what is written :angry:
U are defining SNR, and i have defined SNR margin as reported by the modem
"An explanation of SNR and SNR Margin *
The SNR Margin is not the same as the Signal to Noise Ratio (SNR), although it is related.
The SNR is the signal-to-noise ratio. It is the ratio between the strength of the signal and the background noise on the line and is universally expressed as a logarithmic ratio (decibels or dB).
For a given line the SNR remains essentially fixed whatever the speed you are running.
ADSL routers and modems actually report the SNR Margin, and the term used to describe this varies but is generally “SNR Margin”, “Noise Margin”, “Margin”, “Receive Margin”.
The SNR Margin is the difference between the actual SNR and the SNR required to run at a given speed.
For example, if you need 20dB of SNR to run at 512Kbps, and the actual line SNR is 45dB, then the SNR Margin is 25dB.
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"What's an SNR margin
The SNR margin is the difference in what the current SNR is and what the potential SNR is, basically a safety margin to make sure you are louder than any spikes in background noise. The target SNR (what is negotiates sync at) is set by your ISP and we change between speed settings. As long as you're SNR is greater than 1 there isn't a problem.
from http://forums.whirlpool.net.au/forum-repli...cfm/317028.html
SNR margin is NOT the difference as you said but its tolerance level.
How much decrease (difference) in SNR can be tolerated from exchange
to your modem. More the tolerance wud mean if noise is high it wud try
to re-correct the packets sent/received but that would mean speed will
decrease as same data is sent again. But then to achieve faster speeds
this tolerance should be decreased.
Noise here is not just noise created by voice but it cud be additional
disturbance caused in waves travelling through tel wire. Say by cable
TV wires, LAN cables etc. immitting signals and hindering tel signals,
inspite of insulation there still exists some disturbance.[/b]
Problem with u is that u start posting without first comprehending what is written :angry:
U are defining SNR, and i have defined SNR margin as reported by the modem
"An explanation of SNR and SNR Margin *
The SNR Margin is not the same as the Signal to Noise Ratio (SNR), although it is related.
The SNR is the signal-to-noise ratio. It is the ratio between the strength of the signal and the background noise on the line and is universally expressed as a logarithmic ratio (decibels or dB).
For a given line the SNR remains essentially fixed whatever the speed you are running.
ADSL routers and modems actually report the SNR Margin, and the term used to describe this varies but is generally “SNR Margin”, “Noise Margin”, “Margin”, “Receive Margin”.
The SNR Margin is the difference between the actual SNR and the SNR required to run at a given speed.
For example, if you need 20dB of SNR to run at 512Kbps, and the actual line SNR is 45dB, then the SNR Margin is 25dB.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
"What's an SNR margin
The SNR margin is the difference in what the current SNR is and what the potential SNR is, basically a safety margin to make sure you are louder than any spikes in background noise. The target SNR (what is negotiates sync at) is set by your ISP and we change between speed settings. As long as you're SNR is greater than 1 there isn't a problem.
from http://forums.whirlpool.net.au/forum-repli...cfm/317028.html