QAM tuner
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A QAM tuner is present in some new digital televisions and similar devices. It enables direct reception of digital cable channels without the use of a set-top box. QAM stands for "quadrature amplitude modulation," the format by which digital cable channels are encoded and transmitted via cable. QAM tuners can be likened to the cable equivalent of an ATSC tuner which is required to receive over-the-air (OTA) digital channels broadcast by local television stations. Many new digital televisions contain both and are labeled "with ATSC/QAM Tuner". However, unlike the case with ATSC tuners there is no FCC requirement that QAM tuners be included in new television sets.
An integrated QAM tuner allows the free reception of unscrambled digital programming sent "in the clear" by cable providers; however most digital channels are scrambled because the providers consider them to be extra-cost options and not part of the "basic cable" package. Which channels are scrambled varies greatly from location to location, and can change over time. In the United States a television that is labeled digital cable ready can have a CableCARD installed by the cable provider to unscramble the protected channels, allowing subscribers to tune all authorized digital channels without the use of a set-top box.
[edit] External links
- Home Theater: How Federal Regulations Affect the Products You Install - Residential Systems (Jul 8, 2004)
- Does Your Next Video Display Need to Have a QAM Tuner? - Home Theater & Sound (February 2004)
- LCD Terms & Definition - Sceptre.com
- Subscribing to Cable Services for HDTV Delivery - Yahoo Tech