Home | Site map | Elsevier websites | Alerts
Elsevier
Product information search
Search all Elsevier sites
Search
Advanced Product Search
Go to Elsevier home page
SiteStat.jsp
NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF BROADCASTERS ENGINEERING HANDBOOK
National Association of Broadcasters Engineering HandbookNAB Engineering Handbook
To order this title, and for more information, click here
Tenth Edition


Edmund Williams
Graham Jones, Director of Communications Engineering, National Association of Broadcasters, Washington DC
David Layer, David Layer is Director, Advanced Engineering in the Science & Technology Department of NAB, located in Washington, DC. David has been with NAB since 1995, and has been very active in the radio standards setting area. He is also involved in NAB's technical conference planning and technical publication activities, and has been an author and contributing author for numerous technical publications, including IEEE Spectrum magazine (a leading journal of the Electrical Engineering profession) and the McGraw-Hill Yearbook of Science and Technology.
Thomas Osenkowsky, Tom Osenkowsky is a Senior Member of IEEE, NARTE and SBE. He has been practicing broadcast engineering since 1976. He has designed, constructed and maintained radio broadcast facilities in the United States and Caribbean Islands, written software for engineering applications and is a freqquent contributor to Radio World magazine.

Description
The NAB Engineering Handbook provides detailed information on virtually every aspect of the broadcast chain, from news gathering, program production and postproduction through master control and distribution links to transmission, antennas, RF propagation, cable and satellite. Hot topics covered include HD Radio, HDTV, 2 GHz broadcast auxiliary services, EAS, workflow, metadata, digital asset management, advanced video and audio compression, audio and video over IP, and Internet broadcasting. A wide range of related topics that engineers and managers need to understand are also covered, including broadcast administration, FCC practices, technical standards, security, safety, disaster planning, facility planning, project management, and engineering management. Basic principles and the latest technologies and issues are all addressed by respected professionals with first-hand experience in the broadcast industry and manufacturing. This edition has been fully revised and updated, with 104 chapters and over 2000 pages. The Engineering Handbook provides the single most comprehensive and accessible resource available for engineers and others working in production, postproduction, networks, local stations, equipment manufacturing or any of the associated areas of radio and television.

Audience
Broadcast engineers in all aspects of engineering including television, radio, sound and video.

Contents
1. Broadcast Standards and Practices 1.1 Electromagnetic Spectrum 1.2 Frequency Allocations for Broadcast Services 1.3 FCC Organization and Administrative Practices 1.4 FCC Compliance and Information Bureau 1.5 Frequency Coordination 1.6 Distance and Bearing Calculations 1.7 Broadcast Standards and Practices 1.8 Digital Audio Standards 1.9 NTSC Standard 1.10 Worldwide Standards for Conventional Television 1.11 EAS 2. Broadcast Towers and Systems 2.1 Propagation Characteristics 2.2 Design, Erection, and Maintenance of Towers 2.3 Lightning Protection for Tower Structures 2.4 Coaxial Transmission Line 3. Audio Production Facilities 3.1 Planning an Audio Production Center 3.2 Principles of Acoustics 3.3 Microphones 3.4 Audio Recording Systems 3.5 Studio Audio Equipment 3.6 Station Networking and Automation 3.7 Digital Audio Data Compression Technologies 3.8 Transmission Audio Processing 3.9 Remote News and Production 3.10 Telephone Network Interfacing 3.11 Common Carrier Audio Program Services 4. Radio Transmission Facilities 4.1 AM Transmitters 4.2 AM Stereo 4.3 FM Transmitters 4.4 FM Stereo and SCA Systems 4.5 STL Systems 4.6 Radio Data Broadcasting 4.7 AM IBOC System 4.8 FM IBOC System 4.9 Transmission System Control and Monitoring 4.10 AM Antenna Systems 4.11 AM Antenna Coupling and Phasing Systems 4.12 Computer Simulation of Radio Antenna Systems 4.13 AM Antenna System Maintenance 4.14 FM Broadcast Antennas 4.15 FM Combining Systems 4.16 FM Translators and Boosters 4.17 AM and FM Field Strength Measurements 5. Video Production Facilities 5.1. Planning a Video Production Center 5.2. Principles of Light, Vision, and Photometry 5.3. Video Pickup Devices and Systems 5.4. Video Signal Switching, Timing, and Distribution 5.5. Magnetic and Optical Recording Media 5.6. Video Compression 5.7. Video Recording Principles 5.8. Video Server Storage Systems 5.9. Video Special Effects Systems 5.10. Station Automation and Networking 5.11. Intercom and IFB Systems 5.12. Weather Radar Systems 5.13. Closed Captioning and Extended Services 5.14. Film for Television 5.15. Television Camera Robotics 5.16. Lighting for Television 5.17. Remote Video Production 6. Television Transmission Facilities 6.1 Microwave and STL Systems 6.2 Television Transmitters 6.3 Multichannel Television Sound 6.4 Television Data Broadcasting Systems 6.5 Transmission System Control and Monitoring 6.6 Waveguide 6.7 Diplexers, Combiners, and Filters 6.8 Television Antenna Systems 6.9 Television Field Strength Measurement 6.10 Fiber Optic Transmission Systems 6.11 Satellite Earth Stations and Systems 6.12 Low Power Television 7. Digital Television 7.1. The ATSC DTV System 7.2. Service Multiplex and Transport Systems 7.3. Audio Encoding and Decoding 7.4. Program and System Information Protocol 7.5. Closed Captioning 7.6. Data Broadcasting 7.7. Media and Metadata Management 7.8. Interactive Television 7.9. The DVB Standard 8. Signal Measurement and Testing 8.1. Audio Signal Analysis 8.2. Video Signal Analysis 8.3. Radio Frequency Signal Analysis 9. Ancillary Broadcast Systems 9.1 Broadcast Facility Planning and Construction 9.2 AC Power Conditioning 9.3 Facility Grounding Practices 9.4 Standby Power Systems 10. Technical Management and Safety 10.1 Managing a Technical Facility 10.2 Engineering Documentation 10.3 Systems Engineering Concepts 10.4 Non-Ionizing Radiation 10.5 PCBs and Other Hazardous Substances 10.6 Electrical Shock 10.7 Tower Safety, Fall Arrest Systems, and OSHA 10.8 Disaster Planning and Recovery 10. Index

Bibliographic details
Hardbound, 2120 pages, publication date: MAY-2007
ISBN-13: 978-0-240-80751-5
ISBN-10: 0-240-80751-0
Imprint: FOCAL PRESS

Price and Ordering
Price:
USD 199.95
EUR 181
GBP 124.99
order now
Books and book related electronic products are priced in US dollars (USD), euro (EUR), and Great Britain Pounds (GBP). USD prices apply to the Americas and Asia Pacific. EUR prices apply in Europe and the Middle East. GBP prices apply to the UK and all other countries.
See also information about conditions of sale & ordering procedures, and links to our regional sales offices.

036/338
Last update: 27 Sep 2008
Book contents
Table of contents
Reviews
View other people's reviews
Submit your review
Bookmark this page
Recommend this publication
Overview of all books
Printer-friendly version   Printer-friendly version
 Home | Site map | Privacy policy | Terms and Conditions | Feedback | A Reed Elsevier company
 Copyright © 2008 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.