Multi-Band Equalizers
US-2022231716-A1 · Jul 21, 2022 · US
US11784679B2 · US · B2
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Publication number | US-11784679-B2 |
| Application number | US-202217696735-A |
| Country | US |
| Kind code | B2 |
| Filing date | Mar 16, 2022 |
| Priority date | Mar 17, 2021 |
| Publication date | Oct 10, 2023 |
| Grant date | Oct 10, 2023 |
A practical reading order for non-experts. Skip the full description unless you need deep technical detail.
What the patent document calls the invention.
A short plain-language summary of the technical disclosure.
Who owns or filed the patent and who is credited as inventor.
Filing, priority, publication, and grant dates set the timeline.
The legal scope of protection — read this for what is actually claimed.
Technology tags used to group this patent with similar filings.
Prior art links and similar publications in this corpus.
Official abstract text for this publication.
A cable network that includes a multi-slope equalizer and/or cable simulator.
Opening claim text (preview).
We claim: 1. An equalizer for a cable network comprising: (a) said equalizer receiving an input signal having a frequency spectrum from an input coaxial cable; (b) said equalizer modifying said frequency spectrum of said input signal using a first signal conditioning shape for a legacy band extending from 300 MHz to 650 MHz, where said modification includes a greater attenuation at 300 MHz relative to 650 MHz; (c) said equalizer modifying said frequency spectrum of said input signal using a second signal conditioning shape for an extended band extending from 1.2 GHz to 1.5 GHz, where said first signal conditioning shape is different than said second conditioning shape; (d) said equalizer providing an output signal to an output coaxial cable for a customer. 2. The equalizer of claim 1 wherein said legacy band extends from 50 MHz to 750 MHz. 3. The equalizer of claim 2 wherein said modification includes a greater attenuation at 50 MHz relative to 750 MHz. 4. The equalizer of claim 1 wherein said first signal conditioning shape is substantially linear. 5. The equalizer of claim 1 wherein said first signal conditioning shape is substantially non-linear. 6. The equalizer of claim 1 wherein said second signal conditioning shape is substantially linear. 7. The equalizer of claim 1 wherein said second signal conditioning shape is substantially non-linear. 8. The equalizer of claim 1 wherein a transition from said first signal conditioning shape to said second signal conditioning shape includes a discontinuity. 9. The equalizer of claim 8 wherein said discontinuity includes a frequency that includes a frequency range that includes 1.2 GHz. 10. A cable simulator for a cable network comprising: (a) said cable simulator receiving an input signal having a frequency spectrum from an input coaxial cable; (b) said cable simulator modifying said frequency spectrum of said input signal using a first signal conditioning shape for a legacy band extending from 300 MHz to 650 MHz, where said modification includes a lesser attenuation at 300 MHz relative to 650 MHz; (c) said cable simulator modifying said frequency spectrum of said input signal using a second signal conditioning shape for an extended band extending from 1.2 GHz to 1.5 GHz, where said first signal conditioning shape is different than said second conditioning shape; (d) said cable simulator providing an output signal to an output coaxial cable for a customer. 11. The cable simulator of claim 10 wherein said legacy band extends from 50 MHz to 750 MHz. 12. The cable simulator of claim 11 wherein said modification includes a lesser attenuation at 50 MHz relative to 750 MHz. 13. The cable simulator of claim 10 wherein said first signal conditioning shape is substantially linear. 14. The cable simulator of claim 10 wherein said first signal conditioning shape is substantially non-linear. 15. The cable simulator of claim 10 wherein said second signal conditioning shape is substantially linear. 16. The cable simulator of claim 10 wherein said second signal conditioning shape is substantially non-linear. 17. The cable simulator of claim 10 wherein a transition from said first signal conditioning shape to said second signal conditioning shape includes a discontinuity. 18. The cable simulator of claim 17 wherein said discontinuity includes a frequency that includes a frequency range that includes 1.2 GHz. 19. An equalizer for a cable network comprising: (a) said equalizer receiving an input signal having a frequency spectrum from an input coaxial cable; (b) said equalizer modifying said frequency spectrum of said input signal using a first signal conditioning shape for a legacy band of signaling within a first frequency range, where said modification includes a greater attenuation at a higher frequency than a lower frequency; (c) said equalizer modifying said frequency spectrum of said input signal using a second signal conditioning shape for an extended band of signaling within a second frequency range, where said first frequency range is lower than said second frequency range, where said first signal conditioning shape is different than said second conditioning shape; (d) said equalizer providing an output signal to an output coaxial cable for a customer. 20. A cable simulator for a cable network comprising: (a) said cable simulator receiving an input signal having a frequency spectrum from an input coaxial cable; (b) said cable simulator modifying said frequency spectrum of said input signal using a first signal conditioning shape for a legacy band of signaling within a first frequency range, where said modification includes a lesser attenuation at lower frequencies than at higher frequencies; (c) said cable simulator modifying said frequency spectrum of said input signal using a second signal conditioning shape for an extended band of signaling for a second frequency range, where said first frequency range is lower than said second frequency range, where said first signal conditioning shape is different than said second conditioning shape; (d) said cable simulator providing an output signal to an output coaxial cable for a customer.
Related publications grouped by family.
Answers are generated from the same data shown on this page.