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Long forgotten, and recently rediscovered in my archives is this video recorded back in 2016 of a Sainsonic Audio/Video transmitter kit that was purchased for around $50. At the time, I had plans of operating a Part 15 radio station out of a detached building on the property. This building was devoid of an internet connection (something which has since been resolved), and therefore there was no way to feasibly operate a computer as a 24/7 jukebox whose output would be fed to my AM transmitter. I could've just put the computer in the building without connecting it to the internet, but that would've quickly become very inconvenient every time I wanted to make a change to the programming or anything else for that matter. The most practical solution would've been to run an ethernet cable to this building, but as I learned several years later, that would've required quite a bit of effort in running the cable, digging a trench for it, etc. The quickest and easiest solution I could think of was to operate the computer in the house and feed its output to the AV transmitter. I could then place the receiver in the remote building and use that to feed my AM transmitter. The performance, as I should've expected, was less than acceptable given the distance at which I expected to use it. I can't really fault the unit itself--I just had very high expectations I later learned where unrealistic. Furthermore, since the transmitter I picked up operated at 2.4GHz, it's signal was severely degraded trying to compete with all the wireless networks in the area. I soon scrapped the idea to operate a small part 15 AM radio station to move on to other things, but I'm strongly considering revisiting the idea. This video was rather disjointed and haphazardly recorded, which led to it being shelved originally. However, I recently found myself experimenting with QTGMC to upscale video and convert interlaced video to 60p for YouTube. Previously, I had only ever used QTGMC to upscale videos from my Sony Digital8 Handycams to 1280x720 60p. Never before had I attempted to take AVCHD 1080i video from my Canon camcorder and run that through the conversion/upscaling process to produce 4k60p video. This video served as the perfect test, as I still had the original, unedited files. The conversion process for this roughly seven minute video took approximately three hours and resulted in a 4.5GB file, but I definitely think the quality is worth it, especially when watching this on a TV. I'm certain if I didn't say anything about it, people would just assume I was using a 4K 60p camcorder and a non-linear video editor and computer capable of keeping up with those kinds of video files.