Mike Morris WA6ILQ wrote:
In the USA the 60-66MHz range is television channel 3, the 66-72MHz
range is TV channel 4, the 72-76MHz frequencies are used as
Operational Fixed / Repeater frequencies (essentially commercial
point-to-point links), 76-82MHz is TV channel 5 and 82-88MHz is TV
MCH wrote:
will free up airwaves for use by emergency responders.???
The TV spectrum is being freed up by ANALOG stations and the SAME
SPECTRUM will be reused by DIGITAL stations. The only spectrum being
freed up by TV for PS use is on the 764 MHz + band. (two TV channels, I
believe) and
While it was told that ALL VHF television would move to UHF, I don't
believe that is going to be reality. I could be wrong, however
My local channel 12 is moving to channel 9 with the digital
transition...
73,
Paul N1BUG
Reality
Channels 2-13 will mostly be vacant. There are a small number of stations that
will revert back to their hi VHF channel after Feb 17. Hi VHF channels 7-13.
Here in Tucson only one station will revert back to their original channel.
KGUN on 9.
Other VHF stations in Tucson, 4,6,11 13
At 1/6/2008 09:10, you wrote:
Broadcasters are really wanting this mess to be over. My former station,
KVOA is spending more than twice as much on elect, cooling etc running two
transmitters. One on 4 and one on 23. The stations all want to stop the
bleeding of money.
I thought that the
At 1/5/2008 22:02, you wrote:
Has anyone else here seen the bull put out by NTIA on
https://www.dtv2009.gov/FAQ.aspxhttps://www.dtv2009.gov/FAQ.aspx
=
1. What is the digital television transition?
An analog allocation is 6 MHz. A digital
-- Original Message --
An analog (TV) allocation is 6 MHz. A digital allocation is 6 MHz.
How is digital saving spectrum?
Because digital TV broadcasting can cram multiple viewing channels in that
same 6 MHZ spectrum.
Yes, PGH is all UHF. As I mentioned, look at Harrisburg's DTV
allocations. They have one on Channel 2.
(I pity their 6M activities as much as I rejoice PGH's channel 2 going
away)
Joe M.
Kevin Custer wrote:
MCH wrote:
will free up airwaves for use by emergency responders.???
The TV
I have yet to see any station share their DTV channel with another
station. (which would save spectrum)
So, there may be more content, but station WXYZ will still use the full
6 MHz. If my local area is any indication, they will simply add channels
such as full time traffic and WX. (like you need
Some have here, but I do not know if there exists any financial interest
between the two stations.
Chuck
WB2EDV
- Original Message -
From: MCH [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Sunday, January 06, 2008 3:42 PM
Subject: Re: [Repeater-Builder] Off Topic
06, 2008 12:43 PM
To: Repeater-Builder@yahoogroups.com
Subject: Re: [Repeater-Builder] Off Topic (but with on topic questions):
NTIA propaganda
I have yet to see any station share their DTV channel with another
station. (which would save spectrum)
So, there may be more content, but station WXYZ
- Original Message -
From: MCH [EMAIL PROTECTED]
I have yet to see any station share their DTV channel with another
station. (which would save spectrum)
I was looking at my local area, and there's at least one example...
in Springfield, MO, new DTV 44-1 will be the NBC affiliate,
@yahoogroups.com
Subject:Re: [Repeater-Builder] Off Topic (but with on topic
questions): NTIA propaganda
Date:Sun, 6 Jan 2008 14:31:28 +
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MCH wrote:
will free up airwaves for use by emergency responders
On Jan 6, 2008, at 3:02 PM, Ray Brown wrote:
I was looking at my local area, and there's at least one example...
in Springfield, MO, new DTV 44-1 will be the NBC affiliate, while
44-2 will be the CW (and 44-3 will be Weather Now, I guess it's
a clone of The Weather Channel?)
Our local NBC
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