Is the FCC going to still take away some Channels in 2015 for Broadband?
How many Channels are they thinking of taking from broadcasters?
How many Channels are they thinking of taking from broadcasters?
MarioMania said:Can a TV Station insted move down the UHF Band or even going to VHF?
With in UHF Channel 14-36 or VHF Channel 7-13
Dave said:Last I heard, the FCC wanted to do away with channels 31 - 36 & 38 - 51, leaving the UHF band with channels 14 - 30. Some markets already have certain channels off- limits for TV, due to some channels being used for land-mobile. Chicago for example has channels 14 & 15 off limits. WLS-TV just shut off their VHF signal on RF 7, that they're already on RF 44 exclusively. They might be forced to go back to RF 7 if channels get taken away again. I don't know how this will be handled near Mexico & Canada, where I hear they're not taking 31 - 51 away from TV on the Mexico & Canada sides. Other than channel sharing, LPTV stations will likely go off the air, since most barely survive with the signal they have, & the advertising dollars they get from that signal.
chriscollins said:Out of curiosity, since DTV on VHF has had problems (both due to power and the fact most antenna's are UHF), why not just use VHF for the broadband and move all the TV to UHF?
I think many of them may return to their old analog channels if possible.
Then we have DTVCast a proposed new broadband service for rural areas that would use a portion of a broadcast station's spectrum for delivery. The service promises 10 Mbps down and 1 Mbps up. Each broadcast signal will be able to support anywhere from 400-600 subscribers. DTVCast uses current 8VSB technology (so it is fully compatible with ATSC 1.0 and 2.0). Apparently, it will only work effectively on the UHF band.
This kind of thing has been proposed before. I'd like to see what their "up" technology is. And, I'd like to know how well it scales when 500 subscribers come home from work & try to stream movies at the same time.
Looks just like several of the proposals I've seen before. Only difference is that they've added to the list of available return path technologies DSL and cable. But if you have DSL or cable, why would you need another data service?