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How'd WBOC survive before TV's were required to have UHF capability?

I don't live in the Salisbury/OC/Sussex Co. market, but I have vacationed at the Delaware beaches/Ocean City quite a few times and watch the Salisbury market stations.

IIRC WBOC went on the air in 1954(?). It wasn't until 19*6*4 that Congress or the FCC required new TV sets to have UHF reception capability. How did WBOC and other UHFs survive before then?

ixnay
 
I don't live in the Salisbury/OC/Sussex Co. market, but I have vacationed at the Delaware beaches/Ocean City quite a few times and watch the Salisbury market stations.

IIRC WBOC went on the air in 1954(?). It wasn't until 19*6*4 that Congress or the FCC required new TV sets to have UHF reception capability. How did WBOC and other UHFs survive before then?

ixnay

Not well. Mostly people "below the canal" and on the Eastern Shore watched VHF affiliated stations from Baltimore, DC or Philly. People had roof-top antennas that could pick them up. UHF stations operated on the cheap with left-overs not picked up by VHF stations. I was in Kent County in the late 60's and the cable system didn't even carry WBOC, just major market VHF stations.
 
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