Mastaclocksetta said:
For example, on my Time Warner system in L.A., KCET (PBS) is carried on channel 6, even though over the air, it's 28. How does this work?
The cable system can buy "frequency converters" which will convert any OTA station from its broadcast channel to any other channel.
Actually, most larger cable systems receive a fiber feed directly from the TV station and have their own modulators determining what channel the station will show up on on cable. The system may choose any channel they want.*
And since the OTA signals went digital in June, often an OTA station isn't really transmitting on the channel you think it's transmitting on. KCET is actually a bit unusual in that it actually is transmitted on the same channel you punch in to view it. KNBC is a more common case -- you may know them as "channel 4", and you may punch in "04" to watch them, either on cable or OTA, but they're actually broadcast on channel 36...
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In the early days of cable, many systems offered only 12 channels, 2-13. UHF stations like KCET 28 could not be carried on their OTA channel numbers, because cable channel numbers above 13 simply did not exist -- the cable system's hardware would not transmit such channels. In Madison, Wis. where I was in the 1970s and 1980s, channels 15 NBC, 21 PBS, and 27 ABC were on cable on channels 5, 11, and 7 respectively. People in Madison are used to tuning to channel 5 to watch NBC; today there's no
technical reason cable couldn't carry NBC-15 on channel 15, but it would confuse the heck out of viewers who've been tuning to 5 for decades...
Carrying a
VHF station on its OTA channel number could lead to "ingress" interference.** The OTA signal leaks into the cable and interferes with the cable signal on the same frequency.*** You get a pretty nasty "ghost". Now that the OTA signals are digital, instead of the ghost, the cable signal appears to be much weaker than it really is -- much "snowier".
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* within guidelines established by the FCC which, to somewhat oversimplify, suggest OTA stations must be carried on their OTA channel or some other mutually-agreeable channel.
** For channels 2-6 this pretty much ceased to be a problem when OTA signals went digital in June. Few stations are using OTA channels below 7 - KNBC may call itself "channel 4" but it's actually broadcast on 36 and thus cannot interfere with a signal on cable channel 4. KCBS is on 43 and KTLA on 31.
*** For this reason, it's my understanding it's
illegal for a cable system in Canada to carry a station on a channel used by an OTA signal in the same area.