From a question on the other digital TV thread I was searching the FCC site to come up with allocations for digital TV stations to see what low VHF stations were still out there and came up with this list of allocation for digital TV station from the FCC.
I didn't get a chance yet to read through the notes on top so I am not sure if it's final or not. Someone help me thru the technical mumbo jumbo please

Anyway here's the list
http://tinyurl.com/3yhqsr
(Note: the list is toward the bottom, there are a LOT of note on the top so keep scrolling down)
It seem the FCC is going to have to do some juggling there. I mean in Illinois we have Channel 19 in Chicago, Peoria and Olney. That seems awful close to me for TV stations. Do digital TV stations need less space apart? Or are they all going to be very directional signals now?
I'm wondering if it'll be like when the FCC first assigned TV stations and put them too close. Like a Channel 7 in Wilmington DE, when they already had a Channel 7 in New York and Washington DC?
I didn't get a chance yet to read through the notes on top so I am not sure if it's final or not. Someone help me thru the technical mumbo jumbo please
Anyway here's the list
http://tinyurl.com/3yhqsr
(Note: the list is toward the bottom, there are a LOT of note on the top so keep scrolling down)
It seem the FCC is going to have to do some juggling there. I mean in Illinois we have Channel 19 in Chicago, Peoria and Olney. That seems awful close to me for TV stations. Do digital TV stations need less space apart? Or are they all going to be very directional signals now?
I'm wondering if it'll be like when the FCC first assigned TV stations and put them too close. Like a Channel 7 in Wilmington DE, when they already had a Channel 7 in New York and Washington DC?