What modulator would you suggest? I would like the iPhone apps (SiriusXM, iHeart) to play as wellFWIW, I've had good or excellent results with just about every Belkin product I've ever bought.....EXCEPT their FM modulators.
What modulator would you suggest? I would like the iPhone apps (SiriusXM, iHeart) to play as wellFWIW, I've had good or excellent results with just about every Belkin product I've ever bought.....EXCEPT their FM modulators.
As posted previously, I'd suggest the Whole House Transmitter. It's a little pricey, but it really gets the job done. Google their website or do a search on Amazon. I think they're $119. But you can also go to their FB page and find discount codes. I think I saw them there for $89, I actually have purchased three of them, two of whcich are discontinued models with fewer features than the current model, but still going strong after more than ten years!What modulator would you suggest? I would like the iPhone apps (SiriusXM, iHeart) to play as well
The school's cable had been originally installed for a failled Channel One test project that the district cancelled early in its run because of controversy, and the cable infrastructure was left in place. It had 4 or 5 VHF channels.
I remember when I was living in the UK that a DXer had received WTTV from Bloomington Indiana there.The existence of WTTK is the only reason that CBS affiliated with them. Since that transmitter was moved to the northwest side of Indy, I'm not sure if it even covers Kokomo anymore.
From 1949 to 1957, WTTV was a network affiliate -- first as an NBC primary with CBS, ABC, and Dumont secondary (1949-54, in Bloomington on Channel 10), NBC only (1954-56, when they moved their main studio to Indy with the transmitter in Cloverdale, now on Channel 4), then ABC (1956-57, same setup). But whether the transmitter was in Cloverdale or Trafalgar, they couldn't cover the "money" areas on the north side of the market, which is why NBC left for Channel 6 and ABC for 13 when it signed on. It took Channel 29 to cover the wealthier parts of the market.
THAT'S an impressive hop!I remember when I was living in the UK that a DXer had received WTTV from Bloomington Indiana there.
The year was 1979. Thousands of miles Indiana!
I seem to recall reading an article years ago about the coronation of Queen Elizabeth in 1953. The gist, again IIRC, was that CBS and NBC went to elaboriate lengths with chartered aircraft to get film to New York for what amounted to same day coverage. Meanwhile, ABC set up a massive antenna/amplifier system in far eastern Atlantic Canada to see if they could capture BBC signals....and they did get some useable, if grainy, footage on the air first. I could be wrong about the details, but what stands out in my memory was that ABC scored at least a small scoop versus their bigger and more well-heeled competitors.
The story I've read – from 1953 – had NBC using RCA's Long Island facility, where BBC-TV had been received (and captured on film) previously, on the off-chance some E-Skip or F2 DX would bring in UK Channel 1 from Crystal Palace. The timing would give NBC live pictures for at least a few seconds during the early morning, instead of just the audio feed over wirephotos. It didn't work.THAT'S an impressive hop!
I seem to recall reading an article years ago about the coronation of Queen Elizabeth in 1953. The gist, again IIRC, was that CBS and NBC went to elaborate lengths with chartered aircraft to get film to New York for what amounted to same day coverage. Meanwhile, ABC set up a massive antenna/amplifier system in far eastern Atlantic Canada to see if they could capture BBC signals....and they did get some useable, if grainy, footage on the air first. I could be wrong about the details, but what stands out in my memory was that ABC scored at least a small scoop versus their bigger and more well-heeled competitors.
It had been done in 1938. One might call it the first Kinescope.It IS theoretically possible to see Very Low VHF (Channel 2 and long ago Channel 1) at great distances. Sporadic E and F2 Layer prediction is statistical. There are graphs in the NAB Engineering Handbook 1960 Edition. Basically, if you can get a dish big enough, and focused antenna gain, enough to drive the signal into the statistically possible areas of the graph for significant percentages of the time. It would still be hit and miss, and grainy like a Sporadic E VHF-Low Analog signal tends to be. The founder of Radiosoft, Peter Moncure, designed and made a 16 foot dish from materials available at Home Depot and Farm Supply stores. It could be rotated for both azimuth and elevation angle. By orienting the dish, he was able to get some 35 Channel 2s under fairly normal conditions.
Somewhere in the 40 MHz range. Whoever set this up had to have a good receiver and a high gain antenna, even though the transmission was via the F2 layer of the ionosphere.Looks like there is cochannel interference without offset.
What frequency was this on? What kind of antenna and receiver were used?
Solar Cycle 17 was close to its peak in 1938. F2 propagation works well above 50 MHz during the peak of a sunspot cycle, but not all the time, of course. That's the main reason why that BBC transmission was viewable, if noisy and distorted.As far as I know, there is no way to have a signal that exceeds inverse field. So at 4000 miles plus the elevations on both transmitting and receiving end in the propagation path, you do need very high gain antennas. And if you notice, from the graphs I mentioned, it is still well below the free space value for the vast percentage of the time.
I'm absolutely going to have to try this out sometime, I am also less than a mile from my nearest interstate. Thanks for sharing!87.9 MHz: Filled with micro-FM transmitters. When I'm in traffic on a busy expressway I enjoy leaving my radio tuned to the frequency. Some of these have impressive range considering they're literally transmitting microwatts, using virtually nothing for an antenna, from inside a moving vehicle. I live approximately 1/4 mile from an interstate expressway, and I have no trouble hearing transmitters on 87.9 for 8-10 seconds as they whiz down the road when I swing my yagi in that direction.
During an E-skip event in mid-July this year, I received a dead stereo carrier on 87.9 MHz. I could tell by the characteristics of the signal that it wasn't local. No audio present, just a carrier. Never did ID it.
An interesting frequency to be sure.
Somewhere in the 40 MHz range. Whoever set this up had to have a good receiver and a high gain antenna, even though the transmission was via the F2 layer of the ionosphere.
There could be no co-channel interference because there were no other stations on the air in that spectrum. The US had experimental TV in the late 1930s, but they were above 50 MHz, IIRC.
I don't believe the FCC assigned specific channel numbers to frequency bands or individual stations until 1939. The "generic" allocations were 42-56 and 60-86 MHz at the time, with the 5 Meter ham band between them. The 42-50 MHz band was reallocated to FM in 1939.
This seems more plausible than what I originally posted. Thanks for sharing.The story I've read – from 1953 – had NBC using RCA's Long Island facility, where BBC-TV had been received (and captured on film) previously, on the off-chance some E-Skip or F2 DX would bring in UK Channel 1 from Crystal Palace. The timing would give NBC live pictures for at least a few seconds during the early morning, instead of just the audio feed over wirephotos. It didn't work.
ABC, with pennies to work with, simply took the CBC feed of its kinescope of the BBC coverage once it landed in Montreal in the afternoon, and beat CBS (NBC wised up and paid for the feed from Montreal) to the punch.
The transmissions were on what later became Channel 1 in the UK, with a video carrier of 45.0 MHz, and the sound carrier at 41.5 MHz. Yes, the sound transmissions (which were AM, not FM) were 3.5 MHz below the video carrier, unlike most other TV systems, even in the early days. The channel width was 5 MHz.Somewhere in the 40 MHz range. Whoever set this up had to have a good receiver and a high gain antenna, even though the transmission was via the F2 layer of the ionosphere.