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^ Related----I know that the folk at WPVI DT 6 are not exactly enthralled at being on 6 for DT, but there is nowhere else for them to go. *Is* WPVI on a subchannel of any co-owned Philly station?
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w9wi said:IIRC this arose out of 9/11. All the main digital transmitters were on the WTC, and thus went off the air in the attacks. But WNYW had a backup digital transmitter on the ESB. They were able to configure it to carry a second program, and they used that second program to carry WWOR. They never turned it off, and eventually added a simulcast in the other direction. I suppose they figure that's redundancy in case of a failure of the WNYW transmitter. And that sometimes, due to questionable indoor antennas, you can get one station but not another even though they transmit from the same site. (so if your antenna isn't up to receiving the WNYW transmitter, you can still watch WNYW over WWOR's transmitter)
KML-224 said:Wasn't it that WCBS-TV was the only one who had a full-powered analog backup at ESB on 9/11?
Laurence Glavin said:Which raises the question: could a formerly analog UHF like WFXT or WMFP inform ADVERTISERS that no Boston station is in fact broadcasting on its heritage VHF channel?
Ron. said:KML-224 said:Wasn't it that WCBS-TV was the only one who had a full-powered analog backup at ESB on 9/11?
Yes, someone "accidentally" renewed the lease, kinda worked out in the end.
Necrat said:I still say that is an urban legend. How do you "accidently" renew a lease for that much money?
It was so long ago, we'll never know. It amazes me , though, that after the 1993 bombing, that more stations
didn't think to have full power backups ready to go "off site". I wonder how much TV gear still exists at Alpine?
mysticnitekatt said:WMFP doesn't sell local advertising - they have no sales department - they are just a shack and a transmitter.
whdh1920 said:Now i must ask if there in such great facilities why can't they get a sales staff and people in there to clear the whole schedule????
Ron. said:Yes I forgot they are on different RF channels... BUT... if by some miracle that 2 20's or 5's or 44's came in, my original answer would hold.iyiyi said:WCVB is on channel 20. WNYW is on channel 44...
FCC Rule 73.682(d) requires DTV stations to comply with ATSC standards, and ATSC A/65C at one time reserved minor channel numbers 1 and 2 for other services. Stations followed those restrictions when originally setting up their PSIP tables. Any change could adversely affect reception by the majority of digital receivers, requiring mass rescanning to reacquire the station. Obviously stations are reluctant to cause any such interruption.Uncle Kaimbridge said:Ron. said:Yes I forgot they are on different RF channels... BUT... if by some miracle that 2 20's or 5's or 44's came in, my original answer would hold.iyiyi said:WCVB is on channel 20. WNYW is on channel 44...
My suggestion, especially for data bases (hi Doug!), is to append
the virtual channel with the CALLs (since the virtual is just ID
dressing), with the rf channel being “-”ed: E.g., WCVB:5-20.
In the case of virtual = rf, either do it the same way or
as “:-#”: E.g., WPVI:6-6 or WPVI:-6.
The question I have is, why do the actual rf subchannels start
at .3, not .1, for most stations?
I have been pleasantly surprised at the DX possibilities with digital TV. I purchased a converter box in April 2009 with a government coupon and stuck a UHF antenna up on the roof, hoping to get New York City here in Poughkeepsie. Well, New York was in quite well on many channels, but by the end of April I picked up WUND in North Carolina at over 400 miles! That summer, there was a strong Boston opening with most of the Boston stations in excellently, including WHDH on both ch 7 and ch 42. (over-riding a 20,000 local analog translator on ch 42). I was hooked. I never cease to be surprised at what Digital TV DX is possible. And one thing I love about digital DX, is that if you're receiving a station, you have the same perfect quality picture, whether the station is a local, 200 miles away, 400 miles away, or even over 1000 miles away!ansky212 said:I think this is the first time I have ever heard about someone being able to DX a tv station since the changeover to digital.