I just did a rescan here in the Dallas-Ft. Worth area. The only surprise, minor it may be, is that KLDT is now showing its virtual channel as 55 (its former analog home) instead of 54.
fredcantu said:I guess those with high virtual channel numbers would like to move up the program guide.
tested said:KLDT is in a slightly unusual position. They ditched their analog channel long before that digital switch took place to make room for the Flo TV system on channel 55. They operated on digital 54 before moving to digital 39. Personally, I don't know why they rebranded themselves as 54 in the first place. Then again, very little that that station does makes any sense.
tested said:So why didn't the FCC just make a rule that stations must map to their analog channel number and identify themselves as such on the air?
w9wi said:tested said:So why didn't the FCC just make a rule that stations must map to their analog channel number and identify themselves as such on the air?
They did.
Well, they did the part about mapping to their analog channel number. It's part of the ATSC standard and is incorporated by reference in the FCC regulations. Stations can ID themselves on the air any way they want, but the major channel number they transmit in their stream must be their old analog channel number.*
tested said:w9wi said:tested said:So why didn't the FCC just make a rule that stations must map to their analog channel number and identify themselves as such on the air?
They did.
Well, they did the part about mapping to their analog channel number. It's part of the ATSC standard and is incorporated by reference in the FCC regulations. Stations can ID themselves on the air any way they want, but the major channel number they transmit in their stream must be their old analog channel number.*
okay, but how then did KCEN map to 9.1 and re-brand themselves that way? Why was KLDT ever allowed to be 54.1? That's my point.
Bob E. Nelson said:As I read this, the commission was fully aware of KCEN's wish to brand as channel 9 and blessed it. Of course, they have since reverted to identifying as channel 6 (and presumably righted the '6' logo on the building, which was simply turned upside for the period when they used channel 9).
azumanga said:There is also a problem in the Mobile-Pensacola area: PBS member WSRE broadcasts on digital 31, and uses "23", its old analog channel position, as its PSIP. WDPM, a Daystar station that signed on as a digital-only station, signed on channel 23 after WSRE's analog signal closed down. However, since WSRE was already using "23" as its PSIP, WDPM would have to find something else -- at first, they used "4", which was in violation of FCC rules, as there was never a channel 4 in the market. With the FCC's blessing, they eventually settled on a PSIP of "31", which was WSRE's actual channel number.
(from ATSC A/65C)If, after the transition, a previously used NTSC RF channel in a market is assigned to a
newly-licensed DTV broadcaster in that market, the newly-licensed DTV broadcaster
shall use, as his major_channel_number, the number of the DTV RF channel originally
allocated to the previous NTSC licensee of the assigned channel.
okay, but how then did KCEN map to 9.1 and re-brand themselves that way? Why was KLDT ever allowed to be 54.1? That's my point.
AlanB said:I hope it was an old recording by whomever was at Master Control, but KLDT just an announcement before their legal-ID that "on Monday, over the air viewers will need to rescan their televisions to continue receiving KLDT programming." I thought UHF 39 was their permanent home. Is their a frequency switch in the works, or was someone not paying attention at the station again?