I started this thread in a rant, early in the morning... so let me clarify my complaint. Mobile is a long TV market, and most non-tropical weather comes from the west. I was channel surfing and caught the wall-to-wall coverage of what was happening 40 miles west of me. I surfed back later and the storms were approaching the local TV Antenna Farm. This is when the stations all went haywire, the signals froze, dropped audio, just about everything went wrong. 3 of these stations are UHF digital and 1 us VHF, I believe 3 of these stations plan on significantly increasing their power and/or height after the June deadline. The 4th station is already setup in it's final, full power, digital facility, that station had the best reception during the weather event, but the weather staff was asleep. The other three stations were wall-to-wall for 4 hours or longer, but as soon as the storms were over the Antenna Farm they were unwatchable, I got the exact same results from cable and a rooftop antenna, which was similar to the "rain fade" problems I used to have with DirecTV. When I started fiddling with the TV and hooked up a cheap set of rabbit ears I was able to pick up good signals from the old analog transmissions. This is what was frustrating, the old analog was working but there was no way to watch the digital signals. By the time the storms reached me and blew around the overhead cable TV lines and got them wet, I was put out of service again and had to disconnect the digital converter and hook the cable straight through to the TV to watch "analog cable" rebroadcasting OTA digital TV signals.
The problem is that digital TV stations don't appear to be able to broadcast when a thunderstorm is over the Antenna Farm.
As earlier posts stated, I'm in the middle of Tropical Storm/Hurricane country. If a regular series of spring showers can knock out television weather coverage, which I was prepared for with backups of everything... all I don't have is satellite TV, what's going to happen when we get a salt filled tropical storm or hurricane? I know WKRG, WALA, and WPMI are going to upgrade their digital plants, but that probably won't matter when a "real" storm hits.
I know starting this thread was a mistake to start. I was tired and irritated by the "new technology" fouling up before it's ever had a chance to really be tested. Y'all already know the problems with DTV and the FCC doesn't seem to care or they would have left well enough alone.
The problem is that digital TV stations don't appear to be able to broadcast when a thunderstorm is over the Antenna Farm.
As earlier posts stated, I'm in the middle of Tropical Storm/Hurricane country. If a regular series of spring showers can knock out television weather coverage, which I was prepared for with backups of everything... all I don't have is satellite TV, what's going to happen when we get a salt filled tropical storm or hurricane? I know WKRG, WALA, and WPMI are going to upgrade their digital plants, but that probably won't matter when a "real" storm hits.
I know starting this thread was a mistake to start. I was tired and irritated by the "new technology" fouling up before it's ever had a chance to really be tested. Y'all already know the problems with DTV and the FCC doesn't seem to care or they would have left well enough alone.