Truthfully, if the Congress and FCC wanted to be fair, they'd SELL the AM & FM bands to broadcasters too.
I thought that was the reason for things like filing windows and auctions. Aren't they doing that already?
Truthfully, if the Congress and FCC wanted to be fair, they'd SELL the AM & FM bands to broadcasters too.
Didn't VHF channels 5 and 6 move to UHF transmission with the change to DTV?
Didn't VHF channels 5 and 6 move to UHF transmission with the change to DTV?
Aren't they doing that already?
Not really. If I buy something, that means I own it. Broadcasters don't own any spectrum. It's not even a lease. It's a license to operate.
If the spectrum was sold outright to the various broadcasting companies, wouldn't it be impossible to order a station off the air because of wrongdoing by the station itself or the owner(s) personally?
Nope. Channels 5 and 6 are still there, in the same spots they've been in since 1945. So are Channels 2-4, 7-13, and 14-51 (for now).
You're confusing RF channels and PSIP, the digital code that tells the receiver what channel the station wants to be called. For example, a station that was on analog Channel 5 can actually transmit on Channel 17 (KPHO-TV Phoenix, in this case), and viewers can still punch in 5 or 5.1 (depending on the TV) and still get the station. PSIP makes it convenient for the viewers to find a familiar station, but don't directly tell you whether the station is transmitting on VHF or UHF.
Thank you for the clarification.
What threw me off was the move of several of our local TV stations here in the Seattle-Tacoma metro from VHF to UHF transmission when the DTV transition took place. That led me to believe that migration to UHF (channels 14-83) was nationwide.
Seems like the TV Spectrum is getting smaller & smaller
For what it's worth, channels 70-83 were discontinued many years ago and 52-69 went away in 2009.
There's an even better open system intended more for this application than proprietary AT$C. It's called DAB.
All-UHF Digital TV is actually beneficial to the cord-cutting consumer since most can get away with the UHF-only Winegard FlatWave Micro antenna. As the shell-shocked consumer becomes as thrifty as his grandparents during the Great Depression, demand for terrestrial television is going up. Congress and the FCC will be pressured to expand UHF again and keep all TV stations in UHF.In the case of Brazil, the answer is yes. ISDB-Tb, which is the TV standard of choice in most of South and Central America (the biggest exceptions are Caribbean countries and Mexico that went with ATSC, Cuba to the Chinese DTMB standard, and Colombia and Panamá which are running DVB-T2), is usually deployed on UHF.
Most countries are leaving low VHF with their digital television transition, no matter which standard. Some, like Colombia, are leaving the VHF band altogether.
ATSC is for TV. HD Radio is the proprietary system on radio in the U.S./North America.
I would not be surprised that the FCC gets rid of the AM band because of HD Radio's multistream opportunities. They can easily say that the subchannels on FM represent an opportunity to either move co-owned stations from AM to a HD subchannel or lease an HD subchannel to a displaced AM station owner.
It's time for the FCC to overhaul technology in the radio service like they did with TV 6.5 years ago.
It's time for the FCC to overhaul technology in the radio service like they did with TV 6.5 years ago. HD Radio has an interesting parallel with FM's rise to popularity.
The receiver excuse is another that has always been trotted out. How can anybody say that a $50 Insignia radio is too expensive, compared to the ≈$1,000 flat widescreen TVs for sale?
The Insignia table radio can be used as a converter box for analog table radios through the line out jack. There also still might be Insignia portable models for sale for mobile use.
Oddly enough, AT&T and T-Mobile are now in the process of activating the FM chip for analog FM programming; Sprint already did. It's all a matter releasing an update to add HD capability. Perhaps NextRadio will add HD capability to their app in the next version.
Oddly enough, AT&T and T-Mobile are now in the process of activating the FM chip for analog FM programming; Sprint already did. It's all a matter releasing an update to add HD capability.
I agree on the power hungry HD chip. I had a project where I needed a small FM radio. I looked at a digital FM radio that was small and would have worked great except for the power consumption. I have looked for a good portable HD radio and it's a tough search.
FM rose in popularity when the FCC mandated in 1967 that AM/FM simulcasts of most fulltime AMs should end. That forced the creation of new formats and services which, in turn, moved listeners to FM.
Radio's have to be part of something more inclusive like a phone or a car. Nobody will spend $10 or $50 or whatever to buy a radio.
The HD chip is too power-hungry for portables. And nobody wants to fiddle with connecting an Insignia to the average table or clock or kitchen radio that has no audio inputs. That's not just improbable, it's totally unlikely.