KeithE4 said:
badjef said:
PSIP saying “2” when WCBS is not 54-60Mhz, is wrong. If they are licensed to broadcast
602-608Mhz, then they are “36”. Let them rename 602-608Mhz “2”.
Think of PSIP as a "preset assignment" that is sent to the TV by the station, and your
"Channel 2" as Preset #2.
15 million folks in the NYC market know WCBS-TV as Channel 2, not Channel 33 (its
actual RF channel). WCBS-TV may transmit on Channel 33, but why kill 70 years of
brand identification when a simple software routine can assign it to Preset (or Channel) 2
on your TV, where you will be able to find it? It costs the consumer nothing and makes
life easier for us.
I'm sure NBC squawked when they had to move WNBT from pre-war Channel 1 (50-56
MHz, now a ham band and part of the post-war Channel 2) to Channel 4 after the war, but
there was no PSIP in 1946. If there had been, they'd probably be known as WNBC
Channel 1 to this day, even though they moved their transmit channel from 50-56 to
66-72 to 554-560 MHz over the years.
BTW, WCBS-TV had to move from the prewar Channel 2 (60-66 MHz, today's Ch. 3) to
the post-war Channel 2 (54-60 MHz) at the same time, and everybody that had a TV had
to have their tuners modified accordingly. PSIP would have made life a whole lot easier
for both stations. ;D
Channel numbers were arbitrarily assigned by the FCC anyway, and changed a few times
between 1937 and 1946.
BTW, on some TVs (including mine) stations are accessible both ways. If I want to
watch KTVK, I can either punch up "24" (its RF channel number) or "3.1" on my remote.
Selecting the RF channel number will get you the "x.1" virtual channel.
First, Today’s WNBC moved from #1 to #4, as they are known to that day, but there is
not a snowballs chance they would have continued to call themselves Channel 1, a
number that did not exist. Waaaaay too confusing to the viewer and his new moving
picture box in the living room., especially when it was not yet 24 hours!
Analogue cable boxes did indeed use the FCC OTA numbering for 2-13. The cable
companies have always been ahead of the FCC. The FCC said we don’t care what you do
inside the cable as long as there is no disruption to OTA sevices, Public Safety, Aircraft,
etc. It is why there are blank numbers on cable boxes.
Second, there is nothing saying they have to call themselves anything. WINK-TV, Ft.
Myers does not use a number. This came as a result of the cable companies having
co-channel on their #11 position, so they moved it to #5. They called themselves
“Channel 11, Cable 5” until they dropped it completely. They are not calling themselves
(digital)#9 at all. (My OTA reception of them is iffy at best. anologue#11 was a killer signal
even with rabbits)
I understand with cable digital it is going to be different in that digital world. But that
doesn’t count in this argument because the TV station is not FCC licensed through the
cable. ONLY OTA! All you guys act as though OTA is following cable, FiOS, Dish,
Direct, internet, Mom&Pop, SMATV, and anything else you can think of.
Apple and Oranges! The ID: whether that be, WNBC, New York, WINK-TV, Fort Myers,
KYW-TV, Philadelphia, etc., etc., etc., is for the OTA - “Over The Air” transmitter. That
is the discussion. When OTA no longer exists in reality (realville, for those in Rio Linda),
then I don’t care what the station wants to call them. Until the FCC mandate the OTA
turn off , which will happen, the lies continue.
Jeff in Sa-ra-so-ta!