WTTW-11 BACK ON THE AIR THIS MORNING BUT STILL NO METV OR WCIU CHANNELS ARE STILL OUT AND OFF THE AIR THIS WEEKEND. IN REGUARDS TO CHANNELS 26.1 - 26.2 - 26.3 - 26.4............
TR1992 said:Channel 11 did issue a statement about a power outage. I'm really surprised they don't have some sort of backup.
Bob, I am still not having any trouble with any of the 26's, I really don't know what the problem could be.
Did you try unplugging your converter box for at least one minute, then plugging it back in and rescanning it?
Nope! I never thought of it nor neither tried it yet.
That has worked for some people who have suddenly lost certain station's.
Have you tried to watch ME TV on 23.1 or ME TOO on 48.1? If you are able to pick these up than I suspect it has
to due with your converter box, as these station's are much lower power than WCIU channel 26's digital power.
I can get only 23.1 But I tried punching in 48.1 It just bounces back to 23.1....
I hope you can solve the problem, I would not like it if I couldn't pick up ME or ME TOO, I don't watch much TV,
which is why I won't pay for cable, but; these are the two channel's I watch the most.
As of this evening, the 26's are NOW back on the air!!!...
avtosalon said:The station that is mapping to 23-1 and 48-1 is actually the FULL-power signal of WCIU-DT.
Weigel has made this confusing because the FULL-power signal of WCIU-DT (Digital Channel 27) displays on 3 different channel numbers:
23-1 MeTV
26-1 WCIU-DT
26-2 MeTV
26-3 MeToo
26-4 THIS
26-5 THAT? (promo screen with silent audio)
26-6 FBT (simulcast of low-power analog Channel 33, WFBN-LP Rockford)
48-1 MeToo
You should be able to receive all the above listed channels with the same reception because they originate from the same digital channel.
WWME-LD (Channel 39) is the low-power digital channel that is also on the air, mapping to the following numbers:
23-2 MeTV
23-3 promo screen for THAT with Oldies / current Adult Contemporary music
23-4 promo screen for THAT with silent audio
23-5 promo screen for THAT with silent audio
23-6 promo screen for THAT with silent audio
23-7 promo screen for THAT with silent audio
23-8 promo screen for THAT with silent audio
Some viewers will notice better reception on 23-1 than 23-2 because they originate from separate signals. 23-1 is full-power, but 23-2 low-power. Apparently the FCC allows mapping to multiple channel numbers from a single digital number, even when the programming is a duplicate.
Also, Weigel's two low-power analog channels are still on the air (because they were not required to sign-off on June 12th):
23 WWME-CA (simulcast of WCIU-DT, except newscasts from WMAQ-DT and WGN-DT)
48 WMEU-CA MeToo
audioguy said:Thanks for the explanation of the channel mapping. It's very confusing! And if it's confusing for us, imagine how it is for the average consumer. Can they just choose whatever channel they want to call themselves? Imagine the guy who buys a VHF antenna thinking that's what he needs, when his station is now actually on a UHF channel. There was a time when the channel number actually meant something, but not anymore!
stormy01 said:The mapping does not confuse most people, in fact, it helps them because the channel numbers remain familiar to them. The only people who are messed up about this appears to be the geeks who don't like the RF channel being different from the mapped channel. Average Joe doesn't care about the RF channel, all he cares about is receiving the station! (of course, we are finding out that the digital theoretical radius does not match the actual measured radius and the radius is less in digital than analog - and the digital tuners also appear to be somewhat less sensitive than their analog counterparts which doesn't help either)
BRNout said:Good points all. Few of us with cable remember the occasional static bursts that low VHF would display during a thunderstorm. Frankly, they were so sporadic and minor that you mentally tuned them out. Now you can't because they break up the entire signal, which then takes several seconds to reconfigure every time. Very, very distracting.
A little static was a lot easier to take with an analog signal which is far more forgiving. With digital's "all or nothing" signal decoding characteristics, interference can really be a distraction to your viewing enjoyment.
audioguy said:stormy01 said:The mapping does not confuse most people, in fact, it helps them because the channel numbers remain familiar to them. The only people who are messed up about this appears to be the geeks who don't like the RF channel being different from the mapped channel. Average Joe doesn't care about the RF channel, all he cares about is receiving the station! (of course, we are finding out that the digital theoretical radius does not match the actual measured radius and the radius is less in digital than analog - and the digital tuners also appear to be somewhat less sensitive than their analog counterparts which doesn't help either)
Beg to differ; the channel number is confusing to consumers.
If you want to watch channel 2 and you were using a low band VHF yagi, you now need a high band or cut-to-channel antenna for channel 12.
If you want to watch channel 5, you need a UHF antenna that covers channel 29
If you want channel 7, you can actually use the same antenna that you used previously, since it is still on channel 7
If you want channel 9, you need a UHF antenna that works on channel 19
For those unfamiliar, they do make such things as low band and high band VHF antennas, as well as single channel antennas.
They also make UHF antennas that are optimized for certain ranges.
TR1992 said:I actually experienced that when listening to some of the weaker suburban FM's. I remember that when I use to listen
to 96.7 WLLI in Joliet(when they were I Rock and Will Rock)that the signal would fade out for a few seconds when a
plane was flying overhead(usually the lower the plane, the more the interference). I would also get some sort of police
or fire radio that would completely take over the frequency for about 10 seconds and then the station would come back.
It usually only would happen a couple times a week. I don't know if that still happens, with their new stick, because I
don't listen to the station anymore.
w9wi said:They do make them, but in the U.S. virtually nobody has them. Even in the rural areas 70-80 miles from the tower, all-channel antennas are the rule, at least around here.
Those who buy single-band Yagis are generally cable systems or MATV operations.