vchimpanzee said:Getting back to my original question ...
I watch My 48 more than any other channel on digital TV. It's actually on 33.1, but you don't have to know that.
But east of My 48 is WRAL, which is still said to be on channel 5. According to Wikipedia, it's actually at 48.1. So what happens if you can pick up both?
...
What *should* happen...
When you do a channel scan, your TV tunes itself to RF channel 2 and checks to see if there's a signal there. There isn't, so it goes on to RF channel 3 and checks there. And so on and soforth, until it reaches RF channel 33.* When it tunes to RF channel 33, it finds a signal -- WMYV. It reads WMYV's PSIP packets, which tell your TV "I want you to call me channel 48". The TV stores that data in a lookup table: if you punch in "48" on the remote, tune to RF-33.
It then continues scanning. Eventually it reaches RF channel 48 and finds a signal from WRAL. WRAL's PSIP tells your TV "I want you to call me channel 5". The TV stores that data in a lookup table; if you punch in "05" on the remote, tune to RF-48.
So, you should be able to receive both stations just fine. The only consequence of WRAL's RF channel matching WMYV's virtual channel is that you can't tune WRAL by punching in its RF channel - you *must* punch in its virtual channel. (you could tune WMYV either way -- either "33" or "48" will bring it in **on most TVs**. In theory 33 isn't supposed to work but on most sets it does.)
Even then, on most sets you can tune by RF channel by going into "manual channel add". A common trick for "DXers" is to go to manually add a RF channel that doesn't exist in the market and see what virtual channel shows up during the next band opening.
* of course it's probably found a few other signals before it reaches RF-33.