News2 mins ago
Digital Switchover
4 Answers
Is anyone else having problems picking up BBC channels since the switch over? If so has anyone managed to fix it? Have done the reprogramming, still not working.
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Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by Monkey77. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.In an ideal world you'd have a separate aerial for every TV channel which you watched. That's because, for optimal reception, the lengths of the elements should be exactly matched to frequency of the channel you want to watch. Obviously that's not practical, so all aerials are 'a bit of a compromise' with the elements only being roughly matched to the frequency of any particular channel. That means that, inevitably, any given aerial will be better at receiving some channels than others.
If you were in a strong signal area, with a good quality aerial, it wouldn't matter that your aerial is slightly better at picking up some channels than others but, clearly, your particular aerial isn't good enough for receiving the group of BBC channels.
When the digital TV was first planned it was expected that around one third of viewers would need to upgrade their aerial systems. (i.e. both the aerial and, just as important, the cable). It's turned out that far fewer people actually need to do so, but it's still unsurprising when certain people experience problems due to insufficient signal strength.
Since you're receiving other channels, you might be able to resolve the problem by simply using a cheap signal booster. If not, it's time to upgrade your aerial and cabling.
Chris
If you were in a strong signal area, with a good quality aerial, it wouldn't matter that your aerial is slightly better at picking up some channels than others but, clearly, your particular aerial isn't good enough for receiving the group of BBC channels.
When the digital TV was first planned it was expected that around one third of viewers would need to upgrade their aerial systems. (i.e. both the aerial and, just as important, the cable). It's turned out that far fewer people actually need to do so, but it's still unsurprising when certain people experience problems due to insufficient signal strength.
Since you're receiving other channels, you might be able to resolve the problem by simply using a cheap signal booster. If not, it's time to upgrade your aerial and cabling.
Chris