BBC Freedom Of Information - transmitter radiation patterns

It has always been a great disappointment that the full radiation patterns for transmitters are not published by the transmitter companies.
A few weeks ago, I used the Freedom of Information Act to request this information from the BBC.
And, very kindly, they have provided it all!
This will mean, when I have processed the data, to be able to provide improved prediction maps and other facilities on the site.
I'll be posting more about what this data means in the next week. However, if you want to look at the raw information yourself, it can be downloaded here as a ZIP file (10.2MB).
Post-switchover data
- There is one file for each multiplex on each transmitter (3713 patterns in total), although not all sites are guaranteed to be built, and other sites might be required to be added later. Note that the two-digit number in the file name is the frequency channel.
- The attached spreadsheet is an index which lists each transmitter, multiplex, and filename.
- The antenna pattern files all end in a .plt file extension, but these are all plain text files that can be read by any text editor. However, they are in unix format, not MSDOS format, so they use only line feed instead of line feed and carriage return at the end of each line. If your text editor does not support this, there are plenty of free unix-to-MSDOS conversion utilities that you can download.
- There are two types of PLT files 2-dimensional and 3-dimensional.
- The 2-dimensional patterns contain a line near the start that says, for example, "HORIZONTAL 360" meaning that this file contains a horizontal radiation pattern (ie a normal top-down view of the antenna pattern not to be confused with the antenna polarisation) with 360 measurement points. This is followed by 360 measurements (1 degree apart) in dB below maximum erp. Not all 2D files have a 1 degree resolution some may be 5 degrees or 10 degrees.
- The 3-dimensional patterns (recognisable by their much larger file size) are more complex. These contain a line for example like "PATTERN 360 101". This means the antenna pattern has 360 horizontal measurements around (1 degree resolution) and for each of those there are 101 sets of results at different angles of elevation from the horizontal (ie. the vertical radiation pattern at each of the 360 degrees). The next line of the file lists those 101 angles which might typically run from -5 degrees (above the horizontal) to +20 degrees (below the horizontal) in 0.25 degree steps. For each of these 360 x 101 points is a measurement in dB below maximum erp. The number of horizontal points is not always 360 (but mostly is) and may be 5 degree or 10 degree resolution instead, and the number of vertical elevations recorded will vary a lot, and will not always be at the same resolution (eg. another possibility might be 76 different elevations between 0 and 15 degrees below the horizontal in 0.2 degree steps). The steps are not guaranteed to be evenly spaced in all cases, so you must read the top line of elevation angles in order to interpret the data correctly.
- A small number of antennas (27) do not yet have a plt file assigned to them. For these, in the spreadsheet, there is a column which gives a simple 10 degree resolution pattern as a 72 character string (36 two-digit values for the angles between 0 and 350 degrees).
Pre-switchover data
- This is similar to the above (520 patterns in total) except that the antenna pattern files all end in a .rpd file extension.
- Within the RPD file is information about the transmitter name and frequency channel, and the filename consists of the transmitter number (5 digits) followed by the 2 digit frequency channel. The included spreadsheet includes a transmitter number to name conversion for these files.
- The format of the antenna pattern data is similar to the PLT files, giving the number of points around the pattern, and the number of elevations for which patterns exist, and the range of those elevations. Eg 72 11 0.00-10.00 means 72 points around (5 degree resolution, starting at zero degrees), and 11 elevations between 0 and 10 degrees (below horizontal), ie 1 degree apart. Unlike PLT files, the RPD elevation angles are always equally spaced.
All questions
In this section
Wednesday, 18 May 2011
We should lobby the BBC to release this data, and keep it updated, as open data on their own website.
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Andy's: mapA's Freeview map terrainA's terrain plot wavesA's frequency data A's Freeview Detailed Coverage
Andy Mabbett: Yes, I agree, that would be very useful.
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M
Mike Dimmick1:17 PM
I finally got around to actually plotting all the post-switchover data:
http://photobucket.com/Mi…ckRP
Generated by my own C# program. One line per unique plot for the same transmitter - by site ID, so where there is a VP and an HP plot for the same transmitter, they're separate images.
I haven't done anything with the beam tilt data. For the 3D patterns I've simply used the angle with the least attenuation.
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Thursday, 19 May 2011
Mike Dimmick: Thanks for those, they look very nice. I personally got rather bogged down in trying to show them in 3D.
Which looked like this:

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Friday, 20 May 2011
Brian, I think you did really well getting this info, and I think Mike`s done a really good job on the radiation pattern graphics.
It`s such a pity that the main TXs aren`t included. However I was talking to a contact at Ofcom just the other day and he couldn`t really think of any reason for their censorship. He speculated that the reason for their omission could have been that the international interference avoidance agreements may not have been made then, but they have been now. Thus they may now be available if you asked again. Do you think there`s any chance you could do anything on it ?
Justin Smith
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Andy Fraser
12:23 PM
12:23 PM
Why is some of the data still redacted? Hannington in my case.
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Andy Fraser: It was redacted at the time of the request, they don't provide the information for you later, so I will have to make another request for it.
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Andy Fraser
5:26 PM
Fleet
5:26 PM
Fleet
Sorry, I misunderstood; I thought this was an updated reply to your FoI request.
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Andy's: mapA's Freeview map terrainA's terrain plot wavesA's frequency data A's Freeview Detailed Coverage
Saturday, 21 May 2011
M
Mike Dimmick11:04 AM
I have now also uploaded the 25 pre-switchover patterns. Three of these are odd:
There were data files for 9 channels at Hemel Hempstead and 12 channels at Malvern. The extra channels were used before the equalization programme in 2000! While Hemel still uses three of the same channels, the newer plots have a comment "New 8 lambda antenna carrying all DTT" so I'm assuming the old plots for those channels were overwritten, and have only plotted the three that fell out of use.
The third oddity is that there is a pattern for Sheffield on C35. As far as I can tell, Sheffield has never broadcast anything on C35. I've uploaded it anyway.
I have not mapped channel to multiplex on these plots as this data set doesn't include it.
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Tuesday, 24 May 2011
Andy Fraser: Sorry for the confusion, I'm going to make a new request shortly.
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