News
TV
Freeview
Freesat
Maps
Radio
Help!
Archive (2002-)
There was a problem with the request, 403.
All posts by Richie
Below are all of Richie's postings, with the most recent are at the bottom of the page.Many thanks. The relative signal strengths of the different MUXs were all over the place this morning. Although strangely the BBC MUX C39 which had the lowest sig strength (2% on TV) wasn't one of the ones that was breaking up, and had good signal quality! The MUX C42 with ITV/CH4, etc had a much stronger sig strength (21%) but just displayed random coloured pixelated blocks and poor sig quality. Cramlington NE23. It seems strange that so many major UK DTV transmitters are all marked for Engineering Work in the week commencing 17/02/2025. Arqiva must have a lot of engineers that are keen to climb towers in February weather !!!
link to this comment |
Hi Chris. Thanks for all your tips. I've visually inspected the antenna from ground level. It's a roof mounted wideband log-periodic and it's still pointing on the correct bearing for Pontop Pike, and doesn't appear to have sustained any obvious damage. There's a loft-mounted amplifier that splits the TV signal to bedroom, lounge and kitchen TVs. The LG TVs in the bedroom and lounge currently can't receive anything other than the BBC channels on MUX C39 which display fine, everything else is 100% pixelated or shows as channel unavailable on these sets. The strange thing is that the cheap Polaroid brand telly in the kitchen is showing ITV, CH4, E4, etc on MUX C42, with only occasional glitches every few seconds! Everything was perfectly fine a couple of weeks ago, and nobody has been in the loft or messed with the antenna outside.
It's interesting that you mention the 700MHz & 800MHz clearance issue. About 2 or 3 years ago we started getting intermittent TVI (severe pixelation and muted sound) on the BBC channels. This started about a month after a new 5G mast popped up half a mile from our home and *directly* in line of sight to Pontop Pike. Sig strength was always up around 85%, and quality 95% but would momentarily drop to 1% or 2% when glitching. Sometimes you could go weeks without a problem and then it would happen every night. There was usually an engineer with hi-vis jacket on sticking his head inside the cabinet at the base of the mobile tower on the mornings right after we got horrendous TVI !!! Eventually realised it was interference. Spoke to bloke at "Clear at 800" on the phone and he sent a filter out. It did nothing after the loft amplifier-splitter, but cured the problem completely when I climbed into the loft and put it between the antenna download and the amplifier. So, yes, we have had our fair share of problems with the government's ridiculous idea to sell off part of the UHF TV band, as have others in this area! Nobody received cards through the post about this.
PP is 18 miles SSW of us over the brow of the hill in Cramlington, so we don't get a very strong signal to start with where we live. Putting a powerful local source of interference half a mile from us on exactly the same bearing as PP hasn't helped, but don't have much elevation to get a decent signal from Chatton 31 miles to the north either (>.<)
I remember seeing European analogue TV like ZDF, TV2, etc. a couple of times in the summer via tropo scatter as a teenager. On one occasion was good enough signal to get teletext coming through! Even got some Swedish channels... Never anything interesting to watch though! ;-)))
link to this comment |
Spoke to bloke from Restore TV on the phone this morning and told him everything. They had a record of my call to "at 800" about TVI back in Dec 2022 and said that the filter they sent out in 2022 was actually a "C48" (700MHz) low-pass filter and that it is identical to what they send out these days. They don't have anything better to send me.
As of this morning only the C39 MUX with BBC SD channels and C34 (COM5) Sky Mix, etc. yield any picture on all sets in the house, and they don't seem to glitch at all. All the other MUXs with ITV, CH4, E4, etc don't even attempt to show any picture now, just shows "No signal". In the service menu C39 MUX shows 99% quality all the time and a stable sig strength. C34 shows about 90% quality but looks stable. The others show wildly fluctuating sig strengths and only 1 or 2% quality. No picture or sound at all. (None of out TVs are DVB-T2 compatible.)
The guy from Restore TV suggested I climb up in the loft and check for water ingress, etc. It's hard to get to the distribution amplifier at my age so when I'm up there I will do your checks bypassing the amp and checking each output port and downlead to the rooms one at a time, etc. If that doesn't identify the cause they're going to send an Engineer out in a week's time. That's if if it hasn't resolved naturally. How long does Tx Engineering work usually persist? He also stated that they haven't had any calls from anyone else in my area which makes me think it could be a problem with my kit.
Incidentally what do you think of my chances of getting a decent signal from Chatton at Fern Avenue NE23 3GL, if I spun the aerial round to point North? And if I get a new antenna it would be Group K now for PP and Chatton?
Many thanks in advance. Really appreciate it.
link to this comment |
R
Pontop Pike (County Durham, England) Full Freeview transmitter Friday 21 March 2025 10:45AM
3 days ago
All channels are gone now! Most MUXs show "No signal", and the previously remaining BBC MUX is now pixelated and breaking up beyond unwatchability.
I finally managed to climb up into the loft to check the cables and distribution amplifier... The downlead from the outdoor antenna and it's Belling-Lee connecter look shiny, dry and corrosion free. This was plugged into a "700MHz - CH48" lowpass filter from "Clear at 800", and then into the UHF input on an 8-channel distribution amplifier. The distribution amp was warm, and the red power LED was lit. The distribution amplifier was dry and free of any visible damage/corrosion. As you suspected all the connections are Belling-Lee plugs into the sockets on the amp, so I need a Belling-Lee coaxial coupler to bypass it. There's five coax cables leaving the amp to various sockets around the house, (only 3 actual TVs.) I unplugged/re-plugged all the BL connectors several times. The coax to the nearest bedroom has a dodgy join in it where it looks like the cable was a couple of feet short. They've just laid two coax cables side by side and twisted the cores together and the screens together then wrapped the whole mess with insulating tape to cover their sins!
I'm going to buy a coax coupler to do your recommended tests bypassing the amp, with the amp switched off to eliminate possible oscillation/interference. I'm planning to fix the shoddy cable join with a properly fitted Belling-Lee plug/socket. And I'm also going to make up a 5m cable with some decent 75R coax that I can just drop down the loft hatch and patch the antenna directly to the nearest TV below to see what result that gives.
Since it's such a pain to get into the loft I'm kind of temped to buy a replacement distribution amplifier and just fit it anyway. Would you recommend getting one with F connectors or Belling Lee? I personally think Belling Lee connectors are the work of the devil, and after spotting one dodgy cable join I'm inclined to check everything. I'd be happy to chop off the BL plugs and fit F-connectors. Does this sound reasonable? Any other suggestions for my next climb!?
Thanks in advance,
-Richie,
link to this comment |
Thursday 20 February 2025 10:47PM
Pontop pike pixilated and going black on most Freeview channels in South Northumberland the last two nights. Anyone else getting the same?