On 02/05/2025 12:51, AnthonyL wrote:
On Thu, 01 May 2025 21:36:39 +0100, Pamela
<[email protected]> wrote:
On 20:20 1 May 2025, Harry Bloomfield Esq said:
It has happened a few times, to the 49 inch LG set, but has not
affected two other smaller, slightly more recent LG's in the
house....
We are able to receive signals from three regional main transmitters.
Yorkshire, the North/east, and Tyne/Tees. Yorkshire being the correct
one and the strongest by far.
Sometimes, but twice this week - we switch the set on a morning, and
a white panel appears at the lower half of the screen, wanting us to
set up the location (transmitter). It only allows the choice of
England, and North/east.
The only workaround is to go into settings, and let it do a full
retune, which again allows the choice of the three main transmitters.
The settings, include a place to set up my home postcode, entering
that, it finds the correct location anyway.
Perhaps there is an option to disable automatic tuning, which should
prevent this.
It is not practical on my LG, unlike my ancient Topfield which I can
set to Waltham transmissions only, or more and then remove any
unwanted channels (by transmitter if desired) and then store the
preferences for next time I might need to do a retune.
Does the tuning logic in a TV always ensure that all the 3 or 6
multiplexes that it is tuned to are from the *same* transmitter, in
cases where you can receive muxes from more than one transmitter?
The TV at my parents' holiday cottage in Wensleydale has an aerial
pointing towards Bilsdale. But one day I noticed that ITV was showing
the Leeds-based Calendar local news instead of the Newcastle-based
equivalent. I checked the TV's tuning menu and all the UHF frequencies
were for Bilsdale except PSB2 which was an unknown frequency which I
presume was PSB2 for a relay of Emley Moor. I wish I'd noted what the
frequency was...
To this day I can't think which relay of EM would have a strong enough
signal to be picked up near Leyburn with an aerial that was pointing due
east at Bilsdale, even during abnormal signal propagation.
I've had Belmont on that aerial very occasionally, using my own
DVB-T2/USB tuner, which is going some for a transmitter which is about
95 miles away and at about 45 degrees off the aerial's peak-sensitivity
axis.
Mind you, where we are now (Bridlington), Belmont's signal is very
occasionally denatured by Crystal Palace's which is on almost the same
bearing but 185 miles away! Belmont and CP share all the same
frequencies :-( As an aside, I wonder if the interference would be any better/worse if it was the same mux from both transmitters, than if (as
is the case in reality) different muxes.
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