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For the last six years, I have answered many thousands of personal emails that you have sent to UK Free TV.

Sadly, I am unable to offer this personal service at the moment.

Until I can restore this service, please can you leave any questions you have on an appropriate page, where they will be answered as soon as possible, or below, if you can't figure out where to ask.

I look forward to your questions!



Help with TV/radio stations?
BBC Three Linear channel re-opens1
Will car radios have to be replaced?2
Will UKTV History and FTN eventually be available on fSfS or Freesat? They are 3
Could u please explain why there are no subtitles on most of your films terresti4
Can I pay as you go for British Europsort on my digital tv without subscribing?5
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Comments
Tuesday, 14 June 2011
P
Paul
11:20 AM

Brian, Glad you are having a well earned break. I hope that wherever you are going you have a really fantastic time

Best Wishes,

Paul


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Paul's 9 posts GB flag
M
Mike Dimmick
sentiment_very_satisfiedPlatinum

4:32 PM

NottsUK: It's my belief that the BBC's use of 1440x1080 is using the Kell factor, to try to avoid annoying artifacts caused by the sampling rate matching the black/white transitions of high-density patterns. 1440 is a Kell factor of 0.75, matching the Kell factor used for analogue SD transmissions and close to that for digital ones.

See Kell factor - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia and More than just a pretty face... for descriptions of the Kell factor, and the factors used for UK broadcasting (we are/were CCIR/ITU-R System I). The digital factor is a little wrong because the BBC are required to use 720x576 for the main channels, a factor of 0.703, while for 4:3 broadcasters are allowed to save some capacity by using 544x576. A 1.0 ratio would be 768 pixels per line (multiply 576 by 4/3) so 544 is a Kell factor of 0.708.

That said, broadcasts on a system using solid-state CCD cameras and generally viewed on LCD or plasma sets should probably have a higher Kell factor, though the broadcast 1080i is of course interlaced and therefore would suggest a lower factor. Perhaps the fact that the BBC generally still use CRT monitors, for their colour reproduction capability, has affected their thinking here. The Kell factor is stated as being subjective, so it is a matter of taste.

Of course 960x1080 is a factor of 0.5, on the low end even for interlaced pictures, but 720x1080 (factor 0.375) would not have been acceptable.

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Mike Dimmick's 2,486 posts GB flag
D
Daniel
6:05 PM

You do know your channel list is out of date?

Tv News on freeview 90 Multiplex D closed ages ago.

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Daniel's 18 posts GB flag
R
Rob Shorts
8:26 PM

I just want to know why the signal for BBC 1 and 2 is so poor at the moment? the weather conditions dont seem to be bad and there has been no info about work on the transmitter.

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Rob Shorts's 1 post GB flag
Wednesday, 15 June 2011
G
G.Hodson
2:05 PM
Lincoln

I live in Lincoln LN5 9UE and because of our position most of our estate have aerials facing Waltham including myself. Have wideband aerial and a new LCD tv. Over the past year on digital I pick up all the stations from Waltham but I am also able to pick up a number of BBC channels from Belmont even though my aerial is facing Waltham. When the transmitters increase there output after August will I be able to pick up other stations from Belmont. Gordon

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G.Hodson's 1 post GB flag
G.Hodson's: mapG's Freeview map terrainG's terrain plot wavesG's frequency data G's Freeview Detailed Coverage
M
Mike Dimmick
sentiment_very_satisfiedPlatinum

3:03 PM

G.Hodson: Yes, it's quite likely you will be able to. Depending on the software on your box, when you retune, it might ask you which set of channels to store, it might store the strongest (presumably Waltham if your aerial points that way, although Belmont is more powerful and closer), or it might store the first version that it encounters. The second set might be stored somewhere else in the EPG.

If it stores the first version, you would probably get BBC A, D3&4 and Arqiva A from Belmont, and SDN and Arqiva B from Waltham, as the Belmont frequencies are generally lower than the Waltham ones.

See Digital Region Overlap for thoughts on how to get the services you want.

Note that Belmont Arqiva A and B don't reach full power until November, as they clash with services from Tacolneston. However, SDN, Arqiva A and Arqiva B have the same content at every English transmitter.

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Mike Dimmick's 2,486 posts GB flag
P
Peter Buxton
5:13 PM

Using a freedsat dish and box, can I re-tune a freeview tv set?

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Peter Buxton's 1 post GB flag
Thursday, 16 June 2011
R
Ray Nye
9:55 AM

Hi I have just (last week) bought a Toshiba combi box obviously with freeview.
The tele has gone bust now and will buy a nerw one at the weekend.
Will it matter in the television also has buit in freeview?
Or will this cause any problem.

Cheers Ray

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Ray Nye's 1 post EU flag
Friday, 17 June 2011
E
E. Challand
12:02 PM
Kettering

I am in Kettering with a max strenth signal both via aerial and dish. I've been getting BBC HD channels for some time but two weeks ago started receiving dialogue biox 'no signal'. Why?

link to this comment
E. Challand's 1 post GB flag
E.'s: mapE's Freeview map terrainE's terrain plot wavesE's frequency data E's Freeview Detailed Coverage
Saturday, 18 June 2011
N
NottsUK
sentiment_satisfiedGold

9:04 AM

Briantist: I see REAL DIGITAL will test the signal within four weeks with a possible launch in early September.

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NottsUK's 345 posts GB flag
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