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The end is near for analogue radio... Part 3, satellite Freeview online and DAB

Around the turn of the millennium, radio found new ways to get from studio to listener: satellite, cable, two new forms of terrestrial and over the internet, but the real revolution has been in listening choice.

Around the turn of the millennium, radio found new ways to get
published on UK Free TV

Radio in the Sky

Looking back to Astra UK Channels in 1997, we can see one interesting development for radio was the inclusion of the BBC Radio services on the Astra 1 analogue TV service.

As each transponder could carry six associated audio feeds, UK Gold had BBC World Service and Radios 2, 4 and 5 Live in mono, and Living carried Radios 1 and 3 in stereo. In addition, Virgin Radio, which was a mono AM service could be heard in stereo from the Astra 1 satellites.



For this reason, it almost came by accident that on 1st October 1998, the new Sky Digital television service would also include lots of digital radio stations. With an abundance of capacity and the radio stations could take advantage of the MPEG2 layer III audio system (aka "MP3") and provide many radio stations in high quality stereo. The inclusion of radio stations in the channel numbers also meant that listeners could tune into radio stations without any difficult tuning issues.

"Eureka"

Of course, the first "official" digital radio service developed out of the Eureka 147 project - see DAB: an introduction to the Eureka DAB System and a guide to how it works, which gave the world MPEG-1 layer II audio MPEG-1 Audio Layer II.

The BBC started test transmissions of DAB in January 1990, and its national DAB multiplex went on air in 1995.

The DAB service was thought of as a way of supplying superior quality sound for the existing five BBC network radio stations. However, the very high cost of receivers, around £800 back in 1998 (£1200 in today's prices). The BBC launched digital radio in the UK in 1995 followed by national commercial multiplex operator Digital One in 1998.

"Extending Choice"

However, as early as 1992, the BBC had published "Extending Choice", which proposed that the BBC stop chasing mass audiences, and provide high quality services to audiences that the commercial broadcasters were not. This first camge to fruition in September, 1998 ( BBC News - ENTERTAINMENT - BBC unveils digital TV) when the BBC News 24, Choice and Knowledge channels were announced, and that DAB would soon have BBC Parliament (an audio service), the Asian Network and a side-channels to back-up Radio Five Live.

Since then local DAB (digital radio) commercial services have become available offering non-national BBC Radio and ILR on a local basis.

Greg Dyke, the BBC DG in 2001 BBC News - TV AND RADIO - Dyke warns of digital backtrack made a decision to launch three new networks, codenamed X, Y and Z. These became 1Xtra, 6Music and BBC7 (see radio-now.co.uk )

This was a strategic decision to remove DAB from being a "sound quality" proposal to one of "listener choice". However, DAB radios still cost £300 (£420 at today's prices).

Radio Freeview

So, it was quite fortunate for these stations that the big digital terrestrial balls-up that had been ONdigital (see ONdigital Timeline - ONhistory for more) resulted in the BBC having two DTT multiplexes to fill when the replacement service Freeview launched.

For quite some time, the second multiplex only carried BBC FOUR and Cbeebies, and there were plenty of bits left for all of the BBC national stations to be carried to most homes in very high quality.

As the new BBC radio stations came on air, they were also added to the digital satellite platform.

From 15 November 1999 the first national DAB commercial multiplex "Digital One" launched. This now adds another 15 national stations.

For those who are not happy with the provision of more services at lower bitrates, most UK radio stations can be listened to online at high quality. The unexpected popularity of listening to radio on Freeview has allowed many homes to sample stations that would otherwise have been exclusive to DAB. Now when people consider a DAB purchase, many "new" stations are already familiar.

The most recent figures show that 52.5% of the population tune in to digital radio every week: 65% of that is DAB, 15% on Freeview, Freesat and Sky, and 15% online. See RAJAR DATA RELEASE | QUARTER 2, 2013

How many people are listening on long and medium wave?

Due to the cuts imposed on the BBC from the Licence Fee being frozen, the BBC is looking into removing the Long and Medium Wave services.



According to BBC News - BBC set to cut ... 2017 "There will also be no reinvestment in long wave, which will lead to the end of Radio 4 on LW in the long term".

"The BBC says the eventual closedown of the Long Wave service is determined not so much by the digital switchover but a dwindling supply of valves used by the Droitwich transmitter, owned and operated by Arqiva. At the last count there were only 10 left and their operating life is put at between one and 10 years" (from Will the move to digital cut off my long-wave radio? - Telegraph).

As part of the DQF process, four BBC local radio stations closed down on medium wave. At three of these there were no complaints, but at BBC Radio Mersyside, according to BBC criticised for AM radio shut-down - Media - theguardian.com 600 listeners complained.

Using this as a baseline, 600 listeners from a potential 1,664,000 (from RAJAR) pairs of ears, makes 0.0361% of the population.

If we multiply this up by 53,205,000 (that RAJAR national 16+ figure) we get 19,200.

If there are really only 19,200 people listening to long and medium wave, then it's probably time to turn off the service.

If you look at it the other way, then a service proposal to cover 20,000 people in the UK from 73 transmitters wouldn't be regarded as economic.

It may also be worth noting that if you can't get your BBC radio stations from DAB, or satellite, or Freeview, or online: it is doubtful you are paying for a TV Licence.



So why switch of FM/VHF?

In the last part, The end is near for analogue radio... radio gets very high - Digital radio the limited FM radio spectrum prevents the UK having more than 5 national FM stations.

DAB, with just two national multiplexes provides 25 stations. There is space reserved for a second national DAB service, which could add another 15.

In London, there are an additional three DAB multiplexes adding brining the total stations to over 55. Central Scotland has 45 stations.

Over the last few years, the BBC and commercial operators have been making the DAB local radio network match the FM local radio network - Ofcom - Annex B. Local DAB build-out plans. There are still a few areas of the UK to cover - notably Derbyshire and West Wales - but both in car, and in home, DAB reception is as good as or better than FM.

But there are 758 FM transmitting masts in the UK, some carrying as many as 12 FM stations (Black Hill (North Lanarkshire, Scotland) analogue radio transmitter ) This is a considerable cost for the radio broadcasters because DAB is as low as one-sixth of the cost of FM transmission.

"Transmission will be cheaper, too. DAB can be transmitted at lower power than today's FM and AM signals yet with no loss in geographic coverage, which means less cost to the broadcaster (and less power consumption means DAB is more environmentally friendly than conventional FM and AM)." - WorldDMB - Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

The current plans are to announce a rolling switch off of VHF for the BBC and commercial broadcasters: the switch off will occur areas where digital radio use is highest. Community radio stations (which are not profit making) will continue on FM.

However, the recent success of the Small Scale DAB The potential for lower-cost transmitting stations in support of DAB rollout suggests that community radio could now be very cheaply provided by DAB too.

Now in 2013, you can grab a DAB radio from your local supermarket for £20 ASDA Portable DAB Radio - Radio - ASDA direct - one sixtieths of the cost in 1998, there is little standing in the way of radio choice being available in every UK home.



Help with TV/radio stations?
BBC Three Linear channel re-opens1
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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
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In this section
Which 45 masts transmit the 15 new national DAB radio stations? 1
UK Free TV: 392 AM radio transmissions now have coverage maps2
New! 1000s of new DAB and FM radio coverage maps3
We ARE going to get BBC Local Radio on Freeview ... today!4
How do the two new national DAB radio bids compare?5
More digital radio stations. Ofcom - finally - proposes DAB+6

Comments
Friday, 6 September 2013
R
Richard
sentiment_satisfiedBronze

1:39 PM

The Archers on Home Service Radio was listened to nightly all over ROI.Some time in the 1950s one of the characters got in trouble with the Police (part of the weekly drama)Listeners in Britain got so worried that this person would not be released by court that money was sent to the BBC to pay bail required.

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Richard's 98 posts IE flag
Saturday, 7 September 2013
spencer
8:53 PM

When will i have to get a DAB RECIEVER for my car as i have FM reciever will i lose my FM reception in my car and when exactly ?

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spencer's 7 posts GB flag
Briantist
sentiment_very_satisfiedOwner

9:11 PM

spencer: The FM switch off timetable is going to be announced at the end of this year. You will probably have until between 2019 and 2025 to switch, depending on where you drive.

It is probable that FM switch off in the South East of England earliest, remote Scotland and Wales last.

link to this comment
Briantist's 38,915 posts GB flag
Monday, 9 September 2013
M
michael
sentiment_satisfiedGold

9:32 PM

"Blackout" is currently on Channel Four. A week-long nationalwide power-cut. The official advice : listen to your battery-powered or wind-up radio. Food for thought. Presumably the main (digital) transmitters have a standby generator for a few hours or days, but most relay transmitters would be down. A few AM transmitters with backup-power would cover most of the country - and more people would be likely to have a battery-powered portable AM radio.

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michael's 869 posts GB flag
Tuesday, 10 September 2013
Briantist
sentiment_very_satisfiedOwner

1:37 PM

michael: Modern thinking is that it is better to not have a "single point of failure" in your network.

Much better to use DAB, where you can use small-scale UPS solutions over the whole network.

You might have small areas that fail, but a single power cut can't take out the whole of the network.

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Briantist's 38,915 posts GB flag
M
michael
sentiment_satisfiedGold

8:20 PM

Brian, let us agree to disagree on this - and hope such a nationwide event such as portrayed in the C4 docu-drama never occurs. In the C4 scenario, the nationwide blackout lasts for a week and even emergency services and hospitals didn't have viable contingencies for such a long outage. Fictional drama, but not an unrealistic scenario. UPS and generators would be designed as backup for a short period. Over an extended period, I would trust systems and engineers to maintain a few strategic AM and FM transmitters rather than many thousand smaller DAB and 4G relays. A few DAB transmitters operating from helium balloons might work, if available at short notice. In the near future few would have a portable DAB receiver. Further in the future that might become less of an issue. It would be very interesting to know what contingency plans the government has for immediate implementation in a major emergency, but that may well be secret...

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michael's 869 posts GB flag
Friday, 20 September 2013
T
TonyB
11:12 PM

Hello Brian, thanks for this interesting article. I think it would be wise to also mention DAB+. This new standard has been internationally agreed and offers more efficient compression than DAB, and thus better sound quality.

It will address the concerns of those who quite rightly point out the generally awful quality of DAB for music transmission. DAB+ is an excellent solution yet the UK authorities are dithering over its introduction, preferring to stick with DAB for the foreseeable future.

This is idiotic in my view and will cause nothing but consumer confusion, as well as putting the UK well behind quality radio broadcasting when compared to other European countries.

Consumers should be educated and encouraged to buy DAB radios which are DAB+ compatible, so that when that standard eventually starts in the UK they will not be caught out. Such radios are available right now.

DAB+ explained - Digital radio reviews - Audio - Which? Technology

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TonyB's 1 post GB flag
Saturday, 21 December 2013
T
Trevor
2:08 AM

Hi Brian I do not know where you got your information from but "The Archers" has always been broadcast on the BBC HOME SERVICE now Radio Four of course. The same for many popular comedies too such as "The Goons" and others. The BBC LIGHT SERVICE had "Wagoners Walk" and a few comedies. As for DAB capable of being broadcast to the same comparable area as FM with lower power well this is complete nonsense. Just try listening to DAB in the car or even on the move with a portable. There may well be cheap DAB receivers available but they suffer from very poor sensitivity. A number of them have been compared with my old PURE EVOKE ONE in my area (BRENTWOOD) Not a single one could receive a reliable signal. I know that the industry is determined to continue with DAB but for me it's the end of radio. Poor, unreliable reception and poor sound quality full of digital artifacts.

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Trevor's 5 posts GB flag
T
Trevor
2:26 AM

Hi again Brian I have to appologise I have just been informed by some one much senior to me that in fact "The Archers" was indeed first broadcast on the "Light Service". Dear God what else can I get wrong today.

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Trevor's 5 posts GB flag
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