Full Freeview on the Sandy Heath (Central Bedfordshire, England) transmitter
Brian Butterworth first published this on - UK Free TV
Google Streetview | Google map | Bing map | Google Earth | 52.130,-0.242 or 52°7'47"N 0°14'33"W | SG19 2NH |
The symbol shows the location of the Sandy Heath (Central Bedfordshire, England) transmitter which serves 920,000 homes. The bright green areas shown where the signal from this transmitter is strong, dark green areas are poorer signals. Those parts shown in yellow may have interference on the same frequency from other masts.
This transmitter has no current reported problems
The BBC and Digital UK report there are no faults or engineering work on the Sandy Heath (Central Bedfordshire, England) transmitter._______
Digital television services are broadcast on a multiplexes (or Mux) where many stations occupy a single broadcast frequency, as shown below.
64QAM 8K 3/4 27.1Mb/s DVB-T MPEG2
H/V: aerial position (horizontal or vertical)
Which Freeview channels does the Sandy Heath transmitter broadcast?
If you have any kind of Freeview fault, follow this Freeview reset procedure first.Digital television services are broadcast on a multiplexes (or Mux) where many stations occupy a single broadcast frequency, as shown below.
64QAM 8K 3/4 27.1Mb/s DVB-T MPEG2
H/V: aerial position (horizontal or vertical)
Which BBC and ITV regional news can I watch from the Sandy Heath transmitter?
BBC Look East (West) 1.0m homes 3.7%
from Cambridge CB4 0WZ, 29km east-northeast (65°)
to BBC Cambridge region - 4 masts.
70% of BBC East (East) and BBC East (West) is shared output
ITV Anglia News 1.0m homes 3.7%
from Norwich NR1 3JG, 119km east-northeast (60°)
to ITV Anglia (West) region - 5 masts.
All of lunch, weekend and 80% evening news is shared with Anglia (East)
How will the Sandy Heath (Central Bedfordshire, England) transmission frequencies change over time?
1965-80s | 1984-97 | 1997-98 | 1998-2011 | 2011-13 | 12 Feb 2020 | ||||
VHF | A K T | K T | K T | W T | W T | ||||
C6 | ITVwaves | ||||||||
C21 | C4waves | C4waves | C4waves | +BBCB | BBCB | ||||
C24 | ITVwaves | ITVwaves | ITVwaves | D3+4 | D3+4 | ||||
C27 | BBC2waves | BBC2waves | BBC2waves | BBCA | BBCA | ||||
C31 | BBC1waves | BBC1waves | BBC1waves | ||||||
C32 | com7 | ||||||||
C33 | SDN | ||||||||
C34 | com8 | ||||||||
C35 | _local | ||||||||
C36 | ArqA | ||||||||
C39 | C5waves | C5waves | |||||||
C43 | _local | ||||||||
C48 | ArqB | ArqB | |||||||
C51tv_off | SDN | ||||||||
C52tv_off | ArqA | ||||||||
C55tv_off | com7tv_off | ||||||||
C56tv_off | COM8tv_off |
tv_off Being removed from Freeview (for 5G use) after November 2020 / June 2022 - more
Table shows multiplexes names see this article;
green background for transmission frequencies
Notes: + and - denote 166kHz offset; aerial group are shown as A B C/D E K W T
waves denotes analogue; digital switchover was 30 Mar 11 and 13 Apr 11.
How do the old analogue and currrent digital signal levels compare?
Analogue 1-4 | 1000kW | |
BBCA, D3+4, BBCB | (-7.4dB) 180kW | |
SDN, ARQA, ARQB | (-7.7dB) 170kW | |
com7 | (-13dB) 49.6kW | |
com8 | (-13.1dB) 49.1kW | |
Mux 1*, Mux 2*, Mux A*, Mux B*, Mux C*, Mux D* | (-17dB) 20kW | |
Analogue 5 | (-20dB) 10kW |
Which companies have run the Channel 3 services in the Sandy Heath transmitter area
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Sunday, 25 December 2016
C
Coach12:59 AM
Thanks for the feedback. Had this problem
before with these channels. Although high
normal strength is 95% and no problems.
Last time I purchased an attenuator which
only made matters worse. Signal at the moment
up and down like yo-yo however other station
like BBC 4 are fine and stable at 95%.
Samsung tv
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M
MikeB11:42 AM
Coach:
'Although high normal strength is 95% and no problems. Last time I purchased an attenuator which
only made matters worse.'
A high strength of 95% is not normal! Yes, no problems seemingly manifested itself, but I bet your were very close to the tuner being overloaded. In what way did the attenuator make things worse?
Now you could have a state where the very high power mux is suppressed, but this also kills the low power ones as well, so its swings and roundabouts. And the fact that a relatively weak mux (BBC4) is at 95% points to the others being too high. Your signal strength is all over the place - which sound exactly like too high signal strength.
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Wednesday, 28 December 2016
C
Coach7:07 PM
Thanks. Channels back to normal until
Today. Now no signal at all!
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Thursday, 29 December 2016
N
NJ2:08 PM
In the current weather conditions, fog and frost, there is strong co-channel interference with all the BBC channels on sandyheath. The other channels seem to have less of a problem.
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L
Luis10:11 PM
Hi, for the last 2 days I have intermittent reception on half my channels, they're all on the same multiplex and frequency. I've checked everything and all seems fine in my house. All my TVs are affected, I've checked the cables, retuned and I have at800 filter installed. My aerial seems fine but haven't had it checked by a professional.
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M
Michael Taylor10:15 PM
Thanks Sandy Heath for another night of watching pixels and no service boxes. I wonder why we have all this with modern technology ?? It was much better with the old system. Poorer picture quality is better than all those little squares. My elderly parents now in their nineties rely heavily on tv for entertainment but on the plus side they get a free license to watch those flashing squares.
How long will it take to get this system right please??
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Friday, 30 December 2016
MikeP
4:31 PM
4:31 PM
Luis, Michael, et al:
DO NOT RETUNE. Waiting until then propagation conditions improve.
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A
Adam4:37 PM
Hi, I seem to have lost all the HD channels provided by PSB3/BBCB.
I've done an autotune which has previously picked up all the HD channels (including those provided by COM7) but now it only picks up the HD channels on COM7.
I've done a manual retune on Channel 21, Freq 474000, Modu DVB-T2. But it doesn't pick anything up at all..
Any ideas?
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D
Dariusz4:52 PM
Adam: hi Adam today I lost all signal too
Days before was exactly what you describe
squares fly on screen than signal gone somethimes
for minutes
finaly today about 3pm completely gone
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Saturday, 31 December 2016
J
jb3812:07 AM
Michael Taylor: The reception problems reported by viewers located in a number of Southern regions over the last few days is not being caused by technical faults connected with the transmission side of the equation, but the fact that many areas of the UK have been...and still are...experiencing the effects on reception of a series of high atmospheric pressure zones sweeping across the Mid to Southern areas of the country.
The effects referred to being to allow reception of transmissions from distant stations, which if one of happens to operate on the same frequency as one used by a local station will corrupt the quality of the signal, this being why some multiplexes can be affected and not others. This also happened on the previously used analogue system, but though it generally resulted in either ghosting or background images sweeping across the picture being viewed rather than wipe out the picture.
The unfortunate aspect of this situation being that said high pressure is not presently indicated on Hepburn's tropo forecast maps as clearing the UK until late Sunday evening around 6.00PM or so.
Anyone with Freeview equipment which has separate strength and quality indications can check if they are being affected by this sort of thing, done by simply carrying out a signal check on either a dead / or severely
pixelated channel, as the signal strength will usually indicate as being reasonably normal but accompanied by either erratic low / or zero quality.
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