This is all due to co-channelinterference from distant transmitters due to atmospheric fading. This is because of the large high pressure weather system currently over the UK.
There is pretty much nothing you or anyone else, including the broadcasters, can do about it.
Incidentally, it has been happening since the invention of television! Its no more or less now than it was back in the analogue days, its just that the way it manifests itself on screen has changed with the technology.
Sunday 21 October 2018 8:45AM
This is all due to co-channel interference from distant transmitters due to atmospheric fading. This is because of the large high pressure weather system currently over the UK.
There is pretty much nothing you or anyone else, including the broadcasters, can do about it.
Incidentally, it has been happening since the invention of television! Its no more or less now than it was back in the analogue days, its just that the way it manifests itself on screen has changed with the technology.
It will stop once the high pressure moves