My tv reception suffers from co-channel interference, which usually occurs during periods of high air pressure, BBC say this is due to signals from other channels transmitting further than usual and therefore overlapping with others, my tv can't cope with this mixture of signal (earlier this year I had no signal for about 4days.) in the BBC explanation no mention was made of the "Inversion Effect" so is there a different way that high pressure causes interference?
In the most recent high pressure episode when the high pressure was often at 1040 and lasted around 7 days I had no problem with interference at all !!
can anyone enlighten me as to why
Monday 9 December 2013 5:32PM
My tv reception suffers from co-channel interference, which usually occurs during periods of high air pressure, BBC say this is due to signals from other channels transmitting further than usual and therefore overlapping with others, my tv can't cope with this mixture of signal (earlier this year I had no signal for about 4days.) in the BBC explanation no mention was made of the "Inversion Effect" so is there a different way that high pressure causes interference?
In the most recent high pressure episode when the high pressure was often at 1040 and lasted around 7 days I had no problem with interference at all !!
can anyone enlighten me as to why