I'm Witney so use Oxfordtransmitter, and on the 14th did a retune, lost all channels, so i figured this may be the " too much power is bad for you " thing, fitted a £5 attentuator, and back they all came. 83 channels ( or thereabouts ) and about 35 radio channels. Nothing missing - Dave, Pick, Quest, all ITV, BBC etc. are all back. Worth a shot with an attentuator i reckon before going to more drstic routes. They're as a cheap as chips, though i'm not saying this is going to work for everybody.
Way back when, after the mast fire, i lost a lod of channels, and some would come back, and some different ones' would disappear. Very odd, but then i took some advice from here, and changed all the cheap silly " comes in the box " aerial cables, for proper coax and connectors, which i bought and made up myself. This broght all channels back at that time, and that stayed until the new changeover a couple of days ago. Either of these tricks is worth a try before spending serious money
Saturday 17 September 2011 1:00PM
I'm Witney so use Oxford transmitter, and on the 14th did a retune, lost all channels, so i figured this may be the " too much power is bad for you " thing, fitted a £5 attentuator, and back they all came. 83 channels ( or thereabouts ) and about 35 radio channels. Nothing missing - Dave, Pick, Quest, all ITV, BBC etc. are all back. Worth a shot with an attentuator i reckon before going to more drstic routes. They're as a cheap as chips, though i'm not saying this is going to work for everybody.
Way back when, after the mast fire, i lost a lod of channels, and some would come back, and some different ones' would disappear. Very odd, but then i took some advice from here, and changed all the cheap silly " comes in the box " aerial cables, for proper coax and connectors, which i bought and made up myself. This broght all channels back at that time, and that stayed until the new changeover a couple of days ago. Either of these tricks is worth a try before spending serious money