menuMENU    UK Free TV logo Freeview

 

 

Click to see updates
Choose from four options: ■ TV mapping ■ TV terrain plot ■ TV technical ■ Radio

Freeview reception at BT47 6DJ


For reliable and stable Freeview reception, you need an unobstructed path between the TV aerial on your roof and the digital TV transmitter. The map below shows the transmitters predicted to provide a signal at this location.

You can click on any transmitter symbol to show the coverage area as a green overlay on the map. Double click on a transmitter symbol to go to the transmitter information page.

You can also view the ten closest potential '4G-at-800' mobile phone masts within 1.5km of the selected location - these masts may be used for 4G-at-800 mobile broadband services from 2013-2015.

map is loading, please wait...
There are 3 mobile phone masts within 1.5km of BT476DJ (page shows closest 10)

What do the map symbols mean?

 EE,  Multiple operators,  O2,  3,  Vodafone,  location on line-of-sight,  Selected location,  Freeview transmitter,  Freeview light transmitter,  Engineering/fault today.

These icons show the potential locations for 5G-at-700MHz services that may interfere with Freeview reception. For actual mobile device reception prediction (at 800-960MHz and 1710-2170MHz) see these phone operator's mapping sites: Three O2 EE VM

Predicted Freeview channel list

RTÉ One HDHolywell Hill SV2
Virgin Media 1Holywell Hill SV1
TG4 (RoI)Holywell Hill SV1
Virgin Media 3Holywell Hill SV2
Saorview Information (*Holywell Hill SV2
 
RTÉ One +1Holywell Hill SV2
Virgin Media 2 Holywell Hill SV2
Tithe an Oireachtais Holywell Hill SV1
RTÉ jrHolywell Hill SV2
RTÉ News NowHolywell Hill SV1
 
RTÉ2 HDHolywell Hill SV1
RTÉ2+1Holywell Hill SV2
1BBC One (SD)Londonderry Northern IrelandPSB1
2BBC TwoLondonderry Northern IrelandPSB1
3ITV 1 (SD)Londonderry UTVPSB2
 
4Channel 4 (SD)Londonderry UTVPSB2
5Channel 5Londonderry UTVPSB2
6ITV 2Londonderry UTVPSB2
9BBC FourLondonderry Northern IrelandPSB1
10ITV3Londonderry UTVPSB2
 
13E4Londonderry UTVPSB2
14Film4Londonderry UTVPSB2
15Channel 4 +1Londonderry UTVPSB2
18More4Londonderry UTVPSB2
23BBC ThreeLondonderry Northern IrelandPSB1
 
26ITV4Londonderry UTVPSB2
28ITVBeLondonderry UTVPSB2
30E4 +1Londonderry UTVPSB2
35ITV1 +1Londonderry UTVPSB2
465SELECTLondonderry PSB3
 
53TG4Strabane NIMM
54RTÉ OneStrabane NIMM
55RTÉ TwoStrabane NIMM
101BBC One HDLondonderry PSB3
102BBC Two HDLondonderry PSB3
 
103STV HDLondonderry PSB3
103ITV 1 HDLondonderry PSB3
103UTV HDLondonderry PSB3
104Channel 4 HDLondonderry PSB3
105Channel 5 HDLondonderry PSB3
 
106BBC Four HDLondonderry PSB3
108BBC Scotland HDLondonderry PSB3
109BBC Three HDLondonderry PSB3
110Channel 4 HD (Wales)Londonderry PSB3
201CBBCLondonderry Northern IrelandPSB1
 
202CBeebiesLondonderry Northern IrelandPSB1
204CBBC HDLondonderry PSB3
205CBeebies HDLondonderry PSB3
231BBC NewsLondonderry Northern IrelandPSB1
232BBC ParliamentLondonderry Northern IrelandPSB1
 
250BBC Red ButtonLondonderry Northern IrelandPSB1

 

Advanced options

Show good and blocked paths from BT47 6DJ for aerial height of ...

10m20m (Angel of the North)25m30m40m56m (Hyde Park Flats, Sheffield)62m (Monument)90m (Royal Liver Building, Liverpool)107m (Meridian Quay Tower, Swansea)115m (Bridgewater Place, Leeds)127m (Glasgow Tower)143m (Guy's Hospital)158m (Blackpool Tower)170m (Spinnaker Tower, Portsmouth)180m (The Gherkin/BT Tower) 193m (Tower 42)235m (Canary Wharf)310m (The Shard)(default view)

Comments
Monday, 17 November 2014
P
Peter Darrigan
10:31 AM
Southport

Hi, My Humax PRV 9300 320GB HDD lost all groups during a mains shutdown. I am in the Winter Hill area (Southport PR8 3QH). An automatic retune gives me Wales which is not what the TV is tuned to. For a manual retune what Group numbers do I need.

link to this comment
Peter Darrigan's 2 posts GB flag
Peter's: mapP's Freeview map terrainP's terrain plot wavesP's frequency data P's Freeview Detailed Coverage
D
David Evans
1:22 PM
Buxton

Can I use an indoor aerial at Postcode SK179AG to receive Freeview

link to this comment
David Evans's 1 post GB flag
David's: mapD's Freeview map terrainD's terrain plot wavesD's frequency data D's Freeview Detailed Coverage
M
MikeB
sentiment_very_satisfiedPlatinum

4:08 PM

David Evans: Indoor aerials are normally a bit rubbish, but since your just 1km from the Burbage light transmitter, and 3km from Buxton, you might be perfectly fine. Ofcourse if you want more that the light transmitter channels, you going to need a bigger boat!

link to this comment
MikeB's 2,579 posts GB flag
J
jb38
sentiment_very_satisfiedPlatinum

6:27 PM

Peter Darrigan : A Humax 9300 should not lose anything previously stored unless it has been retuned whilst no signal is being received via the aerial.

However, the Mux channel numbers applicable to Winter Hill are as follows /

C50 (BBC) - C59 (ITV1 etc) - C58 (ITV3 etc) - C49 (Pick TV etc) - C55 (4Music etc).

A 9300 is not capable of receiving HD channels, likewise not included in the list.

link to this comment
jb38's 7,179 posts GB flag
Tuesday, 18 November 2014
J
Jane Dawson
11:05 PM
Wakefield

I have a humax over 9300 and when watching recorded programmes it says scrambled signal on the screen and the picture freezes. I have been advised to get the frequency. 6 digit numbers for my property and change it in the installation and retune manually . Where do I find the frequency I should have for my address? Any advice gratefully received

link to this comment
Jane Dawson's 1 post GB flag
Jane's: mapJ's Freeview map terrainJ's terrain plot wavesJ's frequency data J's Freeview Detailed Coverage
Wednesday, 19 November 2014
J
jb38
sentiment_very_satisfiedPlatinum

8:25 AM

Jane Dawson : The procedure you have referred to of using manual tuning rather than auto-tune is quite unnecessary at you location of being at just over 6 miles away from the high powered Emley Moor transmitter, the manual tuning procedure being more applicable for viewers residing in areas where auto-tuning their TV's or boxes results in receiving Freeview from more than one station, one of usually being inferior.

If the problem referred to is only happening on recorded programmes? then all this means is that the signal was suffering from some form of interference at the time the recording was made, and which might even have been down to engineering work being carried out at the transmitter at the time.

If on the other hand the problem referred to is a frequent occurrence? then this could be caused by an overly powerful signal being received, you can check this by selecting either BBC1 or ITV1 on the Humax followed by pressing: Menu - System - Signal detection, this will then indicate the strength and quality of the signal being received, normal indications being 100% quality and with the strength at around 80 - 90%.

Further advice based on feedback received.

link to this comment
jb38's 7,179 posts GB flag
Thursday, 20 November 2014
J
jim
6:43 PM
Glasgow

no freeview signal in boreland drive knightswood, could this be due to demolition work in Lincoln avenue

link to this comment
jim's 1 post GB flag
jim's: mapJ's Freeview map terrainJ's terrain plot wavesJ's frequency data J's Freeview Detailed Coverage
J
jb38
sentiment_very_satisfiedPlatinum

11:07 PM

jim: Your "no signal" problem is almost certainly being caused by some fault having occurred within your own aerial system rather than anything connected with work being carried out in your area, you should check all plug and socket connections including jumper leads etc, and if you are using any form of signal booster try bypassing it by connecting the aerial directly into the TV or box you are using.

Also, in cases such as yours its always prudent to try and check with your neighbour, or anyone else local to you for the purpose determining if they are also suffering a similar problem as yourself.

link to this comment
jb38's 7,179 posts GB flag
P
Puppy
sentiment_satisfiedBronze

11:22 PM
Oldham

Hi, wondering if anyone could help.

We have had a new living room put onto the side of the house recently and transferred the Sky set top box from the old living room to the new one, all wires were put in etc. and it works absolutely fine.

Of course though, we have contacted Sky for a new Sky HD+ box for the old living room too, although there are a few problems.

1) The old sky box in the old living room had a huge HDMI problem. We had to install a horrid looking short HDMI lead from the sky box to the TV (which was wall mounted) and the wire was showing and looked ugly; this was because the HDMI leads we had installed that went from the cupboard with the set top box, up to the back of the TV on the wall mount (these were very long cables that went 'behind' the wall to stop them showing) but were apparently too long and we had no signal at all from them (we were told by another installer that if we used a bog standard blu ray player or games console, they would work fine but it's just the sky box that didn't seem to like them) Am I right I can by a HDMI amplifier to overcome this problem for when I install the new sky box?

2) Yes, you guessed it ... the old living room had a full working RF2 remote sensor going to an upstairs television and I understand these new set top boxes don't have any RF out, so I've discovered I can by an IO link to power this remote sensor and provide a picture to the upstairs television (and at the same time, provide a Freeview aerial in input to the Sky box) the only problem is is I want to send an RF output to both the upstairs TV and the living room TV (for freeview), if I use a bog standard RF splitter placed on the RF2 out socket on the IO link, am I right in saying the remote sensor link may suffer from 'too low power'?

Thanks for any help

link to this comment
Puppy's 27 posts GB flag
Puppy's: mapP's Freeview map terrainP's terrain plot wavesP's frequency data P's Freeview Detailed Coverage
Friday, 21 November 2014
Dave Lindsay
sentiment_very_satisfiedPlatinum

12:21 AM

Puppy: 1. The "HDMI amplifier" you refer to is a repeater. The problem is that the signal isn't loud enough to get to the other end. A repeater "listens" and then repeats (hence its name) what's heard.

2. With all the talk of high definition I don't understand why it is that people still want to use an RF analogue signal whose quality is poorer than scart and whose sound is mono! When video recorders were first invented there was no way of getting the picture onto the TV except to generate an analogue signal. Then along came scart and subsequently HDMI which are superior. Yet people subscribe to HD services and are content to watch them in analogue TV quality. Bizarre!

Anyway, if the living room TV which requires Freeview but no analogue output from the Sky box ("RF2") then could you put the splitter on the "RF" output or before the Sky box and then this would avoid this potential issue?

link to this comment
Dave Lindsay's 5,724 posts GB flag
Select more comments

Your comment please
Please post a question, answer or commentIf you have Freeview reception problems before posting a question your must first do this Freeview reset procedure then see: Freeview reception has changed, Single frequency interference, and Freeview intermittent interference.

If you have no satellite signal, see Sky Digibox says 'No Signal' or 'Technical fault'

If you have other problems, please provide a full (not partial) postcode (or preferably enter it in box at the top right) and indicate where if aerial is on the roof, in the loft or elsewhere.

UK Free TV is here to help people. If you are rude or disrespectful all of your posts will be deleted and you will be banned.








Privacy policy: UK Free Privacy policy.