Full Freeview on the Hannington (Hampshire, England) transmitter
Brian Butterworth first published this on - UK Free TV
Google Streetview | Google map | Bing map | Google Earth | 51.308,-1.245 or 51°18'28"N 1°14'43"W | RG26 5UD |
The symbol shows the location of the Hannington (Hampshire, England) transmitter which serves 470,000 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 Hannington (Hampshire, 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 Hannington 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 Hannington transmitter?
BBC South Today 1.3m homes 4.9%
from Southampton SO14 7PU, 46km south-southwest (194°)
to BBC South region - 39 masts.
ITV Meridian News 0.9m homes 3.4%
from Whiteley PO15 7AD, 48km south (179°)
to ITV Meridian/Central (Thames Valley) region - 15 masts.
Thames Valley opt-out from Meridian (South). All of lunch, weekend and 50% evening news is shared with all of Meridian+Oxford
How will the Hannington (Hampshire, England) transmission frequencies change over time?
1984-97 | 1997-98 | 1998-2012 | 2012-13 | 18 Apr 2018 | |||||
E | E | E | B E T | W T | |||||
C32 | com7 | ||||||||
C34 | com8 | ||||||||
C35 | C5waves | C5waves | |||||||
C39 | BBC1waves | BBC1waves | BBC1waves | +BBCB | BBCB | ||||
C40 | SDN | ||||||||
C41 | SDN | ||||||||
C42 | ITVwaves | ITVwaves | ITVwaves | D3+4 | D3+4 | ||||
C43 | ArqA | ||||||||
C44 | ArqA | ||||||||
C45 | BBC2waves | BBC2waves | BBC2waves | BBCA | BBCA | ||||
C46 | ArqB | ||||||||
C47 | ArqB | ||||||||
C51tv_off | _local | ||||||||
C55tv_off | com7tv_off | ||||||||
C56tv_off | COM8tv_off | ||||||||
C66 | C4waves | C4waves | C4waves |
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 8 Feb 12 and 22 Feb 12.
How do the old analogue and currrent digital signal levels compare?
Analogue 1-4 | 250kW | |
Analogue 5 | (-6.2dB) 60kW | |
BBCA, D3+4, BBCB | (-7dB) 50kW | |
com7 | (-8.3dB) 36.7kW | |
com8 | (-9.8dB) 26.2kW | |
SDN, ARQA, ARQB | (-10dB) 25kW | |
Mux 1*, Mux 2*, Mux A*, Mux B* | (-11dB) 20kW | |
Mux C*, Mux D* | (-14dB) 10kW |
Which companies have run the Channel 3 services in the Hannington transmitter area
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Friday, 5 August 2011
M
Matt10:02 PM
Godalming
Reigate is over 100 degrees off beam off hannington and also vertical polarisation. I get absolutely no picture whatsoever. Just a screen of the grey you normally get when the cable is unplugged.
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Matt's: mapM's Freeview map terrainM's terrain plot wavesM's frequency data M's Freeview Detailed Coverage
Sunday, 7 August 2011
M
Matt10:19 PM
Godalming
The signal is now perfect! thanks for your help Brian. However, when Guildford's analogue goes back to normal, I bet I'll loose it.
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Matt's: mapM's Freeview map terrainM's terrain plot wavesM's frequency data M's Freeview Detailed Coverage
Monday, 8 August 2011
M
Mike Adger2:24 PM
Newbury
I live at RG20 9ED some 5 miles from Hannington. I have a modern rooftop aerial pointed to Hannington, and 95% of the time, enjoy faultless Freeview services on any of three TVs (two LCDs with bult in receivers), one CRT with Freeview set-top box. If it rains and the nearby high trees are in leaf, then we lose Mux1 services (BBC1, BBC2 etc) only - intermittent sound, severe pixelation, 'No Signal'. We still get a very good service on Mux 2 (ITV1 etc), some losses on the other Muxes. Question is: will the BBC Freecom service be boosted in power after the switchover, or should I be thinking about Freesat now? I am mystified why I should be losing the striingest of the Muxes during rain interference - any suggestions why. thanks
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Mike's: mapM's Freeview map terrainM's terrain plot wavesM's frequency data M's Freeview Detailed Coverage
Wednesday, 10 August 2011
M
Matt7:07 PM
Mike Adger: Trees affect different frequencies differently. Fir one frequency, they might just act like a piece of paper, on others a massive lead wall. The other thing is intermittent interfence: Freeview intermittent interference | ukfree.tv - independent free digital TV advice
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Friday, 12 August 2011
Do you have any information regarding the strength of the Hannington digital signals between February and August next year in the East/ESE direction - i.e. towards Hook? I am thinking that they cannot transmit at full power until after analogue switch off at Guildford. A number of my customers rely on the analogue signal when the digital plays up and the above situation would leave them in limbo for a few months.
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Monday, 15 August 2011
TVTUNER: Yes, as above
"ArqA restricted to 20kW from DSO 2 'until further notice'. ArqB starts up on C41 (final channel is C47) and restricted to 20kW. (Ofcom say C41 is allocated to SDN at this transmitter and there's no note. DUK shows final channels at DSO 2 but does show two 'COM late power up' events.)"
PSB multiplexes broadcast on three old analogue frequencies.
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Monday, 5 September 2011
P
Phil W11:40 AM
Yateley
I live in the outer fringes of the Hannington transmitter (postcode GU46 7TH). I believe the signal in this area is suppressed and there are some geographical issues (hills, trees and so forth) as well. We have a professionally fitted high gain aerial and a distribution amp feeding 3 TVs. Reception was acceptable although the ITV channels on Mux 2 were pretty poor and Mux C (only for Dave) was frequently unwatchable.
I was happy to hang on for switchover and the accompanying better signal in the hope of avoiding having to go satellite or cable.
However, something changed a couple of months back such that Mux 1 reception is now so poor as to be virtually unwatchable, and Mux 2 cant be received at all. Conversely, Mux C now comes in loud and clear. The rest is pretty much as was. I cant think its a hardware problem as its the same on all the TVs in the house and anyway, why would Mux C simultaneously show a dramatic improvement?
Any suggestions welcome.
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Phil's: mapP's Freeview map terrainP's terrain plot wavesP's frequency data P's Freeview Detailed Coverage
Tuesday, 6 September 2011
Phil W: You will get the public service channels with full-strength from 22nd February 2012, with all services becoming stable for you on 4th April 2012.
Until that point you probably will not get a reliable Freeview service, apart from Multiplex A.
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Wednesday, 7 September 2011
R
rick8:12 PM
Salisbury
Hello
I have lost all itv programs since 2pm .I have a 4 month old tv with built in freeview
the signal says no service Ihave tried retuning and all itv channels are invalid
link to this comment |
rick's: mapR's Freeview map terrainR's terrain plot wavesR's frequency data R's Freeview Detailed Coverage
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