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Oxford sees the end of analogue TV as high power digital starts

If you live in Oxford, High Wycombe or Swindon or in Oxfordshire, you will need to take action on Wednesday morning as high power digital television services bring digital and high definition television to everyone.

If you live in Oxford, High Wycombe or Swindon or in Oxfordshir
published on UK Free TV
Tonight, the number of homes with digital-only reception in the UK goes up by 415,700 from 62.5% to 64.1%.

Viewers in the Oxford area that use the Oxford "Beckley" transmitter (and five relay transmitters) will have no analogue television from Wednesday 28th September 2011. Unless you use cable or satellite to watch television, if you don't use a Freeview box or set, your screen will be blank.

Most people need only perform a "full retune" on their Freeview box or TV, but it would be impossible with 415,700 homes covered by the transmitters, for no-one to have a problem.

Oxford transmitter group

From Wednesday 28th September 2011 you MUST have a digital television device to watch TV. If you do not have a digital receiver, from Wednesday will have a blank screen.

Do not expect a terrestrial television service from midnight until 6am - or a late as 3pm on relay transmitters (see below for timetable).

Switchover help scheme

If you are over 75, get (or could get) Disability Living Allowance, Attendance Allowance, Constant Attendance Allowance or mobility supplement; or have lived in a care home for six months or more; or are registered blind or partially sighted and need assistance, please see The Switchover Help Scheme.

Leicester

Cable and satellite

Cable (Virgin Media) and satellite (Sky, Freesat, fSfS) viewers are not affected by the changes. Remember, however, that you may be using analogue TV to watch on a second or third set and it might need a Freeview box.

Existing "full" Freeview users

If you already use Freeview, and can receive all the channels now, check your TV or box is not listed here - TVs and boxes that do not support the 8k-mode. If it is, you will need a new Freeview box.

If you are not on the list, you should scan your box from around 6am.

When you now rescan, you MUST do a "first time installation" or "factory reset" scan (sometimes called "shipping state"), not a simple "add channels". Do the procedure you did on "national retune day", September 30th 2009, see Freeview Retune - list of manuals.

If you can't recall the procedure or find the manual, please see generic clear and rescan procedure.

If you scanned during the first phase of switchover on Wednesday 14th September 2011 - you will have to do it again on Wednesday 28th September 2011.

Using Freeview with Windows Vista

Please see Switch over and PC-based systems because you need some updates for your system to work.

Boosters and amplifiers

If you live close to the transmitter, you may have to disconnect any "boosters" from your aerial system. The new, more powerful digital signals may overload any amplifiers and result in no reception! When looking for them include a check for distribution amplifiers, loft boxes, set back amplifiers, bypass Amplifiers, hidden masthead amps in a loft space and any dodgy active splitters.

For full details, see: Freeview signals: too much of a good thing is bad for you.

Homes without Freeview now have Freeview Light

If you had no Freeview service before, you will have the BBC channels digitally from Wednesday 14th September 2011. This is a single multiplex of the BBC channels (radio, television and text) for most people.

However, if you were on the fringes of reception from one of the main Freeview transmitters, you will now get all the Freeview channels.

If you didn't get this limited Freeview service on 14th September 2011 then you may need a new aerial.

If you are served by a public service (relay) transmitter, which are:

Ascott under Wychwood (6am), Charlbury (noon), Guiting Power (3pm), Icomb Hill (6am) or Over Norton (9am)

...you now need, from around from 6am (unless shown otherwise) on 28th September 2011 to rescan, and you will get a second Multiplex with ITV 1, ITV 2, ITV 1 +1, Channel 4, Channel 5, Channel 4+1, E4 and More4.

And that's your lot if you have a standard Freeview receiver, see Freeview retune - poor public service transmitters.

You may wish to install Freesat for more channels, see Compare Freeview Light and Freesat TV.

Everyone who has digital-only terrestrial TV now has the ability to receive Freeview HD, see below.

Digital regional overlap

The old analogue TV signals provided lots of nations and regions for the public service channels, and these have large areas of overlap.

The old low power digital TV signals were at very low levels and reception of signals from more than one transmitter was a rare event.

All Freeview boxes automatically scan the available broadcast frequencies looking for channels, and they do this from C21 to C69. Older Freeview boxes will, if a duplicate version of a channel is found whilst scanning, such as another BBC One region, placed it in the 800-899 channel range.

Some of the latest Freeview boxes will pick the strongest signals for the "primary" number positions, and some will detect the different regions providing a choice when you perform a "scan for channels".

The 800-899 is easy to access by pressing CH- from 1, and in most programme guides is just a single scroll up.

For more details, see: Digital Region Overlap

Freeview HD

Freeview HD will start on Wednesday 28th September 2011 from Oxford and all five relay transmitters. You will need a Freeview HD - DVB-T2 receiver to watch the channels. An HD "Ready" TV set with Freeview is not enough.

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Comments
Wednesday, 28 September 2011
M
Mark Williams
9:35 PM

Sorry, sony bravia tv with built-in freeview - the other sony TV & set top box is fine.

link to this comment
Mark Williams's 2 posts GB flag
Briantist
sentiment_very_satisfiedOwner

9:36 PM

Colin Doman: Sorry, it is YOU that is wrong. Channel 4 has been broadcasting on the old BBC TWO analogue frequency for two weeks. You should have looked.

link to this comment
Briantist's 38,915 posts GB flag
O
omar
10:43 PM

im in oxford and today i pointed my aerial towards the hannington transmitter and return my sony analogue tv,and still get all 5 channels.:) My tv still has life in it..!!

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omar's 8 posts GB flag
Thursday, 29 September 2011
M
mst
12:11 AM

Arqiva have issued a press release confirming all work done

Press Releases Archive 2010 (OX13PJ)

link to this comment
mst's 19 posts GB flag
Briantist
sentiment_very_satisfiedOwner

3:20 PM

omar: Your TV would have even more life in it if you bought it a Freeview box.

link to this comment
Briantist's 38,915 posts GB flag
Briantist
sentiment_very_satisfiedOwner

3:21 PM

Mark Williams: You might find Single frequency interference | ukfree.tv - independent free digital TV advice worth checking, or even just replacing the aerial "fly lead" that connects to the set with the problems.

link to this comment
Briantist's 38,915 posts GB flag
Friday, 30 September 2011
A
Andy
4:23 PM
Bampton

Rented property in Burford with a small (but apparently digital-ready) aerial in the loft and an LG TV with built-in Freeview decoder. Reception has always been rubbish - the only way that the TV will detect any channels at all is with a signal booster attached, but nevertheless we could receive all 5 non-HD Freeview multiplexes fine before the switchover. Now we've lost multiplex 2 entirely. Re-scanned multiple times with and without signal booster attached (which is still needed, otherwise nothing at all) and performed a factory reset on the TV, but still no joy. Signal strengths on the multiplexes that we can receive vary a fair bit:
53 = 99%
55 = 78%
59 = 42%
62 = 70%

Am I right in saying that a new aerial is probably needed in this case (which the landlord may not agree to of course), or is this anything else I can try? Thanks in advance for any suggestions.

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Andy's 1 post GB flag
Andy's: mapA's Freeview map terrainA's terrain plot wavesA's frequency data A's Freeview Detailed Coverage
J
jb38
sentiment_very_satisfiedPlatinum

5:23 PM

Andy: Not really, but judging by the test indications given I feel that the signal could possibly be improved by re-positioning the aerial within the loft, as in some types of situations large differences can be found by simply moving an aerial a few feet either way, this even applying to roof mounted aerials, albeit this sort of action being a bit more difficult to achieve!

If though a signal test shows zero on Mux Ch 60 I would be suspicious of some other fault applying. Have to tried to manually tune this channel?

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jb38's 7,179 posts GB flag
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