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#6
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However, I don't think Detroit has near the reception problems we had (and still have to this day) when their CBS went to a UHF channel from the VHF channel it had been on for years. The way it is in the Cleveland area, especially near Lake Erie, where I live, some of the stations either do not reach here at all or, if they do reach here, the signal is so weak it is unwatchable. One channel which absolutely does not reach my area without a very large antenna or cable (I have what Spectrum refers to as "streaming" service; however, they tell me I no longer have cable since switching to that service) is channel 19, the station CBS was moved to (from channel 8) in Cleveland more years ago than I care to remember. Since that station is (and has been for some time) the northeast Ohio affiliate of the CBS television network, which is an important network in this country, it should reach every square mile of this area with no exceptions. Channel 19 has been fooling around with a network of translator stations to fill in the spots where the station's real signal does not reach, well or at all; this may get the station's programming to these areas but it isn't the right way to do it, not by a long shot. The station should have either put up a much better transmitting antenna than the one it is currently using or increased its transmitter power from its present power level. (To make matters even worse, the station's transmitter was all but destroyed by lightning six months after the station went on the air in 1985; the station's signal was never the same after that.) Before DTV, channel 19 had a power level of well over three million watts; then, when DTV came along and messed up everything, that power level went down drastically, which cut out a heck of a lot of the station's coverage area and forced people either to get cable or put up a large antenna. Good grief! As I said, I wish Cleveland's TV stations had been left strictly alone, with NBC on channel 3, ABC on channel 5 and CBS on channel 8. Ever since the new UHF stations came in, they have caused more trouble from a reception standpoint, especially in areas far removed from the city of Cleveland, than most of them are probably worth, with the exception of channel 25, which is the PBS affiliate and has been in Cleveland since 1965. The reception of this channel is terrible in most areas, but since it is meant for viewing in northern Ohio's schools and not for mainstream viewing, the station's owners probably don't see that as a problem. Again, sheeeeesh.
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Jeff, WB8NHV Collecting, restoring and enjoying vintage Zenith radios since 2002 Zenith. Gone, but not forgotten. Last edited by Jeffhs; 09-25-2022 at 08:33 PM. |
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