Nick Flowers
August 12th, 2008, 01:13 AM
OK, this is so obsessive that makes train spotting seem mainstream. However, there may be another nerdlet or two out there with which this chimes!
TV transmitters have to get their signal from somewhere, either by landline, or microwave or in the case of relay transmitters simply by picking up off air from somewhere else. I expect now some get the signal from satellite. Some of these routes to remote transmitters can be tortuous in the extreme. The (ex) BBC transmitter at Eitshal in the Outer Hebrides (UK) is the best I know of. From Rosemarkie (Inverness), a main transmitter connected to the main network, there is a chain of passive and active relay stations (unmanned) erected with great difficulty over the Scottish Highlands right across to the Western coast, where the final leg across to the Western Isles is multi-frequency to combat phase cancellation from reflections off the sea. Some of these relays had to utilise ponies to get the equipment on site - no roads.
Other countries are much larger and have more remote areas than the UK and if anyone knows of a more eccentric transmitter feed route, do tell!
Nick F.
TV transmitters have to get their signal from somewhere, either by landline, or microwave or in the case of relay transmitters simply by picking up off air from somewhere else. I expect now some get the signal from satellite. Some of these routes to remote transmitters can be tortuous in the extreme. The (ex) BBC transmitter at Eitshal in the Outer Hebrides (UK) is the best I know of. From Rosemarkie (Inverness), a main transmitter connected to the main network, there is a chain of passive and active relay stations (unmanned) erected with great difficulty over the Scottish Highlands right across to the Western coast, where the final leg across to the Western Isles is multi-frequency to combat phase cancellation from reflections off the sea. Some of these relays had to utilise ponies to get the equipment on site - no roads.
Other countries are much larger and have more remote areas than the UK and if anyone knows of a more eccentric transmitter feed route, do tell!
Nick F.