• Northern Ireland (Lisnagarvey)

    From Scott@21:1/5 to All on Sun Nov 19 09:47:04 2023
    As far as I can see, the Radio Ulster medium wave service on 1341 kHz
    has closed but Radio 4 continues on 720 kHz. This seems illogical as
    I assumed Radio Ulster would be the pre-eminent service. Surely R4
    DAB coverage (on the main BBC multiplex) will be at least as good as
    Radio Ulster so what is the logic of retaining one and not the other?
    It cannot be Test Match Special as this is available on Five Live
    Sports Extra.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Mark Carver@21:1/5 to Scott on Sun Nov 19 11:11:14 2023
    On 19/11/2023 09:47, Scott wrote:
    As far as I can see, the Radio Ulster medium wave service on 1341 kHz
    has closed but Radio 4 continues on 720 kHz. This seems illogical as
    I assumed Radio Ulster would be the pre-eminent service. Surely R4
    DAB coverage (on the main BBC multiplex) will be at least as good as
    Radio Ulster so what is the logic of retaining one and not the other?
    It cannot be Test Match Special as this is available on Five Live
    Sports Extra.

    All of the R4 MW fillers continue to broadcast. The Beeb have said that
    the Radio 4 LW 'opt out' programming (which is also carried on the MW
    fillers) will cease at the end of March next year. From that point there
    will be no need for the MW fillers to continue, and some are expecting
    all of them to be switched off in April.

    As for 198 LW itself, who knows, the energy companies still have
    hundreds of thousands of teleswitches in use, so fortunes are
    intertwined with that mess.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Tweed@21:1/5 to Mark Carver on Sun Nov 19 13:10:11 2023
    Mark Carver <mark@invalid.com> wrote:
    On 19/11/2023 09:47, Scott wrote:
    As far as I can see, the Radio Ulster medium wave service on 1341 kHz
    has closed but Radio 4 continues on 720 kHz. This seems illogical as
    I assumed Radio Ulster would be the pre-eminent service. Surely R4
    DAB coverage (on the main BBC multiplex) will be at least as good as
    Radio Ulster so what is the logic of retaining one and not the other?
    It cannot be Test Match Special as this is available on Five Live
    Sports Extra.

    All of the R4 MW fillers continue to broadcast. The Beeb have said that
    the Radio 4 LW 'opt out' programming (which is also carried on the MW fillers) will cease at the end of March next year. From that point there
    will be no need for the MW fillers to continue, and some are expecting
    all of them to be switched off in April.

    As for 198 LW itself, who knows, the energy companies still have
    hundreds of thousands of teleswitches in use, so fortunes are
    intertwined with that mess.


    If the LW transmitters are only to be used for radio teleswitching, can the carrier be funded in power or turned off when switching commands are not
    being issued?

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Tweed@21:1/5 to Mark Carver on Sun Nov 19 13:51:16 2023
    Mark Carver <mark@invalid.com> wrote:
    On 19/11/2023 13:10, Tweed wrote:
    Mark Carver <mark@invalid.com> wrote:
    On 19/11/2023 09:47, Scott wrote:
    As far as I can see, the Radio Ulster medium wave service on 1341 kHz
    has closed but Radio 4 continues on 720 kHz. This seems illogical as
    I assumed Radio Ulster would be the pre-eminent service. Surely R4
    DAB coverage (on the main BBC multiplex) will be at least as good as
    Radio Ulster so what is the logic of retaining one and not the other?
    It cannot be Test Match Special as this is available on Five Live
    Sports Extra.

    All of the R4 MW fillers continue to broadcast. The Beeb have said that
    the Radio 4 LW 'opt out' programming (which is also carried on the MW
    fillers) will cease at the end of March next year. From that point there >>> will be no need for the MW fillers to continue, and some are expecting
    all of them to be switched off in April.

    As for 198 LW itself, who knows, the energy companies still have
    hundreds of thousands of teleswitches in use, so fortunes are
    intertwined with that mess.


    If the LW transmitters are only to be used for radio teleswitching, can the >> carrier be funded in power or turned off when switching commands are not
    being issued?


    It's 25 BIT per second data carousel, that has to address various
    batches of devices with different tariffs. I think it has to be more or
    less continuously transmitted ?

    Anyway, switching Droitwich (etc) on and off is going to shorten the
    life of the valves etc even faster !


    Not sure where my autocorrect got funded from. I meant reduced in power.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Mark Carver@21:1/5 to Tweed on Sun Nov 19 13:41:47 2023
    On 19/11/2023 13:10, Tweed wrote:
    Mark Carver <mark@invalid.com> wrote:
    On 19/11/2023 09:47, Scott wrote:
    As far as I can see, the Radio Ulster medium wave service on 1341 kHz
    has closed but Radio 4 continues on 720 kHz. This seems illogical as
    I assumed Radio Ulster would be the pre-eminent service. Surely R4
    DAB coverage (on the main BBC multiplex) will be at least as good as
    Radio Ulster so what is the logic of retaining one and not the other?
    It cannot be Test Match Special as this is available on Five Live
    Sports Extra.

    All of the R4 MW fillers continue to broadcast. The Beeb have said that
    the Radio 4 LW 'opt out' programming (which is also carried on the MW
    fillers) will cease at the end of March next year. From that point there
    will be no need for the MW fillers to continue, and some are expecting
    all of them to be switched off in April.

    As for 198 LW itself, who knows, the energy companies still have
    hundreds of thousands of teleswitches in use, so fortunes are
    intertwined with that mess.


    If the LW transmitters are only to be used for radio teleswitching, can the carrier be funded in power or turned off when switching commands are not being issued?


    It's 25 BIT per second data carousel, that has to address various
    batches of devices with different tariffs. I think it has to be more or
    less continuously transmitted ?

    Anyway, switching Droitwich (etc) on and off is going to shorten the
    life of the valves etc even faster !

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From JMB99@21:1/5 to Mark Carver on Sun Nov 19 15:57:31 2023
    On 19/11/2023 15:20, Mark Carver wrote:

    Reducing the power might work. I've rigged up a means in recent weeks to record the exact switch off and on times for my mothers' antique Teleswitch.   They are On 23:00, Off 07:00, On 13:00, Off 15:30.

    Only vary by a few seconds either side of 'bang on', so clearly the
    device is being kept on track as far as clock accuracy is concerned, but there doesn't seem to be any adjustment of the on/off times (that would
    be helpful to National Grid Ltd) so I actually wonder if the system is
    still being used dynamically.

    No 1hr change of time on Oct 29th, those times seems to be GMT all year round.


    So no better than the clockwork switch on my supply (except no lunchtime top-up)!

    I occasionally check with a test probe whether the storage heater is on
    or off (the little neons in the switches died years ago) and never far out.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Mark Carver@21:1/5 to Tweed on Sun Nov 19 15:20:47 2023
    On 19/11/2023 13:51, Tweed wrote:
    Mark Carver <mark@invalid.com> wrote:
    On 19/11/2023 13:10, Tweed wrote:
    Mark Carver <mark@invalid.com> wrote:
    On 19/11/2023 09:47, Scott wrote:
    As far as I can see, the Radio Ulster medium wave service on 1341 kHz >>>>> has closed but Radio 4 continues on 720 kHz. This seems illogical as >>>>> I assumed Radio Ulster would be the pre-eminent service. Surely R4
    DAB coverage (on the main BBC multiplex) will be at least as good as >>>>> Radio Ulster so what is the logic of retaining one and not the other? >>>>> It cannot be Test Match Special as this is available on Five Live
    Sports Extra.

    All of the R4 MW fillers continue to broadcast. The Beeb have said that >>>> the Radio 4 LW 'opt out' programming (which is also carried on the MW
    fillers) will cease at the end of March next year. From that point there >>>> will be no need for the MW fillers to continue, and some are expecting >>>> all of them to be switched off in April.

    As for 198 LW itself, who knows, the energy companies still have
    hundreds of thousands of teleswitches in use, so fortunes are
    intertwined with that mess.


    If the LW transmitters are only to be used for radio teleswitching, can the >>> carrier be funded in power or turned off when switching commands are not >>> being issued?


    It's 25 BIT per second data carousel, that has to address various
    batches of devices with different tariffs. I think it has to be more or
    less continuously transmitted ?

    Anyway, switching Droitwich (etc) on and off is going to shorten the
    life of the valves etc even faster !


    Not sure where my autocorrect got funded from. I meant reduced in power.


    Reducing the power might work. I've rigged up a means in recent weeks to
    record the exact switch off and on times for my mothers' antique
    Teleswitch. They are On 23:00, Off 07:00, On 13:00, Off 15:30.

    Only vary by a few seconds either side of 'bang on', so clearly the
    device is being kept on track as far as clock accuracy is concerned, but
    there doesn't seem to be any adjustment of the on/off times (that would
    be helpful to National Grid Ltd) so I actually wonder if the system is
    still being used dynamically.

    No 1hr change of time on Oct 29th, those times seems to be GMT all year
    round.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Tweed@21:1/5 to Mark Carver on Sun Nov 19 17:21:26 2023
    Mark Carver <mark@invalid.com> wrote:
    On 19/11/2023 13:51, Tweed wrote:
    Mark Carver <mark@invalid.com> wrote:
    On 19/11/2023 13:10, Tweed wrote:
    Mark Carver <mark@invalid.com> wrote:
    On 19/11/2023 09:47, Scott wrote:
    As far as I can see, the Radio Ulster medium wave service on 1341 kHz >>>>>> has closed but Radio 4 continues on 720 kHz. This seems illogical as >>>>>> I assumed Radio Ulster would be the pre-eminent service. Surely R4 >>>>>> DAB coverage (on the main BBC multiplex) will be at least as good as >>>>>> Radio Ulster so what is the logic of retaining one and not the other? >>>>>> It cannot be Test Match Special as this is available on Five Live
    Sports Extra.

    All of the R4 MW fillers continue to broadcast. The Beeb have said that >>>>> the Radio 4 LW 'opt out' programming (which is also carried on the MW >>>>> fillers) will cease at the end of March next year. From that point there >>>>> will be no need for the MW fillers to continue, and some are expecting >>>>> all of them to be switched off in April.

    As for 198 LW itself, who knows, the energy companies still have
    hundreds of thousands of teleswitches in use, so fortunes are
    intertwined with that mess.


    If the LW transmitters are only to be used for radio teleswitching, can the
    carrier be funded in power or turned off when switching commands are not >>>> being issued?


    It's 25 BIT per second data carousel, that has to address various
    batches of devices with different tariffs. I think it has to be more or
    less continuously transmitted ?

    Anyway, switching Droitwich (etc) on and off is going to shorten the
    life of the valves etc even faster !


    Not sure where my autocorrect got funded from. I meant reduced in power.


    Reducing the power might work. I've rigged up a means in recent weeks to record the exact switch off and on times for my mothers' antique
    Teleswitch. They are On 23:00, Off 07:00, On 13:00, Off 15:30.

    Only vary by a few seconds either side of 'bang on', so clearly the
    device is being kept on track as far as clock accuracy is concerned, but there doesn't seem to be any adjustment of the on/off times (that would
    be helpful to National Grid Ltd) so I actually wonder if the system is
    still being used dynamically.

    No 1hr change of time on Oct 29th, those times seems to be GMT all year round.


    I think they’ve given up on the dynamic load balancing for E7. My smart
    meter is configured for E7 and switches to the low rate at 0030 GMT all
    year round.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Mark Carver@21:1/5 to Tweed on Sun Nov 19 18:41:11 2023
    On 19/11/2023 17:21, Tweed wrote:
    Mark Carver <mark@invalid.com> wrote:
    On 19/11/2023 13:51, Tweed wrote:
    Mark Carver <mark@invalid.com> wrote:
    On 19/11/2023 13:10, Tweed wrote:
    Mark Carver <mark@invalid.com> wrote:
    On 19/11/2023 09:47, Scott wrote:
    As far as I can see, the Radio Ulster medium wave service on 1341 kHz >>>>>>> has closed but Radio 4 continues on 720 kHz. This seems illogical as >>>>>>> I assumed Radio Ulster would be the pre-eminent service. Surely R4 >>>>>>> DAB coverage (on the main BBC multiplex) will be at least as good as >>>>>>> Radio Ulster so what is the logic of retaining one and not the other? >>>>>>> It cannot be Test Match Special as this is available on Five Live >>>>>>> Sports Extra.

    All of the R4 MW fillers continue to broadcast. The Beeb have said that >>>>>> the Radio 4 LW 'opt out' programming (which is also carried on the MW >>>>>> fillers) will cease at the end of March next year. From that point there >>>>>> will be no need for the MW fillers to continue, and some are expecting >>>>>> all of them to be switched off in April.

    As for 198 LW itself, who knows, the energy companies still have
    hundreds of thousands of teleswitches in use, so fortunes are
    intertwined with that mess.


    If the LW transmitters are only to be used for radio teleswitching, can the
    carrier be funded in power or turned off when switching commands are not >>>>> being issued?


    It's 25 BIT per second data carousel, that has to address various
    batches of devices with different tariffs. I think it has to be more or >>>> less continuously transmitted ?

    Anyway, switching Droitwich (etc) on and off is going to shorten the
    life of the valves etc even faster !


    Not sure where my autocorrect got funded from. I meant reduced in power. >>>

    Reducing the power might work. I've rigged up a means in recent weeks to
    record the exact switch off and on times for my mothers' antique
    Teleswitch. They are On 23:00, Off 07:00, On 13:00, Off 15:30.

    Only vary by a few seconds either side of 'bang on', so clearly the
    device is being kept on track as far as clock accuracy is concerned, but
    there doesn't seem to be any adjustment of the on/off times (that would
    be helpful to National Grid Ltd) so I actually wonder if the system is
    still being used dynamically.

    No 1hr change of time on Oct 29th, those times seems to be GMT all year
    round.


    I think they’ve given up on the dynamic load balancing for E7. My smart meter is configured for E7 and switches to the low rate at 0030 GMT all
    year round.

    So in conclusion, if/when 198 is switched off, nothing catastrophic is
    going to happen. I'd expect the internal clock to use 50 Hz as a timing reference, so the big question is can it keep counting in a power cut !

    OVO are certainly in no rush to replace the kit with (in my mother's
    case) a dual phase/dual tariff super-dooper smart meter/switch solution, (because they tell me, they still don't have one yet !)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Scott@21:1/5 to All on Mon Nov 20 10:53:14 2023
    On Sun, 19 Nov 2023 13:41:47 +0000, Mark Carver <mark@invalid.com>
    wrote:

    On 19/11/2023 13:10, Tweed wrote:
    Mark Carver <mark@invalid.com> wrote:
    On 19/11/2023 09:47, Scott wrote:
    As far as I can see, the Radio Ulster medium wave service on 1341 kHz
    has closed but Radio 4 continues on 720 kHz. This seems illogical as
    I assumed Radio Ulster would be the pre-eminent service. Surely R4
    DAB coverage (on the main BBC multiplex) will be at least as good as
    Radio Ulster so what is the logic of retaining one and not the other?
    It cannot be Test Match Special as this is available on Five Live
    Sports Extra.

    All of the R4 MW fillers continue to broadcast. The Beeb have said that
    the Radio 4 LW 'opt out' programming (which is also carried on the MW
    fillers) will cease at the end of March next year. From that point there >>> will be no need for the MW fillers to continue, and some are expecting
    all of them to be switched off in April.

    As for 198 LW itself, who knows, the energy companies still have
    hundreds of thousands of teleswitches in use, so fortunes are
    intertwined with that mess.

    If the LW transmitters are only to be used for radio teleswitching, can the >> carrier be funded in power or turned off when switching commands are not
    being issued?

    It's 25 BIT per second data carousel, that has to address various
    batches of devices with different tariffs. I think it has to be more or
    less continuously transmitted ?

    Anyway, switching Droitwich (etc) on and off is going to shorten the
    life of the valves etc even faster !

    What do the Danes do at Kalundborg? I understood they broadcast
    shipping forcasts and news summaries only with long periods of
    silence.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Mark Carver@21:1/5 to Scott on Mon Nov 20 11:11:42 2023
    On 20/11/2023 10:53, Scott wrote:
    On Sun, 19 Nov 2023 13:41:47 +0000, Mark Carver <mark@invalid.com>
    wrote:

    On 19/11/2023 13:10, Tweed wrote:
    Mark Carver <mark@invalid.com> wrote:
    On 19/11/2023 09:47, Scott wrote:
    As far as I can see, the Radio Ulster medium wave service on 1341 kHz >>>>> has closed but Radio 4 continues on 720 kHz. This seems illogical as >>>>> I assumed Radio Ulster would be the pre-eminent service. Surely R4
    DAB coverage (on the main BBC multiplex) will be at least as good as >>>>> Radio Ulster so what is the logic of retaining one and not the other? >>>>> It cannot be Test Match Special as this is available on Five Live
    Sports Extra.

    All of the R4 MW fillers continue to broadcast. The Beeb have said that >>>> the Radio 4 LW 'opt out' programming (which is also carried on the MW
    fillers) will cease at the end of March next year. From that point there >>>> will be no need for the MW fillers to continue, and some are expecting >>>> all of them to be switched off in April.

    As for 198 LW itself, who knows, the energy companies still have
    hundreds of thousands of teleswitches in use, so fortunes are
    intertwined with that mess.

    If the LW transmitters are only to be used for radio teleswitching, can the >>> carrier be funded in power or turned off when switching commands are not >>> being issued?

    It's 25 BIT per second data carousel, that has to address various
    batches of devices with different tariffs. I think it has to be more or
    less continuously transmitted ?

    Anyway, switching Droitwich (etc) on and off is going to shorten the
    life of the valves etc even faster !

    What do the Danes do at Kalundborg? I understood they broadcast
    shipping forcasts and news summaries only with long periods of
    silence.

    Transmitting silence is a little bit cheaper I suppose

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Scott@21:1/5 to All on Mon Nov 20 12:04:09 2023
    On Mon, 20 Nov 2023 11:11:42 +0000, Mark Carver <mark@invalid.com>
    wrote:

    On 20/11/2023 10:53, Scott wrote:
    On Sun, 19 Nov 2023 13:41:47 +0000, Mark Carver <mark@invalid.com>
    wrote:

    On 19/11/2023 13:10, Tweed wrote:
    Mark Carver <mark@invalid.com> wrote:
    On 19/11/2023 09:47, Scott wrote:
    As far as I can see, the Radio Ulster medium wave service on 1341 kHz >>>>>> has closed but Radio 4 continues on 720 kHz. This seems illogical as >>>>>> I assumed Radio Ulster would be the pre-eminent service. Surely R4 >>>>>> DAB coverage (on the main BBC multiplex) will be at least as good as >>>>>> Radio Ulster so what is the logic of retaining one and not the other? >>>>>> It cannot be Test Match Special as this is available on Five Live
    Sports Extra.

    All of the R4 MW fillers continue to broadcast. The Beeb have said that >>>>> the Radio 4 LW 'opt out' programming (which is also carried on the MW >>>>> fillers) will cease at the end of March next year. From that point there >>>>> will be no need for the MW fillers to continue, and some are expecting >>>>> all of them to be switched off in April.

    As for 198 LW itself, who knows, the energy companies still have
    hundreds of thousands of teleswitches in use, so fortunes are
    intertwined with that mess.

    If the LW transmitters are only to be used for radio teleswitching, can the
    carrier be funded in power or turned off when switching commands are not >>>> being issued?

    It's 25 BIT per second data carousel, that has to address various
    batches of devices with different tariffs. I think it has to be more or
    less continuously transmitted ?

    Anyway, switching Droitwich (etc) on and off is going to shorten the
    life of the valves etc even faster !

    What do the Danes do at Kalundborg? I understood they broadcast
    shipping forcasts and news summaries only with long periods of
    silence.

    Transmitting silence is a little bit cheaper I suppose

    Also, as an aside, where did 720 kHz (417 metres) come from? I cannot
    find it as one of the old BBC wavelengths. As far as I can see, it was
    first used by LBC. Is it one of these 'international' frequencies
    that can be used at low power by anyone?

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Mark Carver@21:1/5 to Scott on Mon Nov 20 12:29:26 2023
    On 20/11/2023 12:04, Scott wrote:

    Also, as an aside, where did 720 kHz (417 metres) come from? I cannot
    find it as one of the old BBC wavelengths. As far as I can see, it was
    first used by LBC. Is it one of these 'international' frequencies
    that can be used at low power by anyone?

    Well, it's an interesting question. The IBA had never intended to use
    the frequency (719 pre 1978) but owing to planning delays for Saffron
    Green they had to find two temporary allocations, at the bottom end of
    the MF band for a temporary lash up at Lots Road power station.

    They obtained 719 and 557. 719 didn't seem to be an issue, but 557 was
    being used by by Radio Veronica, an offshore pirate station. The IBA dug
    their heals in, and there was a bit of a kurfffle, but Capital launched
    on 557 (539m).

    Anyway, LBC moved to 1151kHz at Saffron Green in May 1975, but the Beeb resurrected the Lots Road site and used 720 kHz from 1979, after a
    year's worth of complaints from London R4 listeners that they couldn't
    receive LW properly (as of course R4 moved to LW in Nov 78)

    720 has been used in N.Ireland for R4 since Nov 78. I can't find any
    record of it being used anywhere else in the UK other than for R4 in
    London and NI ?

    Further reading regarding Lots Road

    <https://www.bbceng.info/Technical%20Reviews/tott/39-42_G4OYX_Signal_Issue_56.pdf>

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Scott@21:1/5 to All on Mon Nov 20 20:29:34 2023
    On Mon, 20 Nov 2023 12:29:26 +0000, Mark Carver <mark@invalid.com>
    wrote:

    On 20/11/2023 12:04, Scott wrote:

    Also, as an aside, where did 720 kHz (417 metres) come from? I cannot
    find it as one of the old BBC wavelengths. As far as I can see, it was
    first used by LBC. Is it one of these 'international' frequencies
    that can be used at low power by anyone?

    Well, it's an interesting question. The IBA had never intended to use
    the frequency (719 pre 1978) but owing to planning delays for Saffron
    Green they had to find two temporary allocations, at the bottom end of
    the MF band for a temporary lash up at Lots Road power station.

    They obtained 719 and 557. 719 didn't seem to be an issue, but 557 was
    being used by by Radio Veronica, an offshore pirate station. The IBA dug >their heals in, and there was a bit of a kurfffle, but Capital launched
    on 557 (539m).

    Anyway, LBC moved to 1151kHz at Saffron Green in May 1975, but the Beeb >resurrected the Lots Road site and used 720 kHz from 1979, after a
    year's worth of complaints from London R4 listeners that they couldn't >receive LW properly (as of course R4 moved to LW in Nov 78)

    I understand it was relocated to Crystal Palace when Lots Road power
    station was scheduled for demolition.

    720 has been used in N.Ireland for R4 since Nov 78. I can't find any
    record of it being used anywhere else in the UK other than for R4 in
    London and NI ?

    It's a decent signal. It can be received in Glasgow.

    Further reading regarding Lots Road

    <https://www.bbceng.info/Technical%20Reviews/tott/39-42_G4OYX_Signal_Issue_56.pdf>

    Thanks for that. It looks like the use of the frequency was
    negotiated with another authorised user, presumably elsewhere in
    Europe. I assume Northern Ireland would be less of an issue in that
    regard.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From JMB99@21:1/5 to Scott on Mon Nov 20 22:45:00 2023
    On 20/11/2023 20:29, Scott wrote:
    I understand it was relocated to Crystal Palace when Lots Road power
    station was scheduled for demolition.


    Was it Lots Road where they had the very advance sophisticated system
    for the transmitters. They let the phone ring n times and the
    transmitter reset.

    Someone from ITA, IBA (or whatever they were called that week) told me
    about it many years ago.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From JMB99@21:1/5 to All on Mon Nov 20 23:07:52 2023
    Belfast Telegraph - Thursday 11 March 1976


    BBC RADIO IN NORTHERN IRELAND

    Radio 4 417 m 719 khz





    The Stage - Thursday 13 September 1979

    New frequency
    "The long wave reception problems remain in some areas," said Miss Sims,
    "but in central London a new medium wave frequency should provide an alternative for listeners who live in steel framed buildings or suffer electrical interference." We understand that the new frequency is to be
    720kHz (417m) which should improve the Radio 4 signal considerably in
    the daytime.
    However, some interference may be found at night because the same
    frequency has been allocated to a German station.
    Ian Mclntyre's desire for flexibility, something he plans for Radio 3 of
    which he is now controller, is, however, one of Monica Sims's principal
    aims. But she is quick to point out that this does not mean doing away
    with long established and popular series which are. as she says, "part
    of the daily lives of Radio 4 listeners."

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Mark Carver@21:1/5 to Scott on Tue Nov 21 11:27:48 2023
    On 20/11/2023 20:29, Scott wrote:
    On Mon, 20 Nov 2023 12:29:26 +0000, Mark Carver <mark@invalid.com>

    I understand it was relocated to Crystal Palace when Lots Road power
    station was scheduled for demolition.

    Yes it did, and was apparently not welcome. 720 (and 558 kHz which Spectrum/Panjab Radio uses) are carriers easily visible as patterning in analogue TV video. Used to get into everything there.

    Not so much or a problem now TV is digital !

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Mark Carver@21:1/5 to Scott on Tue Nov 21 19:39:56 2023
    On 21/11/2023 19:23, Scott wrote:
    On Tue, 21 Nov 2023 11:27:48 +0000, Mark Carver <mark@invalid.com>
    wrote:

    On 20/11/2023 20:29, Scott wrote:
    On Mon, 20 Nov 2023 12:29:26 +0000, Mark Carver <mark@invalid.com>

    I understand it was relocated to Crystal Palace when Lots Road power
    station was scheduled for demolition.

    Yes it did, and was apparently not welcome. 720 (and 558 kHz which
    Spectrum/Panjab Radio uses) are carriers easily visible as patterning in
    analogue TV video. Used to get into everything there.

    Not so much or a problem now TV is digital !

    Would this not have caused similar issues at Lots Road, or was it
    because it was a shared mast? Surely this problem must have been known
    about.

    There was no TV transmitter at Lots Road

    Not a unique problem though
    http://txfeatures.mb21.co.uk/coldfield/11.shtml

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Scott@21:1/5 to All on Tue Nov 21 19:23:25 2023
    On Tue, 21 Nov 2023 11:27:48 +0000, Mark Carver <mark@invalid.com>
    wrote:

    On 20/11/2023 20:29, Scott wrote:
    On Mon, 20 Nov 2023 12:29:26 +0000, Mark Carver <mark@invalid.com>

    I understand it was relocated to Crystal Palace when Lots Road power
    station was scheduled for demolition.

    Yes it did, and was apparently not welcome. 720 (and 558 kHz which >Spectrum/Panjab Radio uses) are carriers easily visible as patterning in >analogue TV video. Used to get into everything there.

    Not so much or a problem now TV is digital !

    Would this not have caused similar issues at Lots Road, or was it
    because it was a shared mast? Surely this problem must have been known
    about.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Mark Carver@21:1/5 to Scott on Wed Nov 22 10:23:44 2023
    On 22/11/2023 10:20, Scott wrote:
    On Tue, 21 Nov 2023 19:39:56 +0000, Mark Carver <mark@invalid.com>
    wrote:

    On 21/11/2023 19:23, Scott wrote:
    On Tue, 21 Nov 2023 11:27:48 +0000, Mark Carver <mark@invalid.com>
    wrote:

    On 20/11/2023 20:29, Scott wrote:
    On Mon, 20 Nov 2023 12:29:26 +0000, Mark Carver <mark@invalid.com>

    I understand it was relocated to Crystal Palace when Lots Road power >>>>> station was scheduled for demolition.

    Yes it did, and was apparently not welcome. 720 (and 558 kHz which
    Spectrum/Panjab Radio uses) are carriers easily visible as patterning in >>>> analogue TV video. Used to get into everything there.

    Not so much or a problem now TV is digital !

    Would this not have caused similar issues at Lots Road, or was it
    because it was a shared mast? Surely this problem must have been known
    about.

    There was no TV transmitter at Lots Road

    Not a unique problem though
    http://txfeatures.mb21.co.uk/coldfield/11.shtml

    My security package (Bitdefender) says the link is suspicious then
    comes a message 'Not found'.

    I know there was no TV transmitter at Lots Road but I thought the 720
    kHz signal might be interfering with the TV receivers (like 5G, though
    I have never heard of this happening). If this was a known problem,
    why would they put a MW transmitter on a TV mast rather than adding it
    to Brookmans Park or Saffron Green (as NI did at Lisnagarvey returning
    to topic) or any other suitable high building?

    I wasn't talking about TV receivers being interfered with. The problem
    was the AM signal getting into the baseband video and audio circuits of
    the TV transmitters at the site, and so affecting the transmitted signals.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Andy Burns@21:1/5 to Scott on Wed Nov 22 10:32:40 2023
    Scott wrote:

    Mark Carver wrote:

    http://txfeatures.mb21.co.uk/coldfield/11.shtml

    My security package (Bitdefender) says the link is suspicious

    VirusTotal (which includes BitDefender) disagrees

    <https://www.virustotal.com/gui/url/2058fde486be154a7a6ea562c5d3c186ffea49d3d7d758a4621973a214e4adc7>

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Scott@21:1/5 to All on Wed Nov 22 10:20:09 2023
    On Tue, 21 Nov 2023 19:39:56 +0000, Mark Carver <mark@invalid.com>
    wrote:

    On 21/11/2023 19:23, Scott wrote:
    On Tue, 21 Nov 2023 11:27:48 +0000, Mark Carver <mark@invalid.com>
    wrote:

    On 20/11/2023 20:29, Scott wrote:
    On Mon, 20 Nov 2023 12:29:26 +0000, Mark Carver <mark@invalid.com>

    I understand it was relocated to Crystal Palace when Lots Road power
    station was scheduled for demolition.

    Yes it did, and was apparently not welcome. 720 (and 558 kHz which
    Spectrum/Panjab Radio uses) are carriers easily visible as patterning in >>> analogue TV video. Used to get into everything there.

    Not so much or a problem now TV is digital !

    Would this not have caused similar issues at Lots Road, or was it
    because it was a shared mast? Surely this problem must have been known
    about.

    There was no TV transmitter at Lots Road

    Not a unique problem though
    http://txfeatures.mb21.co.uk/coldfield/11.shtml

    My security package (Bitdefender) says the link is suspicious then
    comes a message 'Not found'.

    I know there was no TV transmitter at Lots Road but I thought the 720
    kHz signal might be interfering with the TV receivers (like 5G, though
    I have never heard of this happening). If this was a known problem,
    why would they put a MW transmitter on a TV mast rather than adding it
    to Brookmans Park or Saffron Green (as NI did at Lisnagarvey returning
    to topic) or any other suitable high building?

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Scott@21:1/5 to All on Wed Nov 22 11:55:00 2023
    On Wed, 22 Nov 2023 10:23:44 +0000, Mark Carver <mark@invalid.com>
    wrote:

    On 22/11/2023 10:20, Scott wrote:
    On Tue, 21 Nov 2023 19:39:56 +0000, Mark Carver <mark@invalid.com>
    wrote:

    On 21/11/2023 19:23, Scott wrote:
    On Tue, 21 Nov 2023 11:27:48 +0000, Mark Carver <mark@invalid.com>
    wrote:

    On 20/11/2023 20:29, Scott wrote:
    On Mon, 20 Nov 2023 12:29:26 +0000, Mark Carver <mark@invalid.com>

    I understand it was relocated to Crystal Palace when Lots Road power >>>>>> station was scheduled for demolition.

    Yes it did, and was apparently not welcome. 720 (and 558 kHz which
    Spectrum/Panjab Radio uses) are carriers easily visible as patterning in >>>>> analogue TV video. Used to get into everything there.

    Not so much or a problem now TV is digital !

    Would this not have caused similar issues at Lots Road, or was it
    because it was a shared mast? Surely this problem must have been known >>>> about.

    There was no TV transmitter at Lots Road

    Not a unique problem though
    http://txfeatures.mb21.co.uk/coldfield/11.shtml

    My security package (Bitdefender) says the link is suspicious then
    comes a message 'Not found'.

    I know there was no TV transmitter at Lots Road but I thought the 720
    kHz signal might be interfering with the TV receivers (like 5G, though
    I have never heard of this happening). If this was a known problem,
    why would they put a MW transmitter on a TV mast rather than adding it
    to Brookmans Park or Saffron Green (as NI did at Lisnagarvey returning
    to topic) or any other suitable high building?

    I wasn't talking about TV receivers being interfered with. The problem
    was the AM signal getting into the baseband video and audio circuits of
    the TV transmitters at the site, and so affecting the transmitted signals.

    Sorry. I wondered. My technical knowledge is a bit limited for a
    'tech' group :-(

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Scott@21:1/5 to All on Wed Nov 22 11:57:02 2023
    On Wed, 22 Nov 2023 10:32:40 +0000, Andy Burns <usenet@andyburns.uk>
    wrote:

    Scott wrote:

    Mark Carver wrote:

    http://txfeatures.mb21.co.uk/coldfield/11.shtml

    My security package (Bitdefender) says the link is suspicious

    VirusTotal (which includes BitDefender) disagrees

    <https://www.virustotal.com/gui/url/2058fde486be154a7a6ea562c5d3c186ffea49d3d7d758a4621973a214e4adc7>

    I'll look into this. Now it is getting past Bitdefender okay but with
    a DreamHost message 'Site not found'.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Brian@21:1/5 to All on Fri Nov 24 12:31:18 2023
    On Wed, 22 Nov 2023 10:23:44 +0000, Mark Carver <mark@invalid.com>
    wrote:

    <snip>

    I wasn't talking about TV receivers being interfered with. The problem
    was the AM signal getting into the baseband video and audio circuits of
    the TV transmitters at the site, and so affecting the transmitted signals.

    I may have told this story before, but even so, you're going to get it
    again :-)

    When I first started with the BBC, the shift AS Tel E [1] had started
    at AP before the war. Apparently, it was the devil's own job to keep
    the transmitters there out of the vision signal system, to the extent
    that all the vision apparatus was housed within double copper boxes,
    with the seams continuously soldered.

    [1] The only person I have ever met whose staff number contained only
    four digits.

    --

    Brian

    Beware the spamtrap by Kubrick.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From JMB99@21:1/5 to Brian on Fri Nov 24 17:07:02 2023
    On 24/11/2023 12:31, Brian wrote:
    I wasn't talking about TV receivers being interfered with. The problem
    was the AM signal getting into the baseband video and audio circuits of
    the TV transmitters at the site, and so affecting the transmitted signals.


    Even quite low power VHF transmitters could be a problem with RF because
    often the antenna might be not far above roof level.

    We once had OB unit used our teambase for an OB of a climb on Ben Nevis,
    they had a scanner and comms vehicle in our car park. They tried a
    camera outside for a general view of the Ben but were suffering from RF interference. They said they test equipment at Brookmans Park and
    Crystal Palace, we explained that we had a lot lower power but the
    antenna were less than 90ft agl.

    Our workshop was RF screened because of that.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Andy Burns@21:1/5 to brian gaff on Thu Nov 30 12:05:45 2023
    [received via email, replying via usenet]

    brian gaff wrote:

    It should be  https for any browser to actually allow it these days,
    unless its the router itself web address of course.

    There's nothing that forbids http://
    browsers are likely to flag pages as insecure if not https://
    but so what?

    Scott wrote:

    Mark Carver wrote:

    http://txfeatures.mb21.co.uk/coldfield/11.shtml

    My security package (Bitdefender) says the link is suspicious

    VirusTotal (which includes BitDefender) disagrees

    <https://www.virustotal.com/gui/url/2058fde486be154a7a6ea562c5d3c186ffea49d3d7d758a4621973a214e4adc7>

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Scott@21:1/5 to brian1gaff@gmail.com on Thu Nov 30 12:07:53 2023
    On Thu, 30 Nov 2023 11:47:52 -0000, "Brian Gaff"
    <brian1gaff@gmail.com> wrote:

    Maybe LW will just go on till something major fails.

    I do detect that the BBC are completely illogical with the mw shut downs.
    Its as if there are several committees only responsible for a channel who
    do not take to each other. Its about time the BBC became a broadcaster of >better quality stuff that has no way of being funded on commercial outlets. >It would be cheaper, and not so dumbed down. You get more technically >accurate stuff made in bedrooms on You Tube than the BBC seem to make now be >it radio or TV.
    Brian

    My view is they should surrender high cost events such as the World
    Cup to ITV and concentrate on the public service obligation.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Scott@21:1/5 to All on Thu Nov 30 12:09:23 2023
    PS when I say 'my view' it is just a suggestion for discussion. I do
    not have a settled view. I can see pros and cons.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From J. P. Gilliver@21:1/5 to Scott on Thu Nov 30 13:39:50 2023
    In message <7nugmilclm32i4nplelafs8fmk86rhcojk@4ax.com> at Thu, 30 Nov
    2023 12:07:53, Scott <newsgroups@gefion.myzen.co.uk> writes
    On Thu, 30 Nov 2023 11:47:52 -0000, "Brian Gaff"
    <brian1gaff@gmail.com> wrote:
    []
    do not take to each other. Its about time the BBC became a broadcaster of >>better quality stuff that has no way of being funded on commercial outlets. >>It would be cheaper, and not so dumbed down. You get more technically >>accurate stuff made in bedrooms on You Tube than the BBC seem to make now be >>it radio or TV.
    Brian

    My view is they should surrender high cost events such as the World
    Cup to ITV and concentrate on the public service obligation.

    It's always been a balancing act: if they _only_ did certain stuff, the
    calls for the abolition of their public funding would avalanche (they're getting pretty strong as it is, sadly IMO).

    Where it _is_ a bidding matter, I tend to agree - with legislation to
    protect where possible. But that's really only possible where there is a geographical anchor, like Wimbledon: for international events like world (football) cup, and Formula 1, if such legislation gets too restrictive,
    the organising bodies (such as FIFA) will just take their business to
    other countries. (You may say, what if a lot of that organisation's
    audience is in the UK? Well, they're businesses - they're not interested
    in that audience if it isn't willing to pay. That'd only be relevant if
    a lot of their audience is in the UK _and_ would only pay if the events
    were in the UK.)
    --
    J. P. Gilliver. UMRA: 1960/<1985 MB++G()AL-IS-Ch++(p)Ar@T+H+Sh0!:`)DNAf

    Madness takes its toll. Please have exact change
    [via Penny Mayes (mayes@pmail.net)]

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Scott@21:1/5 to G6JPG@255soft.uk on Thu Nov 30 13:53:22 2023
    On Thu, 30 Nov 2023 13:39:50 +0000, "J. P. Gilliver"
    <G6JPG@255soft.uk> wrote:

    In message <7nugmilclm32i4nplelafs8fmk86rhcojk@4ax.com> at Thu, 30 Nov
    2023 12:07:53, Scott <newsgroups@gefion.myzen.co.uk> writes
    On Thu, 30 Nov 2023 11:47:52 -0000, "Brian Gaff"
    <brian1gaff@gmail.com> wrote:
    []
    do not take to each other. Its about time the BBC became a broadcaster of >>>better quality stuff that has no way of being funded on commercial outlets. >>>It would be cheaper, and not so dumbed down. You get more technically >>>accurate stuff made in bedrooms on You Tube than the BBC seem to make now be >>>it radio or TV.
    Brian

    My view is they should surrender high cost events such as the World
    Cup to ITV and concentrate on the public service obligation.

    It's always been a balancing act: if they _only_ did certain stuff, the
    calls for the abolition of their public funding would avalanche (they're >getting pretty strong as it is, sadly IMO).

    Where it _is_ a bidding matter, I tend to agree - with legislation to
    protect where possible. But that's really only possible where there is a >geographical anchor, like Wimbledon: for international events like world >(football) cup, and Formula 1, if such legislation gets too restrictive,
    the organising bodies (such as FIFA) will just take their business to
    other countries. (You may say, what if a lot of that organisation's
    audience is in the UK? Well, they're businesses - they're not interested
    in that audience if it isn't willing to pay. That'd only be relevant if
    a lot of their audience is in the UK _and_ would only pay if the events
    were in the UK.)

    There must be plenty of countries where there is a sole bidder.

    Scotland could refuse to play in retaliation :-)

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Max Demian@21:1/5 to Andy Burns on Thu Nov 30 14:49:39 2023
    On 30/11/2023 12:05, Andy Burns wrote:
    [received via email, replying via usenet]
    brian gaff wrote:

    It should be  https for any browser to actually allow it these days,
    unless its the router itself web address of course.

    There's nothing that forbids http://
    browsers are likely to flag pages as insecure if not https://
    but so what?

    They're a pain in the bot. Most websites don't require any security as
    they don't request or deliver confidential data.

    --
    Max Demian

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From JMB99@21:1/5 to J. P. Gilliver on Thu Nov 30 15:40:24 2023
    On 30/11/2023 13:39, J. P. Gilliver wrote:
    Where it_is_ a bidding matter, I tend to agree - with legislation to
    protect where possible. But that's really only possible where there is a geographical anchor, like Wimbledon: for international events like world (football) cup, and Formula 1, if such legislation gets too restrictive,
    the organising bodies (such as FIFA) will just take their business to
    other countries.


    Some events, perhaps like Wimbledon want the coverage on Free To Air to
    attract more participation in the sport.

    Obviously others, like football, have an audience don't play the game
    and will pay large amount to watch their own team.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From JMB99@21:1/5 to Scott on Thu Nov 30 15:36:40 2023
    On 30/11/2023 12:07, Scott wrote:
    My view is they should surrender high cost events such as the World
    Cup to ITV and concentrate on the public service obligation.


    Even though the majority choose to watch those events on BBC?

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From JMB99@21:1/5 to Scott on Thu Nov 30 15:42:03 2023
    On 30/11/2023 13:53, Scott wrote:
    Scotland could refuse to play in retaliation 🙂



    Would many notice?

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Rink@21:1/5 to All on Thu Nov 30 21:55:11 2023
    Op 21-11-2023 om 0:07 schreef JMB99:
     Belfast Telegraph - Thursday 11 March 1976


    BBC RADIO IN NORTHERN IRELAND

    Radio 4   417 m 719 khz





    The Stage - Thursday 13 September 1979

    New frequency
    "The long wave reception problems remain in some areas," said Miss Sims,
    "but in central London a new medium wave frequency should provide an alternative for listeners who live in steel framed buildings or suffer electrical interference." We understand that the new frequency is to be 720kHz (417m) which should improve the Radio 4 signal considerably in
    the daytime.
    However, some interference may be found at night because the same
    frequency has been allocated to a German station.
    Ian Mclntyre's desire for flexibility, something he plans for Radio 3 of which he is now controller, is, however, one of Monica Sims's principal
    aims. But she is quick to point out that this does not mean doing away
    with long established and popular series which are. as she says, "part
    of the daily lives of Radio 4 listeners."


    The German station was Langenberg WDR2 (Ruhrgebiet, Nordrhein Westfalen).
    I think it was 200 kW.

    Rink

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Rink@21:1/5 to All on Thu Nov 30 21:52:21 2023
    Op 20-11-2023 om 11:53 schreef Scott:
    On Sun, 19 Nov 2023 13:41:47 +0000, Mark Carver <mark@invalid.com>
    wrote:

    On 19/11/2023 13:10, Tweed wrote:
    Mark Carver <mark@invalid.com> wrote:
    On 19/11/2023 09:47, Scott wrote:
    As far as I can see, the Radio Ulster medium wave service on 1341 kHz >>>>> has closed but Radio 4 continues on 720 kHz. This seems illogical as >>>>> I assumed Radio Ulster would be the pre-eminent service. Surely R4
    DAB coverage (on the main BBC multiplex) will be at least as good as >>>>> Radio Ulster so what is the logic of retaining one and not the other? >>>>> It cannot be Test Match Special as this is available on Five Live
    Sports Extra.

    All of the R4 MW fillers continue to broadcast. The Beeb have said that >>>> the Radio 4 LW 'opt out' programming (which is also carried on the MW
    fillers) will cease at the end of March next year. From that point there >>>> will be no need for the MW fillers to continue, and some are expecting >>>> all of them to be switched off in April.

    As for 198 LW itself, who knows, the energy companies still have
    hundreds of thousands of teleswitches in use, so fortunes are
    intertwined with that mess.

    If the LW transmitters are only to be used for radio teleswitching, can the >>> carrier be funded in power or turned off when switching commands are not >>> being issued?

    It's 25 BIT per second data carousel, that has to address various
    batches of devices with different tariffs. I think it has to be more or
    less continuously transmitted ?

    Anyway, switching Droitwich (etc) on and off is going to shorten the
    life of the valves etc even faster !

    What do the Danes do at Kalundborg? I understood they broadcast
    shipping forcasts and news summaries only with long periods of
    silence.



    About 2,5 hours per day 50 kW,
    the rest of the day 100mW. http://www.mwlist.org/mwlist_quick_and_easy.php?area=1&kHz=243

    Rink

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Mark Carver@21:1/5 to All on Fri Dec 1 15:11:13 2023
    On 30/11/2023 15:36, JMB99 wrote:
    On 30/11/2023 12:07, Scott wrote:
    My view is they should surrender high cost events such as the World
    Cup to ITV and concentrate on the public service obligation.


    Even though the majority choose to watch those events on BBC?


    Given a choice yes, given no choice ITV get all of the audience, what's
    the problem ?

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Mark Carver@21:1/5 to All on Fri Dec 1 16:07:32 2023
    On 01/12/2023 15:53, JMB99 wrote:
    On 01/12/2023 15:11, Mark Carver wrote:
    Even though the majority choose to watch those events on BBC?


    Given a choice yes, given no choice ITV get all of the audience,
    what's the problem ?


    So why don't ITV leave them for CH5 to cover, what's the problem?

    None, the point is when an event is on the BBC and another channel, most viewers will select the BBC to avoid the ads.

    If the BBC are not covering the event, then all the viewers will select
    who ever is showing it instead. They don't care who's showing it.

    To be honest, there are very few sports events that are duplicated on
    BBC and ITV (or where ever) these days.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From JMB99@21:1/5 to Mark Carver on Fri Dec 1 15:53:27 2023
    On 01/12/2023 15:11, Mark Carver wrote:
    Even though the majority choose to watch those events on BBC?


    Given a choice yes, given no choice ITV get all of the audience, what's
    the problem ?


    So why don't ITV leave them for CH5 to cover, what's the problem?

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From J. P. Gilliver@21:1/5 to Mark Carver on Fri Dec 1 17:20:27 2023
    In message <ksuemaF5baiU3@mid.individual.net> at Fri, 1 Dec 2023
    16:07:32, Mark Carver <mark@invalid.com> writes
    On 01/12/2023 15:53, JMB99 wrote:
    On 01/12/2023 15:11, Mark Carver wrote:
    Even though the majority choose to watch those events on BBC?


    Given a choice yes, given no choice ITV get all of the audience,
    what's the problem ?
    So why don't ITV leave them for CH5 to cover, what's the problem?

    None, the point is when an event is on the BBC and another channel,
    most viewers will select the BBC to avoid the ads.

    If the BBC are not covering the event, then all the viewers will select
    who ever is showing it instead. They don't care who's showing it.

    To be honest, there are very few sports events that are duplicated on
    BBC and ITV (or where ever) these days.

    If there _is_ duplication, at least if the BBC are covering it at all,
    it's likely to be between multiple BBC channels. Applies to a lot more
    than sport, of course.
    --
    J. P. Gilliver. UMRA: 1960/<1985 MB++G()AL-IS-Ch++(p)Ar@T+H+Sh0!:`)DNAf

    There should be a place on the ballot paper for 'None of the above', and if enough people filled that in, the system might start to change. - Jeremy
    Paxman in RT, 2014/1/25-31

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From JMB99@21:1/5 to Mark Carver on Fri Dec 1 19:23:52 2023
    On 01/12/2023 16:07, Mark Carver wrote:
    To be honest, there are very few sports events that are duplicated on
    BBC and ITV (or where ever) these days.



    I don't tend to watch sport but I think it is just the final that will
    be on both (or more).

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Rink@21:1/5 to All on Fri Dec 15 02:05:48 2023
    Op 20-11-2023 om 21:29 schreef Scott:
    On Mon, 20 Nov 2023 12:29:26 +0000, Mark Carver <mark@invalid.com>
    wrote:

    On 20/11/2023 12:04, Scott wrote:

    Also, as an aside, where did 720 kHz (417 metres) come from? I cannot
    find it as one of the old BBC wavelengths. As far as I can see, it was
    first used by LBC. Is it one of these 'international' frequencies
    that can be used at low power by anyone?

    Well, it's an interesting question. The IBA had never intended to use
    the frequency (719 pre 1978) but owing to planning delays for Saffron
    Green they had to find two temporary allocations, at the bottom end of
    the MF band for a temporary lash up at Lots Road power station.

    They obtained 719 and 557. 719 didn't seem to be an issue, but 557 was
    being used by by Radio Veronica, an offshore pirate station. The IBA dug
    their heals in, and there was a bit of a kurfffle, but Capital launched
    on 557 (539m).

    Anyway, LBC moved to 1151kHz at Saffron Green in May 1975, but the Beeb
    resurrected the Lots Road site and used 720 kHz from 1979, after a
    year's worth of complaints from London R4 listeners that they couldn't
    receive LW properly (as of course R4 moved to LW in Nov 78)

    I understand it was relocated to Crystal Palace when Lots Road power
    station was scheduled for demolition.

    720 has been used in N.Ireland for R4 since Nov 78. I can't find any
    record of it being used anywhere else in the UK other than for R4 in
    London and NI ?

    It's a decent signal. It can be received in Glasgow.

    Further reading regarding Lots Road

    <https://www.bbceng.info/Technical%20Reviews/tott/39-42_G4OYX_Signal_Issue_56.pdf>

    Thanks for that. It looks like the use of the frequency was
    negotiated with another authorised user, presumably elsewhere in
    Europe. I assume Northern Ireland would be less of an issue in that
    regard.




    720 was in the 1975 plan with 4 transmitter for UK.

    Belfast 0,5 kW
    Londonderry 0,3 kW (synchronised with Belfast)
    Coventry 0,5 kW
    London 0,5 kW

    As you can see in the original Final Acts of the 1975 plan: handle.itu.int/11.1004/020.1000/4.98.43.en.100
    (= pdf, download starts immediately)

    see also:
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geneva_Frequency_Plan_of_1975

    Rink

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Scott@21:1/5 to rink.hof.haalditmaarweg@planet.nl on Fri Dec 15 09:04:37 2023
    On Fri, 15 Dec 2023 02:05:48 +0100, Rink
    <rink.hof.haalditmaarweg@planet.nl> wrote:

    Op 20-11-2023 om 21:29 schreef Scott:
    On Mon, 20 Nov 2023 12:29:26 +0000, Mark Carver <mark@invalid.com>
    wrote:

    On 20/11/2023 12:04, Scott wrote:

    Also, as an aside, where did 720 kHz (417 metres) come from? I cannot >>>> find it as one of the old BBC wavelengths. As far as I can see, it was >>>> first used by LBC. Is it one of these 'international' frequencies
    that can be used at low power by anyone?

    Well, it's an interesting question. The IBA had never intended to use
    the frequency (719 pre 1978) but owing to planning delays for Saffron
    Green they had to find two temporary allocations, at the bottom end of
    the MF band for a temporary lash up at Lots Road power station.

    They obtained 719 and 557. 719 didn't seem to be an issue, but 557 was
    being used by by Radio Veronica, an offshore pirate station. The IBA dug >>> their heals in, and there was a bit of a kurfffle, but Capital launched
    on 557 (539m).

    Anyway, LBC moved to 1151kHz at Saffron Green in May 1975, but the Beeb
    resurrected the Lots Road site and used 720 kHz from 1979, after a
    year's worth of complaints from London R4 listeners that they couldn't
    receive LW properly (as of course R4 moved to LW in Nov 78)

    I understand it was relocated to Crystal Palace when Lots Road power
    station was scheduled for demolition.

    720 has been used in N.Ireland for R4 since Nov 78. I can't find any
    record of it being used anywhere else in the UK other than for R4 in
    London and NI ?

    It's a decent signal. It can be received in Glasgow.

    Further reading regarding Lots Road

    <https://www.bbceng.info/Technical%20Reviews/tott/39-42_G4OYX_Signal_Issue_56.pdf>

    Thanks for that. It looks like the use of the frequency was
    negotiated with another authorised user, presumably elsewhere in
    Europe. I assume Northern Ireland would be less of an issue in that
    regard.

    720 was in the 1975 plan with 4 transmitter for UK.

    Belfast 0,5 kW
    Londonderry 0,3 kW (synchronised with Belfast)
    Coventry 0,5 kW
    London 0,5 kW

    I thought LBC started using the frequency in 1973?

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Rink@21:1/5 to All on Mon Jan 15 20:12:02 2024
    Op 15-12-2023 om 10:04 schreef Scott:
    On Fri, 15 Dec 2023 02:05:48 +0100, Rink
    <rink.hof.haalditmaarweg@planet.nl> wrote:

    Op 20-11-2023 om 21:29 schreef Scott:
    On Mon, 20 Nov 2023 12:29:26 +0000, Mark Carver <mark@invalid.com>
    wrote:

    On 20/11/2023 12:04, Scott wrote:

    Also, as an aside, where did 720 kHz (417 metres) come from? I cannot >>>>> find it as one of the old BBC wavelengths. As far as I can see, it was >>>>> first used by LBC. Is it one of these 'international' frequencies
    that can be used at low power by anyone?

    Well, it's an interesting question. The IBA had never intended to use
    the frequency (719 pre 1978) but owing to planning delays for Saffron
    Green they had to find two temporary allocations, at the bottom end of >>>> the MF band for a temporary lash up at Lots Road power station.

    They obtained 719 and 557. 719 didn't seem to be an issue, but 557 was >>>> being used by by Radio Veronica, an offshore pirate station. The IBA dug >>>> their heals in, and there was a bit of a kurfffle, but Capital launched >>>> on 557 (539m).

    Anyway, LBC moved to 1151kHz at Saffron Green in May 1975, but the Beeb >>>> resurrected the Lots Road site and used 720 kHz from 1979, after a
    year's worth of complaints from London R4 listeners that they couldn't >>>> receive LW properly (as of course R4 moved to LW in Nov 78)

    I understand it was relocated to Crystal Palace when Lots Road power
    station was scheduled for demolition.

    720 has been used in N.Ireland for R4 since Nov 78. I can't find any
    record of it being used anywhere else in the UK other than for R4 in
    London and NI ?

    It's a decent signal. It can be received in Glasgow.

    Further reading regarding Lots Road

    <https://www.bbceng.info/Technical%20Reviews/tott/39-42_G4OYX_Signal_Issue_56.pdf>

    Thanks for that. It looks like the use of the frequency was
    negotiated with another authorised user, presumably elsewhere in
    Europe. I assume Northern Ireland would be less of an issue in that
    regard.

    720 was in the 1975 plan with 4 transmitter for UK.

    Belfast 0,5 kW
    Londonderry 0,3 kW (synchronised with Belfast)
    Coventry 0,5 kW
    London 0,5 kW

    I thought LBC started using the frequency in 1973?



    Yes LBC did at London Lots Road.
    As described by Mark Carver above.
    557 Capital and 719 LBC

    Detailed description from the IBA start on mediumwave you can find here: <https://u.pcloud.link/publink/show?code=kZF58QkZu1NO9K0JYw0bfmabV2pRQVXAFGb7#folder=4636614185&tpl=publicfoldergrid>
    and choose :
    IBA_TechnicalReview5_IndependentLocalRadio2750.pdf
    see pages 10 and 18+19

    I just mentioned the 1975 plan, which started in November 1978.

    Guide to Broadcasting 18 (1980) mentions three UK transmitters
    for BBC Radio 4 on 720 kHz:
    Lisnagarvey 10 kW, London 500 kW, Londonderry 0,25 kW.
    Of course the London 500 kW dhould have been London 500 Watt.

    Guide to Broadcasting 20 (1989) mentions Radio 4 on 720:
    Lisnagarvey 10 kW, London 0,1 kW, Londonderry 0,25 kW.


    Rink

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Scott@21:1/5 to rink.hof.haalditmaarweg@planet.nl on Mon Jan 15 20:37:44 2024
    On Mon, 15 Jan 2024 20:12:02 +0100, Rink
    <rink.hof.haalditmaarweg@planet.nl> wrote:

    Op 15-12-2023 om 10:04 schreef Scott:
    On Fri, 15 Dec 2023 02:05:48 +0100, Rink
    <rink.hof.haalditmaarweg@planet.nl> wrote:

    Op 20-11-2023 om 21:29 schreef Scott:
    On Mon, 20 Nov 2023 12:29:26 +0000, Mark Carver <mark@invalid.com>
    wrote:

    On 20/11/2023 12:04, Scott wrote:

    Also, as an aside, where did 720 kHz (417 metres) come from? I cannot >>>>>> find it as one of the old BBC wavelengths. As far as I can see, it was >>>>>> first used by LBC. Is it one of these 'international' frequencies >>>>>> that can be used at low power by anyone?

    Well, it's an interesting question. The IBA had never intended to use >>>>> the frequency (719 pre 1978) but owing to planning delays for Saffron >>>>> Green they had to find two temporary allocations, at the bottom end of >>>>> the MF band for a temporary lash up at Lots Road power station.

    They obtained 719 and 557. 719 didn't seem to be an issue, but 557 was >>>>> being used by by Radio Veronica, an offshore pirate station. The IBA dug >>>>> their heals in, and there was a bit of a kurfffle, but Capital launched >>>>> on 557 (539m).

    Anyway, LBC moved to 1151kHz at Saffron Green in May 1975, but the Beeb >>>>> resurrected the Lots Road site and used 720 kHz from 1979, after a
    year's worth of complaints from London R4 listeners that they couldn't >>>>> receive LW properly (as of course R4 moved to LW in Nov 78)

    I understand it was relocated to Crystal Palace when Lots Road power
    station was scheduled for demolition.

    720 has been used in N.Ireland for R4 since Nov 78. I can't find any >>>>> record of it being used anywhere else in the UK other than for R4 in >>>>> London and NI ?

    It's a decent signal. It can be received in Glasgow.

    Further reading regarding Lots Road

    <https://www.bbceng.info/Technical%20Reviews/tott/39-42_G4OYX_Signal_Issue_56.pdf>

    Thanks for that. It looks like the use of the frequency was
    negotiated with another authorised user, presumably elsewhere in
    Europe. I assume Northern Ireland would be less of an issue in that
    regard.

    720 was in the 1975 plan with 4 transmitter for UK.

    Belfast 0,5 kW
    Londonderry 0,3 kW (synchronised with Belfast)
    Coventry 0,5 kW
    London 0,5 kW

    I thought LBC started using the frequency in 1973?



    Yes LBC did at London Lots Road.
    As described by Mark Carver above.
    557 Capital and 719 LBC

    I just wondered why they started in 1973 if the frequency was not
    allocated until 1978 but your link seems to explain this - as I
    thought it was obtained by negotiation.

    Detailed description from the IBA start on mediumwave you can find here: ><https://u.pcloud.link/publink/show?code=kZF58QkZu1NO9K0JYw0bfmabV2pRQVXAFGb7#folder=4636614185&tpl=publicfoldergrid>
    and choose :
    IBA_TechnicalReview5_IndependentLocalRadio2750.pdf
    see pages 10 and 18+19

    I just mentioned the 1975 plan, which started in November 1978.

    Guide to Broadcasting 18 (1980) mentions three UK transmitters
    for BBC Radio 4 on 720 kHz:
    Lisnagarvey 10 kW, London 500 kW, Londonderry 0,25 kW.
    Of course the London 500 kW dhould have been London 500 Watt.

    Guide to Broadcasting 20 (1989) mentions Radio 4 on 720:
    Lisnagarvey 10 kW, London 0,1 kW, Londonderry 0,25 kW.

    Would putting Lisnagarvey and Londonderry on the same frequency not
    cause problems? If the latter was only 0.25 kW could they not have
    found a different frequency such as 1484 kHz (202 metres) that was
    used for low powered services for Radio 1 and Radio 2 many miles
    away?

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Brian Gregory@21:1/5 to Scott on Mon Jan 15 22:50:54 2024
    On 22/11/2023 11:57, Scott wrote:
    I'll look into this. Now it is getting past Bitdefender okay but with
    a DreamHost message 'Site not found'.

    The site is hosted at Dreamhost in the US.

    Maybe your DNS is resolving it to a different IP address from most other
    UK users?

    For me, using OpenDNS in the UK, txfeatures.mb21.co.uk resolves to 66.33.220.142.

    (Tested by typeing
    nslookup txfeatures.mb21.co.uk
    at a Windows command prompt)

    --
    Brian Gregory (in England).

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Brian Gregory@21:1/5 to Scott on Mon Jan 15 22:25:34 2024
    On 20/11/2023 10:53, Scott wrote:
    What do the Danes do at Kalundborg? I understood they broadcast
    shipping forcasts and news summaries only with long periods of
    silence.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kalundborg_Transmitter

    --
    Brian Gregory (in England).

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Scott@21:1/5 to void-invalid-dead-dontuse@email.inv on Tue Jan 16 09:39:51 2024
    On Mon, 15 Jan 2024 22:25:34 +0000, Brian Gregory <void-invalid-dead-dontuse@email.invalid> wrote:

    On 20/11/2023 10:53, Scott wrote:
    What do the Danes do at Kalundborg? I understood they broadcast
    shipping forcasts and news summaries only with long periods of
    silence.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kalundborg_Transmitter

    Thanks. I thought it was something along these lines. I was wondering
    more how the transmitter operates part time. Can a transmitter easily
    be turned on and off or does it continue to operate in silence? I
    remember from Tony Currie's book about Radio Clyde (recommended by
    Mark) that the MW transmitter stayed on all night with station idents
    mandated by the IBA every 15 minutes.

    He tells of one listener they thought was listening all the time, so
    at 45 minutes before the start-up TC opened the line to the
    transmitter and broadcast a good morning message to this lady, who
    then phoned the studio two minutes later.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From JMB99@21:1/5 to Scott on Tue Jan 16 14:13:02 2024
    On 16/01/2024 09:39, Scott wrote:
    Can a transmitter easily
    be turned on and off or does it continue to operate in silence?


    Usually things are more reliable if not switched off and on - isn't
    there a light bulb somewhere that has been working for over a hundred years?

    I think there was an improvement in reliability when the BBC UHF TV
    services went 24 hours.

    Famously when Tommy Flowers proposed using valves in Colossus at
    Bletchley Park, many were sceptical but he had worked with valves at
    Dollis Hill and knew they could be reliable if treated carefully.






    By the way posted in this elsewhere in a discussion about the snow today.

    In the 1970s or 1980s, we had a fault at work at a fairly new site which coincidentally was accessed by a SnoTrac.

    There was an antenna fault that dragged on for weeks because of the
    limited access - daylight hours only which are short in the Highlands in mid-Winter.

    The riggers had equipment etc to get up to the site (1600ft asl) so
    bought a small sledge which meant that for a short time, the BBC had an official sledge.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From J. P. Gilliver@21:1/5 to mb@nospam.net on Tue Jan 16 15:05:31 2024
    In message <uo62te$1fl1k$1@dont-email.me> at Tue, 16 Jan 2024 14:13:02,
    JMB99 <mb@nospam.net> writes
    On 16/01/2024 09:39, Scott wrote:
    Can a transmitter easily
    be turned on and off or does it continue to operate in silence?


    Usually things are more reliable if not switched off and on - isn't
    there a light bulb somewhere that has been working for over a hundred
    years?

    It was outside a fire station in America when someone first noticed its
    great age; it may still be, though now has its own special power supply
    to protect it. (Thinking about it, probably DC. And I'd expect slightly under-run.)

    Transmitters, certainly valved ones, would I think benefit from not
    being switched off and on a lot. On the other hand, when we're talking
    of any significant power, the electricity bill has to be weighed against
    the replacement cost (including labour costs). I imagine there's a
    compromise where they're kept powered in terms of HT supplies (and
    filament supplies for valves) but not actually outputting kilowatts or
    more.

    I think there was an improvement in reliability when the BBC UHF TV
    services went 24 hours.

    Wouldn't surprise me.

    Famously when Tommy Flowers proposed using valves in Colossus at
    Bletchley Park, many were sceptical but he had worked with valves at
    Dollis Hill and knew they could be reliable if treated carefully.

    Given the alternative was relays, I am not at all surprised an
    improvement was both expected and realised!





    By the way posted in this elsewhere in a discussion about the snow today.
    []
    bought a small sledge which meant that for a short time, the BBC had an >official sledge.

    I like it!

    I think there are several other examples where the BBC - and other
    similar organisations (such as parts of government) - had, and probably
    still have, official items that you would not expect.
    --
    J. P. Gilliver. UMRA: 1960/<1985 MB++G()AL-IS-Ch++(p)Ar@T+H+Sh0!:`)DNAf

    Paxman, the man who has never used one sneer when three would do
    - Elizabeth Day, RT 2015/5/2-8

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From John Williamson@21:1/5 to All on Tue Jan 16 17:02:12 2024
    On 16/01/2024 16:50, JMB99 wrote:
    On 16/01/2024 15:05, J. P. Gilliver wrote:
    I think there are several other examples where the BBC - and other
    similar organisations (such as parts of government) - had, and
    probably still have, official items that you would not expect.



    Someone sent me this link recently, a company in the US is making
    SnoTracs again.

    https://www.sno-trac.com/

    Not sure about the heated cabin, we always kept the back door tied open.



    "Essentially zero wear parts" Apart from the tracks, the drive wheels,
    all the bearings on the idlers, the engine, the brakes...

    --
    Tciao for Now!

    John.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From JMB99@21:1/5 to J. P. Gilliver on Tue Jan 16 16:50:09 2024
    On 16/01/2024 15:05, J. P. Gilliver wrote:
    I think there are several other examples where the BBC - and other
    similar organisations (such as parts of government) - had, and probably
    still have, official items that you would not expect.



    Someone sent me this link recently, a company in the US is making
    SnoTracs again.

    https://www.sno-trac.com/

    Not sure about the heated cabin, we always kept the back door tied open.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From tony sayer@21:1/5 to All on Sat Jan 20 15:28:51 2024
    In article <K9SM9bS7spplFw0A@255soft.uk>, J. P. Gilliver
    <G6JPG@255soft.uk> scribeth thus
    In message <uo62te$1fl1k$1@dont-email.me> at Tue, 16 Jan 2024 14:13:02,
    JMB99 <mb@nospam.net> writes
    On 16/01/2024 09:39, Scott wrote:
    Can a transmitter easily
    be turned on and off or does it continue to operate in silence?


    Usually things are more reliable if not switched off and on - isn't
    there a light bulb somewhere that has been working for over a hundred >>years?

    It was outside a fire station in America when someone first noticed its
    great age; it may still be, though now has its own special power supply
    to protect it. (Thinking about it, probably DC. And I'd expect slightly >under-run.)

    Transmitters, certainly valved ones, would I think benefit from not
    being switched off and on a lot. On the other hand, when we're talking
    of any significant power, the electricity bill has to be weighed against
    the replacement cost (including labour costs). I imagine there's a
    compromise where they're kept powered in terms of HT supplies (and
    filament supplies for valves) but not actually outputting kilowatts or
    more.


    They are now replacing valved transmitters for modern solid state ones
    much cheaper to run and as power is expensive...

    I think i this is what they actually did with the 198 kHz transmitter at Droitwich ....


    I think there was an improvement in reliability when the BBC UHF TV >>services went 24 hours.

    Wouldn't surprise me.

    Famously when Tommy Flowers proposed using valves in Colossus at
    Bletchley Park, many were sceptical but he had worked with valves at
    Dollis Hill and knew they could be reliable if treated carefully.

    Given the alternative was relays, I am not at all surprised an
    improvement was both expected and realised!





    By the way posted in this elsewhere in a discussion about the snow today.
    []
    bought a small sledge which meant that for a short time, the BBC had an >>official sledge.

    I like it!

    I think there are several other examples where the BBC - and other
    similar organisations (such as parts of government) - had, and probably
    still have, official items that you would not expect.

    --
    Tony Sayer


    Man is least himself when he talks in his own person.

    Give him a keyboard, and he will reveal himself.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Scott@21:1/5 to All on Sat Jan 20 16:49:24 2024
    On Sat, 20 Jan 2024 15:28:51 +0000, tony sayer <tony@bancom.co.uk>
    wrote:

    In article <K9SM9bS7spplFw0A@255soft.uk>, J. P. Gilliver
    <G6JPG@255soft.uk> scribeth thus
    In message <uo62te$1fl1k$1@dont-email.me> at Tue, 16 Jan 2024 14:13:02, >>JMB99 <mb@nospam.net> writes
    On 16/01/2024 09:39, Scott wrote:
    Can a transmitter easily
    be turned on and off or does it continue to operate in silence?


    Usually things are more reliable if not switched off and on - isn't
    there a light bulb somewhere that has been working for over a hundred >>>years?

    It was outside a fire station in America when someone first noticed its >>great age; it may still be, though now has its own special power supply
    to protect it. (Thinking about it, probably DC. And I'd expect slightly >>under-run.)

    Transmitters, certainly valved ones, would I think benefit from not
    being switched off and on a lot. On the other hand, when we're talking
    of any significant power, the electricity bill has to be weighed against >>the replacement cost (including labour costs). I imagine there's a >>compromise where they're kept powered in terms of HT supplies (and
    filament supplies for valves) but not actually outputting kilowatts or >>more.


    They are now replacing valved transmitters for modern solid state ones
    much cheaper to run and as power is expensive...

    I think i this is what they actually did with the 198 kHz transmitter at >Droitwich ....

    Was the story about there only being eight (?) valves in the whole
    world fake news then? How did they justify the capital cost of
    replacing the transmitter if a decision had been taken to close the
    service? There again, are second hand AM transmitters very cheap to
    buy?

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From tony sayer@21:1/5 to All on Sat Jan 20 20:08:16 2024
    In article <q8unqi16trt9r994mng9bkdigeft7tc396@4ax.com>, Scott <newsgroups@gefion.myzen.co.uk> scribeth thus
    On Sat, 20 Jan 2024 15:28:51 +0000, tony sayer <tony@bancom.co.uk>
    wrote:

    In article <K9SM9bS7spplFw0A@255soft.uk>, J. P. Gilliver
    <G6JPG@255soft.uk> scribeth thus
    In message <uo62te$1fl1k$1@dont-email.me> at Tue, 16 Jan 2024 14:13:02, >>>JMB99 <mb@nospam.net> writes
    On 16/01/2024 09:39, Scott wrote:
    Can a transmitter easily
    be turned on and off or does it continue to operate in silence?


    Usually things are more reliable if not switched off and on - isn't >>>>there a light bulb somewhere that has been working for over a hundred >>>>years?

    It was outside a fire station in America when someone first noticed its >>>great age; it may still be, though now has its own special power supply >>>to protect it. (Thinking about it, probably DC. And I'd expect slightly >>>under-run.)

    Transmitters, certainly valved ones, would I think benefit from not
    being switched off and on a lot. On the other hand, when we're talking
    of any significant power, the electricity bill has to be weighed against >>>the replacement cost (including labour costs). I imagine there's a >>>compromise where they're kept powered in terms of HT supplies (and >>>filament supplies for valves) but not actually outputting kilowatts or >>>more.


    They are now replacing valved transmitters for modern solid state ones
    much cheaper to run and as power is expensive...

    I think i this is what they actually did with the 198 kHz transmitter at >>Droitwich ....

    Was the story about there only being eight (?) valves in the whole
    world fake news then? How did they justify the capital cost of
    replacing the transmitter if a decision had been taken to close the
    service? There again, are second hand AM transmitters very cheap to
    buy?

    Dot believe the story re the valves, several valve re-builders in China
    and Russia.

    They have to keep the 198 kHz on the go for time switching services so
    they it seems have worked out that a new Nautel solid state TX is
    cheaper to run and maintain thus Arqiva are spending a lot less on
    power!..

    --
    Tony Sayer


    Man is least himself when he talks in his own person.

    Give him a keyboard, and he will reveal himself.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Scott@21:1/5 to All on Sun Jan 21 09:53:36 2024
    On Sat, 20 Jan 2024 20:08:16 +0000, tony sayer <tony@bancom.co.uk>
    wrote:

    In article <q8unqi16trt9r994mng9bkdigeft7tc396@4ax.com>, Scott ><newsgroups@gefion.myzen.co.uk> scribeth thus
    On Sat, 20 Jan 2024 15:28:51 +0000, tony sayer <tony@bancom.co.uk>
    wrote:

    In article <K9SM9bS7spplFw0A@255soft.uk>, J. P. Gilliver >>><G6JPG@255soft.uk> scribeth thus
    In message <uo62te$1fl1k$1@dont-email.me> at Tue, 16 Jan 2024 14:13:02, >>>>JMB99 <mb@nospam.net> writes
    On 16/01/2024 09:39, Scott wrote:
    Can a transmitter easily
    be turned on and off or does it continue to operate in silence?


    Usually things are more reliable if not switched off and on - isn't >>>>>there a light bulb somewhere that has been working for over a hundred >>>>>years?

    It was outside a fire station in America when someone first noticed its >>>>great age; it may still be, though now has its own special power supply >>>>to protect it. (Thinking about it, probably DC. And I'd expect slightly >>>>under-run.)

    Transmitters, certainly valved ones, would I think benefit from not >>>>being switched off and on a lot. On the other hand, when we're talking >>>>of any significant power, the electricity bill has to be weighed against >>>>the replacement cost (including labour costs). I imagine there's a >>>>compromise where they're kept powered in terms of HT supplies (and >>>>filament supplies for valves) but not actually outputting kilowatts or >>>>more.


    They are now replacing valved transmitters for modern solid state ones >>>much cheaper to run and as power is expensive...

    I think i this is what they actually did with the 198 kHz transmitter at >>>Droitwich ....

    Was the story about there only being eight (?) valves in the whole
    world fake news then? How did they justify the capital cost of
    replacing the transmitter if a decision had been taken to close the >>service? There again, are second hand AM transmitters very cheap to
    buy?

    Dot believe the story re the valves, several valve re-builders in China
    and Russia.

    They have to keep the 198 kHz on the go for time switching services so
    they it seems have worked out that a new Nautel solid state TX is
    cheaper to run and maintain thus Arqiva are spending a lot less on
    power!..

    I'm just surprised that the payoff period for a new transmitter is
    shorter than its anticipated lifetime. Is this a clue that long wave
    will remain in some form for a bit longer?

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From tony sayer@21:1/5 to All on Wed Jan 24 14:51:24 2024
    In article <m4qpqi9edqej4c4ushpcdk8cnnt926eqbh@4ax.com>, Scott <newsgroups@gefion.myzen.co.uk> scribeth thus
    On Sat, 20 Jan 2024 20:08:16 +0000, tony sayer <tony@bancom.co.uk>
    wrote:

    In article <q8unqi16trt9r994mng9bkdigeft7tc396@4ax.com>, Scott >><newsgroups@gefion.myzen.co.uk> scribeth thus
    On Sat, 20 Jan 2024 15:28:51 +0000, tony sayer <tony@bancom.co.uk>
    wrote:

    In article <K9SM9bS7spplFw0A@255soft.uk>, J. P. Gilliver >>>><G6JPG@255soft.uk> scribeth thus
    In message <uo62te$1fl1k$1@dont-email.me> at Tue, 16 Jan 2024 14:13:02, >>>>>JMB99 <mb@nospam.net> writes
    On 16/01/2024 09:39, Scott wrote:
    Can a transmitter easily
    be turned on and off or does it continue to operate in silence?


    Usually things are more reliable if not switched off and on - isn't >>>>>>there a light bulb somewhere that has been working for over a hundred >>>>>>years?

    It was outside a fire station in America when someone first noticed its >>>>>great age; it may still be, though now has its own special power supply >>>>>to protect it. (Thinking about it, probably DC. And I'd expect slightly >>>>>under-run.)

    Transmitters, certainly valved ones, would I think benefit from not >>>>>being switched off and on a lot. On the other hand, when we're talking >>>>>of any significant power, the electricity bill has to be weighed against >>>>>the replacement cost (including labour costs). I imagine there's a >>>>>compromise where they're kept powered in terms of HT supplies (and >>>>>filament supplies for valves) but not actually outputting kilowatts or >>>>>more.


    They are now replacing valved transmitters for modern solid state ones >>>>much cheaper to run and as power is expensive...

    I think i this is what they actually did with the 198 kHz transmitter at >>>>Droitwich ....

    Was the story about there only being eight (?) valves in the whole
    world fake news then? How did they justify the capital cost of
    replacing the transmitter if a decision had been taken to close the >>>service? There again, are second hand AM transmitters very cheap to
    buy?

    Dot believe the story re the valves, several valve re-builders in China
    and Russia.

    They have to keep the 198 kHz on the go for time switching services so
    they it seems have worked out that a new Nautel solid state TX is
    cheaper to run and maintain thus Arqiva are spending a lot less on
    power!..

    I'm just surprised that the payoff period for a new transmitter is
    shorter than its anticipated lifetime. Is this a clue that long wave
    will remain in some form for a bit longer?


    Don't know re that but it does seems that its the price of mains power
    thats dictating their actions.

    I believe the railways have mothballed some Electric locos and are still
    using Diesel them being much cheaper run!...

    --
    Tony Sayer


    Man is least himself when he talks in his own person.

    Give him a keyboard, and he will reveal himself.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Scott@21:1/5 to All on Sun Feb 4 16:02:53 2024
    On Wed, 24 Jan 2024 14:51:24 +0000, tony sayer <tony@bancom.co.uk>
    wrote:

    In article <m4qpqi9edqej4c4ushpcdk8cnnt926eqbh@4ax.com>, Scott ><newsgroups@gefion.myzen.co.uk> scribeth thus
    On Sat, 20 Jan 2024 20:08:16 +0000, tony sayer <tony@bancom.co.uk>
    wrote:

    In article <q8unqi16trt9r994mng9bkdigeft7tc396@4ax.com>, Scott >>><newsgroups@gefion.myzen.co.uk> scribeth thus
    On Sat, 20 Jan 2024 15:28:51 +0000, tony sayer <tony@bancom.co.uk> >>>>wrote:

    In article <K9SM9bS7spplFw0A@255soft.uk>, J. P. Gilliver >>>>><G6JPG@255soft.uk> scribeth thus
    In message <uo62te$1fl1k$1@dont-email.me> at Tue, 16 Jan 2024 14:13:02, >>>>>>JMB99 <mb@nospam.net> writes
    On 16/01/2024 09:39, Scott wrote:
    Can a transmitter easily
    be turned on and off or does it continue to operate in silence? >>>>>>>

    Usually things are more reliable if not switched off and on - isn't >>>>>>>there a light bulb somewhere that has been working for over a hundred >>>>>>>years?

    It was outside a fire station in America when someone first noticed its >>>>>>great age; it may still be, though now has its own special power supply >>>>>>to protect it. (Thinking about it, probably DC. And I'd expect slightly >>>>>>under-run.)

    Transmitters, certainly valved ones, would I think benefit from not >>>>>>being switched off and on a lot. On the other hand, when we're talking >>>>>>of any significant power, the electricity bill has to be weighed against >>>>>>the replacement cost (including labour costs). I imagine there's a >>>>>>compromise where they're kept powered in terms of HT supplies (and >>>>>>filament supplies for valves) but not actually outputting kilowatts or >>>>>>more.


    They are now replacing valved transmitters for modern solid state ones >>>>>much cheaper to run and as power is expensive...

    I think i this is what they actually did with the 198 kHz transmitter at >>>>>Droitwich ....

    Was the story about there only being eight (?) valves in the whole >>>>world fake news then? How did they justify the capital cost of >>>>replacing the transmitter if a decision had been taken to close the >>>>service? There again, are second hand AM transmitters very cheap to >>>>buy?

    Dot believe the story re the valves, several valve re-builders in China >>>and Russia.

    They have to keep the 198 kHz on the go for time switching services so >>>they it seems have worked out that a new Nautel solid state TX is
    cheaper to run and maintain thus Arqiva are spending a lot less on >>>power!..

    I'm just surprised that the payoff period for a new transmitter is
    shorter than its anticipated lifetime. Is this a clue that long wave
    will remain in some form for a bit longer?


    Don't know re that but it does seems that its the price of mains power
    thats dictating their actions.

    I believe the railways have mothballed some Electric locos and are still >using Diesel them being much cheaper run!...

    I assume this refers to freight locos. Could this also be a result of
    power supply limitations and freight locos using a lot of power?

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From John Williamson@21:1/5 to Scott on Sun Feb 4 16:26:43 2024
    On 04/02/2024 16:02, Scott wrote:
    On Wed, 24 Jan 2024 14:51:24 +0000, tony sayer <tony@bancom.co.uk>
    wrote:
    I believe the railways have mothballed some Electric locos and are still
    using Diesel them being much cheaper run!...

    I assume this refers to freight locos. Could this also be a result of
    power supply limitations and freight locos using a lot of power?

    The train operating companies are blaming the cost of electricity.

    For freight, it is easier to swap locos than for passenger trains, as
    the vast majority of passenger trains are now self powered multiple
    units, bought to match the lines they are for.
    --
    Tciao for Now!

    John.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From tony sayer@21:1/5 to All on Mon Feb 5 10:50:21 2024
    They are now replacing valved transmitters for modern solid state ones >>>>>>much cheaper to run and as power is expensive...

    I think i this is what they actually did with the 198 kHz transmitter at >>>>>>Droitwich ....

    Was the story about there only being eight (?) valves in the whole >>>>>world fake news then? How did they justify the capital cost of >>>>>replacing the transmitter if a decision had been taken to close the >>>>>service? There again, are second hand AM transmitters very cheap to >>>>>buy?

    Dot believe the story re the valves, several valve re-builders in China >>>>and Russia.

    They have to keep the 198 kHz on the go for time switching services so >>>>they it seems have worked out that a new Nautel solid state TX is >>>>cheaper to run and maintain thus Arqiva are spending a lot less on >>>>power!..

    I'm just surprised that the payoff period for a new transmitter is >>>shorter than its anticipated lifetime. Is this a clue that long wave
    will remain in some form for a bit longer?


    Don't know re that but it does seems that its the price of mains power >>thats dictating their actions.

    I believe the railways have mothballed some Electric locos and are still >>using Diesel them being much cheaper run!...

    I assume this refers to freight locos. Could this also be a result of
    power supply limitations and freight locos using a lot of power?


    No, as i understand it its simply the price of electricity they pay
    verses the cost of Diesel!.

    Mind you Diesels can go most anywhere whereas electric loco's can only
    go where the power lines or rails go..

    --
    Tony Sayer


    Man is least himself when he talks in his own person.

    Give him a keyboard, and he will reveal himself.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Scott@21:1/5 to All on Mon Feb 5 17:00:19 2024
    On Mon, 5 Feb 2024 10:50:21 +0000, tony sayer <tony@bancom.co.uk>
    wrote:

    They are now replacing valved transmitters for modern solid state ones >>>>>>>much cheaper to run and as power is expensive...

    I think i this is what they actually did with the 198 kHz transmitter at >>>>>>>Droitwich ....

    Was the story about there only being eight (?) valves in the whole >>>>>>world fake news then? How did they justify the capital cost of >>>>>>replacing the transmitter if a decision had been taken to close the >>>>>>service? There again, are second hand AM transmitters very cheap to >>>>>>buy?

    Dot believe the story re the valves, several valve re-builders in China >>>>>and Russia.

    They have to keep the 198 kHz on the go for time switching services so >>>>>they it seems have worked out that a new Nautel solid state TX is >>>>>cheaper to run and maintain thus Arqiva are spending a lot less on >>>>>power!..

    I'm just surprised that the payoff period for a new transmitter is >>>>shorter than its anticipated lifetime. Is this a clue that long wave >>>>will remain in some form for a bit longer?


    Don't know re that but it does seems that its the price of mains power >>>thats dictating their actions.

    I believe the railways have mothballed some Electric locos and are still >>>using Diesel them being much cheaper run!...

    I assume this refers to freight locos. Could this also be a result of
    power supply limitations and freight locos using a lot of power?

    No, as i understand it its simply the price of electricity they pay
    verses the cost of Diesel!.

    I thought some routes had limited supply capacity and that
    high-consuming freight locos were unwelcome, but this is probably one
    for uk.railway.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Scott@21:1/5 to All on Tue Feb 6 10:02:46 2024
    On Mon, 5 Feb 2024 10:50:21 +0000, tony sayer <tony@bancom.co.uk>
    wrote:
    [snip]>>
    I assume this refers to freight locos. Could this also be a result of
    power supply limitations and freight locos using a lot of power?

    No, as i understand it its simply the price of electricity they pay
    verses the cost of Diesel!.

    Mind you Diesels can go most anywhere whereas electric loco's can only
    go where the power lines or rails go..

    You are correct. Power supply issues seem to play little part
    (uk.railway).

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Andy Burns@21:1/5 to Andy Burns on Tue Feb 6 12:01:46 2024
    Andy Burns wrote:

    The OHLE for Midland Mainline has just about reached south of Leicester,
    I don't think EMR has bought any bimodal trains yet ...

    Seems they've got some on-order <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/British_Rail_Class_810>

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Andy Burns@21:1/5 to Scott on Tue Feb 6 11:56:28 2024
    Scott wrote:

    tony sayer wrote:

    Scott wrote:

    I assume this refers to freight locos. Could this also be a result of
    power supply limitations and freight locos using a lot of power?

    No, as i understand it its simply the price of electricity they pay
    verses the cost of Diesel!.

    Mind you Diesels can go most anywhere whereas electric loco's can only
    go where the power lines or rails go..

    You are correct. Power supply issues seem to play little part
    (uk.railway).

    I thought using "diesel under wires" was frowned on?

    The OHLE for Midland Mainline has just about reached south of Leicester,
    I don't think EMR has bought any bimodal trains yet ...

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From John Williamson@21:1/5 to Andy Burns on Tue Feb 6 15:37:22 2024
    On 06/02/2024 11:56, Andy Burns wrote:
    Scott wrote:

    tony sayer wrote:

    Mind you Diesels can go most anywhere whereas electric loco's can only
    go where the power lines or rails go..

    You are correct. Power supply issues seem to play little part
    (uk.railway).

    I thought using "diesel under wires" was frowned on?

    Diesel under wires is common practice. Steam, on the other hand is not encouraged. Diesel only used to be deprecated 'cos electric was cheaper
    to run.


    --
    Tciao for Now!

    John.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Scott@21:1/5 to johnwilliamson@btinternet.com on Tue Feb 6 18:22:18 2024
    On Tue, 6 Feb 2024 15:37:22 +0000, John Williamson <johnwilliamson@btinternet.com> wrote:

    On 06/02/2024 11:56, Andy Burns wrote:
    Scott wrote:

    tony sayer wrote:

    Mind you Diesels can go most anywhere whereas electric loco's can only >>>> go where the power lines or rails go..

    You are correct. Power supply issues seem to play little part
    (uk.railway).

    I thought using "diesel under wires" was frowned on?

    Diesel under wires is common practice. Steam, on the other hand is not >encouraged. Diesel only used to be deprecated 'cos electric was cheaper
    to run.

    Nothing to do with the environment then? I suppose in the old days
    electricity was mainly generated using coal.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From John Williamson@21:1/5 to Scott on Tue Feb 6 18:55:45 2024
    On 06/02/2024 18:22, Scott wrote:
    On Tue, 6 Feb 2024 15:37:22 +0000, John Williamson <johnwilliamson@btinternet.com> wrote:

    On 06/02/2024 11:56, Andy Burns wrote:
    Scott wrote:

    tony sayer wrote:

    Mind you Diesels can go most anywhere whereas electric loco's can only >>>>> go where the power lines or rails go..

    You are correct. Power supply issues seem to play little part
    (uk.railway).

    I thought using "diesel under wires" was frowned on?

    Diesel under wires is common practice. Steam, on the other hand is not
    encouraged. Diesel only used to be deprecated 'cos electric was cheaper
    to run.

    Nothing to do with the environment then? I suppose in the old days electricity was mainly generated using coal.

    The environment thing is fairly recent, but until they got rid of coal,
    diesels made much less pollution per horsepower hour than electric. If
    you look behind the sales talk, the National Grid is a horribly
    inefficient way to go from fuel to wheel, whereas a well designed diesel
    can be as efficient as any land based power station with none of the transmission losses. The Powers That Be now use the CO2 emissions of
    renewable sources as a marketing point to make it easier to sell the
    wires. Electric (Be it trains, buses, vans or cars) also moves the
    pollution from the point of use to somewhere else. Cities are cleaner,
    while the countryside gets the pollution.

    --
    Tciao for Now!

    John.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Andy Burns@21:1/5 to Scott on Tue Feb 6 19:55:06 2024
    Scott wrote:

    John Williamson wrote:

    Diesel under wires is common practice. Steam, on the other hand is not
    encouraged. Diesel only used to be deprecated 'cos electric was cheaper
    to run.

    Nothing to do with the environment then?

    I think Network Rail *do* have a traction decarbonisation strategy?

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From John Williamson@21:1/5 to John Williamson on Tue Feb 6 19:41:03 2024
    On 06/02/2024 18:55, John Williamson wrote:
    On 06/02/2024 18:22, Scott wrote:
    On Tue, 6 Feb 2024 15:37:22 +0000, John Williamson
    <johnwilliamson@btinternet.com> wrote:

    On 06/02/2024 11:56, Andy Burns wrote:
    Scott wrote:

    tony sayer wrote:

    Mind you Diesels can go most anywhere whereas electric loco's can
    only
    go where the power lines or rails go..

    You are correct. Power supply issues seem to play little part
    (uk.railway).

    I thought using "diesel under wires" was frowned on?

    Diesel under wires is common practice. Steam, on the other hand is not
    encouraged. Diesel only used to be deprecated 'cos electric was cheaper
    to run.

    Nothing to do with the environment then? I suppose in the old days
    electricity was mainly generated using coal.

    The environment thing is fairly recent, but until they got rid of coal, diesels made much less pollution per horsepower hour than electric. If
    you look behind the sales talk, the National Grid is a horribly
    inefficient way to go from fuel to wheel, whereas a well designed diesel
    can be as efficient as any land based power station with none of the transmission losses. The Powers That Be now use the CO2 emissions of renewable sources as a marketing point to make it easier to sell the
    wires. Electric (Be it trains, buses, vans or cars) also moves the
    pollution from the point of use to somewhere else. Cities are cleaner,
    while the countryside gets the pollution.

    By the way,I count the way that renewables take up *lots* of land to be
    a form of pollution, especially if you consider the pollution caused by
    making and siting wind turbines and solar panels. Even tidal power can
    wreck the environment in the estuary.

    --
    Tciao for Now!

    John.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From John Williamson@21:1/5 to Andy Burns on Tue Feb 6 22:30:54 2024
    On 06/02/2024 19:55, Andy Burns wrote:
    Scott wrote:

    John Williamson wrote:

    Diesel under wires is common practice. Steam, on the other hand is not
    encouraged. Diesel only used to be deprecated 'cos electric was cheaper
    to run.

    Nothing to do with the environment then?

    I think Network Rail *do* have a traction decarbonisation strategy?


    Executive summary from their own documents:-

    "Ending rail’s contribution to emissions by removing diesel trains.
    Further minimizing carbon emissions through optimised cascade of the
    cleanest compliant diesel trains."

    The main document waffles on about hydrogen and battery powered trains,
    among other things.

    They also have a "We must make a profit" strategy.

    Network Rail are not directly responsible for sourcing motive power, all
    they can do is put pressure on the train operating companies, some of
    which are now, once again, state owned.

    --
    Tciao for Now!

    John.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From JMB99@21:1/5 to John Williamson on Wed Feb 7 13:38:19 2024
    On 06/02/2024 19:41, John Williamson wrote:
    By the way,I count the way that renewables take up *lots* of land to be
    a form of pollution, especially if you consider the pollution caused by making and siting wind turbines and solar panels. Even tidal power can
    wreck the environment in the estuary.



    The chap who got an award for his work on wind power stations was on the
    radio this morning, claimed he thought they were beautiful but of course
    he could not see any from his home!

    They typical bribe areas having them - I bet the same people used to
    criticise the nuclear industry when they similarly gave grants to areas
    near a nuclear power station (perhaps we should follow the wind power
    people and call them farms as it sounds better!).

    They make promises to reinstate the sites but I have read reports of
    turbine towers replaced by bigger one but never read of the hundreds of
    tons of concrete in the ground being removed!

    Then there are the whole networks of roads to the sites. In this
    newsgroup it is amusing to think of the moans when a 50ft tower for a transmitting station was put on a hilltop!

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Scott@21:1/5 to johnwilliamson@btinternet.com on Wed Feb 7 20:28:54 2024
    On Tue, 6 Feb 2024 22:30:54 +0000, John Williamson <johnwilliamson@btinternet.com> wrote:

    On 06/02/2024 19:55, Andy Burns wrote:
    Scott wrote:

    John Williamson wrote:

    Diesel under wires is common practice. Steam, on the other hand is not >>>> encouraged. Diesel only used to be deprecated 'cos electric was cheaper >>>> to run.

    Nothing to do with the environment then?

    I think Network Rail *do* have a traction decarbonisation strategy?


    Executive summary from their own documents:-

    "Ending rail’s contribution to emissions by removing diesel trains.
    Further minimizing carbon emissions through optimised cascade of the
    cleanest compliant diesel trains."

    The main document waffles on about hydrogen and battery powered trains,
    among other things.

    They also have a "We must make a profit" strategy.

    Network Rail are not directly responsible for sourcing motive power, all
    they can do is put pressure on the train operating companies, some of
    which are now, once again, state owned.

    Very effective 'pressure' if it is done via access charges.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Rink@21:1/5 to All on Sun Feb 11 16:39:09 2024
    Op 15-1-2024 om 23:25 schreef Brian Gregory:
    On 20/11/2023 10:53, Scott wrote:
    What do the Danes do at Kalundborg? I understood they broadcast
    shipping forcasts and news summaries only with long periods of
    silence.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kalundborg_Transmitter




    According to that wikipedia page the Danes closed the longwave on
    31-dec-2023.

    Final Broadcast on YouTube (received in Romania): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j7SvL-h7fWM

    Rink

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)