Benster wrote: » Hi folks, does anyone know if RTE will be broadcasting into NI in the same MPEG4 format as the South? Or would they downgrade it to MPEG2 to keep to the Freeview standard so they are still receivable on the majority of NI tellies? I have to pick a TV for the folks back home and I'm not sure if I should go for a newer MPEG4 tuner or the more widely available and cheaper MPEG2.
Northern Ireland MOU 3.15 There are two agreements in place between the governments of the UK and the Republic of Ireland concerning the relay of Irish television services in Northern Ireland. The first is the Belfast/Good Friday Agreement of 10 April 1998. This committed the UK Government to exploring urgently the scope for achieving more widespread availability of Irish language television service TG4, in Northern Ireland. The second is the MOU on the reciprocal relay of television services, signed on 1 February 2010. 3.16 Both governments wrote to their respective spectrum regulators (us in the UK, the Commission for Communications Regulation in the Republic) in May 2009 asking that the spectrum negotiations between the two countries aim to identify suitable interleaved spectrum whose preferred use would be the relay of an additional low-capacity, low-power DTT multiplex in Northern Ireland capable of carrying the three services RTÉ One, RTÉ Two and TG4 on the three Northern Ireland main transmitters. The UK Government has indicated it is minded to direct us for this purpose. Suitable spectrum would need to be identified and awarded in line with any such direction. 3.17 There are some uncertainties in realising such a multiplex. The technical feasibility and the quality of available interleaved spectrum have both yet to be established. Because of these and other uncertainties, the option of carrying TG4 on the Digital 3&4 PSB multiplex in Northern Ireland after DSO in 2012 is being held open by DCMS. It is anticipated that RTÉ One, RTÉ Two and TG4 will, in any event, continue to be available in Northern Ireland after DSO by overspill from transmitters in the Republic. The extent of predicted coverage for this overspill has yet to be established.Northern Ireland 4.13 Arqiva carried out a similar study in late 2007 looking into optimisation of the interleaved spectrum in Northern Ireland.This showed it was possible at that time to find channels for an additional DTT multiplex to be broadcast at each of the main stations in Northern Ireland. The multiplex would have reasonable coverage provided a robust transmission mode was used. However, this work predated more recent spectrum-planning work, including work on clearing the 800 MHz band. As mentioned above, we probably will not know the exact details of interleaved channels and locations that will be available for award until later in 2010. As mentioned in paragraphs 3.15-3.17, the Government has indicated it may direct us on the use of some such spectrum in Northern Ireland. Bearing this in mind, we are endeavouring to identify additional frequencies in the interleaved spectrum that might be suitable for other uses, such as local television.Northern Ireland 4.65 Our June 2008 consultation also noted it might be possible to optimise interleaved spectrum in Northern Ireland and so improve coverage there. However, as with Scotland, we will not know the exact details of the geographic interleaved spectrum available for award until the conclusion of the international negotiations on clearing the 800 MHz band. Also, we will have to find suitable spectrum in line with any direction by the Government to establish a multiplex to carry Irish television services from the three Northern Ireland main transmitters.
watty wrote: » The spots are misleading Lawhec. AFAIK there are only 4 combinations of polarity and band used for all 80 spots (it's been mathematically proven that's all you need). The hard outline is the intended coverage. Assuming a 44cm is perfect at edge, then 66cm would allow for 3dB drop. The real limitation of coverage is the poor BER (interference) by receiving a different spot using same parameters of band & polarisation.Irish and French spot with matching parameters In a row Irish, The NI/Western Isles/Scotland, East Scotland. I have two red lines. The one through Cornwall, West Wales and Western Scotland is where the BER gets bad no matter how big the dish is as the French Spot interferes. The short red line at the Western Isles (pointing at Iceland) is where the dish "gets big" due to less signal. So until service starts we don't know if Ballycastle to Larne (worst N.I. area) needs 55cm or 80cm dish. It's very likely almost none of Wales and Cornwall can get it once any services are on the Coloured in French sport. It's very likely all of N.I. can get it as the Dish for the Coloured Irish Spot is likely only 35cm to 45cm for good operation. Astra 2D only needs 43cm in Ireland. It's the other beams at 28E that need the 65cm (or really 80cm in extreme SW and NW). The kasat spot is likely better than Astra 2D and the SAME size dish at Ka band gets nearly twice the signal as 28.2E Ku. Also the 9E is higher elevation (29 degree vs 22.5) so less atmosphere path and less likelyhood of blocked signal from tree or building. Also all the spots are shown the same size. The Spacecraft has only four main aerials and creates the different spots by offset feeds. Since Ireland is 5W to 8W and more northern, the spots are going to be bigger and overlap more than shown compared to Southern Spots at 9E
Peddyr wrote: » Hi Watty, If Saorsat is feasible in IOM, what would you estimate the size of dish needed? 80cm??
watty wrote: » If it works it will be a curved bar tilted and about 30cm long. Not little.
STB wrote: » So if you are looking for a TV that does all and you are buying a new TV anyhow I would suggest that you look at buying a Freeview HD TV which is DVB-T2 and is apparently backwards compatible with all other formats. They are pricey at the moment. You could also buy a Freeview HD set top box if not in the market for a new TV which will give you the same level of compatability at a lower cost. Its as futureproof as you will get for NI.
Deleted User wrote: » At present,I'm receiving the 3 Welsh freeview hd channels perfectly on a T2 receiver,the standard freeview channel's and all the irish mpeg4 channels including the RTENL HD test. So theres no "apparently" about it.
The tv's are not pricey at all actually. They are quite comparative. par examplehttp://www.richersounds.com/product/led-tv/lg/42le5900/lg-42le5900
STB wrote: » Certainly Freeview HD will not be available when the country profile is changed to Ireland - is there even that option, I'm sure there isnt - as I am sure that the manufacturers would be as quick to say that is manufactured for the UK!
Bearing in mind the clarification and modifications made by RTE to Nordig, see page 3-5 of this document which sets out the difference between UK Dbook V6+ and Nordig 2+ for both DVB-T and DVB-T2 http://www.teracom.se/Documents/Produkter/Irdtesting/Teracom%20DTT%20receiver%20FAQ%202010-06%20008.pdf
Are they ? Par example - DVB-T MPEG4 products for a 42" start at £399 (as in comparison to £699 for dvb-t2)http://www.moneysupermarket.com/c/shopping/sp/audio-video-and-tv/plasma-tvs/
watty wrote: » They are not LED TVs, Those cost 100,000's they are LED backlit LCDs. Some LEDs backlights are better than CFLs and some are worse.
amorset wrote: » I maybe going off topic but Ive just updated my channel list on my Mpeg2 Panno TV and its picked up RTE TV and Radio around 800 channel numbers. However I can only hear it, no picture. Will this be the way it stays ? I live in Tyrone and picking up analogue RTE from Truskmore.
amorset wrote: » However I can only hear it, no picture. Will this be the way it stays ?