Knock More transmitting station explained

Knock More
Map Name:Scotland Moray
Coordinates:57.5323°N -3.1351°W
Location:near Boharm, Moray
Height:113m (371feet)
Gridref:NJ322497
Bbc:BBC Scotland
Itv:STV North

The Knock More transmitting station (sometimes spelled "Knockmore") is a broadcasting facility, located at Knock More,[1] to east of the parish of Boharm, Scotland, in Moray . It is a guyed steel lattice mast which stands 113m (371feet) high. The mast is located on elevated ground which is about 355 m above sea level,[2] and is between Elgin and Keith. It was built by the Independent Broadcasting Authority (IBA) to improve and extend UHF television coverage in north east Scotland, and is now owned and operated by Arqiva.[3]

Coverage

Knock More broadcasts to an area of Scotland which lies between the transmission areas of the Durris and Rosemarkie stations,[4] primarily in the Moray region of Scotland. There is good reception of Knock More in Buckie, Elgin, Dufftown, Keith, Lhanbryde and Lossiemouth. The Rumster Forest station also provides an overlap and alternative television signal along the coastal area between Burghead and Banff. Across the Moray Firth, reception of Knock More is also possible in coastal locations from Balintore and Brora as far north as Lybster.[5]

History

The ITU conference held in Stockholm, Sweden in 1961[6] led to the planning of the UHF television broadcasting network in the United Kingdom.[7] A high power UHF television transmitter was allocated for 625-line colour transmissions close to Banff, with the broadcasting channels 23/26/29/33 broadcasting at 100 kW effective radiated power (erp).

The station opened on 28 October 1974[8] broadcasting the BBC and ITV colour 625-line television channels on UHF band IV, using the PAL system, with horizontal polarisation.

FrequencyUHFkWService
23100ITV Grampian
26100BBC2
33100BBC1

Previously, 405-line television (broadcasting on the VHF bands I and III) had been available for many viewers from neighbouring transmitters at Meldrum and Rosemarkie (BBC)[9] and Durris, Mounteagle and Rumster Forest (ITV Grampian).

Programmes from Channel 4 opened on UHF channel 29 in April 1984, with BBC Radio broadcasts on VHF band II commencing from October 1984.[10]

Knock More also broadcast its UHF 625-line colour television programmes on alternative frequencies (UHF channels 66/55/59/62) in a south-westerly direction to provide a better source for the television relay at Grantown. The Grantown relay is located on high ground, and two of the incoming programme sources from Knock More (ITV on ch23 and BBC2 on ch26) would have experienced adjacent-channel interference from Rumster Forest (which broadcast on ch24 and ch27).

Interim Digital terrestrial television opened from 15 November 1999 at Knock More using channels 34, 30, 53, 60, and 56. Knock More had been considered a "group A" transmitter (UHF channels 21–34, Band IV). Three of the new digital multiplexes were in the upper part of Band V, which would have required some viewers to replace their aerials with a wideband[11] television aerial covering channels 21–68.

Full digital switchover completed on 22 September 2010, with the public service broadcast multiplexes using UHF channels 23, 26, and 29, and the commercial multiplexes on 53, 57, and 60.

The 700 MHz clearance event[12] in 2017 meant the commercial multiplexes were required to vacate their part of the television broadcasting spectrum, and as a result of this, a retune for viewers was required.

Current broadcasting

Television

As of 2023, Knock More broadcasts digital terrestrial television on the following UHF frequencies[13]

FrequencyUHFkWMultiplexSystem
2920BBC BDVB-T2
3120BBC ADVB-T
3310SDNDVB-T
3610Arqiva ADVB-T
3720Digital 3&4DVB-T
4810Arqiva BDVB-T

Analogue radio (FM VHF)

[14]

FrequencykWService
88.2 MHz20BBC Radio 2
90.4 MHz20BBC Radio 3
92.6 MHz20BBC Radio Scotland
94.8 MHz20BBC Radio 4
97.8 MHz20BBC Radio 1

Digital radio (DAB)

FrequencyBlockOperator
218.640 MHz11BBauer Inverness
225.648 MHz12BBBC National DAB

Relays

Below is a list of DTT transmitters that relay television broadcasts from Knock More.(Note: only public service broadcast multiplexes are broadcast from these relay sites)[15]

TransmitterkWBBC-ABBC-BD3&4Pol.
Aviemore0.0026282522V
Avoch0.002323435V
Balblair Wood0.00263323435V
Craigellachie0.014404346V
Grantown0.074441+47V
Kingussie0.02464340V
Lairg0.00264441+47V

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Knockmore Transmitter · Aberlour AB38 9RL, UK. Knockmore Transmitter · Aberlour AB38 9RL, UK.
  2. Web site: Bing Maps. Bing Maps.
  3. Web site: Television transmission services. www.arqiva.com.
  4. https://www.ofcom.org.uk/__data/assets/pdf_file/0023/48614/stv_v2.2.pdf
  5. Web site: Knock More UHF Post-DSO digital TV transmitters. tx.mb21.co.uk.
  6. Web site: Regional Radio Conferences. ITU.
  7. Web site: mb21 – The Transmission Gallery. txfeatures.mb21.co.uk.
  8. Web site: The Transmission Gallery Knock More 2004. 19 November 2023.
  9. Web site: mb21 – The Transmission Gallery – UK TV in 1965. txfeatures.mb21.co.uk.
  10. Web site: mb21 – The Transmission Gallery. tx.mb21.co.uk.
  11. Web site: Wideband TV aerials. 23 September 2016. Ofcom.
  12. Web site: 700 MHz Clearance Programme: The journey. www.freeview.co.uk.
  13. Web site: Ofcom Digital television transmitter details 12 October 2021. 19 November 2023.
  14. Web site: Knockmore Transmitter. RadioDNS.uk.
  15. Web site: Ofcom: Digital television transmitter details. ofcom.org.uk.