Transmitter Bleialf
Transmitter Bleialf
|
||
---|---|---|
Image wanted
|
||
Basic data | ||
Place: | Lead alf | |
Country: | Rhineland-Palatinate | |
Country: | Germany | |
Altitude : | 642 m above sea level NN | |
Coordinates: 50 ° 14 ′ 24.4 " N , 6 ° 20 ′ 11.3" E | ||
Use: | Broadcasting station | |
Accessibility: | Transmission tower not open to the public | |
Owner : | Südwestrundfunk | |
Tower data | ||
Building material : | steel | |
Data on the transmission system | ||
Last modification (transmitter) : | 2008 | |
Waveband : | FM transmitter | |
Radio : | VHF broadcasting | |
Position map | ||
|
The transmitter Bleialf is a filling station of the Südwestrundfunk for VHF radio and terrestrial television , 642 m above sea level. NN . It is located near Bleialf- Buchet in the West Eifel in Rhineland-Palatinate .
It is not to be confused with the former television network broadcaster Schnee-Eifel , which was located 2.2 km northeast of it.
Frequencies and Programs
Analog radio (VHF)
Frequency (MHz) |
program | RDS PS | RDS PI | Regionalization |
ERP (kW) |
Antenna pattern round (ND) / directional (D) |
Polarization horizontal (H) / vertical (V) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
88.3 | SWR1 Rhineland-Palatinate | SWR1_RP_ | D3A1 | - | 0.01 | ND | H |
99.7 | SWR2 | __SWR2__ | D3A2 | Rhineland-Palatinate | 0.1 | D (10 ° -320 °) | H |
98.9 | SWR3 | __SWR3__ | D3A3 | Rhineland-Palatinate / Cologne | 0.1 | ND | H |
94.6 | SWR4 Rhineland-Palatinate | SWR4_TR_ | DCA4 | Radio Trier | 0.1 | ND | H |
Analog television (PAL)
With the introduction of DVB-T on the Eifel transmitter on November 12, 2008, analog TV broadcasting on the Bleialf transmitter will end.
Before the switch to DVB-T, the following analog TV channel was running:
channel |
Frequency (MHz) |
program |
ERP (kW) |
Antenna pattern round (ND) / directional (D) |
Polarization horizontal (H) / vertical (V) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
10 | 210.25 | The First (SWR) | 0.012 | ND | H |
See also
Web links
- Photos from the transmitter Bleialf ( Memento from December 4, 2012 in the web archive archive.today )