The Machynlleth transmitting station is a broadcasting and telecommunications facility located on a hill about 2.5 kilometres (1.6 mi) west of the town of Machynlleth, in Powys, Wales. It was originally built by the BBC,[1] entering service in June 1965 acting as a relay transmitter for the now-defunct 405-lineVHF television system.
Specifications
The site originally consisted of a pair of 14 metres (46 ft) wooden telegraph poles (one for the transmitting aerials, one for the receiving aerials) erected on land that is itself about 92 metres (302 ft) above sea level. The television broadcasts primarily covered the town of Machynlleth and the villages of the upper Dyfi river valley.
625-line colour TV came to the site in the late 1970s. A new 30 metres (98 ft) self-supporting lattice mast was built to carry the UHF aerials but the original VHF TV and VHF radio services continued to use the site's original wooden poles.
The three original VHF radio transmitters were upgraded to stereo in late Spring 1983.[2]
The 405-line VHF television service closed across the UK in 1985, but Machynlleth's 405 line services closed a year early - in January 1984.
Machynlleth currently broadcasts digital television and analogue FM radio.
Services listed by frequency
Analogue television
28 June 1965 - Late 1970s
The transmitter was classed as a relay of Blaenplwyf about 30 kilometres (19 mi) to the southwest, receiving its signal by direct off-air pickup.
405-line television was discontinued after 19 years of service. For the next 25 years there were to be no changes to the television output at this site.
Digital switchover started at Blaenplwyf and therefore at Machynlleth and all its other relays. BBC 2 was closed down on channel 63 and BBC 1 was moved from channel 57 to channel 63 for its final month of service. Mux A started up on the newly vacated channel 57 at full post-DSO power of 4 W.
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