Radio: Belmont (Lincolnshire, England) analogue radio transmitter
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Belmont (Lincolnshire, England) analogue radio transmitter

Google mapBing mapGoogle Earth53.335,-0.172 or 53°20'7"N 0°10'20"W

The approximate coverage area for each radio station is shown as a coloured area on the map - shown is the official radiation pattern: the terrain and receiver aerial position have to be taken into account for actual reception.

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Belmont analogue radio transmitter
BBC Radio 2 88.8MHz at 8.0kW, BBC Radio 3 90.9MHz at 8.0kW (as 88.8MHz), BBC Radio 4 (FM) 93.1MHz at 8.0kW (as 88.8MHz), BBC Lincolnshire (FM) 94.9MHz at 3.0kW, BBC Radio 1 98.3MHz at 8.0kW (as 88.8MHz), Classic FM 100.5MHz at 3.1kW, Lincs FM 102.2MHz at 3.2kW

Other maps:Belmont FreeviewBelmont DABBelmont regionBBC East Yorkshire and LincolnshireYorkshire (Belmont micro region)




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Aubrey Stafford
Wednesday 1 August 2012 8:36AM Retford
Dear Sir.I am at Retford dn22 7gg my FM aerial is on Holme Moss but reception of radio Nottingham & Lincoln is very poor.would I be better using Belmont?.
jb38
Wednesday 1 August 2012 10:08AM
Aubrey Stafford : No, as Belmont's FM radio coverage area is indicated as being limited to the right hand side a line down from Gainsborough to Newark, and of course you are well to the left of this.

Its even a wonder that you can actually receive BBC radio Nottingham, as you are well outside of its coverage area charts.
Dave Lindsay
Wednesday 1 August 2012 10:31AM
Aubrey Stafford : If you have a directional aerial and are wishing to receive from different transmitters, then perhaps you would be better off with an omni-directional antenna.

The bearings of the stations from your location are:

- Holme Moss 291º
- Fishpond Hill (Mansfield) 221º
- Belmont 89º

BBC Radio Nottingham on 95.5 MHz comes from Fishpond Hill and BBC Radio Lincolnshire on 94.9 MHz comes from Belmont.

The four BBC national FM stations and Classic FM are broadcast from Holme Moss and Belmont.

So at present, BBC Radio Nottingham is being received at 70º anti-clockwise of the antenna's greatest direction of sensitivity. If it is horizontally polarised, then its sensitivity is its least at 90º (clockwise and anti-clockwise) of the direction it faces, so you aren't too far off that.
Dave Lindsay
Wednesday 1 August 2012 10:37AM
jb38: Where are the coverage maps you refer to?

I know that mb21 has some, but I can't find one for Radio Nottingham on there.

Also, don't the coverage maps just indicate where the strength is calculated as being above a particular level at a particular height above ground (assuming no local obstructions)? Therefore there may be places outside of those areas where reception isn't greatly less than within. Also, assuming that Aubrey is using an external aerial — as I believe he implies in his posting (or certainly a directional one) — then the signal will be better and therefore the chances of reception will be greater.
jb38
Wednesday 1 August 2012 5:18PM
Dave Lindsay: As far as Nottingham's services are concerned these are on MDS975's web site obtainable via the link provided, where you will see the predicted coverage of BBC radio Nottingham (very bottom map) as well as the independent stations, although only the latter four maps are really of any interest.

www.mds975.co.uk link icon http://www.mds975.co.uk/t…html

This is the link for mb 21's site where Belmont's FM service coverage area is shown.

tx.mb21.co.uk link icon mb21 - Transmitter Information - Belmont

As far as what Aubrey may, or may not actually be able to receive compared to what is seen as being possible when looking at the transmitters coverage area map always based on standard rules applying with regards to the receiving aerials height etc, no hard and fast rules apply when dealing with this sort of thing and yes it is very possible for a signal to be reaching a position far further than a coverage map would suggest, or of course vice-versa! although the "only" positive way of finding out if anything is possible or not is by conducting an on site test, as otherwise there is no way of knowing.

The only snag though that can crop up should reception of whatever be found as being possible outside of an officially published coverage area is that it might not hold out for very long before the signal suffers from fading problems, so a person must always be prepared to accept the possibility of this happening and take it as one of those things!

As far as the aerial direction is concerned, any FM aerial in common with any other horizontally polarised aerial is automatically directional by nature even if it comprises of a simple dipole, this by the fact of a cone of RF silence existing from the ends of each element whereby maximum pick up is only possible when both elements are facing the signal source flat on.


jb38
Thursday 2 August 2012 7:31AM
Dave Lindsay: I just checked the link I provided for MDS975 and see that its not working, and so to save you time searching about just click on - Continue / Site map / Broadcast masts & towers / Transmitter coverage maps / Nottinghamshire.
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