blknomad wrote:
I just got a new 2014 Itasca that has a Jenson tv in the bedroom. When I run a channel scan for the air antena, it comes up with RF CH and a number plus found and a number. Now question is what does the RF CH mean? Is it more channels and how do you access them?
In days of old when broadcastes were bolt the FCC assigned some specific channels, 1 through 82 ultimately, for their use, Well nobody used 1 so not it is the Six Meter ham band. (thank you) and 70-82 went away cause they also were not popular. That left 68 channels.
And you selected the channel with your tuner, Channel 2 was, 56 MHZ center if I recall (Chan 2) I have a list if you want the rest.
But with the switch to DIGITAL, they are no longer called Channels, they are called Services, and ... the "Channel Number" on your screen no longer equates to frequency.
For example (This is from Detroit)
Channel 2-1 and 2-2 (Channel 2) now broadcast on what used to be channel 7's frequency
Channel 7 (-1-2-3) now use Channel 41.
That said, some stations still use their original frequency (Channels 7 and 13 near me here in Upstate S.C. both use their original assigned frequencies)
THE GOOD NEWS, is you do not (normally) need to know this stuff, Your television's control computer figures it out when you do a Scan, remembers it so when, for example I tune to chan 7-2 in Detroit, it tunes to channel 41 and away we go. (Or here in the Upstate it tunes to chan 7) Very confusing to humans, not so much for the computer.
The FCC would like to get everyone off the VHF bands and for the most part has gotten everyone off VHF-Low band (2-6) though there are still a few holdouts.. VHF-Hi has proven a bit harder to vacate.
You see. they have re-sold those frequencies to others.