View Full Version : Lost NBC HD channel on TWC
DickR
02-06-2012, 03:53 PM
We have TWC for TV service. Last night I found that among the channels our digital TV channel scan had found was NBC on 83.3, and there was the super bowl in high def, full screen! At around actual kickoff time, the screen went blank, and we had to switch to channel 6 and watch in low def. What happened? Some other HD channels still were functioning.
Somewhere I was told that the cable network acts like a giant antenna, and that the TV was picking up the over-air signal in the channel scan, but I don't know if that is correct, given that the cable is coaxial and is supposed to be free of outside interference. Did TWC do something sneaky?
brk-lnt
02-06-2012, 04:22 PM
If the cable system is acting like a "giant antenna" then something is seriously wrong with the system.
Most modern cable systems use a dynamic channel frequency mapping. On your cable box it may always say that Channel 123 is NBC-HD for example, but the cable box is remotely programmed to make Channel 123 correspond to different frequencies. This can happen for a number of reasons, one of which could be allocating bandwidth for cable modem usage. Cable modems "steal" bandwidth/frequency from what can be used to carry TV, so there is a constant tradeoff/balance to be had.
About 8 years when the systems were first going digital, and digital tuners were not very common, many of the on-demand shows were just mapped to upper frequencies. You'd watch The Sopranos on-demand, and the cable head-end would make the equivalent of Channel 1000 for your request and tell your cable box to tune that frequency (even though it would look like you were still on channel 1 or channel 99 or whatever). During these times you could see what your neighbors ("neighbors" being people on the same node as you, not just your street) were watching by scanning these upper channels with a QAM tuner card. You'd also see them pause/rewind/fast-forward as well, since all that happens at the head-end. In many cases you can still do this in hotel room cable systems if you have a laptop and a USB tuner card for instance.
Anyway, not sure why TWC changed the channel mappings, but it was probably for some relatively uninteresting reason.
BroadHopper
02-06-2012, 04:57 PM
I am assuming TWC = Time Warner Cable.
I have Metrocast with no cable box. However I have a QAM tuner on which I am able to access the digital channels. For instance 6-1 is channel 6 high def and 6-5 is channel 6 digital as well as 6 for channel 6 analog signal.
Metrocast as of January 31st discontinue channel 6 because channel 7 braodcast the same affiliate. They also discontinue Channel 8 because channel 9 is the same affiliate.
However, I am able to get channel 6 and 8 digital and the analog channels are gone. I was able to watch the game on channel 6 HD even though the folks with cable boxes could not.
I also notice to the higher channels 95-100 if someone in the neighborhood is watching an on demand or PPV, i can pick the signal up.
I always use channel 8 weather as I find the weather forecast a lot more accurate than channel 9
rick35
02-06-2012, 07:39 PM
I believe cable companies are required to carry local channels in HD. Before I added an HD box to my kitchen TV I was able to get 4,5,7,9,11,25,38 and 56 in HD in the clear. You have to scan for channels and you should find them. When I first tried it the Comcast scan resulted in odd channels like 83.3. Now they use 7.1 for channel 7 in HD. The odd channels were the primary reason for adding the HD box.
Portland Channel 6 requested a block on other NBC stations during the game, its their market area, so by law they had the right.
Please don't shoot the messenger :laugh:
DickR
02-06-2012, 09:24 PM
Just to fill in a few more things:
I noticed this afternoon that 83.3 again was live.
One TV, an older analog TV, has the cable box attached to it. The wide screen digital TV (newer) is just plugged into the cable outlet on the wall and thus is limited as to number of channels it can access. The channel scan picked up the various HD channels available, and they show as nn.m (up to three digits after the decimal point). From what has been said, I presume Time Warner Cable puts those out on its cable.
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