Ochsenkopf Transmitter
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The Ochsenkopf Transmitter (German: Sender Ochsenkopf) is a 163 metres (535 ft) radio and TV tower of reinforced concrete, which was built in 1958 on the summit of the 1,024 metres (3,360 ft) Ochsenkopf mountain, the second-highest mountain in the Fichtel Mountains in Northern Bavaria, Germany. The tower replaced a 50 metres (160 ft) guyed steel tube TV mast that collapsed in January 1958 as result of icing. The tower, which is not accessible to the public, has a hyperbolic-shaped basement with five floors for technical equipment. Above it, there are platforms for directional antennas. The antennas for FM-transmission are on the upper part of the concrete tower, those for TV transmission on a steel tube mast on the top.
Transmitting to the former GDR
[edit]Ochsenkopf TV Tower played an important role in transmitting to the former GDR many West German FM and TV programs, notably ARD, West Germany's first – and between 1952 and 1963 only – television channel. Its signal could penetrate deep into the southern territory of East Germany due to its closeness to the border, its use of a low frequency (VHF Band I channel 4), and of vertical polarization. Under good conditions, its signal could be received as far away as Görlitz on the East German-Polish border, even though most aerials there were pointed at the West Berlin transmitters.
The transmitter required large and specifically mounted aerials nicknamed Ochsenkopf-Antenne, or Ochsenkopf for short, thus making the homes of viewers of western television easily recognizable. A campaign in the early 1960s by East Germany's state youth organisation FDJ aimed at turning away or removing such aerials exploited this fact.
Similar towers
[edit]Many other TV towers of similar design were built after 1958 in Germany and other European countries, including:
- Święty Krzyż TV Tower in Poland
- Brotjacklriegel TV Tower in Germany
- Donnersberg TV Tower in Germany
- Ještěd Tower in Czech Republic
- Schladming TV Tower, Austria [1]
- Kitzbüheler Horn transmitter, Austria
- Mugel TV Tower, Austria
- Slanchev Bryag TV Tower, Bulgaria [2]
- Stramni Rid TV Tower, Bulgaria [3]
- Ostankino Tower in Moscow, Russia
Transmitted Programs
[edit]FM Radio
[edit]Program | Frequency | ERP |
---|---|---|
Bayern 1 | 90.7 MHz | 100 kW |
Bayern 1 | 91.2 MHz | 20 kW |
Bayern 2 Radio | 96.0 MHz | 100 kW |
Bayern 3 | 99.4 MHz | 100 kW |
DLF | 100.3 MHz | 100 kW |
Bayern 4 Klassik | 102.3 MHz | 100 kW |
Antenne Bayern | 103.2 MHz | 100 kW |
B5 Aktuell | 107.1 MHz | 100 kW |
Launched on November 25, 2008.
Channel | Frequency [MHz] |
Multiplex | Programs in Multiplex | ERP [kW] |
Antenna Type |
Polarization horizontal (H) / vertical (V) |
Modulation | FEC | Guard Interval | Bit Rate [MBit/s] |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
E23 | 490 | ZDFmobil-Bouquet |
|
50 | omni | H | 16-QAM | 2/3 | 1/4 | 13.47 |
E29 | 538 | ARD Bouquet | 100 | omni | H | 16-QAM | 2/3 | 1/4 | 13.47 | |
E40 | 626 | BR-Bouquet |
|
100 | omni | H | 16-QAM | 2/3 | 1/4 | 13.47 |
Former Programs
[edit]Television (analogue, PAL standard)
[edit]Shut down on November 30, 2008.
Program | Frequency | ERP |
---|---|---|
ARD (BRF region) | Ch E4 vertical | 50 kW (used to be 100 kW) |
The public channels ZDF and Bayerisches Fernsehen for the region were previously transmitted from the nearby mountain Großer Waldstein.