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On Fri, 19 Aug 2005 09:26:04 -0400, "Michael Lawson"
wrote: "Andrew Oakley" wrote in message ... On Thu, 18 Aug 2005 17:02:00 -0500, wrote: prices are too high.I Believe in parking all vehicles (including my Well, in the UK we pay 91p a litre (US$6.17 per gallon) and our economy is doing just fine. Then again, our biggest island is only 700 miles long, so you run out of land to drive on after two tanks of petrol (gasoline). There's also differences as far as public transportation usage as well. As the suburbs developed with the help of the car, it's become harder to backfill the suburbs with public transportation like light rail. The suburbs were designed with the car in mind, not with rail or other forms of mass transportation. Yeah. Our main problem isn't suburbs (which in our case were generally built in the early 1900s when rail was the most common mass transport), but historic towns. Pretty much anywhere you build in a town, there's at least a thousand years of historic buildings you've got to bulldoze; sometimes two thousand years. For towns such as London or Cirencester which were built by the Romans around 200AD, the Romans put in a pretty good trunk road network, with roads hundreds of miles long and straight as a die. These Roman roads have remained pretty much unbuilt-on and these routes form several trunk road / motorway (expressway/interstate) and rail lines today. For towns such as Birmingham or Bristol, which were built mainly during the Industrial revolution of the 1600-1800s, it's a mess. New road and rail links have to go in via tortuorous winding routes in order to preserve historic buildings or parkland. There's also a problem that a lot of towns were built in the Medieval and Dark Ages periods, for defensive capability, such as upon steep hills. These towns are almost impossible to plan around (you can't just move six hills) and many of them are depopulating due to lack of good transport links. In the 1960s and 1970s we did have a go at building new towns such as Milton Keynes and Telford. Milton Keynes (1960s) was considered a failure because of overuse of concrete and loss of countryside, despite good road and rail links. Telford (1970s) was more of a success because it incorporated several spread-out villages mixing with countryside - kind of like a collection of small suburbs linked via trunk roads / expressways, rather than a solid town, with plenty of space for new roads and rail. However even this was considered a waste of green countryside, and with land being a scarce resource on a 700-mile long island, these kinds of projects were abandoned in favour of "filling in" disused gaps in existing towns, called "brown field sites". That new policy of "brown field sites" is also now coming under attack since many of these sites are old industrial sites which are heavily polluted. Basically we've run out of land in the South East of England and people are too scared to build on the rest of the country in case it all gets swallowed up too. Going back on-topic, being on an island only 700 miles long makes radio transmissions a lot easier - for instance, we can have one transmitter covering the entire nation (eg. BBC Radio 4 on 198kHz AM Long Wave). It must be quite odd living somewhere where you have to re-tune AM depending on where you are. What about FM?? Is it strictly local, or do some BBC stations occupy the same part of the dial all over the place?? Generally it works like this: 87.5-88MHz - Commercial event stations 88 - 95MHz - BBC national stations (Radio 2, Radio 3, Radio 4) 95 - 98MHz - Mostly BBC local, some Commercial local 98 - 99MHz - BBC national station (Radio 1) 100-102MHz - "Classic FM" national commercial radio station 102-104MHz - Mostly Commercial local, some BBC local 104-105MHz - Mostly BBC local, some Commercial local 106-108MHz - Mostly Commercial regional and event stations In large cities with more stations, especially London, these rules are frequently not observed. Typically the national stations will have twenty or thirty different transmitters and frequencies within their band. Using RDS your car radio retunes automatically (and usually unnoticably) as you drive around. For instance, I drive 25 miles to work down a valley; listening to BBC Radio 4, my RDS car radio retunes three times (92.7 / 93.4 / 93.0 MHz). You have to remember that most of the UK is a pretty hilly place, but well populated enough to make the transmitter infrastructure worth the money. BBC local stations are generally based on counties and may have several studios with one main studio in the county capital (usually the "cathedral city", ie. administrative town, often only 50-100k residents). Commercial local stations are generally based on large urban cities and usually only have one studio, although there are a handful of rural stations which have been set up by enthusiasts (often more an eccentric ego trip than a profitable business, but they make for truly *fascinating* listening). Some commercial stations join together at various times of day for regional output, notably overnight, but this isn't as common as it is in the US. Overnight on BBC local radio stations there is either regional output for speciality music (eg. Folk, Jazz, South Asian music) or a stereo rebroadcast of the otherwise mono MW station BBC Radio 5 (a rolling news/sport station). In general there is more local news on the BBC than on commercial radio. Also you are more likely to get live outside broadcasts on the BBC than on commercial; although commercial local stations are well known for providing huge mobile trucks which act as both stage and mobile studio for large events such as fireworks, exhibitions etc, whereas the BBC generally have several smaller LandRover/Jeep type vehicles. Examples of BBC and commercial stations covering the same area: http://www.bbc.co.uk/england/radioshropshire/ -- very obvious community/news link to rural county of Shropshire -- "fill-in" FM transmitters on seperate frequencies for areas with poor reception such as Ludlow which is behind a huge hill http://beaconshropshire.musicradio.com/homepage.jsp -- much more music oriented, tied to the more urban town of Telford -- does not even attempt to cover poor reception areas, ignores Ludlow "Event" stations are things like a radio station covering the Cheltenham Gold Cup horse race, Silverstone Formula 1 motor racing - typically these stations broadcast for only one or two weeks per year and have a range of only 1-2 miles (although they are pretty easy to pick up from further afield using a decent directional antenna). The kit for these can be rented as a complete package, with mobile studio, transmitter, engineers, delivery etc. included. "Regional" stations are a pretty new idea. The first one is Kerrang!, a heavy metal radio station from the industrial city of Birmingham which has an extremely powerful transmitter and a very well positioned antenna, covering the whole of the centre of England (the "Midlands") with one frequency (105.7MHz). There is also commercial local radio on AM-MW but this is increasingly rare. BBC local radio on AM-MW has almost died out entirely - I can only think of one BBC local station still on MW in my area, and this is to fill a specific FM reception blackspot. Generally the commercial MW stations are "goldien oldies" stations. What I found really different about radio in the UK to the US is that US MW stations seem to be mostly single-point-of-view politics. In the UK you are not allowed to present a political show from only one point of view, you have to provide "balance" or you loose your licence. The problem is that a lot of UK political shows become very bland as a result, I actually found the US political radio shows much more interesting listening because they actually discussed one point of view in *depth*, rather than having to cut over to the other side all the time. Most UK political shows degenerate into a shouting match between the two sides within a few minutes, whereas US political presenters have the power to just cut troublemakers off. -- Andrew Oakley |