Wenvoe transmitting station


The Wenvoe transmitting station is a facility for broadcasting and telecommunications situated close to the village of Wenvoe in the Vale of Glamorgan, Wales, in the UK. It comprises a guyed mast with antennas attached at various heights. The average height above sea level is for the television antennas. It is owned and operated by Arqiva. The mast sways, which is quite high for a mast this size.

History

The original mast at the site was built in 1952 by the BBC to provide 405-line VHF television to south Wales and the west of England. The station broadcast on Band I channel 5 from 15 August 1952 using its reserve transmitters, and from 20 December 1952 with its main high-power transmitters. It remained on air until the closure of 405-line television in 1985.
In 1955 VHF FM radio was added to the mast, carrying the BBC's Home Service. This was followed by the addition of the Light Programme in 1956 and the Third Programme in 1959.
In 1963 a second mast was built alongside the existing structure. This was in order to carry the new BBC Wales 405-line TV service on Band III VHF channel 13, and entered service on 9 February 1964. The 405-line transmitter for this service was closed early, in 1983.
On 12 September 1965, a 625-line black and white television service BBC2 became available from Wenvoe on UHF. This new transmitter was capable of colour broadcasting from the start and was used for unannounced colour TV engineering test-transmissions from that point onwards.
In September 1967 BBC2 officially launched a colour TV service from Wenvoe, a few months after BBC2 Crystal Palace and others had launched the UK's first colour broadcasting in July of that year.
In 1970 UHF 625-line colour television was introduced for BBC1 and ITV Wales, which is the structure currently in place at the site. Wenvoe "B" is a self-supporting telecommunications mast nearby. The VHF FM antennas were upgraded from the old horizontally polarised slot antennas to new mixed polarisation antennas, and the transmitter power was doubled.
The new analogue Channel 5 was launched in 1997, but this was never transmitted from Wenvoe. It was presumably thought that the 125 kW transmitter at Mendip would serve a satisfactory number of homes in Wenvoe's service area. At the time, many homes within range of Mendip already had aerials pointing at it so as to receive the English-only Channel 4 rather than the bilingual English/Welsh S4C transmitted from Wenvoe.
Work began on a new temporary stayed mast on 14 June 2006 and it was completed in September 2006. This carried the analogue signals whilst Wenvoe "A" was to be structurally improved and extended by. Wenvoe "A" was fitted with a new high-power digital antenna and a full reserve antenna. New high-power digital TV transmitters were installed in the buildings, which would allow Wenvoe "A" to broadcast all six main digital TV multiplexes, as well as a seventh currently proposed by OFCOM after the analogue signals were switched off in 2010.
This mechanical upgrade was completed by the summer of 2009 and Wenvoe "C" was dismantled starting in late August 2009.
Wenvoe's analogue BBC Two service was switched off on 3 March 2010 and the remaining analogue TV services were switched off on 31 March 2010. At this point, Wales had officially completed its switchover to digital TV services.
BBC Radio Wales commenced broadcasting from the Wenvoe Transmitter on 6 December 2011 at 10:39. This replaced the low power VHF Transmitter on the Wenallt Hill which also carried BBC Wales VHF programme on 103.9 MHz to South East Wales up to that point.

Services listed by frequency

Phone services

EE's 4G+ were added to the site first, adding an extra 10MHz of bandwidth on 31st May 2019.
EE 5G has been approved for installation on the Wenvoe Transmitter, and is planned to be installed for coverage in St Nicholas, Culverhouse Cross and Wenvoe on the 1st June 2020.
This is likely to be possible on the original backhaul, which is rated at 100,000 mb/s
The microwave backup links to Wenallt are likely to need upgrading, through. This is because they are rated at only 10,000 mb/s and will be limited to the bandwidth available on the Wenallt site, which will be affected by the Copthorne Hotel site, which uses Wenallt as primary backhaul.
O2 and Vodafone's 4G+ were both added to the site, adding an extra 10MHz and 15MHz of bandwidth, in October 2019. They were most likely both added at the same time due to O2 and Vodafone's mast sharing programme, CTIL.
O2 have very poor performance, and Vodafone do too, due to the lack of backhaul capacity.
Three do not broadcast from the Wenvoe Transmitter, likely to be because of their HSPA+ mast on the electricity pylon along the 5-mile motorway to Barry from Sycamore Cross.

Analogue television

15 August 1952 - 9 February 1964

9 February 1964 - 12 September 1965

The second mast came into service carrying the BBC Wales service.
FrequencyVHFkWService
5V100BBC1 West
13V200BBC Wales

12 September 1965 - April 1970

The first UHF 625-line television service started from Wenvoe. This required the installation of a Band V antenna at the top of the mast, replacing the 1952 Band I antenna that had originally been sited there. The new Band I antenna was brought into service on 8 December 1964, and was sited immediately below the Band V antenna and above the Band II antenna. This put it in close proximity with the fixings of the top deck of guy wires, requiring some careful engineering so as not to affect the radiation pattern adversely.
FrequencyVHFUHFkWService
5V100BBC1
13V200BBC1 Wales
51500BBC2 Wales†

† Monochrome initially, colour TV service started September 1967.

April 1970 - 1 November 1982

† Monochrome initially, colour production at BBC One Wales started 9 July 1970.

1 November 1982 - 1st Quarter 1983

Channel Four launched across the UK. Being in Wales, Wenvoe transmitted the S4C variant.
FrequencyVHFUHFkWService
5V100BBC1
13V200BBC1 Wales
41500HTV Wales
44500BBC1 Wales
47500S4C
51500BBC2 Wales

1st Quarter 1983 - 3 January 1985

The 405-line BBC1 Wales service on Band III from Wenvoe was discontinued early. The off-air 405-line relays at Abergavenny, Carmarthen and Llanelli had been decommissioned the previous year. This left Llandrindod Wells and Kilvey Hill as the last surviving 405-line BBC Wales transmitters classed as relays of Wenvoe.
405-line transmissions from Kilvey Hill and Llanidloes were due to shut in the second quarter of 1983, leaving Llandrindod Wells to continue alone until January 1985.
FrequencyVHFUHFkWService
5V100BBC1
41500HTV Wales
44500BBC1 Wales
47500S4C
51500BBC2 Wales

3 January 1985 - 15 November 1998

The 405-line VHF television system was shut down across the whole UK, and until the start of digital television services, Wenvoe's TV output was 625-lines on UHF only.
FrequencyUHFkWService
41500HTV Wales
44500BBC One Wales
47500S4C
51500BBC Two Wales

Analogue and digital television

15 November 1998 - 3 March 2010

This was the initial roll-out for digital television using the DVB-T system. The transmitter frequencies and power outputs were chosen not to interfere with the UHF TV channels, but to be received with the same aerial-group. The QAM constellations and number of carriers were changed around 2002 after the collapse of ITV Digital as the service was taken over by the Freeview consortium.
FrequencyUHFkWServiceSystem
3010BBC DVB-T
345Digital 3&4 DVB-T
40-5SDN DVB-T
41500ITV1 Wales PAL System I
43-5Arqiva DVB-T
44500BBC One WalesPAL System I
46-5Arqiva DVB-T
47500S4CPAL System I
50-5BBC DVB-T
51500BBC Two WalesPAL System I

3 March 2010 – 31 March 2010

Analogue BBC Two Wales on channel 51 closed after 45 years of service, and ITV1 Wales was moved from channel 41 to that channel for what would be its final month of service.
Multiplex 1 from channel 30 was renamed BBC A and moved to channel 41+. In addition to the power increase to 100 kW ERP, it was reconfigured to 64QAM and 8k carriers, which resulted in a service area similar to the old analogue transmissions but with much more bandwidth available than Multiplex 1 ever had.
For the duration of the switchover, all the channels carried on Multiplex B were duplicated on this new PSB1 multiplex.
Channel 30 was re-used for Multiplex C, freeing Multiplex C's old allocation at channel 43-
FrequencyUHFkWServiceSystem
305Arqiva DVB-T
345Digital 3&4 DVB-T
40-5SDN DVB-T
41+100BBC ADVB-T
44500BBC One WalesPAL System I
46-5Arqiva DVB-T
47500S4CPAL System I
50-5BBC DVB-T
51500ITV1 WalesPAL System I

Digital television

31 March 2010 - 27 April 2011

All remaining analogue television was shut down after 40 years of service. The pre-switchover low-power digital transmissions were upgraded to full power and configured to 64QAM and 8k carriers, with frequency changes and with new names for the multiplexes:
FrequencyUHFkWOperator
3010Arqiva A
41+100BBC A
44100Digital 3&4
47100BBC B†
4950Arqiva B
5110SDN

† High-definition channels; BBC One HD, BBC HD, ITV1 HD and S4C Clirlun using DVB-T2 transmission, coded with MPEG4 100 kW ERP.

27 April 2011 - 23 January 2013

Unusually, the digital switchover at Wenvoe required a third phase to allow time for channels 42 and 45 to be cleared at Ridge Hill. At this point, Arq A and SDN were shifted fully into the group with a power increase:
FrequencyUHFkWOperator
41+100BBC A
42+50SDN
44100Digital 3&4
4550Arqiva A
47100BBC B
4950Arqiva B

23 January 2013 - 10 December 2013

As a side-effect of frequency-changes elsewhere in the region to do with clearance of the 800 MHz band for 4G mobile phone use, Wenvoe's "Arqiva B" multiplex was moved from channel 49 to channel 39. This was to allow channel 49 to be taken over at a future date by the Mendip transmitter.
FrequencyUHFkWOperator
3950Arqiva B
41+100BBC A
42+50SDN
44100Digital 3&4
4550Arqiva A
47100BBC B

10 December 2013 - 24 June 2020

Following changes in the 700 MHz Band on 15 May and 6 June 2019, the Arqiva COM7 multiplex is transmitted on UHF Channel 55 and the COM 8 multiplex is on UHF Channel 56. These multiplexes carry additional HD services. The Local TV Multiplex is on UHF Channel 37 and commenced antenna tests around 1 December 2013.
FrequencyUHFkWOperatorSystem
3710Local TVDVB-T
3950Arqiva BDVB-T
41+100BBC ADVB-T
42+50SDNDVB-T
44100Digital 3&4DVB-T
4550Arqiva ADVB-T
47100BBC BDVB-T2
5540.7COM7DVB-T2
5640.7COM8DVB-T2

25 June 2020 - present

Following changes in the 700 MHz Band, on 22 June 2020, the Arqiva COM8 multiplex was switched off permanently on UHF Channel 56.
FrequencyUHFkWOperatorSystem
3710Local TVDVB-T
3950Arqiva BDVB-T
41+100BBC ADVB-T
42+50SDNDVB-T
44100Digital 3&4DVB-T
4550Arqiva ADVB-T
47100BBC BDVB-T2
5540.7COM7DVB-T2

Analogue radio (VHF FM)

1956 - Winter 1981http://www.bbceng.info/Eng_Inf/EngInf_7.pdf

Wenvoe used a rather erratic set of frequencies at the start, bandplan changes agreed in 1978 were brought into play in 1981.
FrequencykWService
89.95 MHz113BBC Light Programme
92.125 MHz113BBC Home Service
94.3 MHz113BBC Welsh Home Service
96.8 MHz113BBC Third Programme

Present

Digital Radio (DAB)