TV Home Forum

40th anniversary of the ITV strike

10 August – 24 October 1979 (August 2019)

This site closed in March 2021 and is now a read-only archive
CO
commseng
Didn't the IBA supply backup generators to the early ILR stations for their MW transmitters after a while?
The majority of listening was to MW rather than VHF back then.
DV
DVB Cornwall
I believe that the ITCA (Independent Television Companies Association) proposed to the IBA that the transmitters be shut down in mid September rather than continue with the caption. This suggestion was denied by the IBA primarily due to fears that post strike some wouldn’t come back on line properly resulting in more expense and delay in re-establishment of service.
TJ
TedJrr
I believe that the ITCA (Independent Television Companies Association) proposed to the IBA that the transmitters be shut down in mid September rather than continue with the caption. This suggestion was denied by the IBA primarily due to fears that post strike some wouldn’t come back on line properly resulting in more expense and delay in re-establishment of service.


Maybee also that the IBA continued to chatge rentals to the ITCA's members.....
MA
Markymark
I believe that the ITCA (Independent Television Companies Association) proposed to the IBA that the transmitters be shut down in mid September rather than continue with the caption. This suggestion was denied by the IBA primarily due to fears that post strike some wouldn’t come back on line properly resulting in more expense and delay in re-establishment of service.


The IBA would have been reluctant to switch off the transmitters, at least not weekdays daytime, aerial riggers needed to have all three channels present to set up aerials and distribution systems properly.

In fact I seem to recall 1979 was about the time BBC 2 shut down their transmitters between 10:30 and 16:00, which the trade weren't happy about. The BBC relented in August 1982, when C4 tests started, otherwise that would have caused a lot of grief.
TedJrr and Closedown gave kudos
MA
Markymark
Didn't the IBA supply backup generators to the early ILR stations for their MW transmitters after a while?
The majority of listening was to MW rather than VHF back then.


I'm not sure, I think the IBA had the facility to turn up on site with a genny, if the power failure was long term ?
They did that at Guildford in Oct 1987 for County Sound, that Tx site that also carried TV and BBC National Radio and was off for 4-5 days. I suspect if BBC Surrey had existed back then, the Beeb would have done the same for that (but not the other services)
PP
Po6xyPop77
Myina posted:
Didn’t the strike cause a baby boom?


No. For those of us who were alive in the 70s, we'd had long winter evenings without any power, (the smell of candle wax still takes me back to those days) I'd sat at school in lessons wearing my coat, because the heating didn't work (because there was a power cut and/or the oil hadn't turned up) and my parents had lived through WWII (my mother's house had its roof blown clean off by a bomb) , so quite honestly having no ITV for 10 weeks really really wasn't a disaster.

Oh, grow up, Debbie Downer! Rolling Eyes Can't you just be grateful that it’s 40+ years ago? Anyway, I'm nearly finished my mock of the apology caption.
SH
Sh1ruba
Myina posted:
Myina posted:
Didn’t the strike cause a baby boom?


No. For those of us who were alive in the 70s, we'd had long winter evenings without any power, (the smell of candle wax still takes me back to those days) I'd sat at school in lessons wearing my coat, because the heating didn't work (because there was a power cut and/or the oil hadn't turned up) and my parents had lived through WWII (my mother's house had its roof blown clean off by a bomb) , so quite honestly having no ITV for 10 weeks really really wasn't a disaster.

Oh, grow up, Debbie Downer! Rolling Eyes Can't you just be grateful that it’s 40+ years ago? Anyway, I'm nearly finished my mock of the apology caption.

Debbie Downer's actually a sketch from Saturday Night Live , if you guys didn't know.


The phrase probably originated from that skit.
TedJrr, Josh and MrDexB gave kudos
PP
Po6xyPop77
*I basically finished my mock. *
(If you can't see anything, click this link: https://imgur.com/a/4CX4Idv
BR
Brekkie
Well that was worth waiting for. Wink
TIGHazard, rob and BBI45 gave kudos
IS
Inspector Sands
I believe that the ITCA (Independent Television Companies Association) proposed to the IBA that the transmitters be shut down in mid September rather than continue with the caption. This suggestion was denied by the IBA primarily due to fears that post strike some wouldn’t come back on line properly resulting in more expense and delay in re-establishment of service.

Would that have been an issue in 1979? The transmitters were switched off every night and always came back on. Probably more of a issue with the older 405 line ones too

It was an issue years later once things went 24 hours. I remember being told that when the original BBC UHF transmitters were replaced they had trouble turning the outgoing ones off as the switches that once were used every night hadn't been used for years and wouldn't turn off. They had to turn the main breakers off instead
CO
commseng
It used to take about 25 minutes to bring the whole BBC chain up, from Crystal Palace to Baltasound, which is why pulse and bar was radiated for 30 minutes before Test Card F or Ceefax in Vision.
DV
DVB Cornwall

Would that have been an issue in 1979? The transmitters were switched off every night and always came back on. Probably more of a issue with the older 405 line ones too

It was an issue years later once things went 24 hours. I remember being told that when the original BBC UHF transmitters were replaced they had trouble turning the outgoing ones off as the switches that once were used every night hadn't been used for years and wouldn't turn off. They had to turn the main breakers off instead


I'm presuming that the worry was a prolonged switch off rather than overnight. Some equipment would have been live during the overnight closure, heating circuitry etc. especially on the high powered ones. A complete shutdown would be different.

Newer posts