Everything about The Transmitter Hamburg-billstedt totally explained
The
Transmitter Hamburg-Billstedt is a
broadcasting facility in
Hamburg-
Billstedt, established in
1934. It is owned and operated by the
Norddeutscher Rundfunk public broadcasting service, but open to competitors, too.
From 1934 to
1949 it used as transmission
aerial a wire hung up in a tower of wood. This tower had until
1941 a height of 145 metres. In 1941 its height was reduced to 84.5 metres and in 1949 it was demolished.
In
1940 a second aerial in form of a triangle area aerial was built. This aerial allowing transmitting on a wide frequency range was demolished in the
Fifties.
In 1949/50 a 198 metre high guyed steelframework mast with a
cage aerial and a transmission aerial for
FM and TV on its top was erected. From this mast, which was partly destroyed by a storm during its erection in December 1949, between
1953 and
1962 the programme of the "Deutschen Langwellensender" (German
longwave transmitter) was broadcasted.
This programme was transmitted in a special modulation mode, the compatible single sideband modulation, allowing smaller bandwidth and the possibility of reception with conventional AM receivers.
Because this mast was under high voltage the aerials for FM and TV on its top were fed via a
Goubot line.
In the first half of the
1960s this aerial mast was demounted and the actual installation built. It consists of:
- Guyed steel tube mast for FM and TV, built in 1960. This radio mast has a diameter of 2 metres. It was 255 metres high in 1960 and grew to 300 metres in the meantime.
- Guyed tubular mast radiator for mediumwave. This mast, which is 184 metres tall, is insulated against ground. It is designed as double feedable fading-reducing aerial and therefore equipped with a separation insulator in a height of 101 metres
- Guyed steel tube mast with a height of 120.9 metres and a diameter of 0.7 metres. This mast was built in 1939. It stood until 1963 in Osterloog and was dismounted in this year and rebuilt in Hamburg-Billstedt. It is insulated against ground and used as back-up aerial for mediumwave.
- Guyed steel framework mast with a height of 77 metres insulated against ground. This mast built in 1979 is used as reflector mast for the 184 metre high medium wave transmission mast. Its construction was necessary because of the conditions of the waveplan of Geneva.
Since
1967, the
University of Hamburg has been using the 304 m-mast as a five-level
meteorological measurement platform, with
thermometers,
hygrometers, and
anemometers mounted at various heights up to 250 m above ground. The atmospheric variables are sampled at a high temporal resolution to allow computation of
boundary layer turbulent fluxes of
heat and
momentum. Live data and time series are also made available via the
World Wide Web.
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