Heligoland radio tower

Heligoland radio tower is a 113-metre (371 ft) high transmission tower on the island of Heligoland in Germany. It is owned by the Deutsche Telekom.[1] It was constructed in 2000, replacing an older, lower mast that was subsequently demolished, and has some unusual characteristics. It uses a triangular base and, despite being a free-standing tower, is supported by guy wires as well. A few months after its 2000 installation, local authorities sought the sale of municipal land on the Düne area of Heligoland island for private building and operational purposes.[2]

Heligoland radio tower

Besides its use as a microwave radio relay station, it is used for transmitting radio and TV stations as well. It serves the entire island of Helgoland and is a major landmark on the island, and plays a major role in maintaining connections to the mainland.[3] In addition, the collective of Heligoland radio tower and two other towers on the island retain a military air.[4]

Channels

  • Analog radio:[5]
    • NDR 1 Welle Nord - 88.9 MHz (10 W)
    • NDR 2 - 93.4 MHz (10 W)
    • NDR Kultur - 97.0 MHz (10 W)
    • NDR Info - 92.5 MHz (10 W)
    • N-Joy - 91.5 MHz (50 W)
    • Deutschlandfunk - 107.4 MHz (50 W)
    • Deutschlandradio Kultur - 103.0 MHz (50 W)
    • R.SH - 100.0 MHz (50 W)
    • delta radio - 104.5 MHz (50 W)
    • Radio NORA - 101.6 MHz (10 W)
    • Klassik Radio - 89.8 MHz (10 W)
  • Analog television (no longer on air):[6]
    • VHF 6 - ARD (2 W)
    • UHF 21 - ZDF (30 W)
    • UHF 23 - n-tv (30 W)
    • UHF 28 - 3sat (30 W)
    • UHF 34 - Premiere (30 W)
    • UHF 41 - Sat.1 (30 W)
    • UHF 47 - RTL Television (30 W)
    • UHF 52 - VOX (30 W)
    • UHF 54 - NDR Fernsehen (30 W)
    • UHF 56 - DSF (30 W)
    • UHF 60 - Pro7 (30 W)
  • Digital television (DVB-T):[7]
    • UHF 23 - ZDF bouquet (250 W)
    • UHF 39 - NDR bouquet (250 W)
    • UHF 47 - ARD bouquet (250 W)
gollark: βee.
gollark: Hmm, neat. However, βεε you gαlaxtοnic entity.
gollark: Strange.
gollark: ?
gollark: ℝ 𝕚𝕤 𝕥𝕙𝕖 𝕤𝕖𝕥 𝕠𝕗 𝕒𝕝𝕝 𝕣𝕖𝕒𝕝 𝕟𝕦𝕞𝕓𝕖𝕣𝕤.

References

  1. "A short trip of D-KFDI and D-KKGG to Helgoland, May 2009". Archived from the original on 2011-07-19. Retrieved 2010-12-08.
  2. "D-Helgoland: sale of municipal land for specific purposes". Tenders Electronic Daily. December 5, 2000. Document number 000000150618-2000.
  3. Der Spiegel, Volume 19, Part 3 at Google Books
  4. Andrew Billen (September 18, 2000). "Atoll be the day". Evening Standard. A military air is retained by its three radar towers, which seem to say: "Never Again."
  5. http://www.ukwtv.de/sender-tabelle/UKW/Deutschland/Schleswig-Holstein.htm
  6. Wittsmoorliste
  7. http://www.ukwtv.de/sender-tabelle/TV/Deutschland/Schleswig-Holstein.html

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