Band V

{{Short description|Radio frequency range}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=December 2014}}

Band V (meaning Band 5) is the name of a radio frequency range within the ultra high frequency part of the electromagnetic spectrum. It is not to be confused with the V band in the extremely high frequency part of the spectrum.

Sources differ on the exact frequency range of UHF Band V. For example, the Broadcast engineer's reference book{{cite book|title=Broadcast engineer's reference book|last=Tozer|first=Edwin Paul J.|authorlink=Edwin Paul J. Tozer|year=2004|publisher=Focal Press|isbn=0-240-51908-6|page=166|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=DL73f4vFeEwC&pg=PA166 |accessdate=2009-05-17}} and the BBC{{cite web|url=http://www.bbc.co.uk/reception/info/pdf/factsheet_tvaerials.pdf|title=Television aerials factsheet|accessdate=2012-07-07|publisher=British Broadcasting Corporation}} define the range as 614 to 854 MHz. The IPTV India Forum define the range as 582 to 806 MHz{{cite web|url=http://www.iptvforum.org.in/prez/trai.pdf|title=Regulatory Intervention for IPTV and Mobile TV|date=2007-11-22|accessdate=2009-05-19|publisher=IPTV India Forum}} and the DVB Worldwide website refers to the range as 585 to 806 MHz.{{cite web|url=http://www.dvb.org/about_dvb/dvb_worldwide/india/index.xml|title=Draft recommendations for mobile TV services issued

|date=2008-01-07|accessdate=2009-05-19|publisher=DVB Worldwide| archiveurl= https://web.archive.org/web/20090508101540/http://www.dvb.org/about_dvb/dvb_worldwide/india/index.xml| archivedate= 8 May 2009 | url-status= live}} Band V is primarily used for analogue and digital (DVB-T & ATSC) television broadcasting, as well as radio microphones and services intended for mobile devices such as DVB-H. With the close-down of analog television services most countries have auctioned off frequencies from 694 MHz and up to 4G cellular network providers.

Television

=Australia=

In Australia UHF channel allocations are 7 MHz wide. Band V includes channels 36 to 69, with base frequencies of 585.5 MHz to 816.5 MHz. More details are available on the television frequencies page.

=New Zealand=

In New Zealand UHF channel allocations are 8 MHz wide. Band V includes digital channels 36 to 49, with base frequencies of 594.0 MHz to 698.0 MHz. More details are available on the television frequencies page.

=United Kingdom=

In the UK, Band V allocations for television are 8 MHz wide, traditionally consisting of 30 channels from UHF 39 to 68 inclusive. There is also a channel 69. Semi-wideband aerials of the group E type cover this entire band.{{cite web|url=http://www.aerialsandtv.com/aerials.html#aerialgroups|title=Aerial Groups / Widebands|accessdate=2009-05-17|publisher=A.T.V. (Aerials and Television)| archiveurl= https://web.archive.org/web/20090423063325/http://www.aerialsandtv.com/aerials.html| archivedate= 23 April 2009 | url-status= live}} However, aerials of types group B and group C/D will cover the lower and upper halves of Band V respectively with higher gain than a group E.

The following table shows TV channel allocations in Band V in the UK.

  • Rows with a yellow background (channels 61–68 inclusive) indicate channels cleared for 4G mobile broadband services following an auction run by the UK spectrum regulator Ofcom in January 2013 and the subsequent award of spectrum (which also included channel 69) to the winning mobile operators on 1 March 2013.{{cite web|url=http://stakeholders.ofcom.org.uk/spectrum/spectrum-awards/awards-archive/completed-awards/800mhz-2.6ghz/|title=800 MHz & 2.6 GHz Combined Award|accessdate=2014-11-21|publisher=The Office of Communications}}
  • Rows with an orange background (channels 49–60 inclusive) indicate channels that are due to be cleared so that from 2022 they can be used by mobile data services. The decision to reallocate these channels was published by Ofcom on 19 November 2014.{{cite web|url=http://stakeholders.ofcom.org.uk/binaries/consultations/700MHz/statement/700-mhz-statement.pdf|title=Decision to make the 700 MHz band available for mobile data - statement|accessdate=2014-11-21|publisher=The Office of Communications}}

class="wikitable"
Channel

! Frequency Range

39614–622 MHz
40622–630 MHz
41630–638 MHz
42638–646 MHz
43646–654 MHz
44654–662 MHz
45662–670 MHz
46670–678 MHz
47678–686 MHz
48686–694 MHz
style="background:orange"

|49

694–702 MHz
style="background:orange"

|50

702–710 MHz
style="background:orange"

|51

710–718 MHz
style="background:orange"

|52

718–726 MHz
style="background:orange"

|53

726–734 MHz
style="background:orange"

|54

734–742 MHz
style="background:orange"

|55

742–750 MHz
style="background:orange"

|56

750–758 MHz
style="background:orange"

|57

758–766 MHz
style="background:orange"

|58

766–774 MHz
style="background:orange"

|59

774–782 MHz
style="background:orange"

|60

782–790 MHz
style="background:yellow"

|61

790–798 MHz
style="background:yellow"

|62

798–806 MHz
style="background:yellow"

|63

806–814 MHz
style="background:yellow"

|64

814–822 MHz
style="background:yellow"

|65

822–830 MHz
style="background:yellow"

|66

830–838 MHz
style="background:yellow"

|67

838–846 MHz
style="background:yellow"

|68

846–854 MHz

=United States=

  • 698–806 MHz: Was auctioned in March 2008; bidders got full use after the transition to digital TV was completed on June 12, 2009 (formerly UHF TV channels 52–69). T-Mobile USA, licensee of "block A" (channels 52 and 57), began using its frequency allotment in 2015, in media markets where TV stations on 51 either did not exist or relocated early.
  • 614–698MHz (TV channels 38–51) will be auctioned in March 2016.

References

{{reflist}}

{{TVRband}}

Category:Radio spectrum

Category:Broadcast engineering

{{tv-tech-stub}}