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1. tivert+(OP)[view] [source] 2023-07-28 19:42:31
> IIRC, it wasn’t uncommon for UHF dials to be continuous while VHF had precise stops and switched directly from channel to channel, so in UHF, as a practical matter, you'd have static between tuned channels, while that was not the case in VHF.

That must have been a pretty old or cheap TV. All the dial TVs I ever used had stops for all the channels, VHF and UHF. And even when I was a kid, pretty much all TVs didn't have dials, but some kind of digitally-controlled analog tuner.

I remember tuning from channel 2 to 60 or so in maybe about a quarter second or less. Definitely so fast I didn't really register it as a delay.

replies(2): >>dragon+35 >>jzb+7a
2. dragon+35[view] [source] 2023-07-28 20:03:25
>>tivert+(OP)
> That must have been a pretty old or cheap TV.

Well, they weren't all old when I used them (some were; TVs were expensive to replace so got kept a while.) Maybe the ones without UHF stops were, though, its been quite a while.

> And even when I was a kid, pretty much all TVs didn't have dials

Likely, you were a kid more recently than I was.

3. jzb+7a[view] [source] 2023-07-28 20:28:07
>>tivert+(OP)
I want to say I remember static between channels, but TBH it's been too many years to say for sure. My parents gave me a 12" black and white TV in the late 70s or very, very early 80s and I want to say it'd had static when switching channels.

I know, though, that I had to adjust the antenna for some channels. The knob did have specific stops, but you had to tinker with the antenna position for some channels.

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