The Clarkstown radio transmitter was a longwave radio transmitter in County Meath, Ireland. The mast was located approximately 3.5 kilometres (2.2 mi) east of the village of Summerhill, in a field south of the R156 regional road at Clarkstown. At 248 metres high, it was more than double the height of the Spire in Dublin.
Location | Clarkstown, County Meath |
---|---|
Mast height | 248 metres (814 ft) |
Coordinates | 53°27′46″N 6°40′39″W / 53.462649°N 6.677589°W |
Built | 1988 |
Demolished | 2023 |
History
editConstructed in 1988 for the transmission of Atlantic 252 on 252 kHz, it used one 248-metre (814') high guyed steel framework mast with triangular cross section, insulated from ground. The original transmitters were two 300 kilowatt Continental transmitters built by Varian Associates of Dallas. These were replaced in 2007 by a single 300 kilowatt Transradio TRAM 300L transmitter.[1] The ground around the mast and the entire transmission site bed are lined with copper for conductivity. The site has an ITU-cleared transmission power of 500 kW by day and 100 kW at night but was later only capable of operating at 300 kW by day and 100 kW at night.
Atlantic 252 ceased operations on 2 January 2002 and sports radio station TEAMtalk 252 briefly took over the frequency for a few months in 2002. The transmitter was later taken over by RTÉ Networks Limited (now 2RN). It was used for the AM version of RTÉ Radio 1 on 252 kHz from 2004 to 2023, and was the sole source of RTÉ Radio 1 on AM from 24 March 2008, when the medium wave Tullamore transmitter on 567 kHz was taken off air.,[2] to 2023.
In 2007, the transmitter was carrying a Digital Radio Mondiale multiplex overnight, featuring Radio 1, RTÉ Digital Radio Sport, RTÉ Digital Radio News and the World Radio Network, before reverting to AM transmission for the daytime. DRM tests since ceased, with AM transmissions operating full-time once again until closedown in 2023.
On 24 September 2014, RTÉ announced that broadcasting of RTÉ Radio 1 on 252 kHz would cease on 27 October 2014,[3] however following representations from Irish listeners in the UK and others, that date was postponed.[4] On 31 March 2023, RTÉ announced that the longwave service would be discontinued on 14 April of that year.[5][6] As planned, this did happen.
The mast was felled on Thursday 27 July 2023.[7]
Timeline
edit- 1988: Construction of Clarkstown Transmitter by Radio Tara (RTÉ/RTL)
- 1989: Launch of Atlantic 252 on 1 September 1989, a pop music station aimed at UK and Irish market
- 2002: 2 January, closure of Atlantic 252
- 2002: 11 March, launch of TEAMtalk 252, aimed at UK and Irish market
- 2002: 30 June, TEAMtalk 252 closes
- 2002: RTÉ take over the running of the Clarkstown Transmitter following demise of TEAMtalk
- 2004: January, official launch of RTÉ Radio 1 on Long Wave
- 2004: While the Tullamore transmitter was offline for maintenance Clarkstown provided Radio 1's AM service
- 2007: Major upgrade of transmitter
- 2007: RTÉ runs DRM tests, in parallel with analogue AM service
- 2008: 24 March, closure of RTÉ Medium Wave service leaving 252 Long Wave as the only AM Broadcast by RTÉ. Services which were on Medium Wave transferred to Long Wave.
- 2008: 1 December, launch of RTÉ Radio 1 Extra which was extra content not broadcast on FM was now relayed on Long Wave 252
- 2014: RTÉ announces plans to close Long Wave 252, September 2014
- 2014: RTÉ postpones closure plans until 2017 [8]
- 2017: RTÉ announce a further postponement of closure plans until June 2019
- 2019: Oireachtas Communications Committee announce the rebuilding of the antenna system and postponement of closure plans at least until 2021
- 2023: March 31, RTÉ announces the closure of 252 kHz[9]
- 2023: April 15, RTÉ stops broadcasting on long wave
- 2023: July 27, The Clarkstown Mast is demolished
Gallery
edit-
Close up of the mast
-
Wider shot of the mast
-
Guy lines stabilizing the mast
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ DRM Long Wave Transmitter in Summerhill (Ireland), archived from the original on 5 December 2014, retrieved 22 September 2023
{{citation}}
: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link) - ^ Noonan, Laura (19 January 2008). "Anger as RTÉ to switch off medium wave band". Irish Independent. Retrieved 18 December 2010.
- ^ "About RTÉ".
- ^ "RTÉ Longwave 252 to stay until closure by June 2019 – with digital replacement planned".
- ^ RTÉ Radio 1 long wave 252 service to end next month RTÉ News, 2023-03-31.
- ^ Keep Listening - How to Listen to RTÉ's Radio Services
- ^ "VIDEO: Going, going, gone!… Old Atlantic 252 mast in Moynalvey comes down". Meath Chronicle. 27 July 2023. Retrieved 27 July 2023.
- ^ "RTÉ's longwave service extended until 2017". 19 December 2014.
- ^ RTÉ Radio 1 names the day to turn off 252 Long Wave Radio Today, March 31, 2023.
External links
edit- https://web.archive.org/web/20070929125352/http://tx.mb21.co.uk/features/252/summerhill.shtml – pictures from mb21
- Summerhill Transmitter at Structurae
- http://www.skyscraperpage.com/diagrams/?b45496
- IAA information on the mast here (page 20).
- https://web.archive.org/web/20041113154742/http://members.lycos.co.uk/gregsradio/newpage0.html