This is a dolby digital discreet array of signals. So not out of phase. Was same yesterday during Jamie. Sort it out! Please sort it out as fast as you can. Log In. Contact us Sign up for newsletters. Log In Register now My account. By Jaymi McCann. September 29, am Updated am. However, days after E4 first went down, viewers are complaining that the channel is still experiencing some technical difficulties.
Here's what you need to know. Freeview, Channel 4 and Channel 5 went down overnight on September 25 after the transmission centre in West London was evacuated over a fire alarm. Reports from furious viewers suggested widespread problems with the channels and the TV platform started shortly after 6. Both TV and online viewers were left perplexed after being greeted with an "off air" message and a blank screen. The server connection issues hit thousands of viewers as firefighters rushed to the Broadcast Centre in White City shortly after 6.
Getting adverts on channel 4 shows, even though I pay the subscription fee to avoid this. Any idea when this will be fixed? September 28, For at-home viewers, there's little you can do to troubleshoot your issues — so just keep in mind that fiddling with an aerial, or shouting down the phone at customer service, likely won't do much for now.
The myriad of issues suggests that a technical fix will be complex, and damaged broadcasting hardware — if a brief fire did manage to do some damage — will take longer than a couple of days to address. However, the issues seem to be inconsistent across viewers, so some may fare better than others. We'd recommend checking back each day to see how your favorite channels are doing, or keeping an eye on the Channel 4 Twitter account , to see what the latest pronouncements are.
If you need a TV fix on the meantime, check out the best TV streaming services to consider spending your time on. He's spent the past three years reporting on TVs, projectors and smart speakers as well as gaming and VR — including a stint as the website's Home Cinema Editor — and has been interviewed live on both BBC World News and Channel News Asia, discussing the future of transport and 4K resolution televisions respectively.
As a graduate of English Literature and persistent theatre enthusiast, he'll usually be found forcing Shakespeare puns into his technology articles, which he thinks is what the Bard would have wanted.
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