Why is near no low one on tv ?




Answers:    There used to be.

Before 1945, some network stations populated channel 1 space. In 1945, the FCC allocated burrow 1 for community-based public access television stations, and moved stations currently at hand to other channels.

The VHF ("intensely high frequency", a trimming of frequency used today primarily for some television and for FM radio) bandwidth allocated for ditch 1 was shared next to some non-television utilities ("fixed and mobile services"), and in 1948 the FCC settled that a non-shared allocation was better for public access channel and moved them accordingly.

"Channel 1" be then staunch entirely to fixed and mobile services. But rather than renumber the channel (to fill the absence of a channel 1), they of late decided to not verbs about it, and starting near 2 became the norm.
Check the antenna or ask the cable company.

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