Campaign begins to keep BBC Medium-wave broadcasts

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A week after the BBC ended transmitters on 198 kHz longwave, a campaign is beginning to ensure that the BBC’s medium-wave broadcasts do not face the same fate. Although we continue to campaign for the reinstatement of longwave broadcasts in some form, medium-wave represents a next-best option, providing essential radio service in more remote regions and a reliable backup option when other means of communication fail.

A new petition has been launched on the change.org platform, calling on the BBC and government to work together to keep BBC medium-wave, which had been slated for potential shut-down as early as 2027. This includes transmissions on Radio 5 across the UK, Radio Scotland and Radio Wales. The image at the top of this page shows the Burghead transmitter, which broadcasts both Radio 5 on 693 kHz and Radio Scotland on 810 kHz. The older petition to Keep Longwave also remains active, calling on the BBC to reinstate longwave transmissions, perhaps using the BBC World Service, as it can carry signals across much of Europe.

Medium-wave signals are significantly shorter than longwave, and cannot travel as far. However, they still retain many advantages over FM and digital broadcasts. Medium-wave can travel across entire regions of the UK, meaning that only 22 transmitters are needed to cover the entirety of the country with the national medium-wave signal for Radio 5 on 693 and 909 kHz. Indeed, two frequencies are used for this because the areas of coverage from the 22 transmitters overlap, and this helps prevent interference. Compare this with the 214 transmitters needed to provide national FM coverage. Overall, we would rate longwave as the best means of national broadcasting, but Medium-wave is a close second, as shown in the table below.

RadioLWMWFMDABInternet
RangeExcellentGoodPoorPoorExcellent
Rural availabilityExcellentGoodPoorPoorPoor
ReliabilityExcellentExcellentGoodGoodPoor
Speech qualityExcellentExcellentExcellentGoodGood
Music qualityGoodGoodExcellentGoodGood
Energy EfficiencyExcellentGoodPoorPoorTerrible
Cost to transmitExcellentExcellentPoorGoodN/A*
Cost to receiveExcellentExcellentGoodPoorPoor
Table: relative strengths and weaknesses of different means of broadcasting (*technically, the internet – e.g. BBC Sounds or ‘smart speaker’ – is not broadcasting and is not transmitted as such, as it requires a server to send information directly to a computer)

The long-range transmission of medium-wave means that it can reach many remote areas that FM and digital signals cannot, albeit not the extent of longwave. It also means that in the event of a local power cut which knocks out internet, DAB, FM and mobile signals, MW can continue to provide news and information – a feature that may be imperative in times of national crisis. Unlike longwave, medium-wave in the UK is broadcast from modern transmitters that are not likely to fail in the near future and do not need significant re-engineering to continue working into the future. Plus, a national MW channel is less energy-intensive and less costly for the BBC to broadcast compared to a national FM signal. For all these reasons we believe that the BBC would continue to support MW broadcasts were public support for the platform to be made clear.

The BBC suggested in 2022 that Radio 5 Live might leave Medium-wave in 2027, but in the intervening years no further announcements have been made on the subject. The closure this month of transmitters at Redruth and Folkestone in the south of England are not part of a gradual close-down of Radio 5 on medium-wave. Rather, these were top-up transmitters on low power intended to serve areas where coverage on Radio 5 was poor because of interference from medium-wave broadcasts from Continental Europe. With the end of those broadcasts, the Redruth and Folkestone transmitters became redundant and listeners have been advised to retune to Radio 5 from other nearby transmitters. ‘To continue listening to BBC Radio 5 Live in the Folkestone Area, please retune your radio to 909 Medium Wave’ says a message on the BBC’s reception website.

Many of those with older radios – including older car radios – would benefit from the continuation of medium-wave broadcasts, especially if they are fans of sport or seek a reliable source of news when travelling through rural areas. AM radio, including medium-wave, suits itself especially well to this use, providing a rich sound for spoken word programmes that is often preferred to the squeaky-clean sound of digital radio, and without the hiss and garble of FM and DAB in areas of poor reception. But it is in emergencies that AM radio comes into its own: in the United States, it is being mandated that new cars retain AM reception capabilities for this very reason.

At the campaign to Keep AM Alive in the UK, we would like to see similar considerations made by the UK government. As part of an upcoming Radio Review, we would like to see the continuation by the BBC of at least one nationwide medium-wave signal made mandatory for the sake of national security. We would also like to see frequencies for the BBC’s medium-wave services mentioned at least occasionally on-air, as was previously the case, so that the public remains aware of where to access these services. Telling people to simply ‘ask your smart speaker’ to play the radio will be no good in an emergency in the instance of a power cut or when fragile internet connections fail. Good old-fashioned medium-wave remains the best fallback option for nationwide broadcasts, and should be retained for this reason even if FM transmissions are brought to a close during the 2030s.

We would love to see the resurrection of longwave to provide nationwide radio coverage. In its absence, however, medium-wave remains the next best option. Please support our petition to keep medium-wave, and help keep the future of UK radio secure for everyone’s benefit.

13 responses to “Campaign begins to keep BBC Medium-wave broadcasts”

  1. inspiring26db9e4d72 Avatar
    inspiring26db9e4d72

    transmission on all wave bands should be kept, especially the long wave( which they’ve stopped (shit heads))

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  2. jovial41a5d83dc2 Avatar
    jovial41a5d83dc2

    Hopefully Medium Wave can be saved; it’s interesting how you say the sound quality for music is poor on AM; as a strong AM signal can sound better than FM. Also I’ve found that Polskie Radio One (225KHz) comes in fairly strong overnight and frequently plays music.

    Just tuning through the MW band on my Sony radio; it’s quite surprising how many stations can be received at night; both national, regional and from overseas.

    SquiddyGaming 🦑

    Twitter: http://twitter.com/Squidygame

    Website: http://151.244.232.25/

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    1. t_thornes Avatar

      Yes, I rather prefer music on AM personally, especially on a good quality radio, but I believe that’s not an opinion shared by many, hence why Radios 1, 2 and 3 left AM in the 1990s but 4 and 5 stayed on it. Interested to hear about the Polskie Radio One reception!

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      1. jovial41a5d83dc2 Avatar
        jovial41a5d83dc2

        I still think it’s interesting that those stations started off on AM; there’s some music stations on AM but most are either specialist music or possibly pirates.

        Polskie Radio One is quite a good station; although I can’t understand Polish.

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      2. AMradiofan Avatar
        AMradiofan

        I’m sure there were many ex-pats who were sad when Radios 1, 2 and 3 went FM-only in the early 90s. Now Radio 4 LW has gone, leaving only Radio 5 Live and Talksport for European listeners. The BBC have even blocked international access to BBC Sounds (which many overseas listeners would gladly pay for at a time when the BBC are constantly pleading poverty)!

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  3. Stephen Avatar
    Stephen

    BBC Radio 4 on 198 kHz was a lifeline in southern Ireland.

    What medium-wave transmission penetrates that den of iniquity?

    (Slight joke intended !!)

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  4. Varyar Avatar
    Varyar

    Signed!
    I’m still trying to tune my radio to 198 kHz in the hope of picking up a signal. Will I be in for a surprise? It’s unlikely, but I really do hope that at least the medium-wave signal will remain on air. Perhaps I’ll manage to build a receiver sensitive enough to pick it up. I haven’t listened to the BBC since the LW signal went off the air.

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  5. John Golding Avatar

    Stopping BBC shutting down Medium Wave Wireless broadcasts & eventually the transmitters

    Dear Tobias,

    I agree, stop the BBC doing this wrecking. BBC have already shut down longwave. 

    We pay for them but the BBC are arrogant. 

    Best wishes,

    John

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  6. Robert Avatar
    Robert

    ht seem odd, but I can hear BBC MW from Northern Spain, and it’s not a dedicated receiving station. Just a humble XHData D-328, with pointer near 1000 in MW, from 23:00 Spanish time. It’s not as clear as LW but can listen to it.

    A pity if some stupid businessmen axe it as well

    Best regards

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  7. deliciouslymoond7d8760ae9 Avatar
    deliciouslymoond7d8760ae9

    When the Longwave transmitter was closed we were told we would still be able to listen on FM… I live in France and there one receives French radio transmitted on their transmitter… I paid my licence fee every year from 1967 until I sold my UK home in 2024 and happy to continue for services. So as I live in an area that does not have good online signals I have said Bye, bye to my BBC listening after 77 years. The area of BROADcasting has ended and the new NARROWcast services has lost the BEEB many listeners… Vivienne kincaid

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  8. Jonathan Snowden Avatar

    The closure of Radio 5 live on 909 and 693 has already begun. Even if they argue the sound quality is “not acceptable” the BBC should keep the option to use medium wave and perhaps use it for DRM broadcasting, which works well on a bandwidth of 9kHz. At the moment, Five Live in the car from our local transmitter (Barrow-in-Furness) is excellent. If I use my phone and bluetooth it to the car radio, I am at the mercy of poor mobile signal coverage, especially since the big phone companies switched off 3G, leaving areas like ours with a patchwork of 4G and 5G that dips without warning.

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  9. AMradiofan Avatar
    AMradiofan

    I believe Medium Wave absolutely has a future, even though Long Wave clearly has the edge in breadth of coverage. I’m astonished that Long Wave never took off in large countries like the USA and Australia, given its natural ability to travel such vast distances.

    Medium Wave is a funny one. It travels further than FM broadcasts and is still better than FM for portable listening, but is somewhat prone to interference (particularly after dark). I’m in Wales but receive Radio Scotland on 810kHz far clearer than Radio Wales on 882kHz – possibly due to differences in transmitter power. Also, Radio Wales now only has one MW transmitter – the others were closed a few years ago.

    I get a strong, clear, bassy signal (comparable with ex-Radio 4 LW) from Manx Radio on 1368kHz, especially on the car radio, but Radio 5 Live on 909kHz is variable – suffering from intermittent but frequent echo, along with rising and falling volume (I believe this is a ‘ghosting’ effect caused by radio sets receiving simultaneous broadcasts on the same frequency from different transmitters which are ‘competing’ against each other). I can also pick up Radio 5 on 693kHz (presumably from Droitwich), which doesn’t have that ghosting, but it’s always been a far weaker signal for me than on 909kHz. 909 is very clear when I go to Yorkshire, probably because Moorside Edge transmitter is much closer there. I get Radio Cumbria on 837kHz very well during the day (it fades at night, while even Manx Radio suddenly disappears just after midnight). I can pick up TalkSport on 1053, 1071, 1089 and 1107kHz – the latter two are very clear at all times and much better than 5 Live, with 1089 being slightly stronger. I believe 1053 comes from Droitwich and 1107 from Wallasey, 1089 must be Moorside Edge and 1071 Wrekenton. (Source: https://tx.mb21.co.uk/)

    At certain times I can pick up the low-powered Radio 5 Live relay on 990kHz from Tywyn, as well as Radio Cumbria on 756kHz and Radio Caroline on 648kHz (which only officially covers Southeast England, though they keep trying to get Ofcom permission to increase the power).

    I always got a good Radio 4 signal on 720kHz MW in the car (similar quality to 198 LW), until the BBC removed Radio 4 from its MW transmitters a couple of years ago (another huge mistake!).

    Manx Radio is often my go-to in the car, they play a good variety of music – not just pop, but traditional and new-age Celtic (5pm Fridays on MW only), classical/light music (Thursdays at 9pm, FM/digital only) and there’s a very fun 1960s-themed programme (‘Carnaby Street’ on Saturday mornings, both frequencies). They also have regular news bulletins, covering UK and international news as well as Isle of Man issues. They do mention their AM frequency on-air (and sometimes even the 25kW power), but sadly their website indicates that they hope to retire the AM transmitter at some point!

    I think the BBC are far more hesitant of retiring Radio 5 Live on MW than they were with Radio 4 LW, because there is no other analogue option for it. If it closes on MW it will become a digital-only station. Also, because that station’s commercial rival TalkSport still has large MW coverage (despite shutting a few transmitters in the last few years, they have no plans to close the remaining 11), the BBC no doubt fear being placed at a disadvantage if they allow such closure. The BBC have, however, removed several of their local stations from MW. As you say, 22 transmitters for 5 Live is not a lot compared to 214 sites for FM (and a whopping 416 for DAB!), and the transmission equipment is modern, so it can’t be costing them that much. It’s a pity that LW at Droitwich wasn’t updated to solid-state, or it might still be running.

    It’s quite fun tuning to the MW band at night and being able to pick up stations from the Continent (I guess the waves travel further at night due to less sun interference). But those incoming foreign stations at night must be what causes increased interference with the domestic ones.

    Just about all analogue radios currently produced have MW, even car manufacturers are still incorporating it into their modern touch-screen radios, so let’s hope that one at least has a future.

    I’m no Luddite – in fact, my go-to speech station when there’s nothing on Radio 4 is Radio 4 Extra, which is (and always has been) a digital-only station. I recently installed a DAB adapter in my fairly old car so I can listen to it on the move. I’m also a regular listener of catch-up on BBC Sounds, on my phone or PC. I simply recognise the benefits of analogue radio and continue to take advantage of them when I can. Surely the ‘old’ and ‘new’ can co-exist?

    I think your petition should be on the UK Parliament website, as that would gain more traction and potentially have an influence on politicians. 10,000 signatures would trigger a Government response and 100,000 signatures a parliamentary debate.

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  10. amstereofan Avatar

    It makes no sense in a digital age to keep BBC going on MW with a good national DAB and FM network available. The same goes for the waste of bandwidth talksport still hogging 4 frequencies on MW in 2026, absolutely ridiculous… I’m all for sensible and reasonable use of MW ie low power community stations on MW but it’s pointless national networks are still using the band…

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