Band I is a range of radio frequency within the very high frequency (VHF) part of the electromagnetic spectrum. The first time there was defined "for simplicity" in Annex 1 of "Final acts of the European Broadcasting Conference in the VHF and UHF bands - Stockholm, 1961". Band I ranges from 47 to 68 MHz for the European Broadcasting Area, and from 54 to 88 MHz for the Americas and it is primarily used for television broadcasting in compliance with ITU Radio Regulations (article 1.38). With the transition to digital TV, most Band I transmitters have already been switched off.
In the UK, Band I was originally used by the BBC for monochrome 405-line television; likewise, the French former 455-line (1937–1939) then 441-line (1943–1956) transmitter on the Eiffel Tower in Paris, and some stations of the French monochrome 819-line system used Band I. Both 405-line and 819-line systems were discontinued in the mid-1980s. Other European countries used Band I for 625-line analogue television, first in monochrome and later in colour.
This was being gradually phased out with the introduction of digital television in the DVB-T standard, which is not defined for VHF Band I, though some older receivers and some modulators do support it.
In the United States, use of this band is for analog NTSC (ended June 12, 2009 for high power stations) and digital ATSC standards (current). Digital television has problems with impulse noise interference, particularly in this band.
| 47-54 MHz |
| 48.5-55.5 MHz |
| 52-59 MHz |
| 54-61 MHz |
| 61-68 MHz |
| 81-88 MHz |
E2A is a channel shifted slightly away from E2 and was used by a limited number of transmitters closer to Eastern Europe. Its use was to limit interference to and from nearby transmitters on channel R1.
Italy used slightly different allocations, such as channel IA and the out of band "channel IC" (video: 82.25 MHz - audio: 87.75 MHz). Channel IC was used by the first transmitter brought in service by the RAI in Turin in the 1950s which was previously used in WW2 by the US to broadcast NTSC TV on channel A6 for military purposes, later donated to Italy, it had its video carrier shifted 1 MHz lower to accommodate the System B standard. This channel was also widely used by private local stations until the switch over to DVB-T.
Some countries such as Ireland (system A, I), France (system E, F, L) and the United Kingdom (system A) did not use system B and therefore used different frequencies for their channels. Some others didn't use Band I at all for terrestrial broadcast television. The fast growing of digital television as well as the susceptibility of this band to interference during E skip events in all European countries was accompanied by the progressive closedown of band I analog transmitters from 2006 to 2020.
| 48.5-56.5 MHz |
| 58-66 MHz |
Russia, Ukraine, Kazakhstan and a few other countries still broadcast analog TV on Band I in 2023.
| 44-50 MHz |
| 54-60 MHz |
| 60-66 MHz |
| 66-72 MHz |
| 76-82 MHz |
| 82-88 MHz |
In Brazil, with the phasing out of the PAL-M analog broadcasts, Am radio stations have been migrated to a new FM radio band between the frequencies from former analog TV channels A5 and A6 (76.1 MHz to 87.5 MHz) called Extended FM or e-FM.
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