salsadancer7 said:
See....to me, that does not make sense that some cities have some channels and other cities don't...!! I have my locals, hbo, show, starz, discovery, inhd1, inhd2, espn, espn2, nflhd, hdnet and hdnet movies. Now if I didn't have the total package, it drops by 3. I would THINK that Adelphia would give EVERYONE that has the availability of hd the same thing throughout the US. But I guess if it makes sense...why do it right...?
I think there are a couple of things that would explain why certain Adelphia systems have more channels, in this case HD channels, than others.
1. Bandwidth: Some Adelphia systems may still be running on old, non-upgraded 600mhz head-ends, which can facilitate far less channels than an a head-end that has been upgraded to 860mhz. And because of this, many Adelphia systems want to offer as many SD channels as possible right now, since HDTV customers are still the minority, and thus the HD Tier is thin.
2. TV Market Ranking: This kind of determines the bandwidth issue. If your Adelphia system is in a large TV market, or is in the area of a high ranking TV market, Adelphia wants to spend more money upgrading you before they want to spend it on those systems in the smaller markets. I live in the Hartford-New Haven area, which is ranked at #28 in the country. Not to mention we live inbetween the #1 (New York) and #5 (Boston) markets. My Adelphia system is an 860mhz system, and we have every channel that Adelphia has available to it: HBO, SHO, STARZ, CIN, HDNet, HDNet Movies, INHD, INHD2, ESPNHD, ESPNHD2, Discovery HD, NFL HD, plus our local channels.
This is just an observation by me, and may or may not be true, but it seems to make sense to me in explaining why some systems are not getting all the channels that others are getting.