Emley Moor has been a transmission site since the earliest days of commercial television in the UK. The present concrete tower is the third antenna support structure to have occupied the site. The first permanent transmitter built there was for
ITV, covering much of the north of England. It had a lattice tower, which provided limited coverage. This original
lattice tower was erected in 1956 to provide
Independent Television broadcasts to the Yorkshire area. It entered service on 3 November 1956, transmitting
Granada Television programmes on weekdays, and
ABC TV programmes at weekends.
Second mast and collapse In 1964 in anticipation of colour
PAL transmissions set to begin in 1966, the original lattice tower was replaced by a taller
guyed mast, identical to the structure at
Belmont transmitting station in Lincolnshire. The dismantled lattice tower was rebuilt at
Craigkelly transmitting station.
Yorkshire Television commenced broadcasting from the Emley Moor transmitter following the reorganisation of the ITV franchises on 29 July 1968. The guy-supported
tubular mast was constructed from curved steel segments to form a tube, long, and was surmounted by a lattice section tall, and a capping cylinder, bringing the total height to . At the time of its construction, it was one of the tallest human-made structures in the world. It was designed by
British Insulated Callender's Cables (BICC), and manufactured by
EMI, and built by
J. L. Eve Construction. Its ropes weighed , made by
British Ropes, with steel from
Steel, Peech and Tozer of
Templeborough in South Yorkshire. The column weighed and had 375 segments, with steel from
United Steel Companies at
Scunthorpe in northern
Lincolnshire. The cylindrical steel mast was regularly coated in ice during the winter, and large
icicles formed on the guy wires, placing them under great strain. During winter, ice often fell from the guy-wires. For this reason, amber warning lights on the tower operated when ice was a hazard, and notices were posted on the fence adjacent to Jagger Lane, below the guy wire crossings. On 19 March 1969, a combination of strong winds and the weight of ice that had formed around the top of the mast and on the guy wires caused the structure to collapse. The collapse left sections of twisted mast strewn over the transmitter site, and across the junction of Common Lane and Jagger Lane, and the surrounding fields. Although a falling stay cable cut through the roof of a local chapel and across the transmitter site buildings, no one was injured. It completely disabled the
BBC2 UHF transmitter and the ITV VHF transmitter, leaving several million people without service.
BBC1 VHF television transmissions continued from
Holme Moss. The
Independent Television Authority (ITA) owned a collapsible emergency mast, tall, which was moved to Emley from the
Lichfield transmitting station so that some service could be restored.
ITV signals were restored to 2.5 million viewers within four days. The
BBC provided a mobile mast on an
outside broadcast van to restore a restricted BBC2 colour service within two days. The ITA bought a larger temporary mast from a Swedish company. A crew of Polish riggers were hired, and a mast was erected in under 28 days at a cost of (equivalent to £ million in ). This mast could hold only one set of antennae, so many viewers in outlying areas still could not receive colour programmes. The taller mast was brought into service on 16 April. Some weeks later, the BBC erected a mast, improving coverage. behind a circular cylinder. In this animation, the flows on the two sides of the cylinder are shown in different colours, to show that the vortices from the two sides alternate, which can build an oscillating motion in the cylinder. The accumulation of ice was believed to have caused the collapse, but a committee of inquiry attributed it to
vortex shedding which occurred over a five-year period of low but steady wind speed, enhanced during periods of high wind speed. It was not built on the site where the original mast had stood, but slightly to the south-east at . Local residents did not wish to see another mast on Emley Moor, and a departure from usual designs was called for. The new structure consists of a tapered cylindrical pillar, tall, constructed of
reinforced concrete, and is topped by a steel lattice mast which carries the antennae. UHF (625-line colour) transmissions commenced on 21 January 1971, and the older VHF (405-line black and white) system became operational on 21 April 1971. ==Structure==