Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Website. tv5.co.th. Availability. Terrestrial. Digital. Channel 5 (HD) (TV5 MUX2) Channel 5 or Channel 5 HD (Full Name : Royal Thai Army Radio and Television Station; also known as Thai TV5 or simply TV5) is a Thai free-to-air public television network owned by the Royal Thai Army, launched on 25 January 1958.
Thai Public Broadcasting Service (Thai PBS) 4. ALTV (Thai PBS Active Learning TV) 5. Royal Thai Army Radio and Television (TV5 HD) 7. T Sports 7; 10. Thai Parliament Television (TPTV) 11. NBT Regional 11 (Broadcast in each region to 4 sectors, to consist of) NBT North (Main Station in Chiang Mai, Broadcast in the Northern Region and Lopburi)
Bangkok Royal Thai Army. 5 ( HDTV ) RTA2 MUX2. CH36 (594MHz) Bangkok. Bangkok. Bangkok MCOT HD. Bangkok MCOT. 30 ( HDTV )
NBT TV. NBT TV (or NBT (Digital) 2 HD), formerly TVT11, is the television division and free-to-air channel of NBT. The broadcasting of TVT11 began on 11 July 1988, when TV9 (currently known as Modernine TV) split into two channels. It was firstly aimed at viewers in the countryside. Some elements such as sex and violence are censored as NBT is ...
Television had become the largest advertising medium in Thailand by 1959, with only two stations in Bangkok serving 35,000 television sets in a population of nine million. [3] As of 1967, Thailand had the third highest number of television sets in Southeast Asia, with little more than 250,000 sets available. [ 4 ]
T Sports 7. Thai Global Network. Thai Parliament Television. Thai Public Broadcasting Service. Thairath TV. TNN (Thai TV channel) Top News (Thailand) True Spark. True Sports.
Virtual: 30. History. Former call signs. HST-TV [1] Former channel number (s) 4 (1955-1975) Channel 9 MCOT HD (Thai: ช่อง 9 เอ็มคอตเอชดี) is a Thai state-owned free-to-air television network launched on 24 June 1955. It is owned by MCOT.
List of former analog TV frequencies in Thailand. Analog television broadcasting in Thailand began on June 24, 1955 (in FCC 525-line NTSC), and Color telecasts (PAL, System B/G 625 lines) were started in 1967; full-time color transmissions were launched in 1975, while state-owned regional television began broadcasting in 1959. Analog broadcasting ended on March 26, 2020. Channel 3 HD was the ...