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Channel 5 is the second oldest television station in Thailand, owned and operated by the Royal Thai Army, and as such features, among others, programming devoted to the Royal Thai Armed Forces . Channel 5 completely ceased its analog broadcast on 21 June 2018 at 9:30am as part of its digital switchover.
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) NBT Northeast (Main Station in Khon Kaen, Broadcast in the Northeastern Region)
The audience share achieved by each terrestrial channel in Thailand is shown in the first table below. The second table shows the share each channel receives of total TV advertising spending. Channel 7 is both the most popular and most commercially successful station with just under 50% of the total audience followed by Channel 3 at just under 30%.
Inspira Media. Inspira TV (covering Bandung and Jakarta) Jawa Pos Group. Jawa Pos Multimedia. JPM TV (covering Jakarta and Banten) JTV (covering East Java) Jawa Pos TV (covering Java (especially in Surabaya, Madiun, Jakarta, Semarang and Cianjur), and also Bali) STTV.
It was established on 25 February 1930 and currently comprises 5 AM, 6 FM radio stations and World Service, a foreign language international shortwave radio station launched on 20 October 1938. Television Channels NBT TV. NBT TV (or NBT (Digital) 2 HD), formerly TVT11, is the television division and free-to-air channel of NBT.
Channel MUX Frequency Broadcasting area Transmitted area Bangkok NBT Digital 2HD: Bangkok The Government Public Relations Department of the Prime Minister's Office: 2 PRD MUX1 CH26 (514MHz) Bangkok: Bangkok: Bangkok TV 5 HD: Bangkok Royal Thai Army: 5 RTA2 MUX2 CH36 (594MHz) Bangkok: Bangkok: Bangkok MCOT HD: Bangkok MCOT: 30
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.
TPBS operates Thai PBS (ไทยพีบีเอส), which was formerly known as iTV, TITV and TV Thai television station, respectively. Thai PBS is a public television station broadcasting on UHF Channel 29. The station broadcasts on a frequency formerly held by the privately run channel, iTV. Thai PBS tested its broadcast by connecting to ...