Truskmore (Irish: Trosc Mór, meaning 'big cod')[3] is a mountain with a height of 647 metres (2,123 ft) on the border of County Sligo and County Leitrim in Ireland. It is the highest summit in the Dartry Mountains and the highest in Sligo.[1] It is in the middle of a plateau whose edges are marked by high cliffs,[4] including Benbulbin (526m), Benwiskin (514m), Slievemore (597m) and Kings Mountain (462m).[1] The top of Truskmore lies in County Sligo, a short distance from the border with County Leitrim; however, the mountain itself is in both counties.[4]

Truskmore
Trosc Mór
Truskmore seen from Gleniff Horseshoe Drive
Highest point
Elevation647 m (2,123 ft)[1][2]
Prominence560 m (1,840 ft)[1]
ListingCounty Top (Sligo), Marilyn, Hewitt
Coordinates54°22′27″N 8°22′18″W / 54.374208°N 8.371639°W / 54.374208; -8.371639
Naming
English translationbig cod (fish)
Language of nameIrish
Geography
Truskmore is located in island of Ireland
Truskmore
Truskmore
Location in Ireland
Locationborder of County Sligo and County Leitrim, Republic of Ireland
Parent rangeDartry Mountains
OSI/OSNI gridG758473

Transmission site

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The Truskmore television transmitter opened on 1 February 1962, the second of the original five main Telefis Éireann transmitters to go on air after Kippure (December 1961). It used as antenna carrier a 135 metres [1] tall mast. Initially its transmissions were only in 405 lines on VHF channel 11, with 625-lines transmissions beginning in November 1963 on Channel I. The new RTÉ Radio VHF FM radio service was added in 1966. The second television service came in 1978 on Channel G and UHF television transmission began in 1996 with the advent of Teilifís na Gaeilge. In 2009 a new 175-m mast was erected in preparation for the changeover to digital television transmission and the original 1961 mast was removed. Since the national shutdown of the analog television networks on 24 October 2012,[5] Truskmore now broadcasts[6] the Irish DTT service Saorview and the national FM radio channels to the northwest of Ireland, including a large area of the west of Northern Ireland. The site is owned and operated by 2RN, a subsidiary[7] of the Irish public service broadcaster RTÉ.

Current transmissions

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Digital television

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Frequency UHF kW Multiplex Pol
642 MHz 42 160 Saorview 1 H
666 MHz 45 160 Saorview 2 H

FM radio

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Frequency kW Service Notes
88.2 MHz 125 RTÉ Radio 1 Since 1986
97.8 MHz 125 RTÉ lyric fm Since 1999
90.4 MHz 125 RTÉ 2fm 89.7 MHz Before 1986
92.6 MHz 125 RTÉ Raidió na Gaeltachta 91.9 MHz Before 1986 (Mono only before 1982)
100.0 MHz 125 Today FM Since 1997
102.5 MHz Ocean FM Since 2004
104.4 MHz iRadio Since 2011
107.4 MHz Newstalk Since 2006 Mono only
DTT Relay County Mux 1 Mux 2 kW Pol
Aranmore Donegal 47 44 4 V
Castlebar Mayo 22 25 2 H
Dooncarton Mayo 27 32 0.5 V&H
Glencolumcille Donegal 33 36 0.2 H
Glenties Donegal 32 34 0.1 H
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See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b c d Truskmore MountainViews. Retrieved: 2012-05-06.
  2. ^ Truskmore Peakbagger. Retrieved: 2012-05-06.
  3. ^ Placenames Database of Ireland
  4. ^ a b Ordnance Survey Ireland - Online map viewer
  5. ^ The Irish Times. "Analogue consigned to broadcasting history". The Irish Times. Retrieved 23 January 2016.
  6. ^ "Saorview Frequencies" (PDF). 2RN. 2RN. Retrieved 19 August 2022.
  7. ^ RTÉ NL. "About RTÉ NL" (PDF). RTÉ. Retrieved 29 October 2012.