Bigdog wrote:175-216 MHz television channels 7 - 13, known as "Band III" internationally
174–216 MHz: professional wireless microphones (low power, certain exact frequencies.
The large technically and commercially valuable slice of the VHF spectrum taken up by television broadcasting has attracted the attention of many companies and governments recently, with the development of more efficient digital television broadcasting standards. In some countries much of this spectrum will likely become available (probably for sale) in the next decade or so (currently scheduled for 2009 in the United States).
These are the VHS bands. This is what all the microphones I have use. They are not rare. And they are the bands that everyone is interested in. If you are too close to a TV broadcasting tower you will get interference.
My microphones have a 1500 foot range.
Will a broadcasted digital signal cause more or less interference?
OK You've said it enough times so out with it. What mics are you using? Neither Sennheiser nor Shure makes a VHF microphone and neither makes a handheld transmitter that advertises anything over about 500ft of range. The only microphone systems I'm aware of with that type of range are bodypack transmitters which operate at about 100mW (Handheld transmitters operate in the range of 30-50mW) and even then the 1400-1600ft range is only outdoors under ideal circumstances, indoors it is about an eighth of that range under ideal line of sight circumstances. Oh and those mics and receivers cost in the 1000's of dollars so not consistent with your $600 range.
Audio Technica makes a couple of very entry level models in VHF, none of them costs more than $300 and none have close to the advertised range you keep touting.
The only other makers I'm aware of that produce VHF wireless systems are Hisonic, Azden, Pyle, Vocopro and Nady. None of whose products could considered "professional level".
So either your Microphones are older models and in which case their a meaningless example of what is rare or not these days or your buying a cheaper brand that isn't professional quality model. Either way, my statement remains true "Almost all professional level wireless transmitters are UHF these days".
So clear up the confusion BD, what Brand and model are you using?