[AT] local television
Bill Bruer
bill_bru at bellsouth.net
Fri May 27 17:12:52 PDT 2011
I didn't have to go as far as John, but I did have to add an amplifier at
the antenna that I didn't need for the analog signal. I already had coax
cable running from the antenna into the house but the digital signal is
evidently much weaker.
When the transition first occurred I assumed I would have to get a new
antenna etc. I called a local outfit that sells and installs antennas.
They were honest enough to test the signal strength at my antenna and tell
me that I was actually receiving quite well. The cable run was just long
enough that it needed the amplifier. We now get more channels than we ever
did though some still fade out in really bad weather.
Bill Bruer
Murfreesboro, TN
bill_bru at bellsouth.net
----- Original Message -----
From: "John Slavin" <chaunceyjb at sbcglobal.net>
To: <at at lists.antique-tractor.com>
Sent: Friday, May 27, 2011 2:53 PM
Subject: [AT] local television
Ron:
Are you sure you have the right antenna? Some of the stations when they
went digital, went from vhf to uhf during the transition and then some came
back to their original channel, some stayed where there were in UHF, and
some went to an altogether new channel, which could be UHF or VHF. If you
have a vhf antenna only (or perhaps a channel specific antenna, it won't
receive the vhf signal at all. Here is what I did: 1)Got rid of all my old
300 ohm cable lead to my house and replaced it with 75 ohm coaxial cable; 2)
bought a new UHF antenna, (this is the antenna that will really reach out
there, but it's uhf only and highly directional necessitating a rotor:
http://www.antennasdirect.com/store/91XG_HDTV_Antenna.html); 3) bought a
signal amplifier, 4) bought a new digital rotor (the new rotors can be added
to universal remotes to avoid the accumulation of remotes).
John Slavin
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