What is this setup?
I was traveling up in northern rural Ohio last week and I noticed that about 90% of the homes there have OTA antennas. Kuddos to them.
Also, most of them had the setup like the stock photo below. https://i.imgur.com/QLQRDUi.jpg Just looking for some educating. 1: Why are there 2 antennas on the pole? (Assuming multiple direction reception.) 2: If for multiple direction reception then why are they 2 different styles? 3: How would these 2 antennas connect to the TV? (As easy as a splitter?) It just really intrigued me after seeing so many homes with this type of setup. Got me thinking about my setup and being able to receive channels from multiple directions possibly. |
Hello, waddo66
Thanks for the interesting photo. Quote:
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It is the real channel number (also called physical channel or RF channel) that determines what antenna is needed. VHF-Low, real channels 2-6 VHF-High, real channels 7-13 UHF, real channels 14-51 The virtual channel number (like 5.1 or 5-1) is a holdover from the analog TV days to maintain the identity of the station, and is what the TV displays. By convention, the virtual channel number is given in the decimal form to keep it from being confused with the real channel number. The upper antenna is a DIY antenna called a Gray-Hoverman. It is designed for UHF channels, but has two rods, one at the top and one at the bottom. They are called NARODS that enable the antenna to also receive VHF-High channels. The lower antenna is factory made and covers all three TV bands: UHF, VHF-High, and VHF-Low. Quote:
If you don't have all the channels after combining that you had when the antennas were separate, that simple method of combining doesn't work for you. Quote:
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I do not have an exact address. But everywhere I went in Defiance Ohio had similar setups to the one pictured.
The stock photo is just something I found on the internet that looked like the ones I saw there. Style may be different but the top antenna on most of the masts had the flat rectangular style. I went onto Google Maps and went to street view to search the houses in the rural area of Defiance Ohio. The picture below is representative of a LOT of homes there. This one I found is on 21123 Township Hwy 30 in Defiance. Looks like they really like TV with the 2 antennas and 2 satellite dishes. https://i.imgur.com/daOCi10.jpg |
Defiance, OH is between Ft.Wayne and Toledo. The stations in Ft. Wayne are
all UHF. The stations in Toledo are both UHF and VHF. Ft. Wayne is actually a bit closer to Defiance. In most cases, the only way to change between the Ft. Wayne antenna and the Toledo antenna would be an A/B switch or a separate tuner connected to the television HDMI port. If the setup had a UHF only antenna for Ft. Wayne and a VHF only antenna for Toledo, then a UHF/VHF signal joiner could be used. Hope this helps.......... |
The situation for you in White Hiuse TN is very different than Ohio. You have stations on VHF low, VHF high, and UHF; all of which arrive in roughly the same direction. The Channel Master antenna that you considered in 2016 was a good choice. If you want to add another channel, let’s consider WBKO on channel 13 aimed NNE. Let’s say you bought a Stellar Labs VHF only antenna to add to your all channel antenna. If you tried to add it to your all channel antenna using a backwards splitter I’d expect it to interfere with some of your existing reception, especially WSMV on channel 10.
JoeAZ’s suggestion of an external tuner is good for one TV set. If you want more than one you can try a few tricks to add the two antennas together. A simple solution is to find a used Channel Master Jointenna tuned to channel 13. An expensive solution is to get Tinlee to make a special combiner. If you are interested I can describe a way to combine the two antennas using a preamp, a UVSJ, a type F tee connector, a 2 way splitter, and a shorted piece of RG6 exactly 101” long. Hint: 101” is 8 quarter wavelengths on channel 10 and 9 quarter wavelengths on channel 13. |
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