Almost there...
A little update on my antenna project:
I mounted the eave mount and put the mast up. Routed 50ft. of coax from the roof to a ground block just inside the foundation (grounded to the water pipe going into my well). Grounded the mast w/ #10 awg stranded wire to the same water pipe. (I have a 6ft. ground rod, but I may return it - I think it will be a mission to pound it in - and I figured the well pipe would make a better ground). From the ground block I have 100 ft. of RG-6 to the pre-amp power injector, then 6 ft' coax to my Tivo. And 3 ft. of coax from preamp to antenna when I get up to the roof. I have a couple of questions for you guys: 1. I have about 20 ft. of coax coiled just before the ground block (going to the pre-amp power injector splitter) - wondering if this will affect the signal strength much. Should I cut it and install a new connector or just leave it? I'm thinking the db loss in cutting the wire and installing a new connector will be greater than just leaving it intact - especially since I have the pre-amp. 2. I am a one man show - how do I get the antenna on top the roof with the ladder without falling off? lol Hold it in one hand and climb with the other? heh The antenna is not heavy, just big. Any ideas would help. Thanks! |
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antenna is up
i want to thank all y'all for the excellent advice - the antenna is up and i'm getting 70-100% signal on all channels except fox hd from new york - the sd comes in fine - then again i knew it would be weak from the tv fool report - i'll have to work on that channel.
i'm a little worried about the antenna in the wind tonight - we got 20-30mph winds and the antenna is wobbling a bit - doesn't seem like i drop the signal when this happens, just wondering if this is normal. the eave mount is sturdy - but i'm thinking i didn't tighten the mast mounts on the antenna enough - i'll climb up tomorrow. it's an eave mount w/ 5 ft. mast - maybe it's just cause this is a big antenna (7698p) heh. thanks again fellas. Quote:
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Fox in NYC is available as channel 5.1 in HD on UHF 44. It is also available in SD as 5.2 on UHF channel 38. Similarly, channel 9's programming is also available as sub-channels but on the opposite frequencies. If you're getting 9.1 and 5.2 but not 5.1 and 9.2, then you're missing the signal carried on channel 44.
Your new antenna is a very large one with a significant wind load. Don't be afraid to install guy wires, if needed to prevent it from coming down and damaging your eave in the process. |
Ch 44
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Thanks, it's ch 44 that's getting drop outs - weak 0-35% signal fluctuating.
I'm gonna get on the roof and re-aim the antenna - originally was supposed to aim right at a tree, but i shifted it a few degrees so it's not directly at the tree - since i visualize the signal wrapping around the tree-i grab it on it's way around. Quote:
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adjacent channel interference
I noticed on my tv fool report:
http://www.tvfool.com/?option=com_wr...8d179181bb9946 that channel 44 (5.1) Fox, the one that I'm having trouble getting, is marked as "adjacent channel warning." how do I determine what the adjacent channel is that may be causing my reception problem? and how do I correct this issue? does it have more to do with the receiver? here is the transmitter profile: http://www.tvfool.com/?option=com_wr...ALLTV%26n%3d28 - all my channels are coming from the same direction, nyc thanks, |
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Possible fixes are a slight re-aiming of your antenna. Consider an antenna with a greater front to side ratio. A notch filter on channel 43. The use of a pair of antennas configured to null channel 43. (roughly 30" for 109 degrees off-axis) Some TV sets may be more prone to adjacent channel problems than others. |
Hurrican Sandy
Hey guys, just wanted to give an update on my OTA antenna situation.
I was getting dropouts in the spring/summer when the tree in front of my antenna (pin oak) filled in and I was constantly getting on the roof to re-aim it between the limbs to catch a glimpse of the Eastern sky. During Hurricane Sandy a large Blue Spruce fell on the house - this tree was also in direct line of sight to the tower. Turns out this tree was the culprit to my bad reception - after it went down my signal was perfect - no drop outs - even with the pin oak in full bloom. There's one good thing that came out of that SOB storm Sandy. |
balun type
what type of balun/downlead do I need for the digiwave ANT 2075?
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