Antenna for my location
3 Attachment(s)
I live in the High Point, NC area and receive most of my station fine with a normal flat indoor antenna, the exception being NBC which is the opposite direction. Even with the indoor antenna, I will get some pixelization when walking in front of TV for time to time so I had been debating putting up an outdoor antenna. I recently cut the cord and just stream now, but need a backup if my internet dies so I'm looking for an antenna or multiples if necessary.
I will be mounting the antenna about 20 feet in the area with no obstructions in the way towards the High Point towers and some trees in the way of the Winston Tower, it is the one I don't get NBC on and about 40 miles away. I will be feeding 2 tv's in the house with about a 30 foot run to one and 50 foot to the other. What would I need to do to make this all work ? Zip code is 27370, all channels are UHF report from rabbitears https://www.rabbitears.info/searchma...tudy_id=225167 |
This antenna does not have a reflector, so it would receive in your two directions.
https://store.antennasdirect.com/cle...NDYxNTUwOC42MA.. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
Antennas Direct responded to my question and said I'm unlikely to get NBC since there is a 400 foot mountain in my way. |
I'm in Elon and get 12, NBC no issues from 60+ miles. It is in fact one of my strongest stations. I use a DIY 4 bay similar to the AD with no reflectors.
Their broadcast tower is on top of Sauratown MT, the MT is 2,200 feet and the tower is another 500 to 1,000 feet at most. They transmit at 1,000Kw. That puts the transmitter at around 3,000 feet. A little 400 foot hill is not likely to be in your way unless you are at the very base of that hill and directly in the RF shadow. |
Quote:
|
Quote:
You must be in the perfect storm. I cannot even sniff a signal from WXII with a directional yagi. I'm currenly about 5 feet off the ground but will be extending it another 15 ft this weekend, don't know if it will make a difference |
4 Attachment(s)
Quote:
http://forum.tvfool.com/attachment.p...9&d=1615081321 Using different software to confirm the problem: http://forum.tvfool.com/attachment.p...0&d=1615081351 http://forum.tvfool.com/attachment.p...1&d=1615081376 This is an image of the signal report you posted at AVS; it's more accurate for your location: http://forum.tvfool.com/attachment.p...2&d=1615081396 The only chance you have for WXII is a separate antenna like the HDB91X aimed at WXII. |
Do you think it would be a waste of money or should I accept defeat ? If you think it is worthwhile, what would be a good combiner and would I have to worry about multipath ?
|
5 Attachment(s)
Quote:
I did the analysis to make an evaluation. With signals like that, the signal reports can be off either way. My educated guess is that it is difficult but not impossible. First you try to get the signal, then you worry about combining. Combining will not be easy; you might have to keep it separate. You could use a separate tuner for NBC with its output connected to the HDMI input of a TV. If you use a Mediasonic HW-150 ($40) you can enter channel 16 in the manual search window. This will avoid having to rescan over and over. http://forum.tvfool.com/attachment.p...4&d=1615090403 It also has a signal quality scale that drops out below 39% if the tuner can't pick it up. http://forum.tvfool.com/attachment.p...3&d=1615090351 http://forum.tvfool.com/attachment.p...5&d=1615090761 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YDQzvFG3chs There are ways to see if the signal is there even if the tuner can't pick it up, like an RTL-SDR.COM V3 SDR ($30) with DIY free software from Github or a SiliconDust HDHR tuner ($100). http://forum.tvfool.com/attachment.p...6&d=1615091203 http://forum.tvfool.com/attachment.p...8&d=1615091926 It's your decision about what to do for WXII. |
All times are GMT. The time now is 11:55 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, vBulletin Solutions Inc.
Copyright © TV Fool, LLC