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help with antenna selection
I am currently using a cheap rabbit ear antenna with the converter box on my kitchen. I recently bought a Samsung LED for my basement for movie watching but I realized I want to watch TV shows from time to time. Amazon has a wide selection of antennas and I am confused w/c one to get as I do not understand the VHF and UHF lingo. Do I have to get another converter box for this TV? here is the reference guide to my address:
http://www.tvfool.com/?option=com_wr...3cf4dd866b72ff If anybody here can help, I appreciate it very much! |
Your report is not specific to your location, but if it is representative of your situation, a basic all channel antenna such as a Winegard HD7015 http://www.solidsignal.com/pview.asp...0Antennas&sku= aimed at 63° per your compass, will provide a comprehensive line-up of programing. The signal will be strong enough to split up to 4 ways without any amplification.
You new TV should be equipped with a digital OTA tuner. |
GroundUrMast,
thanks for your response, what do you think of the antenna direct. their rep asked me to go to this Antenna Point website and the site gave me a recom( Clearstream C2) based on my address. I was skeptical about it that is why I went to your forum. |
The antenna "suggestion" from Antennapoint is relatively unsophisticated (you'd be surprised ...) and is only intended to cover the "majority" of local stations.
If you want a comprehensive analysis and recommendation, call or email us with your specifics. YMWV based on who you get... |
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If you or your husband would like to dig deeper into your reception issues, please send me your contact information by private message and I'll be happy to work with you towards a resolution. I will take the liberty if sending my contact info to you via a private message. Properly configured, a new TV set should be capable of receiving digital broadcasts without resorting to an external converter box unless the new TV has a substandard or defective tuner (it happens...) We do, however, get many calls from customers who have missed one or more necessary steps that are needed to use a new TV with an antenna. Usually, these are a simple matter of switching the menu option from CABLE to ANTENNA/AIR/etc and re-running the scan for channels routine. Looking forward to hearing from you. |
Tv Antennas and Reception
It is Ok to use 1 antenna , a Winegard HD7694P point the antenna at about 58 degrees magnetic compass . Here is how to point Tv antennas , http://www.kyes.com/antenna/pointing/pointing.html . Antennas Direct does not sell a All Channel Antenna , thats why they sell people 2 antennas. Also read and understand this about Real Digital Tv Channels and Virtual Digital Tv Channels , http://forum.tvfool.com/showthread.php?t=695
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At this point we are all working with data that may or may not be representative of the real conditions at trijon04's location. From the posted TV Fool Report:
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I agree with John, a single combination antenna should easily serve in the situation represented in the first posted TVF report. The antenna I suggested would provide reception of the low VHF channels shown in the report. Still, the Antennas Direct combination should be quite capable (based on the original TVF report). It sounds as if ADTech is willing to help sort out the difficulty using the Antennas Direct products. That's the logical next step. AD has shown a sincere willingness to help their customers, I would certainly recommend you let them have a chance to help you in this case. I would be cautious about buying another antenna without first working with ADTech, and also running a TVF report based on the site address or coordinates. |
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