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reception problems
hi, I'm new to OTA. I was wondering if anyone could provide help, cause I can't seem to figure this out. My setup is a channel master 2016 antenna, 20 feet high, and 60 feet of R6 to the grounding block on the house. From there it goes another 40 feet to where it connects. When I connect it straight to a TV or digitial converter box, I don't have any issues with freezing or pixelation. My goal is to hook it up to my HDHOMERUN dual tuner. In order to do that I split the incoming cable, and then run it to the 2 inputs of the tuner. It degrades the signal to where channel 13 FOX(vhf) constantly freezes, and channel 7 freezes sometimes. I tried putting a motorola signal booster in place of the splitter, and also at the point where the cable enters the house. Same results. I've tried pointing the antenna in different directions with no luck. Again, I seem to get a good picture with nothing inbetween the cable and TV. I would think a simple signal booster would help make up for the minor splits but it doesn't. My tvfool report is below, any ideas? thanks.
http://www.tvfool.com/?option=com_wr...b9c976cf5d4ecc |
TV Antennas and Reception
I suggest a CM7778 preamp installed close to the antenna. The stations to the east/north east are weak and FOX 13 is being received on the back side of the antenna reducing the signal. The splitter reduces the signal to the point that digital lock is lost. The preamp needs to be installed close to the antenna , like directly below the antenna. . As always , look in the connectors on the ends of the coax , if outer shied and shield wires of coax are pushed in toward the center wire then push away from center wire. Look and see if foam is on the center wire , if so then scrape it off , foam is a insulator. . Read and understand this about , Real Digital Tv Channels , Virtual Digital Tv Channels , Analog Tv Channels , , http://forum.tvfool.com/showthread.php?t=695
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There's no way that a single antenna will be optimum for all of your stations unless you want a rotor. I have two suggestions: The Winegard HD-1080 has a VHF pattern that is opposite the UHF pattern. That should solve the FOX problem, but cause a problem with KTBW. (you may not care) You could install two antennas and connect them to the two inputs of the dual tuner version of the HD HomeRun. Both antennas should be rated for channels 7-69. The one aimed at 66° should be larger than the other. An optimum antenna for 66° could be a HD 7496P with an AP 8700 preamp. More gain would loose some signals off the side, less gain would make CBS unreliable. |
thanks for the suggestions. Tower Guy, I don't really understand why I can't pick up Fox 13 really well. For the sake of that one channel, I've rotated my antenna 360 degrees in increments and really saw no noticable change in signal quality. I've also tried rabbit ears around the house for testing and couldn't really pick it up. Very strange, as the Fox 13 tower is only 2-3 miles away from me towards the west. I'm sure there's hills and trees blocking line of sight, but being that close I would think it wouldn't matter, especially for vhf. I think I'll give that winegard hd-1080 a try, along with a preamp. thanks
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UPDATE: I received the CM7778 and installed it. My reception didn't do any better, in fact it seemed a little worse. I think I pretty much give up on getting a good signal here, with the billions of tall trees and hills.
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TV Antennas and Reception
"yeah where I'm located, right next to a huge vertical wall about 200 feet high directly west"
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http://www.solidsignal.com/pview.asp...0Antennas&sku= |
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Therefore you need two VHF antennas and a broad beam UHF antenna with good F/B ratio or a 7-69 antenna aimed at 82° plus a VHF only aimed at 279°. I can't predict which antenna combination would work best with your terrain. I can predict that trying to combine them into a single feed will be hard and/or expensive. That's why the suggestion to use the dual inputs of your HD Homerun, one for each of two antennas aimed in different directions. |
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Judging from the path profiles in your original TVF report (click on the station call sign), going up will buy you far more than any amplifier or antenna upgrade. (That's not to say you won't benefit from an antenna upgrade.)
Given the proximity to KTBW and KCPQ, amplification will likely be overloaded if you get the additional signal I expect. Experiment with the Interactive TV Map using different placements of the antenna and mounting height. I think you will see signal levels change significantly with relatively small changes. If I'm wrong, only a few minutes of time spent. As T.G. mentioned earlier, depending on the HTPC software package you use, you can dedicate individual ports on the HD HomeRun to separate antennas. Thread 820 That has allowed me to avoid the need for Jointennas. |
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http://owisoft.net/Documents/map.JPG |
I agree with T.G., this is certainly a fight with multipath. If you can not mount any higher, for whatever reason then there is no point researching it... As I looked at it, it appeared that you would get substantially better signal from the stations on Queen Anne, Capitol Hill and West Tiger if you could get above 35' AGL.
I would expect the multipath problems for KCPQ would be less also. That would also make me try a single antenna solution, with KCPQ on the back side of the antenna. So, if you are limited to the existing mounting AGL, two antennas make sense. You don't need the gain, but the directivity of an Antennacraft Y10713 makes it my choice for a dedicated CH-13 antenna at your location. (Directivity is a primary antenna quality useful for combating multipath.) For the Seattle stations, I agree with the Winegard 7496P already suggested. |
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