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Quick Question
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Well, for starters, I was getting "free" cable for some time so I never bothered with an antenna as I was satisfied with the quality of the cable channels. That ended recently and because I'm a cheap college student I decided I would try and build my own antenna.
I found some plans for a DB4 antenna and it works much better than I anticipated. However there is a tiny issue. I receive all the channels I want on the TV however, over at my computer/htpc, I am missing a couple of channels. The most important one is 56.1 - ion. Just wondering what I can do to improve the reception on the computer. Not sure if I should add an amp or try and remove some cable length. I have used a manufactured antenna (Winegard Freevision) at this location before and didn't near as good reception as my homemade antenna. TV Fool report: http://www.tvfool.com/?option=com_wr...ccd1bb0b464743 I also attached a crude drawing of my setup. |
Signal levels at your location are far in excess of the input capacity of many amplifiers. An amplifier is one of the very last options I would suggest in this case.
A few possibilities: (1) Your home made antenna is badly de-tuned at channel 48 (WOPX's real broadcast channel). -- What happens when you remove all splitters and connect the antenna to the 2250 only? (2) The antenna is OK and you are receiving enough signal (TV + FM) to overload the Hauppauge 2250 front end. -- Have you tried installing a passive FM trap? (3) There is a bad splitter, cable, connector, etc. -- Have you done a thorough inspection? Including the parts that "can't be bad"? (4) You have the antenna located in a cold spot for a couple of signals. -- Have you tried adjusting aim and the location of the antenna? Is it inside or out? Mounted outside, in the clear, a factory built DB-4 would be PLENTY of antenna for all of the UHF signals south east of you.. An RCA ANT-751 would be quite sufficient and it would cover the high VHF signals also. Either antenna should recover enough signal to drive a 4-way split with no amplifier. |
Damn. I had a long post typed up and I lost it.
Anyways, I can't remove the first splitter because the coax would not reach the computer tuners, but if I remove the first splitter and connect directly to the tv, the signal improves from 59% to 62%. If I disconnect the tv, and remove the second splitter and connect directly to the computer tuners, the signal strength shows no improvement. If I replace the first splitter with the second one, there is still no signal improvement at the computer. There is a 1% improvement at the tv. I leaning towards it being an antenna issue. I'm on the third floor of a three story apartment building. I have the antenna mounted a 10 foot mast that is attached to my balcony floor and we have 10 foot ceilings. So that puts the antenna near the roof line. I could try moving the antenna around but there is an oak tree near one side of my balcony and I currently have the antenna in the spot farthest from the tree. It is pointing at 120 degrees. I can try a FM trap, any recommendations? |
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Wouldn't that restrict my ability to receive channel 2-1?
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The UVSJ splits between UHF and VHF, the HLSJ splits between high-VHF and low-VHF.
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I'll give one a shot and see if it helps. |
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