It really depends on your goal(s). One deep fringe all channel antenna and a rotator would be a viable option.
The 7015 is not a deep fringe design, but there's a chance it might work as a fixed aim solution... If you aimed it at 91° you'd be taking a chance of marginal reception of real CH-2 which is on the edge of the noise threshold. (There's more noise in the low-VHF band than the high-VHF and UHFbands.) The 7015 has very modest gain on real CH-2 so you'd be giving your self a very thin fade margin. You'd also be marginal on real CH-7 and the two signals from the back, (10 & 23).
I'm not comfortable suggesting a single fixed aim antenna in your situation.
If I was building an antenna system my self, my preference (if we were neighbors) would be the three antenna system as I described in post #5. I have an aversion to rotators, particularly when there is more than one set connected. It appears to me that there are channels of interest coming from three different directions, each falling conveniently into UHF, high-VHF and low-VHF categories. (There is a fair chance you'll get real CH-10 via the back side of the Y10713 so you could have two PBS feeds.) This option would give you the ability to connect multiple sets and never have to deal with a rotator and the hassle of rescanning a tuner that needs to be rescanned each time the antenna is moved. (And, you can build it one antenna at a time if you need or want to.)
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If the well is dry and you don't see rain on the horizon, you'll need to dig the hole deeper. (If the antenna can't get the job done, an amp won't fix it.)
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