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Old 6-Jan-2014, 12:03 AM   #16
StephanieS
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Join Date: Aug 2012
Posts: 442
Yup. The Antennacraft Y10-7-13: http://www.solidsignal.com/pview.asp?p=Y10-7-13

The antenna will say in the description whether it is for UHF, high-VHF, low-VHF or a combination of the three. For your reception purposes, low-VHF, we can ignore as there are no real channels 2-6 you need to try to receive.

If installing both antennas on the same mast, have them be separate by 4' on the same mast. Purchase a Antennas Direct EU385CF-1s combiner. This allows you to combine two antennas into one coax. Connect 4228 coax to UHF input, connect Y10-7-13 coax to VHF input. Run single coax from combiner into home.

Installing both antennas on the same mast I would have them be pointed in exactly the same direction. Once you get configured with rotor, both antennas can serve the same heading as you switch between markets. This will give you the tools to receive both UHF and high-VHF channels from each market.


Quote:
Originally Posted by mhouston View Post
Is there a recommendation for the type of antenna to receive that band's signal ABC WCTI (RF 12) Greenville, CBS WNCT (RF 10) Greenville and ABC WTVD (RF 11) from Raleigh.
What do I look for on the chart to determine the bands an antenna can receive or designed to receive and then what do I look for in terms of the product specs.

Last edited by StephanieS; 6-Jan-2014 at 12:06 AM.
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