I don't mean to muddy the waters here but if I had the strong signals you do I'd go get a cheap indoor antenna 5-10 bucks ( one with rabbit ears and a loop pull the ears out to about 16.5" point the loop at about 80 deg. and see how many stations I could get with that. The green background on your report is supposed to note stations available from an indoor antenna (foil backed insulation and aluminum siding not with standing). If you can get most of the channels from 46 and 105 deg. or at least the ones of interest then when your shiny new winegard comes you could point it at the harder to get stations and use an a/b switch.
Thanks John for pointing out that I missed the uhf abilities of the winegard.
BTW I use and antenna very similar to the HBU , a little bigger and 20+years old, and have it pointed at 320 Deg. and get a solid signal from a station 22 miles away at 89 Deg. (1 edge and NM of 41) 130 Deg. off .
I guess this could be bad for co-channel interference.
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