View Single Post
Old 14-Oct-2012, 4:08 PM   #13
GroundUrMast
Moderator
 
GroundUrMast's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2010
Location: Greater Seattle Area
Posts: 4,773
Antennas are designed to do well in a given range of frequencies. That does not mean that they have also been engineered to block out other frequencies.

So your VHF antennas are good at receiving VHF signals, and may be fair at receiving strong UHF signals.

As an aside, the Antennas Direct Clear Stream 5 was designed as a VHF antenna, but they noticed it does remarkably well with UHF in some applications. The manufacturer has gone so far as documenting it's UHF capability with the disclaimer that the UHF performance is 'out of band performance'. http://www.antennasdirect.com/cmss_f...20with_uhf.pdf
__________________
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.)

(Please direct account activation inquiries to 'admin')
GroundUrMast is offline   Reply With Quote