Yes.
Which is why my signal varies 10 or so points on the meter during the day. The 1-edge conditions play with the signal's trajectory as you describe.
The 8 bay wasn't attractive in my application due to having so many strong signals close to me. With 65 db signal strengths @ 15 miles and LOS, if a 8 bay would catch more signal I off the sides and back, I feared overload. I preferred the stronger rejection properties of the yagi off the back and side.
Other than the coax jumper, it's been about what I expected. KLEW's weak signal and 1-edge, I had to keep expectations reasonable. I am overall satisfied with the 91xg and with the 12' jumper and paying 39 bucks for the 91xg, I am satisfied with 99% reliability.
Quote:
Originally Posted by teleview
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At distance , and across hills mountains and across tree tops , Tv transmissions tend to shift up and down and side to side.
A single long yagi type antenna will be in the shifting path and out of the shifting signal path.
The broad flat serface of a 8 bay antenna tends to stay in the shifting signal path.
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