Any part of the system that's exposed to the elements for 7 years is suspect more than parts that have been protected. Start at the beginning, the antenna;
A close inspection for corrosion, water intrusion or physical damage would be my first step.
Assuming no visible trouble, attach a known good receiver directly to the antenna with no amplifiers or splitters, using the shortest length of cable that allows you to safely use the test TV to check the output of the antenna. Ideally, the test TV should have signal quality diagnostics. If the antenna is unable to produce a reliable signal in this setting you need to consider whether one or more of the following are true, your antenna inspection has missed a defect, there have been changes near your location which would block reliable reception (new construction or tree growth for example) or changes to TV transmitters due to repack or any other reason.
If there is reliable reception at the antenna, then begin splitting the system in half... once you have good signal at some mid-point, you know the trouble is downstream of the testing point.
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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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