TV Fool  

Go Back   TV Fool > Over The Air Services > Help With Reception

Notices

Reply
 
Thread Tools
Old 20-Sep-2011, 5:41 AM   #1
be236
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Sep 2011
Posts: 135
Smile Help with antenna selection in Wa?

Hi folks,

Here's my TV map: http://www.tvfool.com/?option=com_wr...60b56f2de6febd

Basically, I want to get the Vancouver stations from -9 to -16 NM dBm that are about 100 miles away.

Is that even possible?

Currently I have the V-shapped antenna, like from Radio Shack VU-190 or something pointed directly at those stations.

Before when they were in analog form, I could get channels 2, 6, 8, and 10. Now that they're all digital, of course I didnt expect to get them with my current setup since they are in UHF and their ERP is so much lower, though channel 43 CBUT is at 100kW.

The farthest I can get is channel 35 (12.1 KVOS) and KCBC 24 that is about 60 miles away.

I have RG 6 cable that is about 100 feet with combiners in between them serially.

Of course, I know I need to get an amplifier to eliminate the signal loss down stream...

So... back to original question.. can I get those channels with up to -16 NM dBm?

I read that the DB4 or DB8 has a gain of about 15 dbM, which would bring me to almost 0 dBm?

Or, that Lava 2605 (that famous 'get channels 150 miles away' advertising), where the spec they gave on their website is up to 30 dBm gain, which would bring me to +15 NM dBm.. is that for real, theoretically?

Another tidbit, that channel 22 with ERP 40 kW, on some days, my tuner would show a signal "blimp" for it, so that gives me hope that it faintly detects some signal with my current rig...

So , would a combination of amplifieri and new DB4/DB8 or that Lava 2605 antenna help me catch one or two Vancover stations?

I don't wanna move just to watch non-traditional TV....

-Andrew
be236 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 20-Sep-2011, 6:44 AM   #2
John Candle
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Jun 2010
Posts: 2,697
Tv Antennas and Reception

Read and understand about analog to digital transition of the USA and Canada , http://forum.tvfool.com/showthread.php?t=695 , http://www.tvtechnology.com/article/117022 , http://www.tvtechnology.com/article/105462 , http://www.user.dccnet.com/jonleblan...da_TV_stations. You can go to the forms of , http://www.digitalhome.ca , for update information. Also tvfool is being up dated. The pending applications that may not reflect the latest information shows , analog CBUT 2 , CHAN 8 , CHEK 6 . Digital , CHAN 22 , CBUT 43. In any event , if you will like to reach out for the Canada stations now or after the tvfool up date , at your location a Big Antenna will be needed. I recommend a Winegard HD7084P antenna or a Channel Master CM3671 and a Antennas Direct CPA-19 preamp. I recommend a dedicated antenna for the Canada stations.

Last edited by John Candle; 20-Sep-2011 at 7:07 AM.
John Candle is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 20-Sep-2011, 7:02 AM   #3
John Candle
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Jun 2010
Posts: 2,697
Tv Antennas and Reception

You can connect a CPA-19 preamp to the VU-190 and see what can be received. Careful aiming of the antenna for Canada tv reception will help , turn the antenna to the left and right for the strongest signal. After reading the information about the Canada tv transition you now understand that Canada has a mix of analog and digital tv stations and will likely have for a long time in to the future. The complete tv analog shut down for the USA is 2015.
John Candle is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 20-Sep-2011, 7:09 AM   #4
be236
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Sep 2011
Posts: 135
Quote:
Originally Posted by John Candle View Post
Read and understand about analog to digital transition of the USA and Canada , http://forum.tvfool.com/showthread.php?t=695 , http://www.tvtechnology.com/article/117022 , http://www.tvtechnology.com/article/105462 , http://www.user.dccnet.com/jonleblan...da_TV_stations. You can go to the forms of , http://www.digitalhome.ca , for update information. Also tvfool is being up dated. The pending applications that may not reflect the latest information shows , analog CBUT 2 , CHAN 8 , CHEK 6 . Digital , CHAN 22 , CBUT 43. In any event , if you will like to reach out for the Canada stations now or after the tvfool up date , at your location a Big Antenna will be needed. I recommend a Winegard HD7084P antenna or a Channel Master CM3671 and a Antennas Direct CPA-19 preamp. I recommend a dedicated antenna for the Canada stations.
Yes, I understand about their switch to digital on Sep 1, 2011.

I even check out this site , which is fairly accurate:
http://members.shaw.ca/nwbroadcasters/tvpage.htm

.. that CM 3671 looks very similar to my current big antenna (though I dont know what its gain is).. I'm looking for the more compact and vertical one like DB4/DB8.

Also, my understanding about amplifiers is that it mitigates signal loss down the line to the TV, it does not "increase" the gain of the antenna itself, right?
be236 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 20-Sep-2011, 7:15 AM   #5
be236
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Sep 2011
Posts: 135
Quote:
Originally Posted by John Candle View Post
You can connect a CPA-19 preamp to the VU-190 and see what can be received. Careful aiming of the antenna for Canada tv reception will help , turn the antenna to the left and right for the strongest signal. After reading the information about the Canada tv transition you now understand that Canada has a mix of analog and digital tv stations and will likely have for a long time in to the future. The complete tv analog shut down for the USA is 2015.
Yes, I do understand those BC stations and which are digital (well most are, except for CHEK 6 analog on temp authority to stay there for the short future)...

Basically, with tvfool shows the direction of those stations I want and looking overlap with satellite map, I can see my antenna is pointed in that exact location.. of course I will adjust left and right ever slightly to be sure... for now basically I am fairly confident the channels I want are all UHF and digital (except CHEK 6)... and yes, I do intend to have dedicated antenna for those stations and another big antenna like VU-190 pointed south towards Seattle , which works all fine (I can get KBTC 27 just fine now with no pre-amp)...

As for that CPA-19... again, that only boosts signal downstream right, it does NOT increase my antenna signal gain, as I have read by another poster...

So, back to my original question... if theory if the channels I want is say at -15 dBm , and I find that DB8 can get me a gain of 16 dBm, say, then my net gain is 1 dBm, and with amplifier, the input to my TV should be 1 dBm, right?

.. But I read elsewhere that I need at input to TV about 8-9 dBm to get a digital lock on my tuner to get a signal, right?
be236 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 20-Sep-2011, 7:42 AM   #6
John Candle
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Jun 2010
Posts: 2,697
Tv Antennas and Reception

The CPA-19 will keep what signal is received and increased buy the 'antenna (gain)' strong all the way to the receiver. Signal loss happens in the coax and splitters down stream from the antenna. The Canada stations are very weak. As for the shake out of what Canada stations will be analog or digital and what stations will be VHF or UHF , Well.
John Candle is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 20-Sep-2011, 8:15 AM   #7
John Candle
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Jun 2010
Posts: 2,697
Tv Antennas and Reception

As for digital lock , +8 and +9 are good target numbers. Some tv tuners , Sony or Samsung , can get lock , down to -10 or lower -15 NM (dB). The FCC and industry target number is 0 NM(dB).
John Candle is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 20-Sep-2011, 3:05 PM   #8
be236
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Sep 2011
Posts: 135
Quote:
Originally Posted by John Candle View Post
The CPA-19 will keep what signal is received and increased buy the 'antenna (gain)' strong all the way to the receiver. Signal loss happens in the coax and splitters down stream from the antenna. The Canada stations are very weak. As for the shake out of what Canada stations will be analog or digital and what stations will be VHF or UHF , Well.
Where can I find this CPA-19 amplifier?

On Amazon.com the reviews for Motorola amplifier is pretty good, along with some others like Winegard (sp)....

Yes, I know the Canadian stations have low ERPs, typically less than 50 kW, whereas the US stations are like 800 - 1000 kW. There's a separate thread for that. I dont know why that's the case... Are they trying to save electricity? heheh. or discouraging Americans from picking up their signals across the border? Or encouraging their folks to ditch OTA and get cable instead? (heh)
be236 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 20-Sep-2011, 3:09 PM   #9
be236
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Sep 2011
Posts: 135
Quote:
Originally Posted by John Candle View Post
As for digital lock , +8 and +9 are good target numbers. Some tv tuners , Sony or Samsung , can get lock , down to -10 or lower -15 NM (dB). The FCC and industry target number is 0 NM(dB).

I've got an older Sony HDTV CRT (2006?) that can't pick up channel 44.1, while my newer DTV converter box (Artec) can, using the same cable. Must be because this Sony was older, so I am guessing newer Sony tuners are more sensitive.

I wonder if there's a list of DTV convert boxes rated by tuner sensitivity, because I have a variety.

Also, this Sony TV can pick up channel 6 (CHEK) while it's still on analog with my current poor setup, but the picture is static as expected, but watchable.
be236 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 20-Sep-2011, 3:12 PM   #10
rickcain
Member
 
Join Date: Dec 2010
Posts: 65
Stay away from Lava antennas, all of them. Total snake oil.
rickcain is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 20-Sep-2011, 3:19 PM   #11
be236
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Sep 2011
Posts: 135
Quote:
Originally Posted by rickcain View Post
Stay away from Lava antennas, all of them. Total snake oil.
Ya, at first I was wary of those Lavas.. Yet, if you go to Amazon.com and read the hundreds of reviews, lots of them are quite favourable. I think Lava gets 4 out of 5 stars...

I was quite surprised when I read them. Of course there were few a few reviews saying they are junk too...

But a few of the good reviews say that they picked up stations 80-100 miles away with those Lavas. Which is what I need/want for my situation. Of course, I dont expect them to get any stations beyond that (eg, 110-150 miles away).

So I'm not sure what to make of them... can't believe all those good reviews are "fake."
be236 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 20-Sep-2011, 3:25 PM   #12
MisterMe
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Aug 2011
Location: USA Gulf South
Posts: 231
Quote:
Originally Posted by be236 View Post
I've got an older Sony HDTV CRT (2006?) that can't pick up channel 44.1, while my newer DTV converter box (Artec) can, using the same cable. Must be because this Sony was older, so I am guessing newer Sony tuners are more sensitive.

...
Is KFFV the only digital station that your Sony can't receive or does not not receive any? If KTTV is the only station that you can't receive, then lack of tuner sensitivity may be the reason. If you can't receive any digital stations, then the explanation is likely the fact that older wide screen TV sets did not have integrated ATSC [digital] tuners. If this is the case, the you need an external tuner or converter box like your Artec.
MisterMe is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 20-Sep-2011, 3:35 PM   #13
be236
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Sep 2011
Posts: 135
Quote:
Originally Posted by MisterMe View Post
Is KFFV the only digital station that your Sony can't receive or does not not receive any? If KTTV is the only station that you can't receive, then lack of tuner sensitivity may be the reason. If you can't receive any digital stations, then the explanation is likely the fact that older wide screen TV sets did not have integrated ATSC [digital] tuners. If this is the case, the you need an external tuner or converter box like your Artec.
No, KFFV (44.x) is the only channel my Sony (yes, it's HDTV with ATSC tuner) can't get. All the other digital channels it gets fine like the Artec DTV converter box.

So, like I said, I suspect because it's an older Sony model, its ATSC tuner is not as sensitive as the Artec DTV converter box I bought in 2009 as US went Digital.

Is there a listing of newer HDTVs ranked my tuner sensitivity so I know which model to buy for my next TV so I can pick up those weak Vancouver stations (get a better chance of digital lock on low NM values as listed in tvfool)?
be236 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 20-Sep-2011, 3:49 PM   #14
rickcain
Member
 
Join Date: Dec 2010
Posts: 65
Well here's the deal with Lava antennas....

1) Lots of people are selling these things, so padding review sites is not unusual

2) Many glowing customers unknowingly are in strong reception areas, so even a paper clip stuck in the tuner box can get them 40+ channels of Free TV.

3) Plastic! The only thing plastic on an antenna should be an end cap for waterproofing. When you get into structural parts in the design, you can expect early failure. Weather and the sun will do a number on plastic, especially cheap polystyrene which these antennas are made of.

4) The earth's curvature makes 100-120+ mile antenna claims suspicious. You would need a very large antenna very high up with an amp to get reliable reception.


Stick to the big boys that have been in the business for decades, Winegard, Antennacraft, Channelmaster, Antennas Direct.
rickcain is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 20-Sep-2011, 4:06 PM   #15
be236
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Sep 2011
Posts: 135
Quote:
Originally Posted by rickcain View Post
Well here's the deal with Lava antennas....

1) Lots of people are selling these things, so padding review sites is not unusual

2) Many glowing customers unknowingly are in strong reception areas, so even a paper clip stuck in the tuner box can get them 40+ channels of Free TV.

3) Plastic! The only thing plastic on an antenna should be an end cap for waterproofing. When you get into structural parts in the design, you can expect early failure. Weather and the sun will do a number on plastic, especially cheap polystyrene which these antennas are made of.

4) The earth's curvature makes 100-120+ mile antenna claims suspicious. You would need a very large antenna very high up with an amp to get reliable reception.


Stick to the big boys that have been in the business for decades, Winegard, Antennacraft, Channelmaster, Antennas Direct.
Well, in the analog days, I was able to pick up those 100-mile stations in VHF fine (albeit static, but watchable)... yes, I know VHF has a longer distance than UHF.. and they had high ERPs like 100-300 kWatt.

Now these new UHF stations have less than 50 kWatt, so it makes it that much harder.

My other choice was to get either the DB4 or DB8 or those Clearstream C4 or C5, that Amazon shows good reviews as well.

Hopefully Amazon has a good return policy, such that I would just be out my "shipping cost."
be236 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 20-Sep-2011, 6:28 PM   #16
mtownsend
Moderator
 
Join Date: Dec 2009
Posts: 632
Quote:
Originally Posted by be236 View Post
Where can I find this CPA-19 amplifier?
You can try Solid Signal: http://www.solidsignal.com/pview.asp...lifier-(CPA19)



Quote:
Yes, I know the Canadian stations have low ERPs, typically less than 50 kW, whereas the US stations are like 800 - 1000 kW. There's a separate thread for that. I dont know why that's the case... Are they trying to save electricity? heheh. or discouraging Americans from picking up their signals across the border? Or encouraging their folks to ditch OTA and get cable instead? (heh)
Just a few general comments:

>> The US went through some adjustments after the June 12, 2009 analog shutdown. The ERPs for several stations were increased as they fine tuned their new equipment and tried to improve reception. I suspect there will be some adjustment period for the Canadian broadcasters as well. You might see some ERPs go up as a result.

>> VHF stations will almost always be limited to ERPs below 100 kW. Even 50 kW is considered to be quite powerful for an ATSC (digital) signal in VHF. UHF stations can go over 100 kW, and Canada already has several of them (going up to about 470 kW).

>> Even in the days of analog-only television, I think we saw the same relative difference in Canadian vs. US ERPs. If everyone is simply trying to maintain the same coverage as they had before, then any analog ERP differences would naturally translate into equivalent digital ERP differences.
mtownsend is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 20-Sep-2011, 6:41 PM   #17
be236
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Sep 2011
Posts: 135
Quote:
Originally Posted by mtownsend View Post
You can try Solid Signal: http://www.solidsignal.com/pview.asp...lifier-(CPA19)


Just a few general comments:

>> The US went through some adjustments after the June 12, 2009 analog shutdown. The ERPs for several stations were increased as they fine tuned their new equipment and tried to improve reception. I suspect there will be some adjustment period for the Canadian broadcasters as well. You might see some ERPs go up as a result.

>> VHF stations will almost always be limited to ERPs below 100 kW. Even 50 kW is considered to be quite powerful for an ATSC (digital) signal in VHF. UHF stations can go over 100 kW, and Canada already has several of them (going up to about 470 kW).

>> Even in the days of analog-only television, I think we saw the same relative difference in Canadian vs. US ERPs. If everyone is simply trying to maintain the same coverage as they had before, then any analog ERP differences would naturally translate into equivalent digital ERP differences.
First point:

Ok, just to be clear, the "gain" listed for this pre-amp is downstream to prevent signal loss from the antenna to RF input of TV, right? It does NOT increase the actual signal gain of the antenna itself, correct?

I mean... suppose I have a UHF channel listed here at -5 dBm. This pre-amp claims to have +17 dBm gain for UHF. This does NOT mean I will get -5 + 17 = +12 dBm signal at the antenna, right?

Also, if I buy this from that site, what's their return policy in case it just doesnt work for me... am I just out "shipping cost?"

Second point:

Yeah, I noticed that.. US stations analog in VHF in Seattle was like at 800kW (see my earlier link), but now digital stations in VHF are like 50kw or so.. that's fine..

My grip is why Can stations UHF are so much lower than US... US UHF digital stations I see like 500 kW, but theirs is like 40kW, though CBUT 43 is at 100kW which is nice.. wonder why the other Vancouver stations not at 100kw.. :0
be236 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 20-Sep-2011, 7:04 PM   #18
GroundUrMast
Moderator
 
GroundUrMast's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2010
Location: Greater Seattle Area
Posts: 4,773
Quote:
Ok, just to be clear, the "gain" listed for this pre-amp is downstream to prevent signal loss from the antenna to RF input of TV, right? It does NOT increase the actual signal gain of the antenna itself, correct?
You're on the right track. A preamp can overcome loss in the cable and splitters that are connected to the output of the amplifier. No amplifier can remove noise or distortion from a signal and in fact, all amplifiers add some noise and distortion to the signal. So, no amplifier can do the job of an antenna which is to recover enough signal of sufficient quality so that noise and distortion will not mask or 'bury' the signal.

Your math is correct but incomplete, or based on a misunderstanding. The signal at the output of the amplifier would be +12 dBm... I suspect that you are referring to the noise figure however. (-5 dBm would be an extremely powerful signal level and virtually all consumer grade amplifiers are incapable of delivering +12 dBm output.)

If you are looking at a signal with a predicted NM of -5 dB (not dBm), the noise figure of the amplifier would be subtracted from the signal NM. For an amplifier with a noise figure of 3 dB the math would be {NM(-5 dB - 3 dB = -8 dB)} which means that there would be 8 dB more noise than a perfect or near perfect receiver could work with. The amplifier makes the net NM worse, not better.

The solution is to use an antenna with enough gain to produce a signal with a positive NM. Antenna gain is better than amplifier gain. Antenna gain adds to the NM of a signal, amplifiers subtract from a signals' NM.

FWIW: Measurement in units of dBm are referenced to one Milli-Watt (1/1000 Watt) of power. Signal power is commonly expressed this way. Noise margin can be expressed in dB, with the zero level (reference point) being the minimum signal/noise that a perfect or very nearly perfect receiver could recover. Signal power and NM are two different measurements and the units used are unique to each.

There is a low level of electrical noise generated by every atom in the universe. When we are dealing with very weak signals, noise generated by random electron movement in the antenna itself become significant noise sources.
__________________
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')

Last edited by GroundUrMast; 20-Sep-2011 at 7:19 PM.
GroundUrMast is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 20-Sep-2011, 7:17 PM   #19
mtownsend
Moderator
 
Join Date: Dec 2009
Posts: 632
Quote:
Originally Posted by be236 View Post
Well, in the analog days, I was able to pick up those 100-mile stations in VHF fine (albeit static, but watchable)... yes, I know VHF has a longer distance than UHF.. and they had high ERPs like 100-300 kWatt.

Now these new UHF stations have less than 50 kWatt, so it makes it that much harder.
Keep in mind that analog (NTSC) signals NEEDED much more power to achieve a clear picture. They need a fairly high signal to noise ratio (say roughly a 27 dB SNR) to produce a clean (like VHS tape quality) image.

Digital (ATSC) signals can produce a clean (like DVD quality) image while using less signal power (roughly a 15 dB SNR).

The lower power of digital broadcasts does not make it harder to receive. The power was reduced to maintain roughly the same amount of coverage as the old analog systems. Since the threshold for reception has been reduced, it takes less power to get to that threshold. The high ERPs with analog stations was mostly out of necessity due to the spectral inefficiency of that signal format (developed in the 1940s and 50s).

In general, ERP is a bad way to look at station effectiveness because it does not take into account the signal type (ATSC vs. NTSC) and it does not take into account the frequency (high frequency channels require much more power than low frequency channels). For example, a 50 kW digital station on channel 7 will cover the same area as (actually even more than) a 5000 kW analog station on channel 51.
mtownsend is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 20-Sep-2011, 8:33 PM   #20
be236
Senior Member
 
Join Date: Sep 2011
Posts: 135
Quote:
Originally Posted by GroundUrMast View Post
You're on the right track. A preamp can overcome loss in the cable and splitters that are connected to the output of the amplifier. No amplifier can remove noise or distortion from a signal and in fact, all amplifiers add some noise and distortion to the signal. So, no amplifier can do the job of an antenna which is to recover enough signal of sufficient quality so that noise and distortion will not mask or 'bury' the signal.

Your math is correct but incomplete, or based on a misunderstanding. The signal at the output of the amplifier would be +12 dBm... I suspect that you are referring to the noise figure however. (-5 dBm would be an extremely powerful signal level and virtually all consumer grade amplifiers are incapable of delivering +12 dBm output.)

If you are looking at a signal with a predicted NM of -5 dB (not dBm), the noise figure of the amplifier would be subtracted from the signal NM. For an amplifier with a noise figure of 3 dB the math would be {NM(-5 dB - 3 dB = -8 dB)} which means that there would be 8 dB more noise than a perfect or near perfect receiver could work with. The amplifier makes the net NM worse, not better.

The solution is to use an antenna with enough gain to produce a signal with a positive NM. Antenna gain is better than amplifier gain. Antenna gain adds to the NM of a signal, amplifiers subtract from a signals' NM.

FWIW: Measurement in units of dBm are referenced to one Milli-Watt (1/1000 Watt) of power. Signal power is commonly expressed this way. Noise margin can be expressed in dB, with the zero level (reference point) being the minimum signal/noise that a perfect or very nearly perfect receiver could recover. Signal power and NM are two different measurements and the units used are unique to each.

There is a low level of electrical noise generated by every atom in the universe. When we are dealing with very weak signals, noise generated by random electron movement in the antenna itself become significant noise sources.
Yes, you're correct.. when I said signal of -5 dBm, I mean that's the NM value I get here in Tvfool when it shows channels for my specific location.

So back to my actual problem that I started for this thread.

The channels I want show up to -16 dB NM value. Then I need to find an antenna that is spec-ed/claimed to be +16 dB gain or higher , right so that I can get above the 0 dB threshold to get a signal lock?

That Lava antenna claims +30 dB gain (but not sure if they meant that is for the pre-amp gain and not the antenna gain itself).

The DB8 antenna I see in various sites show a gain of +16 dB, which would get me to this 0 dB threshold... but looks like I need more gain to get signal... would I have to string 2 DB8s together or something like that (would look unslightly)...
be236 is offline   Reply With Quote
Reply

Bookmarks

Go Back   TV Fool > Over The Air Services > Help With Reception


Thread Tools

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off




All times are GMT. The time now is 10:51 AM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, vBulletin Solutions Inc.
Copyright © TV Fool, LLC