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local TV what antenna? J. Davidson 10-07-2007
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Posted by mm on October 8, 2007, 12:59 am
On Sun, 7 Oct 2007 17:11:03 -0500, "J. Davidson"

>We have 4 TVs in the house connected to satellite. We have another, a
>Sanyo, on which we would like to be able to watch local TV (we live near
>Memphis). Can someone recommend an antenna for us?
>Many thanks,
>Jackie Davidson

P&M

I presume you have a coaxial cable connector on the back of your tv?
A silver colored little thimble like thing, but not tapered, with
threads on the outside?

What I would try first is a thin piece of non-stranded (single thread)
wire, insulated if possible, with the insulation stripped off the inch
at one end, and stuff that wire into the little hole in the center of
the coaxial connector on the back of the tv. You can put it in a half
inch, or even maybe an inch if it goes that far. Although even a tiny
bit, a mm. or two, is enough to work, but it might fall out.

The wire should be as thin or thinner than the wire that sticks out of
a coaxial cable connector with the threads on the inside. You can use
one of the strands in a piece of 4-conductor phone line, for example,
or just about anything.

While commercially sold antennas are stiff and stick up, those aren't
very inportant characteristics. Stiff is only useful so that one can
put the antenna where he wants it, but I just let it run down the back
of the tv and the tv-table to the floor. Sticking up, as opposed to
dangling down is only important if the stations are far enough away
that reception is marginal, and even then one could hook the wire to
the curtains or a shelf or a brad in the wall if necessary. I'm sure
it won't hurt to wrap the last half inch of the wire once or twice
around the brad, although that half inch won't function as an antenna
anymore. (becuase it is in a circle and the induced currents in it
will be in all directions and will cancel each other out)

If the stations in Memphis are near enough reception will be ok to
great with anything although low stations like 2, 3, and 4, require a
piece of wire that is at least 3 feet long. Higher number stations
usually don't require that, but you probalby want to get channel 2
also. 30 or 40 or 50 miles is where tv reception fades away, and if
the broadcast antenna is that far away, it can matter if you are on a
hill or in a valley, even a tiny valley like I'm in. It can also
matter what floor you are on. The basement can be bad.

Finally, although SONY usually works well, after that I find that one
can't predict quality of reception by brand. I have local stations in
Baltiomre, and others in DC, and some tv's will get channels 4, 5, 7,
and 9 in DC, but most will only get 3 of them, and which 3 varies.
Others will only get 2 or 1. I have maybe tv's of all ages and brands
going through here over the last 24 years, so I think my sample is
pretty good. Neither brand nor age is a good predictor of how many DC
stations they will get, although all of them get the Baltimore
stations.



AppliancePartsPros.com, Inc.
Posted by RickH on October 8, 2007, 8:09 am
> We have 4 TVs in the house connected to satellite. We have another, a
> Sanyo, on which we would like to be able to watch local TV (we live near
> Memphis). Can someone recommend an antenna for us?
> Many thanks,
> Jackie Davidson


You want the best, go with Winegard, they are awesome:

http://www.winegard.com/offair/products.htm

Also consider that VHF analog broadcasts will be gone in short time,
so an antenna that favors UHF reception would be better for over the
air High Definition which is broadcast digitally in UHF. The HD8200P
should be fine if you still need good VHF reception now, and should do
outstandingly well for everything in the future and current HD
broadcasts.



Posted by Mark Lloyd on October 8, 2007, 10:23 am
On Mon, 08 Oct 2007 05:09:39 -0700, RickH

>> We have 4 TVs in the house connected to satellite. We have another, a
>> Sanyo, on which we would like to be able to watch local TV (we live near
>> Memphis). Can someone recommend an antenna for us?
>> Many thanks,
>> Jackie Davidson
>
>
>You want the best, go with Winegard, they are awesome:
>
>http://www.winegard.com/offair/products.htm
>
>Also consider that VHF analog broadcasts will be gone in short time,
>so an antenna that favors UHF reception would be better for over the
>air High Definition which is broadcast digitally in UHF. The HD8200P
>should be fine if you still need good VHF reception now, and should do
>outstandingly well for everything in the future and current HD
>broadcasts.
>

Most of the newer TV stations around here use UHF, but there's an
interesting exception. The local ABC station broadcasts digitally on
channel 10.
--
78 days until the winter solstice celebration

Mark Lloyd
http://notstupid.laughingsquid.com

"I have found Christian dogma unintelligable. Early
in life I absented myself from Christian assemblies."
-- Benjamin Franklin

Posted by hallerb@aol.com on October 8, 2007, 10:45 am
> On Mon, 08 Oct 2007 05:09:39 -0700, RickH
>
>
>
>
>
> >> We have 4 TVs in the house connected to satellite. We have another, a
> >> Sanyo, on which we would like to be able to watch local TV (we live near
> >> Memphis). Can someone recommend an antenna for us?
> >> Many thanks,
> >> Jackie Davidson
>
> >You want the best, go with Winegard, they are awesome:
>
> >http://www.winegard.com/offair/products.htm
>
> >Also consider that VHF analog broadcasts will be gone in short time,
> >so an antenna that favors UHF reception would be better for over the
> >air High Definition which is broadcast digitally in UHF. The HD8200P
> >should be fine if you still need good VHF reception now, and should do
> >outstandingly well for everything in the future and current HD
> >broadcasts.
>
> Most of the newer TV stations around here use UHF, but there's an
> interesting exception. The local ABC station broadcasts digitally on
> channel 10.
> --
> 78 days until the winter solstice celebration
>
> Mark Lloydhttp://notstupid.laughingsquid.com
>
> "I have found Christian dogma unintelligable. Early
> in life I absented myself from Christian assemblies."
> -- Benjamin Franklin- Hide quoted text -
>
> - Show quoted text -

how many tvs are you watching at the same time? if its usually 4 or
less you can run a cable from one or two of the satellite receivers
add a switch with infrared remote extender and control your satellite
receiver and watch it from tv number 5


Posted by Neill Massello on October 8, 2007, 8:01 pm

> On Mon, 08 Oct 2007 05:09:39 -0700, RickH
>
> >> We have 4 TVs in the house connected to satellite. We have another, a
> >> Sanyo, on which we would like to be able to watch local TV (we live near
> >> Memphis). Can someone recommend an antenna for us?
> >> Many thanks,
> >> Jackie Davidson
> >
> >
> >You want the best, go with Winegard, they are awesome:
> >
> >http://www.winegard.com/offair/products.htm
> >
> >Also consider that VHF analog broadcasts will be gone in short time,
> >so an antenna that favors UHF reception would be better for over the
> >air High Definition which is broadcast digitally in UHF. The HD8200P
> >should be fine if you still need good VHF reception now, and should do
> >outstandingly well for everything in the future and current HD
> >broadcasts.
> >
>
> Most of the newer TV stations around here use UHF, but there's an
> interesting exception. The local ABC station broadcasts digitally on
> channel 10.

UHF TV channels above 51 are being phased out to accommodate cell phone
and other uses. As far as I know, all the current VHF frequencies will
remain available for DTV, and current analog VHF stations will be
allowed to switch their digital signal to their VHF allocation when
analog TV dies in 2009.


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