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(More customer reviews)I live about 20 miles north of Atlanta and had pretty good reception on the old rabbit ears, prior to the stations going digital. I got about 8 stations. When the digital generation came and I set up my converter box to the same rabbit ears, my reception dropped to 4 stations, and a couple would fuzz in and out, which was totally frustrating.
I put the antenna up myself on the side of the house with 3 chain link fence poles combined, took me maybe a couple hours with the ground wire and running cable down and neatly into the living room.
Immediately, I went from 4 stations to 38 stations, some of which I'd never heard of. One slight adjustment (using an old compass) brought them in all crystal clear. If you refuse to pay for cable like me, this is the antenna you want to get! It opens very easily, has a good solid mount, and the cable attachment attaches with one snap. Couldn't be any easier. And if a 62 year old man can do it with no trouble by himself, think how quickly a couple people could get it up!
I am totally pleased with this antenna.
Special thanks to the "Ask This Old House" episode on PBS that described the process in getting it up and going. Already at work, one of my co-workers wanted the model number of my antenna so he could get one!
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