Showing posts with label antennas. Show all posts
Showing posts with label antennas. Show all posts

Sunday, June 17, 2012

Philips High Performance Amplified Indoor Uhf/Vhf/Fm/HDTV Antenna Review

Philips High Performance Amplified Indoor Uhf/Vhf/Fm/HDTV Antenna
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I'm a first timer at getting OTA HDTV. This has been an experiment in progress for the past 5 weeks. I have gone through four antennas (they are all here as I write this) before finding something that's satisfactory (rather than tolerable).
I live around 25 miles from Manhattan, where the towers of most TV stations are located. I am also aware of the directional information from [...], and have experimented accordingly with its effects on reception. My apartment's windows all face north, while the signals all comes from southwest. I cannot get signals from where it comes from, and thus needed to get signals from deflections perhaps off nearby buildings and trees. It's a very poor circumstance for over-the-air reception, maybe just slightly better than being underground. Signals are weak, and are affected by weather. Stormy and windy days have shown effects at disrupting signal reception.
With this said, and without going into much detail, let's talk about the antennas. Now all these antenna have been tested with the same equipment, setup, directional adjustments, location, etc. etc. and have been tested through good an foul weather, day and night, to observe differences.
1.Terk HDTVa Terk HDTVa Indoor Amplified High-Definition Antenna for Off-Air HDTV Reception- After reading some rave reviews and high ratings at [...], log periodic types (looks like a fishbone) seems to be the way to go. I got the Terk HDTVa first, thinking that the amplification and VHF antenna should nail my reception problems at the start. However, after more than two weeks of fidgeting around ad nauseam (directions, locations, amplifications, different devices, etc.), I only managed to pick up two ATSC channels' signals, and even those don't have strong enough signals to display anything. I thought maybe it's just my poor location, and that I should probably give up on the attempt. The included in-line amplifier dongle doesn't work at all. Powering it on makes no difference in signal strength readings, which hovered around 5-10%.
It is well built, looks nice, good concepts, but it just didn't work.
2.Phlips PHDTV1 Philips PHDTV1 Digital HDTV-UHF Indoor Antenna- The venerated "silver sensor" which was previously sold under the Zenith brand also had great ratings and reviews. It's in fact nearly legendary. I decided, in desperation, to try it out, even if it doesn't have amplification. It seems all my local HD channels are in UHF anyway, so I won't miss the VHF dipoles.
The unit has startlingly poorer build quality compared to the Terk. It has paint bubbles, hairs and dusts trappings in the paint, sharp edged cheap plastics and much thinner metal blades that's covered in oil and has some dings and bendings. I wasn't impressed with the quality, and didn't expect much from it as I set it up.
To my surprise, it picked up 9 working channels (note: the terk got two channels' signals, but they didn't work) from the start, even if it's randomly placed. It's thrilling as it was the first time I saw OTA HDTV. After some adjustment and location experiments, I was able to receive 19 channels. However, not all of these channels work well given the same direction.
The directionally sensitive antenna needs to be adjusted as I switch channels. e.g. NBC and CBS seems to work well in one direction, while ABC has its own favorite direction, which works also with FOX. I tried as best as possible to find a compromise point where everything works. I couldn't. It just needs to be adjusted constantly.
The transmission is often dogged by reception fluctuations. Signal quality tend to fluctuate quite a bit, especially affected by weather. That means the TV playback would get choppy at times, with its severity dependent on the direction I point the antenna at. I didn't think fluctuating signals was a characteristic until I tried the latter two antennas later. I also found that I had to constantly play with the directional positioning to get a stable signal from each of the stations.
It works, and I was impressed, but then in retrospect it could only be best described as a "tolerable" HDTV experience as I struggled for a smooth signal delivery.
3.RCA ANT111 Basic Indoor Antenna- While shopping in stores, I saw this basic and classic RCA loop/dipole antenna for less than $[...]. I couldn't resist the temptation to try it out, just for the heck of it. It is also a different type of antenna than the previous two.
Again, I was surprised. This cheap antenna worked well, especially considering how it's only a fraction of the price of the two I'd tried. I ended up getting 17 channels, a few less than the PHDTV1, with the same location and setup. Some channels also don't work, even if signals were detected. The quality of the signals seems to be the key.
So what's so special about it? It strangely had better signal delivery for the channels that worked. It's not as choppy, and quality level is very steady. It is also not as affected by directional positioning. I was for the first time able to view FOX, ABC, CBS, NBC without adjusting the antenna. However, the lack of directionality also makes it ambiguous when I lost the signal. It seems that there's no "favorite direction" for the channels, which also means I can't pull in stronger signals at my choosing. It is also quite susceptible to weather changes, particularly wind (which probably affected signals reflected by trees?)
The signal strength also seems to be a little weaker, though the signal quality tend to be higher in general. That probably contributed to the smoother video delivery. It also tempted me to get a similar design that has amplification.
4.Philips MANT510 Philips High Performance Amplified Indoor Uhf/ Vhf/ Fm Antenna- This unit has a "digital TV optimized, patent pending UHF panel array". I thought I'd try it out just for the slightly different antenna design, if not just for the adjustable amplification.
Well, it works, and works quite well. The antenna doesn't work without power, and with amplification turned off it works a little less than unpowered PHDTV1 and ANT111. Yet with the amplification turned on, I get 24 channels, with strength up to 81% (compared to 3-10% unamplified, and quality consistently above 60 and usually in the 70-90%+. That generates the most reliable video delivery of all the ones tried.
While thunderstorms still managed to distrupt signals, it's much less often and only momentarily. I also don't have to worry about hunting for signals as I just point it in one general direction and I get everything but three NJN channels (they are even further from here.. maybe a good 50 miles).
I finally can just set the antenna and forget it. It lets me focus on the programming rather than antenna adjustment. While it needs to be powered, it gives me the confidence to finally enjoy HDTV, rather than tweaking and tolerating it. It's good enough that I can probably stop searching. I hope it'll be helpful to you who may be going through the same purchasing decision nausea as I have.

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Monday, June 11, 2012

CLEARSTREAM2 Antenna Review

CLEARSTREAM2 Antenna
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I live in New York City about 14 miles north of stations broadcasting from the Empire State Building. I tried indoor antennas, both the Terk HDTVa Indoor Amplified High-Definition Antenna for Off-Air HDTV Reception and the RCA ANT525 AMPLIFIED ANTENNA, neither of which would pull in stations consistently even when I was constantly moving the antenna to maximize reception. The signal quality was constantly bouncing between 10% and ~80%, so stations were constantly cutting in and out.
I purchased this antenna when it was recommended by the telephone agent at AntennasDirect.com. She recommended it for me over the Antennas Direct DB2 Multi Directional HDTV Antenna because this one was somewhat less directional, and smaller in size.
All I can say is, WOW. I have 100% signal strength on nearly all channels, with a consistent 85% - 100% signal quality. It pulls in 24 HD stations (more than the ones I tried before) without moving the antenna at all, and with no extra amplification. I am using it as an internal antenna -- it's just placed by the window.
This antenna is worth every penny I paid for it, and more. I cannot recommend it highly enough.

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Sunday, June 3, 2012

Philips SDV4400/27 HDTV/UHF/VHF/FM Outdoor TV Antenna Review

Philips SDV4400/27 HDTV/UHF/VHF/FM Outdoor TV Antenna
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We bought this antenna to pick up both analog and digital signals. It made all the channels we were receiving with our old antenna come in almost crystal clear, which is alot better than what we were previously receiving. This is a good antenna for the price, but it does not come with a mast pole for mounting.

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Tuesday, May 22, 2012

Uhf / Vhf Antenna Pre Amp Kit Review

Uhf / Vhf Antenna Pre Amp Kit
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I think many people purchasing this amp may not understand how it works, and may not be very patient with trying out a few setup options. I own a small computer and electronics shop, and have just recently started installing products from antennas direct. In the installation instructions it says to point your antenna first for an ideal signal BEFORE installing the amplifier. This is very important to getting satisfactory results. Also, if you understand what factors reduce signal strength (cable quality and length, connectors, splitters, etc), you can better diagnose what may be going wrong. I brought this amp to a customer's home, along with several different models of antennas to test out and swap parts to see what results I got. [...] gave them no results for stations servicing their area, and they lived in a hole in the middle of the woods. They had a very large, old broken aerial antenna sitting on a wood pile that they had been using, which got in most VHF antennas, and some UHF. For this antenna, the amplifier did absolutely nothing, and actually cut reception in half on the signal meters on 3 different TVs. For a roof mounted DB4, it improved all the UHF stations, but reduced the signal on all VHF stations to the point where none of them came in. With the ClearStream C5 roof mounted, all VHF stations came in above 80% with no amp, and when the amp was added, it brought them up to nearly 95%. The UHF stations were diminished. With the DB4 and C5 both connected using the diplexer included with the C5 and NO AMPLIFIER, all available stations came in clearly and with no pixelization. However, this setup needed to service 3 televisions with a splitter. Once the third run of cable was added to the splitter and total cable length of the entire system exceeded 120 ft., the signal cut enough to cause some stations to break up. Adding the amplifier back in solved this problem, and gave them all available stations at above 80% signal strength. I could not ask for much more at a house out in the sticks in deep woods 30-60 miles from any towers, Another benefit to adding the amp is that the signal is not only higher, but it also stabilized it. Before the amp, the numbers and meters were jumping all over the place, with blowing trees, etc. After the amp, the meters didn't vary more than 3% up or down.
Overall I'm impressed, but it did take some work to get the right combination. I wish there were more noticeable gain. An 18dB gain should be enough to take a 75% signal and turn it into 100% as seen by the TV or tuner, but it didn't. It seems that reception was as good without the amp until the third split was added, and that's the step that made it obvious it was needed. Until then, it was looking as if we could do without the amp. So sure, it does the job and stabilizes reception, but it looks like if you're using no splitters and within 30 miles of all your local stations, you can get the best reception with the right combination of antennas and no amp. 5 stars for the C5. It brought the whole package together, a great antenna with an effective bonus diplexer.
Build quality is average. I'd like to have the ability to remove the AC adapter from the power injecter (to run power through small drilled holes, etc.). Although I'd say it's pretty cheap feeling and looking, it's not overpriced in my opinion. A lot of other more expensive products are less effective.
to sumarize:
Get a more powerful antenna than you think you should, and only plan on using an amp to overcome splits and long runs. Getting a smaller antenna and beefing it up with an amp isn't likely to have the same effect as a larger antenna by itself.

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Thursday, May 17, 2012

DIRECTV WNC Multi-satellite Dish with Integrated Triple LNB Built in Multi-switching Review

DIRECTV WNC Multi-satellite Dish with Integrated Triple LNB Built in Multi-switching
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I received this dish ahead of schedule and in the end it worked great. I had trouble aligning it and thought the LNB was bad so I contacted the shipper and they sent me some replacements! In the end I discovered that the location I was trying to use didn't have a good view of the area of the sky that was needed. I moved the dish and everything went well.

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Sunday, May 13, 2012

Channel Master 4221HD Multi-Bay UHF Short Range HDTV Antenna Review

Channel Master 4221HD Multi-Bay UHF Short Range HDTV Antenna
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I initially made the mistake of thinking all expensive antennas were created equal. Needless to say, my first antenna was a $100 purchase that worked no better than my old rabbit ears.
I then made the decission to "step up" and purchased a Radio Shack antenna from the "electronic experts". It was touted as an attic antenna but was really too cumbersome for the attic and again provided no more value than my rabbit ears.
Fed up with making returns, and noticing that being in a hurry was costing me time, I finally decided to do some research. After much reading, I decided the 4221 based on its rating was going to be the right thing. I have it installed in my attic and could not be happier. It is a very manageable size and most importantly, it brings in all the channels flawlessly! After the two previous failures I could not be more thrilled. Price is not the key. It was cheaper than the two previous attempts by about half the cost. . . And the best news. It works!
You will want to check on the requirements for your area. A midrange UHF was perscribed as the right thing based on broadcast signals in my area. One also needs to ensure the antenna is pointed in the right direction. Most high gain antennas are directional as is the 4221. If you are looking for a midrange UHF, look no further.

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Wednesday, May 9, 2012

Terk Technology TV-55 UHF/VHF HDTV Indoor/Outdoor Amplified Antenna Review

Terk Technology TV-55 UHF/VHF HDTV Indoor/Outdoor Amplified Antenna
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Purchased this unit (mounted indoors) because I got tired of adjusting rabbit ears (I refuse to pay $50/month for cable). Unfortunately the reception quality is mediocre, if not subpar for its price. I get cleaner pictures with my old amplified rabbit ear set.

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The Terk TV-55 is engineered specifically to optimize the performance of high definition television as well as analog television signals. The TV-55's unique helical coil element allows for an unobtrusive design yet without compromising the ability to capture lower-frequency TV stations. The helical coil receives both UHF and VHF frequencies and provides exceptional reception at all frequencies.

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Winegard HD 7696P High Definition VHF/UHF HD7696 Series Antenna (HD7696P) Review

Winegard HD 7696P High Definition VHF/UHF HD7696 Series Antenna (HD7696P)
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I live is a great spot for TV reception (Raleigh, NC). I was using a ChannelMaster CM-4228HD antenna. I received all of the stations pretty well except for ABC11. The towers were all in the same general direction (157 - 166 degrees), and the antenna was pointed in that direction, but I could not get all of them. I posted in a forum about my problem and an expert (based on his posts, he knew what he was talking about) suggested that I try this antenna. Apparently my ChannelMaster antenna did not handle signal multipath very well as it is an issue in my region. After months of trying to get my CM-4228HD antenna to work, I bit the bullet and purchased this along with an antenna rotator. This really solved my problems. Not only does ABC11 come in crystal clear, I also receive other channels that I didn't get before! I would suggest this product to anyone in a similar area to mine.

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Sunday, May 6, 2012

Winegard HD7000R VHF/UHF HDTV Antenna Review

Winegard HD7000R VHF/UHF HDTV Antenna
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First the good. I installed this antenna in my attic with an AP-8700 amplifier. It immediately brought in all of my locals and their sub-channels with great signal strength. The farthest tower from me is probaly 30-40 miles. I have 3 TV sets running off this antenna and it works great. I have no complaints now that it is up (see next).
Now the bad:
-The instructions are terrible. It's not that difficult to put together and set up, but don't expect the instructions to help you get there.
-I actually went through two of these antennas. The first one shipped from Amazon missing some parts. I exchanged it using Amazon's return process (which is great by the way), but the second unit arrived missing the same parts. I called Winegard and they were aware of several units that went out with missing parts and sent me replacements 2 day.
The two bad items are the reason I rated this 4 stars. Both Winegard and Amazon's customer service were great which is why they didn't get a lower rating. This is easily a 5 star antenna performance-wise, but hope you don't have the same problems I did with getting all the parts you need.

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Saturday, May 5, 2012

Winegard SS-2000 Squareshooter UHF-Only Amplified Antenna Review

Winegard SS-2000 Squareshooter UHF-Only Amplified Antenna
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After a lifetime of living in various areas all having poor TV reception, I'm used to barely visible images, heavy ghosting, snow, and poor colors.
Flipping through cable channels at hotels never turned up anything sufficiently interesting to pay a subscription for. But, with the transition to digital coming, I picked up a digital tuner (EyeTV 250+) for my computer (as the cheapest entry point) and plugged-in to the apartment's antenna to see what was available.
Only one digital channel was received, but it was so clear, I researched antennas further and eventually got the Winegard SS2000.
Although only 10 miles from antennas broadcasting from the top of a mountain in Los Angeles, I'm about 150 feet below a line of sight blocked by foothill terrain that is topped by another 50 feet of trees. The apartment has a multi-element UHF/VHF antenna about 80 feet off the ground that provides only marginal results on VHF. In fact, antennaweb.org predicted reception of ZERO digital channels at my location.
So the SS2000 was to be an experiment only; expectations were low, considering the elaborate external VHF/UHF pro antenna system at 80 feet of elevation only got one digital station.
I wired up the SS2000, plugged it in and got 42 digital channels with it just propped up in a chair, 2 feet off the ground inside my apartment. The first station I looked at was broadcasting a football game in 1080i & Dolby; seeing individual blades of grass on the field with accurate colors and no artifacts was memorable!
Got a tripod for the antenna (USAT from DVBhardware) and placed it outdoors on my patio, upping the count to a total of 54 stations (28 are keepers).
So it works, and works very well. I also got the SS3000 "indoor" antenna for comparison, but find the SS2000 to be superior, whether used indoors or outdoors. This may be because the SS3000 is a bit ungainly and difficult to orient considering it's long "wingspan". The SS2000 square isn't a visual work of art for the indoors, but it's not bad either, and could well be hung inside on a wall. It is light-weight. Given the better performance, compactness, and indoor/outdoor flexibility of the SS2000, I don't know what purpose the SS3000 serves.
Despite the reception "valley" I'm in, I do benefit from having most of the antennas broadcasting from a single site. The SS2000 is NOT suitable if you have stations broadcasting from multiple directions. If the antenna is turned more than ~10 degrees off-point, I start to lose stations. So you will need something else if you want/have to receive from multiple directions.
I briefly tried the analog VHF channels with the SS2000; they were there, but with many artifacts. Since the local stations all broadcast equivalent digitals, there's no reason to look at the analog VHF again, so I didn't pursue it.
As a side-note, I've seen reviews by people reporting failure with one antenna or another (even this one); keep in mind, this antenna is NOT for free satellite reception but for free digital terrestrial broadcasts from a ground-based transmitter. I get suspicious when I read of people expressing disgust with an antenna after getting "nothing" when pointing it "south" ...
UPDATE: The SS2000 is a powered antenna with an AC adapter that injects into the antenna coaxial cable (only one cable to unit). Out of curiosity, I unplugged the power and observed no difference in performance, even for a couple of marginal Japanese channels that drop in and out. The signal level reported by the tuner didn't change whether or not it was powered for ANY of the channels (most of which come in at 55 to 75% signal strength levels at this location, which is apparently good enough). Since the adapter was warm, it was apparently drawing power to no effect. So I leave it unplugged now. I don't know under what conditions the powered-antenna function is useful, but apparently not mine ... which is fine -- just wanted to mention the potential electricity savings.
Now with a Zenith DTT900 digital-to-analog converter box for my standard TV, I run the unpowered SS2000 antenna into a PCT MA2-4P drop amplifier (+8 dB) to split the signal and send on to the converter-box and computer tuners. Works great , but a $7 unpowered splitter did not: the -3.5 dB loss wiped out both tuners.

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Thursday, May 3, 2012

Dish Network 1000.4 Eastern Arc Dish for 61.5, 72, 77 Review

Dish Network 1000.4 Eastern Arc Dish for 61.5, 72, 77
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I am very happy with this product, My luck stroke twice with a sweet promo deal from dish. Works Very good. I found the dish deal at [...]. it may still be ongoing.

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Winegard SW-0010 Tripod Mount for Antenna Review

Winegard SW-0010 Tripod Mount for Antenna
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This would be better if one leg was adjustable so you could mount it on slopes, but as long as you center it over the peak, it works fine.
Note that there's only one way it will fit or else the pivot pads on the bottom won't line up right. This is not mentioned in the instructions.
Instead of buying the official mast with expensive shipping, simply go to your home supply store and get a length of 1-1/4" electrical conduit (EMT), it's the same gauge (16) as the better masts and 10 feet is only about $8.


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Friday, April 27, 2012

GE 24703 Passive Flat Panel Antenna Review

GE 24703 Passive Flat Panel Antenna
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I got this GE antenna at Target. I didn't want to spend much money to replace an older antenna that was for analog signals. I was actually very surprised how well this GE antenna worked. I hooked it up to a TV on a first floor and it worked very well. It picked up all the local stations, including PBS, which I had trouble getting before. I then tried this antenna on a second floor TV and it worked just as well. I have more expensive antennas that don't work nearly as well. The GE antenna is nice because it's small, slim, unobtrusive, and won't be as noticeable as some antennas. I would definitely suggest buying this!

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Wednesday, April 25, 2012

Channel Master 2020 DIGITAL ADVANTAGE (HDTV / VHF / UHF) Outdoor Antenna Review

Channel Master 2020 DIGITAL ADVANTAGE (HDTV / VHF / UHF) Outdoor Antenna
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My house is located at 13 miles north from Chicago TX stations in downtown.
Several big trees are blocking the line of sight from the right front of my antenna on chimney.
At first,I tried with an antenna Mod# DB4 due to its small size, but it gave me frequent dropping signals out on most channels I could get and no VHF high channels(CH2,CH7).
Therefore, I chose this antenna(Mod# CM-2020) which has strong directional and gain on UHF and high VHF channels. This antenna works perfectly for me except snowy of CH41(analog signal), even though its very long antenna.

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Saturday, April 21, 2012

Channel Master 2Bay Out Antenna 4220Hd Antennas & Hardware Outdoor Review

Channel Master 2Bay Out Antenna 4220Hd Antennas and Hardware Outdoor
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I live in an apartment right in the middle between San Francisco and San Jose, so the significant transmitters are 31 miles away from opposite directions. First I tried the RCA ANT525 AMPLIFIED ANTENNA. It pulled in a lot of channels, but I had to crank up the amplification to the max. The problem is, it amplifies all disturbances too, so signal quality is unstable and varies greatly, for example when somebody moves around the room. This causes a very unpleasant viewing experience, especially with digital TV where picture and sound vanish completely when signal quality drops below a certain threshold.
Next up was the Philips High Performance Amplified Indoor Uhf/Vhf/Fm/HDTV Antenna, which boasts even more amplification. It performed significantly worse than the RCA, probably because I couldn't mount it high on the wall like the RCA.
Next, I ordered the highly recommended Antennas Direct DB2 Multi Directional HDTV Antenna, but cancelled the order after I realized that it's UHF-only. NBC is broadcast on channel 11 around here, and the summer games were one of the reasons why I bought a TV in the first place, so going UHF-only wasn't an option.
Then I found this Channel Master 4220. It claims to work also with high band VHF (channels 7-13 or something like that), so it should work perfectly for NBC. It's also a little smaller than the DB-2, which makes it even easier to use indoors. I just mounted it on the wall with a single nail. It looks a bit raw, but I actually like it, it's like contemporary wall art and goes well with a minimalistic modern interior. It took a while to find the best position, and now I get a solid signal for almost all channels without having to move the antenna. It's passive without amplification, so it doesn't need power and you don't have another cable going through your living room. Highly recommended!

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Sunday, April 15, 2012

Indoor Amplified Uhf/vhf/fm/hd Review

Indoor Amplified Uhf/vhf/fm/hd
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OK, so I live in an apartment building with an antenna on the roof and wired jacks connecting to this antenna in each apartment.
Originally I using the basic local package from the cable company and decided I didn't watch enough Live tv to continue paying for the package. So now I only receive internet service through the cable company.
Then when over the air broadcasts switched to digital i connected to the digital antenna on the roof and was able to get over 40 channels free. then this last summer the antenna on the roof has been very unreliable. I'd lose signal completely or it would pixelate really bad. I bought this antenna yesterday from walmart, for $27 and it works like a charm. I positioned it against the window and get anywhere from 50% to 100% signal and I get 42 channels. I have two flat screen tvs with digital ATSC tuners built in.
So I seem to get one more channel with this antenna then I did with the roof.
As far as the two reviews that say they had trouble with reception:
As always with any antenna, geographic location, building materials, antenna placement strength of signal all play a part in how well reception will be received.
Also I know people with analog tube TVs that have a digital box. Personally I have read up on those boxes and they aren't are reliable as a new digital TV. In fact, most of the boxes i could find reviews on only had 1 or 2 stars. Most report the boxes having a short life, or inconsistent ability to hold, or even tune into a signal.P.S. I live in central florida which is flat. And my apartment is in a high rise, so i'm sure both factors help reception for me.One Last thing, I have gain turned up on max and i get great signal results. I have two tvs one in the living room and one in the bedroom, the antenna is shared between them with a splitter. People would assume one tv might not work as well due to signal loss, but on the contrary, both tvs are great with very crisp signals.

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Friday, April 13, 2012

Winegard HD7084P HDTV Antenna Review

Winegard HD7084P HDTV Antenna
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We installed this antenna with rotor and Channel Master amplifier last summer. We live on a hill about 60 miles from the nearest tower. Reception was great. This antenna does not require much assembly. It folds out and snaps into place. I advise using an amplifier if you live in a rural area. We tried it without the amplifier and lost a lot of channels. Also, I highly recommend you secure it to your house with wires and use strong galvanized poles. Although this antenna is well made and held up well with 60 mph winds, it did not do well when we had a severe ice storm this past winter. The pole was not strong enough to hold the weight of the ice covered antenna with steel rotor and the pole bent and the antenna fell on the porch roof. It pretty much destroyed the antenna, so when I finish writing this review, I'm ordering another one of these antennas.

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