Quote:
Originally Posted by Ressurrector
I mean can't you just use a good outdoor antenna and IF you had too could't you just throw some booster boxes in the line??
Here is my tvfool.com stats below
Now I can tell you that the first station listed- WBXX (CW) can be gotten with just rabbit ears into a 722 for a modest but still shoddy level (65-75 percent?)
I think I understand now how antenna's are color coded as to indicate their individual strength and the regions in distance of possible stations from your antenna ........ BUT what I don't understand is IF you have to have line of sight for OTA DTV to work then is it that the one station is ALL I could receive for any price save maybe building a small radio tower??? The other site "antennaweb.org" ONLY shows that one channel as DTV when fool has others..... But I don't really get the 1 edge 2 edge thingy. Can someone explain that to me?
I am interested because I just seen Smackdown in HD last night and was pretty impressed....especially considering E* has no new HD in the forseable future.
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You and I have one very important thing in common that the other posters don't have. We both live in the mountains! And for us OTA often not possible or hit and miss at best, often depending on whether or not your live in a valley or on/near the top of a mountain.
My TV Fool chart looks similar to yours, showing +/- 800 feet for LOS, and 1 or 2 edge for all stations. The "edge" thingy for us means we have 1 or 2 mountains between our house and the towers which are blocking LOS. The elevation of these mountains is the "edge".
For me I have a cluster of station antennas at about 3700 ft. only 7 miles to the west. My house is at 1100 ft. but I have another mountain in between at 2200 ft. only about 2 miles from me. This one blocks my LOS, and TV Fool shows 1edge which is correct.
So technically I shouldn't be able to receive anything unless I raise my antenna more than 800 ft. But here's where the art vs. science comes to play.
I get steady signals, not strong but steady, from all stations except FOX and that antenna is only a 100 feet or so from the rest. The reason seems to be FOX's directional signal. I've tried every reasonable thing I (and my friends on AVS forum) can think of and still can't get FOX. By everything I mean antennas and lots of different locations. Believe it or not, my best antenna location is one particular spot in my attic. Go figure.
Two other things with prove the art over technology theory. My daughter lives 25 miles on the other side of the antenna cluster, in a valley by the river (not far from Va Tech) and gets FOX HD OTA with rabbit ears. Also for me, ABC and CW are 25 miles to the east, 2 edge, hitting my directional antenna in the rear, and they are my strongest signals.
Art wins again, but there has to be some technical explanation...its just no one here can figure out what it is.
So on the next nice day, find a friend who'll read the signals for you, get a long length of RG6, several antenna types, some beer (optional and not recommended if your on the roof) and have fun. You might get lucky, especially if the friend happens to be your wife
P.S. For what it's worth, my antenna is a CM Stealtenna 3010 with 15db amp. I tried a big yagi from RS, and a Winegard 8 bay both with and without a CM 7700 amp.