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#1
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"Cecil Moore" wrote in message
... Are the GPS coordinates for the transmitting antenna available anywhere? I called the local TV station and they don't know the coordinates for their transmitting antenna. They used to be able to be found in the FCC database. I recall when a digital station in Kingsport, TN, first went on the air several years ago, I looked up the data on location. The FCC even had the antenna pattern on file. -- 73, Dr. Barry L. Ornitz WA4VZQ [transpose digits to reply] |
#2
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![]() "Cecil Moore" wrote in message ... snip Are the GPS coordinates for the transmitting antenna available anywhere? I called the local TV station and they don't know the coordinates for their transmitting antenna. -- 73, Cecil http://www.w5dxp.com This thread got a little tangled. If, as I think, you're asking for coordinates for a US station, try, http://www.fcc.gov/mb/video/tvq.html 1. Enter the call letters for a known station. KLTV might be a good one. 2. Press Enter or scroll down and click Submit Data. 3. On the following page, click the station call letters. If a station has more than one listing, click any of them, as they all lead to the same web page. 4. On the next page, scroll down, observing the different documents issued by the FCC for the station. They may have a "TV" license for analog, also have a "DT" license and/or a DT Construction Permit. KLTV has seven irons in the fire, those busy bees. 5 Each one of the entries for a different document provides specifics for the installation (or proposal) document. You will see ERP, transmitter location, antenna height above ground, above average terrain and above sea level. There are links to area maps, including a coverage map. (For an agency that wants its licensees to toe the mark, this FCC database is not free of errors. If the given locations are, in fact, correct, your desired coordinates are provided to the arc-second, about 100 feet.) Here's a quick sample: Licensee: KLTV/KTRE LICENSE SUBSIDIARY, LLC Service Designation: DS Special Temporary Authority (digital) Channel: 10 192 - 198 MHz Application File No.: BSTA-20060217AAS Facility ID number: 68540 CDBS Application ID No.: 1115172 32° 21' 6.50 " N Latitude 95° 15' 59.20" W Longitude (NAD 27) This website accepts data query in a variety of formats. Interesting to enter a LAT/LON and a distance (in km). The website returns all stations within that distance. (Some may be low-power translators aimed away from you, thus useless.) |
#3
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In article ,
Jeff Liebermann wrote: On Sun, 15 Feb 2009 21:59:13 -0800 (PST), Bill Bowden wrote: Anybody have a good antenna design for the new UHF digital TV stations? I get reasonable results from my old VHF/UHF antenna (55% signal strength) , but it's big and ugly, and I want to replace it with a smaller, more efficient UHF design (maybe a Yagi) I can construct at home. Rule of thumb: The bigger and uglier the antenna, the better it works. Anybody know the dimensions of such an antenna, Various commercial digital TV antennas: http://www.hdtvprimer.com/ANTENNAS/comparing.html with Eznec NEC2 files at: http://www.hdtvprimer.com/SIMS/ probabaly in the frequency range of 400-800 Mhz ? There are going to be some DTV stations in the VHF range. You might want to check the new channels for your area: http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/FCC-07-138A2.xls List of frequencies: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/North_American_broadcast_television_frequencies Note that the upper end of the UHF TV band will be channel 51 at 698Mhz. EXACTLY, after conversion, some VHF stations will return as Digital, a few low-band and many high-band -- -------------------------------------------------------- Personal e-mail is the n7bsn but at amsat.org This posting address is a spam-trap and seldom read RV and Camping FAQ can be found at http://www.ralphandellen.us/rv |
#4
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Bill Bowden wrote:
Anybody have a good antenna design for the new UHF digital TV stations? I get reasonable results from my old VHF/UHF antenna (55% signal strength) , but it's big and ugly, and I want to replace it with a smaller, more efficient UHF design (maybe a Yagi) I can construct at home. Anybody know the dimensions of such an antenna, probabaly in the frequency range of 400-800 Mhz ? -Bill You could just cut off the long VHF elements and use them, cut to UHF size, to extend and increase the number of director elements. MTV |
#5
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![]() "MTV" wrote in message ... Bill Bowden wrote: Anybody have a good antenna design for the new UHF digital TV stations? I get reasonable results from my old VHF/UHF antenna (55% signal strength) , but it's big and ugly, and I want to replace it with a smaller, more efficient UHF design (maybe a Yagi) I can construct at home. Anybody know the dimensions of such an antenna, probabaly in the frequency range of 400-800 Mhz ? -Bill You could just cut off the long VHF elements and use them, cut to UHF size, to extend and increase the number of director elements. MTV Yes. I have a seven foot TV parabola on my roof, but my next-best antenna is an absolute piece of junk, literally. My neighbor was throwing out an all-channel antenna that was blown down in a storm and badly damaged. I clipped the connections between the UHF & VHF sections and hacksawed off the mostly undamaged UHF section (12 directors, I think). With a section of pipe rudely jammed into the boom as a counterweight, I'm pulling in stations 125 miles away almost as well as with the parabola. Turning other people's discards into functional devices is an art. (I'm the guy who worked Hawaii on 20m with 100 Watts into an extension ladder. ... and no, I wasn't feeding it with ladder line.) "Sal" (KD6VKW) |
#6
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On Feb 16, 10:35 pm, "Sal M. Onella"
wrote: "MTV" wrote in message ... Bill Bowden wrote: Anybody have a good antenna design for the new UHF digital TV stations? I get reasonable results from my old VHF/UHF antenna (55% signal strength) , but it's big and ugly, and I want to replace it with a smaller, more efficient UHF design (maybe a Yagi) I can construct at home. Anybody know the dimensions of such an antenna, probabaly in the frequency range of 400-800 Mhz ? -Bill You could just cut off the long VHF elements and use them, cut to UHF size, to extend and increase the number of director elements. MTV Yes. I have a seven foot TV parabola on my roof, but my next-best antenna is an absolute piece of junk, literally. My neighbor was throwing out an all-channel antenna that was blown down in a storm and badly damaged. I clipped the connections between the UHF & VHF sections and hacksawed off the mostly undamaged UHF section (12 directors, I think). With a section of pipe rudely jammed into the boom as a counterweight, I'm pulling in stations 125 miles away almost as well as with the parabola. Turning other people's discards into functional devices is an art. (I'm the guy who worked Hawaii on 20m with 100 Watts into an extension ladder. ... and no, I wasn't feeding it with ladder line.) "Sal" (KD6VKW) I found an old 5 element yagi cut for channel 52 which was used years ago for a pay TV station called "ON TV". It has 3 (10.5 inch) directors spaced apart 5 inches, one (12 inch) reflector and the driven element is about 11 inches. The diameter of all elements is a little larger than a coat hanger. Wondering what the bandwidth would be for other UHF stations below and above 52? And is there an easy way to modify it for wider band? I also need to get the high VHF band for channel 7-13, so maybe one more reflector is needed? -Bill |
#7
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On Feb 15, 6:59*pm, Bill Bowden wrote:
Anybody have a good antenna design for the new UHF digital TV stations? I get reasonable results from my old VHF/UHF antenna (55% signal strength) , but it's big and ugly, and I want to replace it with a smaller, more efficient UHF design (maybe a Yagi) I can construct at home. Anybody know the dimensions of such an antenna, probabaly in the frequency range of 400-800 Mhz ? -Bill All my antennas for DTV and analogue are Quads and Quagi antennas. A two element Quad for channel 2 and 5 VHF(its wideband enough for this), a three element for channel 11 VHF and a 9 element Quargi for channel 63 UHF. Thats all the TV stations we have here on the island. Easy and cheap to make and they perform like hormones IMHO. My non technical wife says they and the array looks like a Christmas tree, therefore not ugly but cute -) Need more info... Tons on the Inet or let me know. Chris |
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