RadioBanter

RadioBanter (https://www.radiobanter.com/)
-   Antenna (https://www.radiobanter.com/antenna/)
-   -   TV antenna question (https://www.radiobanter.com/antenna/973-tv-antenna-question.html)

eccos December 28th 03 07:54 AM

TV antenna question
 
Can I ask a tv antenna question here?

My satellite service does not include local channels. I have an indoor
antenna that if connected through the satellite receiver gives me very poor
reception. (Why?) If I connect the antenna directly to the TV, and not
through the receiver, the reception improves dramatically. However, this
requires having to manually connect and disconnect cables all the time.

Can you help?

Thanks.



Gary V. Deutschmann, Sr. December 28th 03 11:56 AM

Get an A-B Switchbox.
Rat Shack used to have remote control A-B Switchboxes.

TTUL
Gary


"eccos" verbositized:

Can I ask a tv antenna question here?

My satellite service does not include local channels. I have an indoor
antenna that if connected through the satellite receiver gives me very poor
reception. (Why?) If I connect the antenna directly to the TV, and not
through the receiver, the reception improves dramatically. However, this
requires having to manually connect and disconnect cables all the time.

Can you help?

Thanks.




Crazy George December 28th 03 03:25 PM

See inserted text:

--
Crazy George
Remove N O and S P A M imbedded in return address
"eccos" wrote in message
y.com...
Can I ask a tv antenna question here?

My satellite service does not include local channels. I have an indoor
antenna that if connected through the satellite receiver gives me very

poor
reception. (Why?)


Well, it depends on where you are connecting the antenna. If you are
disconnecting the dish and plugging in the local antenna there, that input
is for a different frequency range and the signal is stray coupling. And,
it has DC on the jack, so you may damage the satellite receiver.

On the other hand, if the satelite receiver has an input for an off the air
antenna, then the receiver usually has to be off for this input to be
activated and passed to the receiver.

If the above is the case, and the signal doesn't come through with the
satellite receiver turned offf, then the internal diode switch in the
satellite receiver is damaged.


If I connect the antenna directly to the TV, and not
through the receiver, the reception improves dramatically. However, this
requires having to manually connect and disconnect cables all the time.


Gary's suggestion of an A - B switch is the simplest approach, while a
hands-off method is to find a satellite system dealer who still has some of
the "insertion couplers" which have an input for channel 3 or 4 from the
satellite system and another input for an antenna, and produces a combined
output for your TV set.


Can you help?

Thanks.





Tarmo Tammaru December 28th 03 08:05 PM

An A/B switch seems like the best bet. This assumes the antenna is 75 Ohms;
if not, you need a 300:75 Ohm transformer. I assume the sat receiver input
is also 75 Ohms. If you connect 300 Ohm twinlead to it, it won't work well.
How do you connect to the TV - F connector, or screw terminals? See if the
TV has 2 antenna inputs. A lot of newer TVs do. That would let you switch
sources using your regular remote control

Tam/WB2TT
"eccos" wrote in message
y.com...
Can I ask a tv antenna question here?

My satellite service does not include local channels. I have an indoor
antenna that if connected through the satellite receiver gives me very

poor
reception. (Why?) If I connect the antenna directly to the TV, and not
through the receiver, the reception improves dramatically. However, this
requires having to manually connect and disconnect cables all the time.

Can you help?

Thanks.





Uncle Peter December 28th 03 11:48 PM

Your are powering off the satellite receiver when attempting to
receive local channels, right?

Pete

"eccos" wrote in message
y.com...
Can I ask a tv antenna question here?

My satellite service does not include local channels. I have an indoor
antenna that if connected through the satellite receiver gives me very

poor
reception. (Why?) If I connect the antenna directly to the TV, and not
through the receiver, the reception improves dramatically. However, this
requires having to manually connect and disconnect cables all the time.

Can you help?

Thanks.





eccos December 29th 03 07:02 AM


" Uncle Peter" wrote in message
news:JUJHb.13181$WQ3.1404@lakeread05...
| Your are powering off the satellite receiver when attempting to
| receive local channels, right?

No, I usually don't. I simply unplug the receiving cable from the dish to
the tv, and plug the cable of the indoor antenna.



eccos December 29th 03 07:02 AM


"Tarmo Tammaru" wrote in message
...
| An A/B switch seems like the best bet. This assumes the antenna is 75
Ohms;
| if not, you need a 300:75 Ohm transformer. I assume the sat receiver input
| is also 75 Ohms. If you connect 300 Ohm twinlead to it, it won't work
well.
| How do you connect to the TV - F connector, or screw terminals? See if the
| TV has 2 antenna inputs. A lot of newer TVs do. That would let you switch
| sources using your regular remote control

This is way over my head. Can you walk me through this?

How do I know if the antenna is 75 Ohms? What is a 300:75 Ohm transformer?

Thanks.



Crazy George December 29th 03 02:27 PM

Ummmm, it would help if you were a little more careful with your
phraseology. The connections go: Dish - DSS box - TV, right?

Below, you write:
"I simply unplug the receiving cable from the dish to the tv,"
Which leaves out a relatively significant component. While all those cable
connectors are interchangeable, connecting the right cable to the right box
makes a difference, as you have observed.

Which DSS (what you call "dish") do you have? What are the cable connectors
on the rear labeled? Do you have the manual for it?

--
Crazy George
Remove N O and S P A M imbedded in return address
"eccos" wrote in message
y.com...

" Uncle Peter" wrote in message
news:JUJHb.13181$WQ3.1404@lakeread05...
| Your are powering off the satellite receiver when attempting to
| receive local channels, right?

No, I usually don't. I simply unplug the receiving cable from the dish to
the tv, and plug the cable of the indoor antenna.





Uncle Peter December 29th 03 03:25 PM


"eccos" wrote in message
y.com...

" Uncle Peter" wrote in message
news:JUJHb.13181$WQ3.1404@lakeread05...
| Your are powering off the satellite receiver when attempting to
| receive local channels, right?

No, I usually don't. I simply unplug the receiving cable from the dish to
the tv, and plug the cable of the indoor antenna.

There should be a F connector on the receiver for a cable or TV antenna
input. The TV automatically is switched to this input when the receiver is
powered off.

Pete






Cecil Moore December 29th 03 03:59 PM

eccos wrote:
How do I know if the antenna is 75 Ohms? What is a 300:75 Ohm transformer?


TV coaxial line is 75 ohms. TV twinlead is 300 ohms. 300 ohms is the
older standard for TVs that once had two antenna screw terminals.
--
73, Cecil http://www.qsl.net/w5dxp



-----= Posted via Newsfeeds.Com, Uncensored Usenet News =-----
http://www.newsfeeds.com - The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World!
-----== Over 100,000 Newsgroups - 19 Different Servers! =-----


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 08:45 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
RadioBanter.com