Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#15
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() lbbs wrote: My low channels and high channels are coming in week (I especially would like to improve channel 49). I like in a small city of 130,000 population. We have Toronto aprox 40 miles north and Buffalo 40 miles south of us. I would to find a way to improve my TV signal. One of the things I would like to try is put a preamp on the antenna, but not sure what dB rating to use so I don't over amplify my signal (I don't want to improve some channels at the expense of other good channels). Any ideas? The right pre-amp mounted at the antenna will make a noticeable improvement regardless of the antenna age or design. Obviously though, the better the antenna the better the result. The most important considerations are pre-amp output capability and noise figure. For UHF TV, select a pre-amp with a 2db noise figure or less and about a 15db gain or more. This will improve your overall noise figure below the typical TV tuner noise figure of 6 db and over come the coax line loss. The output capability is a function of pre-amp design and db gain. The preamp amplifies many channels at the same time and a strong TV signal or multiple weaker signals, even though you might be watching another channel, will overload the preamp if the preamp db gain is too high. I have found that the Channel Master 7777 VHF/UHF pre-amp works depending upon location. The output capability ffor this pre-amp is not really good; but works for my current location, south east Florida. I get TV reception ranging from 17 to 110 miles distant from the transmitters, using a Winegard HD9095 UHF only antenna. The antenna is on a telescoping mast and the height can be varied from 12 to about 40 feet. On the other hand, when I was in the NYC area only 12 miles distant from the WTC (prior to 9/11) overload with this pre-amp was a problem. I was trying to receive WTNH-DT digital about 80 miles distant and the preamp got clobbered from the very powerful NYC TV stations. Also, what about cleaning up the connection at the antenna, by cutting off the end that is corroded and reconnecting it to the antenna? Or just cleaning the connection with sand paper? Try cleaning the feed point contacts the best you can. I have found that cleaning more then that results in little value. Usually something breaks and you end up with a pile of junk. |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|