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On 2/28/2018 10:57 AM, wrote:
On Wed, 28 Feb 2018 08:33:20 -0800 (PST), Its Me
wrote:

On Wednesday, February 28, 2018 at 11:01:31 AM UTC-5, wrote:
On Wed, 28 Feb 2018 07:05:32 -0500, "Mr. Luddite"
wrote:

On 2/28/2018 1:57 AM,
wrote:
On Wed, 28 Feb 2018 00:15:26 -0500, "Mr. Luddite"
wrote:

On 2/27/2018 10:37 PM, Its Me wrote:
On Tuesday, February 27, 2018 at 9:13:10 PM UTC-5, wrote:
On Wed, 28 Feb 2018 01:37:19 -0000 (UTC), Bill
wrote:


Our problem is we are in a valley. I am about 140’ above the valley
floor, but still the hills limit a lot of signals.

I am not sure why OTA sucks so bad here. OI am 30 miles from the
towers and it is flat ground. Looking down the line on Google I don't
even see any big buildings, just trees. I do have one big live oak
right here. The antenna is 25 feet off the ground and I am afraid to
stick a lightning rod up much higher.

I am running this, with an amp
http://www.newark.com/stellar-labs/30-2440/vhf-uhf-hdtv-60-mile-fringe-yagi/dp/88W2140?st=UHF%20antenna

How long is the cable coming down from the antenna, and what kind of cable? You get a lot of loss in that cable.



I kinda doubt that's his problem. The RF amp will more than make up for
any losses and actually there isn't much signal loss in the RF signal
cable anyway unless he has miles of it.

I think it's more an issue of where the transmitter's antenna radiation
pattern has been optimized for. Greg is near the ocean and there's not
much point of the station wasting signal power out over the water.


This is the setup and that distance is 26 miles. (not sure why google
does not save the ruler when you save the picture)
http://gfretwell.com/ftp/Antenna.jpg



Greg, I was just thinking about something. Don't know exactly what type
of antenna you are using but maybe it was designed primarily for the old
VHF frequencies that analog TV used. Most of the digital broadcasts are
now on UHF. Unless your antenna is designed to receive UHF freqs, that
may be part of your problem.

It says UHF/VHF Digital. I am starting to wonder if another antenna is
in my future myself. This really does not make any sense to me either.
I may try moving it away from the tree first since the canopy is right
there.


You can get a better performing antenna, but don't rule out your amp. It could be defective and just not doing well at the upper UHF freqs. It have to cover a pretty broad band.


This is the second amp I tried. I had one before and I thought it
might be bad so I got a new one.

Try removing the amp. I have a homemade bowtie antenna 21ft high and
get one of my main stations 50.3 miles away without any problems.
Your antenna has plenty of gain, I would remove the amp and make sure
the aim is correct, using TV Fool and your address.
Mikek
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On Wed, 28 Feb 2018 12:08:09 -0500, "Mr. Luddite"
wrote:

On 2/28/2018 11:56 AM, wrote:
On Wed, 28 Feb 2018 08:30:54 -0800 (PST), Its Me
wrote:

On Wednesday, February 28, 2018 at 12:15:32 AM UTC-5, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/27/2018 10:37 PM, Its Me wrote:
On Tuesday, February 27, 2018 at 9:13:10 PM UTC-5, wrote:
On Wed, 28 Feb 2018 01:37:19 -0000 (UTC), Bill
wrote:


Our problem is we are in a valley. I am about 140’ above the valley
floor, but still the hills limit a lot of signals.

I am not sure why OTA sucks so bad here. OI am 30 miles from the
towers and it is flat ground. Looking down the line on Google I don't
even see any big buildings, just trees. I do have one big live oak
right here. The antenna is 25 feet off the ground and I am afraid to
stick a lightning rod up much higher.

I am running this, with an amp
http://www.newark.com/stellar-labs/30-2440/vhf-uhf-hdtv-60-mile-fringe-yagi/dp/88W2140?st=UHF%20antenna

How long is the cable coming down from the antenna, and what kind of cable? You get a lot of loss in that cable.



I kinda doubt that's his problem. The RF amp will more than make up for
any losses and actually there isn't much signal loss in the RF signal
cable anyway unless he has miles of it.

That's why I asked what kind of cable and how long. RG-6 can have upward of 6dB of loss per 100ft at upper UHF freqs, while the old RG-58 would be up around 16dB of loss. There's also loss at each connection point. As you point out, the signal is either on of off with digital TV, and UHF doesn't have long legs.


The cable is less than 50'



Doesn't say anything about having an RF amplifier. What are you using
and where is it located? The antenna's with the amp located in the
antenna rather than at the end of the down cable work best.


The amp is right next to the antenna (6 feet of RG-6 away)
It is a Holland 16 dB.
Good news is I cut all of the ends off and re terminated everything.
It seems to be better but still not what I should expect with the
antenna and amp I have. I am getting a solid 68-69% on the weakest
stations now (on the TiVo signal strength meter). The best is 88%.
Those are all on the 2 towers in the GE picture I posted. The others
are things I don't care about anyway. (Espanol, shopping and Jesus
channels)
The only one that looked bad at all was the one right at the antenna.
I gunked it up with silicone paste and we will see if it holds. If it
screws up again I will go up to my Comcast neighbor and have him make
me up one with snap and seal connectors. I am just too cheap to buy
that tool I guess. He owes me a favor anyway. I am fighting the city
for him about the race car in his driveway.

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On Wed, 28 Feb 2018 12:15:10 -0500, "Mr. Luddite"
wrote:

Greg, If I were you I'd go to Walmart or Best Buy and buy a cheap,
amplified set of rabbit ears and try them before going to the trouble of
moving your current antenna around. I think you will be surprised.
Should only cost anywhere from $19 to $29 bucks. Just make sure the
amp is built into the antenna itself.

My brother, who lives 55 miles south of Boston, set up a TV and the set
of amplified rabbit ears I gave him in his shed. The antenna is sitting
on the shed rafters, about 7 feet high. He gets the three major
networks in Boston in HD with no problem along with a few other
stations. Was happy because he could go out to the shed to watch the
Patriots games.


I have one, new in the box right here. These houses are not really
conducive to RF signals tho. Lots of steel and concrete. Even FM radio
is not that great. I was getting a decent UHF signal with one of those
wire loops on my guvmint converter out in the tiki bar but nothing in
the house. Some of that may have been because the sloped pan roof
behind the box was reflecting a lot of signal back or something.
I do notice that the TV tuner is a lot better than the RF tuner in a
Dish box or even the new TiVo.
I also get channel 31 on the TV and 30 on the TiVo. (both the same
station as far as I can tell). The TiVo sees the ch 31 signal at 70%
or so but it will not tune. The TV doesn't seem to see 30 at all. My
portable TV I use to tune the antenna sees 30.

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On Wednesday, February 28, 2018 at 2:01:40 PM UTC-5, wrote:
On Wed, 28 Feb 2018 12:08:09 -0500, "Mr. Luddite"
wrote:

On 2/28/2018 11:56 AM, wrote:
On Wed, 28 Feb 2018 08:30:54 -0800 (PST), Its Me
wrote:

On Wednesday, February 28, 2018 at 12:15:32 AM UTC-5, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/27/2018 10:37 PM, Its Me wrote:
On Tuesday, February 27, 2018 at 9:13:10 PM UTC-5, wrote:
On Wed, 28 Feb 2018 01:37:19 -0000 (UTC), Bill
wrote:


Our problem is we are in a valley. I am about 140’ above the valley
floor, but still the hills limit a lot of signals.

I am not sure why OTA sucks so bad here. OI am 30 miles from the
towers and it is flat ground. Looking down the line on Google I don't
even see any big buildings, just trees. I do have one big live oak
right here. The antenna is 25 feet off the ground and I am afraid to
stick a lightning rod up much higher.

I am running this, with an amp
http://www.newark.com/stellar-labs/30-2440/vhf-uhf-hdtv-60-mile-fringe-yagi/dp/88W2140?st=UHF%20antenna

How long is the cable coming down from the antenna, and what kind of cable? You get a lot of loss in that cable.



I kinda doubt that's his problem. The RF amp will more than make up for
any losses and actually there isn't much signal loss in the RF signal
cable anyway unless he has miles of it.

That's why I asked what kind of cable and how long. RG-6 can have upward of 6dB of loss per 100ft at upper UHF freqs, while the old RG-58 would be up around 16dB of loss. There's also loss at each connection point. As you point out, the signal is either on of off with digital TV, and UHF doesn't have long legs.

The cable is less than 50'



Doesn't say anything about having an RF amplifier. What are you using
and where is it located? The antenna's with the amp located in the
antenna rather than at the end of the down cable work best.


The amp is right next to the antenna (6 feet of RG-6 away)
It is a Holland 16 dB.
Good news is I cut all of the ends off and re terminated everything.
It seems to be better but still not what I should expect with the
antenna and amp I have. I am getting a solid 68-69% on the weakest
stations now (on the TiVo signal strength meter). The best is 88%.
Those are all on the 2 towers in the GE picture I posted. The others
are things I don't care about anyway. (Espanol, shopping and Jesus
channels)
The only one that looked bad at all was the one right at the antenna.
I gunked it up with silicone paste and we will see if it holds. If it
screws up again I will go up to my Comcast neighbor and have him make
me up one with snap and seal connectors. I am just too cheap to buy
that tool I guess. He owes me a favor anyway. I am fighting the city
for him about the race car in his driveway.


I'm not trying to insult your intelligence, but your are using an inline amplifier with an indoor power inserter, and not a 16 dB attenuator, correct? As sharp as you seem to be with computers and electronics I sure wouldn't expect so, but it doesn't hurt to ask. I just didn't see a 16dB amp in their catalog. Looks like their LA series amps are the ticket!

http://www.hollandelectronics.com/Holland_Catalog.pdf
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On 2/28/2018 2:43 PM, Its Me wrote:
On Wednesday, February 28, 2018 at 2:01:40 PM UTC-5, wrote:
On Wed, 28 Feb 2018 12:08:09 -0500, "Mr. Luddite"
wrote:

On 2/28/2018 11:56 AM, wrote:
On Wed, 28 Feb 2018 08:30:54 -0800 (PST), Its Me
wrote:

On Wednesday, February 28, 2018 at 12:15:32 AM UTC-5, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/27/2018 10:37 PM, Its Me wrote:
On Tuesday, February 27, 2018 at 9:13:10 PM UTC-5, wrote:
On Wed, 28 Feb 2018 01:37:19 -0000 (UTC), Bill
wrote:


Our problem is we are in a valley. I am about 140’ above the valley
floor, but still the hills limit a lot of signals.

I am not sure why OTA sucks so bad here. OI am 30 miles from the
towers and it is flat ground. Looking down the line on Google I don't
even see any big buildings, just trees. I do have one big live oak
right here. The antenna is 25 feet off the ground and I am afraid to
stick a lightning rod up much higher.

I am running this, with an amp
http://www.newark.com/stellar-labs/30-2440/vhf-uhf-hdtv-60-mile-fringe-yagi/dp/88W2140?st=UHF%20antenna

How long is the cable coming down from the antenna, and what kind of cable? You get a lot of loss in that cable.



I kinda doubt that's his problem. The RF amp will more than make up for
any losses and actually there isn't much signal loss in the RF signal
cable anyway unless he has miles of it.

That's why I asked what kind of cable and how long. RG-6 can have upward of 6dB of loss per 100ft at upper UHF freqs, while the old RG-58 would be up around 16dB of loss. There's also loss at each connection point. As you point out, the signal is either on of off with digital TV, and UHF doesn't have long legs.

The cable is less than 50'



Doesn't say anything about having an RF amplifier. What are you using
and where is it located? The antenna's with the amp located in the
antenna rather than at the end of the down cable work best.


The amp is right next to the antenna (6 feet of RG-6 away)
It is a Holland 16 dB.
Good news is I cut all of the ends off and re terminated everything.
It seems to be better but still not what I should expect with the
antenna and amp I have. I am getting a solid 68-69% on the weakest
stations now (on the TiVo signal strength meter). The best is 88%.
Those are all on the 2 towers in the GE picture I posted. The others
are things I don't care about anyway. (Espanol, shopping and Jesus
channels)
The only one that looked bad at all was the one right at the antenna.
I gunked it up with silicone paste and we will see if it holds. If it
screws up again I will go up to my Comcast neighbor and have him make
me up one with snap and seal connectors. I am just too cheap to buy
that tool I guess. He owes me a favor anyway. I am fighting the city
for him about the race car in his driveway.


I'm not trying to insult your intelligence, but your are using an inline amplifier with an indoor power inserter, and not a 16 dB attenuator, correct? As sharp as you seem to be with computers and electronics I sure wouldn't expect so, but it doesn't hurt to ask. I just didn't see a 16dB amp in their catalog. Looks like their LA series amps are the ticket!

http://www.hollandelectronics.com/Holland_Catalog.pdf



Wouldn't that be something? But, I agree I doubt it. Then again, as
you say, Holland has a 16db attenuator listed but no 16 db amplifier. I
saw a Holland 20 db amplifier. :-)




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On Wed, 28 Feb 2018 11:43:26 -0800 (PST), Its Me
wrote:

On Wednesday, February 28, 2018 at 2:01:40 PM UTC-5, wrote:
On Wed, 28 Feb 2018 12:08:09 -0500, "Mr. Luddite"
wrote:

On 2/28/2018 11:56 AM, wrote:
On Wed, 28 Feb 2018 08:30:54 -0800 (PST), Its Me
wrote:

On Wednesday, February 28, 2018 at 12:15:32 AM UTC-5, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/27/2018 10:37 PM, Its Me wrote:
On Tuesday, February 27, 2018 at 9:13:10 PM UTC-5, wrote:
On Wed, 28 Feb 2018 01:37:19 -0000 (UTC), Bill
wrote:


Our problem is we are in a valley. I am about 140’ above the valley
floor, but still the hills limit a lot of signals.

I am not sure why OTA sucks so bad here. OI am 30 miles from the
towers and it is flat ground. Looking down the line on Google I don't
even see any big buildings, just trees. I do have one big live oak
right here. The antenna is 25 feet off the ground and I am afraid to
stick a lightning rod up much higher.

I am running this, with an amp
http://www.newark.com/stellar-labs/30-2440/vhf-uhf-hdtv-60-mile-fringe-yagi/dp/88W2140?st=UHF%20antenna

How long is the cable coming down from the antenna, and what kind of cable? You get a lot of loss in that cable.



I kinda doubt that's his problem. The RF amp will more than make up for
any losses and actually there isn't much signal loss in the RF signal
cable anyway unless he has miles of it.

That's why I asked what kind of cable and how long. RG-6 can have upward of 6dB of loss per 100ft at upper UHF freqs, while the old RG-58 would be up around 16dB of loss. There's also loss at each connection point. As you point out, the signal is either on of off with digital TV, and UHF doesn't have long legs.

The cable is less than 50'



Doesn't say anything about having an RF amplifier. What are you using
and where is it located? The antenna's with the amp located in the
antenna rather than at the end of the down cable work best.


The amp is right next to the antenna (6 feet of RG-6 away)
It is a Holland 16 dB.
Good news is I cut all of the ends off and re terminated everything.
It seems to be better but still not what I should expect with the
antenna and amp I have. I am getting a solid 68-69% on the weakest
stations now (on the TiVo signal strength meter). The best is 88%.
Those are all on the 2 towers in the GE picture I posted. The others
are things I don't care about anyway. (Espanol, shopping and Jesus
channels)
The only one that looked bad at all was the one right at the antenna.
I gunked it up with silicone paste and we will see if it holds. If it
screws up again I will go up to my Comcast neighbor and have him make
me up one with snap and seal connectors. I am just too cheap to buy
that tool I guess. He owes me a favor anyway. I am fighting the city
for him about the race car in his driveway.


I'm not trying to insult your intelligence, but your are using an inline amplifier with an indoor power inserter, and not a 16 dB attenuator, correct? As sharp as you seem to be with computers and electronics I sure wouldn't expect so, but it doesn't hurt to ask. I just didn't see a 16dB amp in their catalog. Looks like their

LA series amps are the ticket!

http://www.hollandelectronics.com/Holland_Catalog.pdf


Dunno, It looks like a model
HCDA-2
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On Wednesday, February 28, 2018 at 7:32:49 PM UTC-5, wrote:
On Wed, 28 Feb 2018 11:43:26 -0800 (PST), Its Me
wrote:

On Wednesday, February 28, 2018 at 2:01:40 PM UTC-5, wrote:
On Wed, 28 Feb 2018 12:08:09 -0500, "Mr. Luddite"
wrote:

On 2/28/2018 11:56 AM, wrote:
On Wed, 28 Feb 2018 08:30:54 -0800 (PST), Its Me
wrote:

On Wednesday, February 28, 2018 at 12:15:32 AM UTC-5, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/27/2018 10:37 PM, Its Me wrote:
On Tuesday, February 27, 2018 at 9:13:10 PM UTC-5, wrote:
On Wed, 28 Feb 2018 01:37:19 -0000 (UTC), Bill
wrote:


Our problem is we are in a valley. I am about 140’ above the valley
floor, but still the hills limit a lot of signals.

I am not sure why OTA sucks so bad here. OI am 30 miles from the
towers and it is flat ground. Looking down the line on Google I don't
even see any big buildings, just trees. I do have one big live oak
right here. The antenna is 25 feet off the ground and I am afraid to
stick a lightning rod up much higher.

I am running this, with an amp
http://www.newark.com/stellar-labs/30-2440/vhf-uhf-hdtv-60-mile-fringe-yagi/dp/88W2140?st=UHF%20antenna

How long is the cable coming down from the antenna, and what kind of cable? You get a lot of loss in that cable.



I kinda doubt that's his problem. The RF amp will more than make up for
any losses and actually there isn't much signal loss in the RF signal
cable anyway unless he has miles of it.

That's why I asked what kind of cable and how long. RG-6 can have upward of 6dB of loss per 100ft at upper UHF freqs, while the old RG-58 would be up around 16dB of loss. There's also loss at each connection point. As you point out, the signal is either on of off with digital TV, and UHF doesn't have long legs.

The cable is less than 50'



Doesn't say anything about having an RF amplifier. What are you using
and where is it located? The antenna's with the amp located in the
antenna rather than at the end of the down cable work best.

The amp is right next to the antenna (6 feet of RG-6 away)
It is a Holland 16 dB.
Good news is I cut all of the ends off and re terminated everything.
It seems to be better but still not what I should expect with the
antenna and amp I have. I am getting a solid 68-69% on the weakest
stations now (on the TiVo signal strength meter). The best is 88%.
Those are all on the 2 towers in the GE picture I posted. The others
are things I don't care about anyway. (Espanol, shopping and Jesus
channels)
The only one that looked bad at all was the one right at the antenna.
I gunked it up with silicone paste and we will see if it holds. If it
screws up again I will go up to my Comcast neighbor and have him make
me up one with snap and seal connectors. I am just too cheap to buy
that tool I guess. He owes me a favor anyway. I am fighting the city
for him about the race car in his driveway.


I'm not trying to insult your intelligence, but your are using an inline amplifier with an indoor power inserter, and not a 16 dB attenuator, correct? As sharp as you seem to be with computers and electronics I sure wouldn't expect so, but it doesn't hurt to ask. I just didn't see a 16dB amp in their catalog. Looks like their

LA series amps are the ticket!

http://www.hollandelectronics.com/Holland_Catalog.pdf


Dunno, It looks like a model
HCDA-2


Ah, OK. How do you power that thing up?
  #128   Report Post  
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First recorded activity by BoatBanter: Jul 2007
Posts: 36,387
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On Wed, 28 Feb 2018 16:43:55 -0800 (PST), Its Me
wrote:

On Wednesday, February 28, 2018 at 7:32:49 PM UTC-5, wrote:
On Wed, 28 Feb 2018 11:43:26 -0800 (PST), Its Me
wrote:

On Wednesday, February 28, 2018 at 2:01:40 PM UTC-5, wrote:
On Wed, 28 Feb 2018 12:08:09 -0500, "Mr. Luddite"
wrote:

On 2/28/2018 11:56 AM, wrote:
On Wed, 28 Feb 2018 08:30:54 -0800 (PST), Its Me
wrote:

On Wednesday, February 28, 2018 at 12:15:32 AM UTC-5, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/27/2018 10:37 PM, Its Me wrote:
On Tuesday, February 27, 2018 at 9:13:10 PM UTC-5, wrote:
On Wed, 28 Feb 2018 01:37:19 -0000 (UTC), Bill
wrote:


Our problem is we are in a valley. I am about 140’ above the valley
floor, but still the hills limit a lot of signals.

I am not sure why OTA sucks so bad here. OI am 30 miles from the
towers and it is flat ground. Looking down the line on Google I don't
even see any big buildings, just trees. I do have one big live oak
right here. The antenna is 25 feet off the ground and I am afraid to
stick a lightning rod up much higher.

I am running this, with an amp
http://www.newark.com/stellar-labs/30-2440/vhf-uhf-hdtv-60-mile-fringe-yagi/dp/88W2140?st=UHF%20antenna

How long is the cable coming down from the antenna, and what kind of cable? You get a lot of loss in that cable.



I kinda doubt that's his problem. The RF amp will more than make up for
any losses and actually there isn't much signal loss in the RF signal
cable anyway unless he has miles of it.

That's why I asked what kind of cable and how long. RG-6 can have upward of 6dB of loss per 100ft at upper UHF freqs, while the old RG-58 would be up around 16dB of loss. There's also loss at each connection point. As you point out, the signal is either on of off with digital TV, and UHF doesn't have long legs.

The cable is less than 50'



Doesn't say anything about having an RF amplifier. What are you using
and where is it located? The antenna's with the amp located in the
antenna rather than at the end of the down cable work best.

The amp is right next to the antenna (6 feet of RG-6 away)
It is a Holland 16 dB.
Good news is I cut all of the ends off and re terminated everything.
It seems to be better but still not what I should expect with the
antenna and amp I have. I am getting a solid 68-69% on the weakest
stations now (on the TiVo signal strength meter). The best is 88%.
Those are all on the 2 towers in the GE picture I posted. The others
are things I don't care about anyway. (Espanol, shopping and Jesus
channels)
The only one that looked bad at all was the one right at the antenna.
I gunked it up with silicone paste and we will see if it holds. If it
screws up again I will go up to my Comcast neighbor and have him make
me up one with snap and seal connectors. I am just too cheap to buy
that tool I guess. He owes me a favor anyway. I am fighting the city
for him about the race car in his driveway.

I'm not trying to insult your intelligence, but your are using an inline amplifier with an indoor power inserter, and not a 16 dB attenuator, correct? As sharp as you seem to be with computers and electronics I sure wouldn't expect so, but it doesn't hurt to ask. I just didn't see a 16dB amp in their catalog. Looks like

their
LA series amps are the ticket!

http://www.hollandelectronics.com/Holland_Catalog.pdf


Dunno, It looks like a model
HCDA-2


Ah, OK. How do you power that thing up?


I looked and it is the HDCA-1 One in, One out and one for power from a
wall wart.
That is 15dB not 16.
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On Wednesday, February 28, 2018 at 10:19:34 PM UTC-5, wrote:
On Wed, 28 Feb 2018 16:43:55 -0800 (PST), Its Me
wrote:

On Wednesday, February 28, 2018 at 7:32:49 PM UTC-5, wrote:
On Wed, 28 Feb 2018 11:43:26 -0800 (PST), Its Me
wrote:

On Wednesday, February 28, 2018 at 2:01:40 PM UTC-5, wrote:
On Wed, 28 Feb 2018 12:08:09 -0500, "Mr. Luddite"
wrote:

On 2/28/2018 11:56 AM, wrote:
On Wed, 28 Feb 2018 08:30:54 -0800 (PST), Its Me
wrote:

On Wednesday, February 28, 2018 at 12:15:32 AM UTC-5, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 2/27/2018 10:37 PM, Its Me wrote:
On Tuesday, February 27, 2018 at 9:13:10 PM UTC-5, wrote:
On Wed, 28 Feb 2018 01:37:19 -0000 (UTC), Bill
wrote:


Our problem is we are in a valley. I am about 140’ above the valley
floor, but still the hills limit a lot of signals.

I am not sure why OTA sucks so bad here. OI am 30 miles from the
towers and it is flat ground. Looking down the line on Google I don't
even see any big buildings, just trees. I do have one big live oak
right here. The antenna is 25 feet off the ground and I am afraid to
stick a lightning rod up much higher.

I am running this, with an amp
http://www.newark.com/stellar-labs/30-2440/vhf-uhf-hdtv-60-mile-fringe-yagi/dp/88W2140?st=UHF%20antenna

How long is the cable coming down from the antenna, and what kind of cable? You get a lot of loss in that cable.



I kinda doubt that's his problem. The RF amp will more than make up for
any losses and actually there isn't much signal loss in the RF signal
cable anyway unless he has miles of it.

That's why I asked what kind of cable and how long. RG-6 can have upward of 6dB of loss per 100ft at upper UHF freqs, while the old RG-58 would be up around 16dB of loss. There's also loss at each connection point. As you point out, the signal is either on of off with digital TV, and UHF doesn't have long legs.

The cable is less than 50'



Doesn't say anything about having an RF amplifier. What are you using
and where is it located? The antenna's with the amp located in the
antenna rather than at the end of the down cable work best.

The amp is right next to the antenna (6 feet of RG-6 away)
It is a Holland 16 dB.
Good news is I cut all of the ends off and re terminated everything..
It seems to be better but still not what I should expect with the
antenna and amp I have. I am getting a solid 68-69% on the weakest
stations now (on the TiVo signal strength meter). The best is 88%.
Those are all on the 2 towers in the GE picture I posted. The others
are things I don't care about anyway. (Espanol, shopping and Jesus
channels)
The only one that looked bad at all was the one right at the antenna.
I gunked it up with silicone paste and we will see if it holds. If it
screws up again I will go up to my Comcast neighbor and have him make
me up one with snap and seal connectors. I am just too cheap to buy
that tool I guess. He owes me a favor anyway. I am fighting the city
for him about the race car in his driveway.

I'm not trying to insult your intelligence, but your are using an inline amplifier with an indoor power inserter, and not a 16 dB attenuator, correct? As sharp as you seem to be with computers and electronics I sure wouldn't expect so, but it doesn't hurt to ask. I just didn't see a 16dB amp in their catalog. Looks like

their
LA series amps are the ticket!

http://www.hollandelectronics.com/Holland_Catalog.pdf

Dunno, It looks like a model
HCDA-2


Ah, OK. How do you power that thing up?


I looked and it is the HDCA-1 One in, One out and one for power from a
wall wart.
That is 15dB not 16.


If you have good power from your wall wart 50ft away, that should be good to go. I think you're right... I'd start looking at your antenna, its placement, and aiming.

Good luck!
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On Wed, 28 Feb 2018 20:39:39 -0800 (PST), Its Me
wrote:

On Wednesday, February 28, 2018 at 10:19:34 PM UTC-5, wrote:


Ah, OK. How do you power that thing up?


I looked and it is the HDCA-1 One in, One out and one for power from a
wall wart.
That is 15dB not 16.


If you have good power from your wall wart 50ft away, that should be good to go. I think you're right... I'd start looking at your antenna, its placement, and aiming.

Good luck!


The wall wart is more like 3 feet away, connected with 18ga Quad
Shield.
The antenna is mounted on the peak of a gable end and the cable goes
in the attic right there. The amp is just inside, plugged into a
receptacle put there for the purpose. From there I have the 50' cable
to the TV.
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