Agreed not the most practical but the BEST still available.The best outdoor tv antenna too buy today is the Winegrud 8200U for your low&hi band vhf&yor uh F
broadcasting channel's of to day and don't forget your cm-7777 mast mount AMP!!
good luck
Agreed not the most practical but the BEST still available.The best outdoor tv antenna too buy today is the Winegrud 8200U for your low&hi band vhf&yor uh F
broadcasting channel's of to day and don't forget your cm-7777 mast mount AMP!!
good luck
The configuration you recommend is entirely unsuitable for an application where the Topic Starter (TS) is located within seven miles of the towers.The best outdoor tv antenna too buy today is the Winegrud 8200U for your low&hi band vhf&yor uh F
broadcasting channel's of to day and don't forget your cm-7777 mast mount AMP!!
In this day and age, buying an antenna that isn't rated cover VHF low perhaps isn't a good idea. While the repack itself may not bring much VHF low, simulcasting Next-Gen (ATSC 3.0) will probably force at least a temporary residence there.
Given the TVFool projections, picking up signals in this situation is like fishing in a barrel. The biggest concern is getting too much signal.
Now if the TS was trying to pull a rabbit out of a hat and get WTAS, that would be worthy of discussion.
Not ATSC 3.0 petr se. It is the spectrum repack that is going on currently. The FCC is busy selling off some UHF spectrum and forcing stations to move to lower frequencies.Why would ATSC 3.0 bring back Lo-vhf from the dead?
VHF-low isn't dead, its just pining.Why would ATSC 3.0 bring back Lo-vhf from the dead?
The correct spelling is Winegard.Winegrud 8200U is the best of the best in tv antennas today!!!
Most of the Milwaukee towers are in the same general area, less than 3 miles apart. His zipcode seems to indicate he lives in Walker's Point neighborhood and he should be able to use a paperclip for an antenna there.
In that location, a very large (fringe) antenna can actually overload the tuner with too much signal.
I agree with harshness, and stated so back in response #17. The TS problem was that he was trying to use a wifi antenna, tuned for the wrong frequency and with the wrong impedance.
BTW, I doubt we will see clarbear again. he hasn't been on for a week now, once we answered his initial questions.
Practically speaking, no.Can a paper clip be used for a wifi antenna or should I get a different antenna for getting the channels and use the wifi when I use the television for the internet?
As a general class, these are called "mud flap" antennas. This one is a 50 +/- mile (assuming you can see the flashing lights on the antenna towers) antenna that doesn't do VHF-high particularly well and VHF-low probably not at all. If you're particularly close to the antennas, you'll need to take the amplifier out of the circuit.Does anyone know anything about this. I saw this on Amazon.
As a general class, these are called "mud flap" antennas. This one is a 50 +/- mile (assuming you can see the flashing lights on the antenna towers) antenna that doesn't do VHF-high particularly well and VHF-low probably not at all. If you're particularly close to the antennas, you'll need to take the amplifier out of the circuit.
Antennas like this are regularly selling for under $20 as part of the Amazon daily deals. Today there's one for $17.99.