OTA TV Stations Spectra Using a Dongle Spectrum Analyzer

spongella

SatelliteGuys Pro
Original poster
May 12, 2012
1,625
1,236
Central NJ
Hello fellow OTA viewers,

Below is a scan using a dongle SDR spectrum analyzer tuned to an area of the digital TV band. I do this to "see" what TV signals are out there, especially those that are too weak to be received by my television set.

Here is what a typical digital OTA signal looks like, about 5.97 MHz wide, with an ATSC "spike" at the beginning. This is KYW TV, Channel 3.1, from Philadelphia. It occupies 542 - 548 MHz. This signal was captured using a discone antenna, which is not really an OTA antenna, but it will pick up TV signals to some extent.

The second screenshot is a close up of the ATSC spike around 542 MHz using HDSDR.

If you are curious about what TV stations are in the area that you cannot receive on your TV, using the spectrum analyzer will help. You can even use it to locate the direction of the station if you have a TV antenna on a rotor.

Sponge
 

Attachments

  • KYW channel 3.1 discone.jpg
    KYW channel 3.1 discone.jpg
    118.3 KB · Views: 442
  • kywchan3.1ATSC spike.jpg
    kywchan3.1ATSC spike.jpg
    342.8 KB · Views: 434
I guess I'm lucky as being only 2 miles from the towers I just slap up the antenna and tune until the meter maxes out :)
 
This location is a fringe area of the NYC/Philadelphia broadcast towers. When the digital switch occurred a few years back it took lots of testing of different antennas and many trips to the roof to get a decent signal. Here you need a rotor and good pre-amp to get decent TV. I get about 50 - 60 channels.

Definitely better reception in the winter when the leaves are off the trees. Never had that problem with analog TV.

Even TV DX is not as good as with analog, but it still occurs. Paths are a little shorter though.

Sponge
 
  • Like
Reactions: Mr Tony

Users Who Are Viewing This Thread (Total: 0, Members: 0, Guests: 0)

Who Read This Thread (Total Members: 1)

Latest posts