The Harrington said:
Claude: Thanks for the response (You to rcdallas). One thing though, the way it works is I have an outlet/panel on the wall with two coax connectors (one for camera and one for Dish) . Connected to each connector is a very short (maybe 7 inches) of coax that then connects to the splitter. The splitter then has one line from it to the TV. With this being the case where do I put the UHF/UVF amplifier? Or are u talking about down in the basement where the runs originate?
Let me ask you this, are all your lines in your rooms where the tvs are located, at the wallplate's do these camera lines run direct down to the basement, (homerun), or do you have a line going from the source to a line in room 1 then to a splitter that then feeds room 2 then to a splitter again that feeds room 3?
It doesn't sound like they are homeruns down to the basement from each room from what you have described.
Ideally you'd want homeruns, first from the main line to the amp then split it off.
In your case, from what it sounds really I'd have to say put your amplifier perhaps somewhere in the middle of wiring scheme before it gets too grainy.
Really you don't want to send TOO much signal to the TV which could cause you a not so pretty picture.
All in all you'd want to amplify the signal not the noise.
A typical house amp I believe puts out about +15db, going by a tech question I asked earlier (thanks RandallA) I assume the output to the camera is around +6db so off the bat you'll be +21db if the amp is hooked up directly after camera signal source. Ideally this is where you'd want to put your splitters then feed the rooms with the tv. You may need to do some calculations to determine your attenuation.
Remember on a two way splitter its -3.5db on each leg, three way splitter is -3.5 on one leg -7db on the other two and a 4 way splitter is -7db on all four legs.
To keep it simple, just place it where all the pictures look best.
