Thinking of going OTA

gdodd12

SatelliteGuys Pro
Original poster
Feb 2, 2007
215
2
But I don't want to mount an antenna to my roof and have to run a line and all that. I also am not sure what locals are available OTA in HD.

And suggestions?
 
I have a very small indoor antenna in my entertainment center (behind a glass door) and get my OTA locals in just fine. got it for $15 at walmart. you may need to try out a few models, as some work better than others for different locations. mine is an RCA ANT146, and you probably wont even need the rabbit ears connected to it if your stations are UHF.
 
A lot of people go overkill on indoor antennas. Amplified ones aren't always that great as they amp up the noise and clean signal is imperative to a good signal lock. They also act like attenuators when turned off. My suggestion is to get a simple dipole antenna with the classic 300-ohm flatwire coming off of it and use a 300-ohm matching transformer to mate it to your TV's barrel. Keep the dipoles short and pointed 90 degrees from your stations' transmitters. Also keep the dipoles flat so they are horizontal instead of the usual rabbit ear configuration.

When I worked for the now-defunct USDTV, I got many a clean signals on their system using proper orientation of an indoor antenna.
 
A lot of people go overkill on indoor antennas. Amplified ones aren't always that great as they amp up the noise and clean signal is imperative to a good signal lock. They also act like attenuators when turned off. My suggestion is to get a simple dipole antenna with the classic 300-ohm flatwire coming off of it and use a 300-ohm matching transformer to mate it to your TV's barrel. Keep the dipoles short and pointed 90 degrees from your stations' transmitters. Also keep the dipoles flat so they are horizontal instead of the usual rabbit ear configuration.

When I worked for the now-defunct USDTV, I got many a clean signals on their system using proper orientation of an indoor antenna.

Interesting ... why flat vs rabbit ears? Also, why short versus long?
 
But I don't want to mount an antenna to my roof and have to run a line and all that. I also am not sure what locals are available OTA in HD.

And suggestions?
Check out this link: Address

If you enter your address it will let you know what kind of antenna you will need and what stations you will be able to receive. I just have a small directional antenna sitting behind my TV that works perfectly. It really depends on your location and distance from towers.
 
Go to Antennaweb.org. Enter your address and you will see what's available and what kind of antenna you need. You will not regret it. OTA is so much better than Sat Locals.
 
I use a basic rabbit ears antenna on my bedroom TV for the OTA stations. Even though most of the HD ones are UHF (all but one), it picks most of them up just fine and it's sitting behind my TV hidden on a closet shelf where there isn't a lot of open space. It doesn't get'em all, but I really only use it for our local CW station that Dish doesn't broadcast in HD and I need an OTA for that.

My amplified indoor HD antenna (it's the one from Radio Shack that looks like a flying saucer) is connected for the large plasma downstairs, it gets 'em all at 90% or higher with the exception of the one CBS VHF station in my area. That one I'm lucky if I get 68% on most days.

These are only backups to the Dish Ones because overall, I don't find them 100% trustworthy. They are most useful though if I have to record 3 shows at the same time, which isn't too often, but does happen during sweeps season.

Personally, that one seems to do the trick for me so I don't feel the need to invest in an outdoor system. Granted, I could probably pull in the Milwaukee area, but I'm not a much of a Packer's fan.

Rabbit ears are VHF most HD broadcasts right now are on the UHF band
 
When all of our locals started broadcasting digital from a single antenna farm on a mountain peak, I replaced my old legacy antenna with a 4 bay UHF and a small high-VHF antenna. I split the output to four TVs (mostly HD) with excellent reception.
 
In my location, one of my OTAs is VHF, 2 of my locals are 50+ miles away, so it is difficult to get all my channels OTA. The NBC affiliate, not only being distant, is also apparently low power, so the signal can be marginal at times.

Maybe if I had actually placed my antenna outside, I could have got by without amplification, but without it, I would have been limited to just the ABC affiliate.
 
But I don't want to mount an antenna to my roof and have to run a line and all that. I also am not sure what locals are available OTA in HD.

And suggestions?

Is your house wired for cable TV? If so you can use those feeds for an antenna. My locals are within 24 miles @ the most & I have an old roof ant. Actually, I just stuck the pole in the ground and screwed 2 pole clamps to the wood trim framing under the roof. I can pick up 3 out of 5 locals with an indoor pair of rabbit ears. The other 2 need the outdoor UHF ant. The PQ is fantastic compared to Dish or cable.
 
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