|
HD Antenna and Home owners association issues
"NadCixelsyd" wrote in message
oups.com... In my area, all the HD is UHF. A UHF-only antenna is not quite as offensive as a big VHF antenna. See how your reception is with a double-bow (Antenna's direct, DB2) or a 4-bow (CM 3021, my favorite) or a cute little Yagi. See if these offends your homeowners association. This begs the question: are there any satellite dishes on roofs? What is the HOA's position on these? ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Excellent point! especially since the grumblers apparently not even within eyesight! If you want to get pi**ed off about an antenna, wait until the vacant lot next door becomes a cell phone tower. -- All the Best, Richard Harison ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Since you received the blessing of your immediate neighbors, you might want to pass that information along to the board. If you can't find out who complained, you might want to find out how many complained. If it's one person who's being a jerk, ask what it would to do apease them. Excellent point! especially since the grumblers apparently not even within eyesight! If you want to get pi**ed off about an antenna, wait until the vacant lot next door becomes a cell phone tower. -- All the Best, Richard Harison |
HD Antenna and Home owners association issues
I read all the other comments up to now and just want to add that I went
through the same thing with my HOA. FCC has a file on my complaint. There are items that you must be aware of which would give a ruling in favor of the HOA. Like, safety hazards. I had to move my antenna because if it were to fall, it would fall into neighbors yard. Other than that I had no problem. HOA decided to drop the complaint against me after long communications with the FCC. Before I moved the antenna I received signals from Tampa better than from Ft. Myers. AFter moving it, I now get Ft. Myers better. Don't know the brand name of my antenna but it is a "wing type" about 5 - 6 inches wide, maybe an inch thick and about 30 inches in length. Does a great job with stations relative far away. My zip is 33872 if anyone wants to check out distances. I also receive VHF stations but never watch them as I have Dish for all TVs except the HDTV. The antenna is up probably 19' in the air. Good luck and let us know how it all turns out. Jim BTW, some regular antennas are grandfathered into the rules and regulations. There are probably 6 still in existence. They can be seen from far away. My little antenna can only be seen from my back yard and it is a lake after about 20 yds of land. "varioust" wrote in message ups.com... Hi everyone, This is my first post to the group so I apologize if this is not the correct place to post. I have been enjoying the threads in this group and I decided I would post to see if anyone has an idea of what I should do in this situation. I apologize in advance if I should be posting to another group. I have been having issues with my HOA who disparately desires me to relocate my antenna from the highest point on my roof (where I receive line-of-sight with transmitters) to a more suitable location (attic, or where it is not visible from the street). Obviously, I know that "technically" they can't tell me to do this because of the FCC ruling in 1996...however, they used what I call the "good neighbor" approach on me. Listed below is a portion of the e-mail from my HOA president (and it is long): "" The Board of Directors is currently discussing the heart of the rule governing the prohibition of the placement of an antenna in or on a member's lot or dwelling; that being the true aesthetics involved in a member using this sort of equipment for their receptive needs. We are discussing and seeking consultation as to the Board's responsibility to oversee the requirements or restrictions of placement of such antennas to stay in keeping with the spirit of rule #18 in our covenants. But with all "restrictions" we must carefully weigh the individual member's rights to what is legally allowed against the other member's rights to a clear and unobstructed view. We will be discussing the manner in which a member would be conscientious of their neighbor's property as they would their own and ask each member that decides to follow this FCC ruling to place their antenna where it is not visibly seen by the surrounding homes or passersby. After saying this, in the spirit of neighborliness and citizenship, we are asking that you consider relocating your antenna. Several other members have installed similar antennas in their attic crawl spaces. If the reception there is unacceptable or your attic isn't large enough to accommodate then we are asking you, for the time being; to relocate the antenna to the north side of your home's ridgeline to at least reduce the amount of visibility. The reason we are requesting this from you is the very reason this was brought to the Board's attention. It is displeasing to your neighbors. Please consider this request until the Board can make a final decision as to how it will regulate the placement of the equipment that our covenants still conclude as being unsightly. "" My only response is: WOW! Can anyone give me a good idea of how to respond to this. Or recommendations on what I should do. Should I cave in to the "good guy" response, or should I fight this? I don't want to upset people, but I also think people should be aware that I am within my rights to have my antenna where it is...so it comes down to a matter of principle. Any advice would be helpful. Thank you in advance! Thanks, Tyler |
HD Antenna and Home owners association issues
Jim,
This is good to know. I don't think that my antenna is grandfathered in but it is around 80" long and can only be seen from half-a-block or so. It is a Radio Shack 80" boom antenna. I don't think safety issues will be a problem. Although, anything is possible I guess and I wouldn't be surprised if I put up a fight that they use that angle. Anyway, there have been a lot of good posts and I have good responses from others that I might use in my argument against the HOA. I appreciate it, and I will keep you all updated on the situation. Thanks! On May 3, 5:22 pm, "Jim" wrote: I read all the other comments up to now and just want to add that I went through the same thing with my HOA. FCC has a file on my complaint. There are items that you must be aware of which would give a ruling in favor of the HOA. Like, safety hazards. I had to move my antenna because if it were to fall, it would fall into neighbors yard. Other than that I had no problem. HOA decided to drop the complaint against me after long communications with the FCC. Before I moved the antenna I received signals from Tampa better than from Ft. Myers. AFter moving it, I now get Ft. Myers better. Don't know the brand name of my antenna but it is a "wing type" about 5 - 6 inches wide, maybe an inch thick and about 30 inches in length. Does a great job with stations relative far away. My zip is 33872 if anyone wants to check out distances. I also receive VHF stations but never watch them as I have Dish for all TVs except the HDTV. The antenna is up probably 19' in the air. Good luck and let us know how it all turns out. Jim BTW, some regular antennas are grandfathered into the rules and regulations. There are probably 6 still in existence. They can be seen from far away. My little antenna can only be seen from my back yard and it is a lake after about 20 yds of land. "varioust" wrote in message ups.com... Hi everyone, This is my first post to the group so I apologize if this is not the correct place to post. I have been enjoying the threads in this group and I decided I would post to see if anyone has an idea of what I should do in this situation. I apologize in advance if I should be posting to another group. I have been having issues with my HOA who disparately desires me to relocate my antenna from the highest point on my roof (where I receive line-of-sight with transmitters) to a more suitable location (attic, or where it is not visible from the street). Obviously, I know that "technically" they can't tell me to do this because of the FCC ruling in 1996...however, they used what I call the "good neighbor" approach on me. Listed below is a portion of the e-mail from my HOA president (and it is long): "" The Board of Directors is currently discussing the heart of the rule governing the prohibition of the placement of an antenna in or on a member's lot or dwelling; that being the true aesthetics involved in a member using this sort of equipment for their receptive needs. We are discussing and seeking consultation as to the Board's responsibility to oversee the requirements or restrictions of placement of such antennas to stay in keeping with the spirit of rule #18 in our covenants. But with all "restrictions" we must carefully weigh the individual member's rights to what is legally allowed against the other member's rights to a clear and unobstructed view. We will be discussing the manner in which a member would be conscientious of their neighbor's property as they would their own and ask each member that decides to follow this FCC ruling to place their antenna where it is not visibly seen by the surrounding homes or passersby. After saying this, in the spirit of neighborliness and citizenship, we are asking that you consider relocating your antenna. Several other members have installed similar antennas in their attic crawl spaces. If the reception there is unacceptable or your attic isn't large enough to accommodate then we are asking you, for the time being; to relocate the antenna to the north side of your home's ridgeline to at least reduce the amount of visibility. The reason we are requesting this from you is the very reason this was brought to the Board's attention. It is displeasing to your neighbors. Please consider this request until the Board can make a final decision as to how it will regulate the placement of the equipment that our covenants still conclude as being unsightly. "" My only response is: WOW! Can anyone give me a good idea of how to respond to this. Or recommendations on what I should do. Should I cave in to the "good guy" response, or should I fight this? I don't want to upset people, but I also think people should be aware that I am within my rights to have my antenna where it is...so it comes down to a matter of principle. Any advice would be helpful. Thank you in advance! Thanks, Tyler |
HD Antenna and Home owners association issues
On 3 May 2007 12:08:10 -0700, varioust wrote:
Hi everyone, This is my first post to the group so I apologize if this is not the correct place to post. I have been enjoying the threads in this group and I decided I would post to see if anyone has an idea of what I should do in this situation. I apologize in advance if I should be posting to another group. I have been having issues with my HOA who disparately desires me to relocate my antenna from the highest point on my roof (where I receive line-of-sight with transmitters) to a more suitable location (attic, or where it is not visible from the street). Obviously, I know that "technically" they can't tell me to do this because of the FCC ruling in 1996...however, they used what I call the "good neighbor" approach on me. Listed below is a portion of the e-mail from my HOA president (and it is long): Man, I sure am glad I don't live in that are. They'd probably have a problem with my antenna http://www.rogerhalstead.com/ham_files/Tower29.htm They are not in this photo, but there are two located just below the position of my feet which are about 94 feet above the ground. I have two of the largest UHF TV antennas I could find. One points NW and the other south. I get good, reliable digital reception close to about 90 miles out. |
HD Antenna and Home owners association issues
"varioust" wrote in message ups.com... Hi everyone, This is my first post to the group so I apologize if this is not the correct place to post. I have been enjoying the threads in this group and I decided I would post to see if anyone has an idea of what I should do in this situation. I apologize in advance if I should be posting to another group. I have been having issues with my HOA who disparately desires me to relocate my antenna from the highest point on my roof (where I receive line-of-sight with transmitters) to a more suitable location (attic, or where it is not visible from the street). Obviously, I know that "technically" they can't tell me to do this because of the FCC ruling in 1996...however, they used what I call the "good neighbor" approach on me. Listed below is a portion of the e-mail from my HOA president (and it is long): "" The Board of Directors is currently discussing the heart of the rule governing the prohibition of the placement of an antenna in or on a member's lot or dwelling; that being the true aesthetics involved in a member using this sort of equipment for their receptive needs. We are discussing and seeking consultation as to the Board's responsibility to oversee the requirements or restrictions of placement of such antennas to stay in keeping with the spirit of rule #18 in our covenants. But with all "restrictions" we must carefully weigh the individual member's rights to what is legally allowed against the other member's rights to a clear and unobstructed view. We will be discussing the manner in which a member would be conscientious of their neighbor's property as they would their own and ask each member that decides to follow this FCC ruling to place their antenna where it is not visibly seen by the surrounding homes or passersby. After saying this, in the spirit of neighborliness and citizenship, we are asking that you consider relocating your antenna. Several other members have installed similar antennas in their attic crawl spaces. If the reception there is unacceptable or your attic isn't large enough to accommodate then we are asking you, for the time being; to relocate the antenna to the north side of your home's ridgeline to at least reduce the amount of visibility. The reason we are requesting this from you is the very reason this was brought to the Board's attention. It is displeasing to your neighbors. Please consider this request until the Board can make a final decision as to how it will regulate the placement of the equipment that our covenants still conclude as being unsightly. "" My only response is: WOW! Can anyone give me a good idea of how to respond to this. Or recommendations on what I should do. Should I cave in to the "good guy" response, or should I fight this? I don't want to upset people, but I also think people should be aware that I am within my rights to have my antenna where it is...so it comes down to a matter of principle. Any advice would be helpful. Thank you in advance! Thanks, Tyler Tell them that all these problems with the OTA HD reception has convinced you to put a 20 foot X-Band and two 2 meter Ku band satellite dishes in the front yard for the absolute best in TV viewing. Then invite the neighbors for HD sporting events in true good neighbor fashion. |
HD Antenna and Home owners association issues
In article . com,
varioust wrote: Hi everyone, This is my first post to the group so I apologize if this is not the correct place to post. I have been enjoying the threads in this group and I decided I would post to see if anyone has an idea of what I should do in this situation. I apologize in advance if I should be posting to another group. I have been having issues with my HOA who disparately desires me to relocate my antenna from the highest point on my roof (where I receive line-of-sight with transmitters) to a more suitable location (attic, or where it is not visible from the street). Obviously, I know that "technically" they can't tell me to do this because of the FCC ruling in 1996...however, they used what I call the "good neighbor" approach on me. Listed below is a portion of the e-mail from my HOA president (and it is long): "" The Board of Directors is currently discussing the heart of the rule governing the prohibition of the placement of an antenna in or on a member's lot or dwelling; that being the true aesthetics involved in a member using this sort of equipment for their receptive needs. We are discussing and seeking consultation as to the Board's responsibility to oversee the requirements or restrictions of placement of such antennas to stay in keeping with the spirit of rule #18 in our covenants. But with all "restrictions" we must carefully weigh the individual member's rights to what is legally allowed against the other member's rights to a clear and unobstructed view. We will be discussing the manner in which a member would be conscientious of their neighbor's property as they would their own and ask each member that decides to follow this FCC ruling to place their antenna where it is not visibly seen by the surrounding homes or passersby. After saying this, in the spirit of neighborliness and citizenship, we are asking that you consider relocating your antenna. Several other members have installed similar antennas in their attic crawl spaces. If the reception there is unacceptable or your attic isn't large enough to accommodate then we are asking you, for the time being; to relocate the antenna to the north side of your home's ridgeline to at least reduce the amount of visibility. The reason we are requesting this from you is the very reason this was brought to the Board's attention. It is displeasing to your neighbors. Please consider this request until the Board can make a final decision as to how it will regulate the placement of the equipment that our covenants still conclude as being unsightly. "" My only response is: WOW! Can anyone give me a good idea of how to respond to this. Or recommendations on what I should do. Should I cave in to the "good guy" response, or should I fight this? I don't want to upset people, but I also think people should be aware that I am within my rights to have my antenna where it is...so it comes down to a matter of principle. Any advice would be helpful. Thank you in advance! 1. Realize that if you become an adversary to the HOA you will become subject ot the absolute letter of the law on all covenants. You are throwing the book in their face. They will likely respond in kind. 2. Show up at the HOA office unannounced and ask in person to see documentation that neighbors are displeased. You don't want them to go drum up displeasure... you want to see the existing documentation for the displeasure that they claim exists. If they provide it, and if they are actually neighbors, consider talking to those folks about the issue personally. My bet is that there is no documentation. Your antenna was spotted by a HOA drivethrough. 3. Consider asking for reimbursement for your expenses to have the antenna moved... You'll agree to have it moved, but the HOA will have to have it done. And if reception is unacceptable, they will have to have it moved it back. 4. Consider moving the mast to behind the ridgeline, but extending the height to get back to the same line of sight. |
HD Antenna and Home owners association issues
On May 3, 7:20 pm, Steve Cutchen wrote:
In article . com, varioust wrote: Hi everyone, This is my first post to the group so I apologize if this is not the correct place to post. I have been enjoying the threads in this group and I decided I would post to see if anyone has an idea of what I should do in this situation. I apologize in advance if I should be posting to another group. I have been having issues with my HOA who disparately desires me to relocate my antenna from the highest point on my roof (where I receive line-of-sight with transmitters) to a more suitable location (attic, or where it is not visible from the street). Obviously, I know that "technically" they can't tell me to do this because of the FCC ruling in 1996...however, they used what I call the "good neighbor" approach on me. Listed below is a portion of the e-mail from my HOA president (and it is long): "" The Board of Directors is currently discussing the heart of the rule governing the prohibition of the placement of an antenna in or on a member's lot or dwelling; that being the true aesthetics involved in a member using this sort of equipment for their receptive needs. We are discussing and seeking consultation as to the Board's responsibility to oversee the requirements or restrictions of placement of such antennas to stay in keeping with the spirit of rule #18 in our covenants. But with all "restrictions" we must carefully weigh the individual member's rights to what is legally allowed against the other member's rights to a clear and unobstructed view. We will be discussing the manner in which a member would be conscientious of their neighbor's property as they would their own and ask each member that decides to follow this FCC ruling to place their antenna where it is not visibly seen by the surrounding homes or passersby. After saying this, in the spirit of neighborliness and citizenship, we are asking that you consider relocating your antenna. Several other members have installed similar antennas in their attic crawl spaces. If the reception there is unacceptable or your attic isn't large enough to accommodate then we are asking you, for the time being; to relocate the antenna to the north side of your home's ridgeline to at least reduce the amount of visibility. The reason we are requesting this from you is the very reason this was brought to the Board's attention. It is displeasing to your neighbors. Please consider this request until the Board can make a final decision as to how it will regulate the placement of the equipment that our covenants still conclude as being unsightly. "" My only response is: WOW! Can anyone give me a good idea of how to respond to this. Or recommendations on what I should do. Should I cave in to the "good guy" response, or should I fight this? I don't want to upset people, but I also think people should be aware that I am within my rights to have my antenna where it is...so it comes down to a matter of principle. Any advice would be helpful. Thank you in advance! 1. Realize that if you become an adversary to the HOA you will become subject ot the absolute letter of the law on all covenants. You are throwing the book in their face. They will likely respond in kind. 2. Show up at the HOA office unannounced and ask in person to see documentation that neighbors are displeased. You don't want them to go drum up displeasure... you want to see the existing documentation for the displeasure that they claim exists. If they provide it, and if they are actually neighbors, consider talking to those folks about the issue personally. My bet is that there is no documentation. Your antenna was spotted by a HOA drivethrough. 3. Consider asking for reimbursement for your expenses to have the antenna moved... You'll agree to have it moved, but the HOA will have to have it done. And if reception is unacceptable, they will have to have it moved it back. 4. Consider moving the mast to behind the ridgeline, but extending the height to get back to the same line of sight. These are all good points. I plan on showing up at their office tomorrow unannounced (unless they are reading this thread). I'll let you know what happens. I was also planning on asking them to reimburse me for the cost of moving the antenna as well and that would really be the only way it is going to move because I don't plan on spending any more time/money on this. I have a good signal now...why should I mess with it if I don't have to. And I agree, if the move it and my signal decreases then it should go back. Tyler |
HD Antenna and Home owners association issues
Since you received the blessing of your immediate neighbors, you might want to pass that information along to the board. If you can't find out who complained, you might want to find out how many complained. If it's one person who's being a jerk, ask what it would to do apease them. Excellent point! especially since the grumblers apparently not even within eyesight! If you want to get pi**ed off about an antenna, wait until the vacant lot next door becomes a cell phone tower. -- All the Best, Richard Harison The covenant basically says about antennas and dishes that you can't have any antenna of any size and only a dish that has a diameter within 24" and not over 24". Which I find strange that they use 24" for dishes...aren't most dishes nowadays b/t 28" and 31"??? |
HD Antenna and Home owners association issues
varioust wrote:
Since you received the blessing of your immediate neighbors, you might want to pass that information along to the board. If you can't find out who complained, you might want to find out how many complained. If it's one person who's being a jerk, ask what it would to do apease them. Excellent point! especially since the grumblers apparently not even within eyesight! If you want to get pi**ed off about an antenna, wait until the vacant lot next door becomes a cell phone tower. -- All the Best, Richard Harison The covenant basically says about antennas and dishes that you can't have any antenna of any size and only a dish that has a diameter within 24" and not over 24". Which I find strange that they use 24" for dishes...aren't most dishes nowadays b/t 28" and 31"??? The covenant is wrong. Check the fcc webpage for otard rules. I think someone already posted the link in this forum. Chip -- -------------------- http://NewsReader.Com/ -------------------- Usenet Newsgroup Service $9.95/Month 30GB |
HD Antenna and Home owners association issues
On May 4, 4:30 am, varioust wrote:
Since you received the blessing of your immediate neighbors, you might want to pass that information along to the board. If you can't find out who complained, you might want to find out how many complained. If it's one person who's being a jerk, ask what it would to do apease them. Excellent point! especially since the grumblers apparently not even within eyesight! If you want to get pi**ed off about an antenna, wait until the vacant lot next door becomes a cell phone tower. -- All the Best, Richard Harison The covenant basically says about antennas and dishes that you can't have any antenna of any size and only a dish that has a diameter within 24" and not over 24". Which I find strange that they use 24" for dishes...aren't most dishes nowadays b/t 28" and 31"??? If what you say about the size is true, sounds like the HOA doesn't want _any_ type of receiving device. Any Stepford Wives there? GG |
| All times are GMT +1. The time now is 08:16 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2021, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
HomeCinemaBanter.com