|
New aerials/cables advice please
In article , JoeJoe
says... As you can see two face in the same direction, the third slightly off... I am not sure though which of them is the one that I manage to get something out of. The only way to accurately figure out where they should be pointing is to find out where the transmitter is, what the direction is in degrees from your house (don't forget to convert from map to magnetic by adding the difference between true north and magnetic north) and use a compass. Standing on the ground in front of the house will give you a close enough idea - you don't need to be stood directly where the antenna mast is. -- Conor www.notebooks-r-us.co.uk I only please one person per day. Today is not your day. Tomorrow isn't looking good either. - Scott Adams |
New aerials/cables advice please
On Sat, 8 Aug 2009 18:18:21 +0100, "JoeJoe" wrote:
My 3 aerials look like this: http://tinypic.com/r/11qh3c0/3 As you can see two face in the same direction, the third slightly off... I am not sure though which of them is the one that I manage to get something out of. The neighbours' aerials - see here http://tinypic.com/r/2myq1sg/3 - with our houses perfectly aligned - face around 10 degrees off mine. Alignment I can definitely help with, or at least my site can, if you can find out which transmitter you are receiving: http://www.macfh.co.uk/Test/UKTerrestrialTVTest.html The signal on a rather old Philips FV box shows as around 30% signal strength, and 100% signal quality. Strength sounds perhaps a bit low, but let's see if others want to run with that. I may not have put it clearly enough, but I am looking for a cost effective solution, not a state of the art one. Our main viewing is through Sky, not Freeview, and we are merely looking for a backup solution + a FV for one spare TV in the kids playroom. Ok, but equally, if a job's worth doing at all, it's worth doing to a certain minimum standard - there's no point in spending money now doing half a job, only to find that you have to spend double the amount later. It rather sounds to me as though something based on a distribution amp, and, given the rather low signal strength, a masthead amp However, apart from any the alignment, I'm not sure there's much more I can add, though you may care to take a look at the following thread, concerning the problems I had here - I installed a masthead amp and a distribution amp, so while not all of it will be relevant to your situation, a fair slice will be: http://tinyurl.com/llougd .... standing in for ... http://groups.google.com/group/uk.te...2d6d033115b50d ====================================== Please always reply to news group as the email address in this post's header does not exist. Alternatively, use one of the contact addresses at: http://www.macfh.co.uk/JavaJive/JavaJive.html http://www.macfh.co.uk/Macfarlane/Macfarlane.html |
New aerials/cables advice please
Use a masthead amplifier/splitter and send the power to it up the downlead from one of the TV points. Don't. They amplify all the **** as well as what you want and they fail. Get 3 decent antennas stuck up there. Maplin do some excellent wideband ones. They do a 71 element one which is extremely directional with a good high gain. Just the job for your truck then, but as the OP has not told us which Tx he is using, how can you know that a W/B aerial is appropriate? -- Graham. %Profound_observation% |
New aerials/cables advice please
"JoeJoe" wrote in message
o.uk... The setup that we inherited from the privious owners consists of 3 x aerials attachet to the (same) chimney and poll with separate cables running to each TV point. The aerials look very old and rusty, and so are the external cables. We now can just about get a signal strong enough for freeview from one of them. The other two appear to be dead (cables? connections? aerials? all?). A diagram of the current setup can be found he http://tinypic.com/view.php?pic=2lmuv86&s=3 With the painters coming over soon to paint the outside of the house providing easy access to the chimney , we are looking to replace everything with new aerial(s) and cables. TV point 3 is connected to Sky, but we would like to have Freeview there as well as a back up. TV points 1 + 2 need to be connected to Freeview only. Before I go ahead and do it there are a few considerations that I would appreciate if those in the know could comment on: - Should I go for 1 or 3 aerials? If at all possible then I would rather avoid having to use a distribution and/or amplifier box. This will probably need to be housed in the attic space which will mean having to come in and then out of the house again (only way to route the cables downstairs) + having to work out a new power source there. - Cable length. TV point 3 is at least 25 metres from the aerial. Would such a run be ok without amplifying the signal along the way? - Which cable should I use? - Connector along the way. The wall socket of TV point 3 is connected to a cable that runs under the house, and the new cable from the aerial will have to be joined to it. What is the best way to do this (the connection will be under the house)? Many thanks in advance for any advice/suggestion/comments. J. You've had half a million replies and not one single person has asked which transmitter you are using and how far away you are from it? If your signal is strong enough in the first place a single aerial and a three way passive splitter could easily suffice. -- Woody harrogate three at ntlworld dot com |
New aerials/cables advice please
"Woody" wrote in message ... "JoeJoe" wrote in message o.uk... The setup that we inherited from the privious owners consists of 3 x aerials attachet to the (same) chimney and poll with separate cables running to each TV point. The aerials look very old and rusty, and so are the external cables. We now can just about get a signal strong enough for freeview from one of them. The other two appear to be dead (cables? connections? aerials? all?). A diagram of the current setup can be found he http://tinypic.com/view.php?pic=2lmuv86&s=3 With the painters coming over soon to paint the outside of the house providing easy access to the chimney , we are looking to replace everything with new aerial(s) and cables. TV point 3 is connected to Sky, but we would like to have Freeview there as well as a back up. TV points 1 + 2 need to be connected to Freeview only. Before I go ahead and do it there are a few considerations that I would appreciate if those in the know could comment on: - Should I go for 1 or 3 aerials? If at all possible then I would rather avoid having to use a distribution and/or amplifier box. This will probably need to be housed in the attic space which will mean having to come in and then out of the house again (only way to route the cables downstairs) + having to work out a new power source there. - Cable length. TV point 3 is at least 25 metres from the aerial. Would such a run be ok without amplifying the signal along the way? - Which cable should I use? - Connector along the way. The wall socket of TV point 3 is connected to a cable that runs under the house, and the new cable from the aerial will have to be joined to it. What is the best way to do this (the connection will be under the house)? Many thanks in advance for any advice/suggestion/comments. J. You've had half a million replies and not one single person has asked which transmitter you are using and how far away you are from it? If your signal is strong enough in the first place a single aerial and a three way passive splitter could easily suffice. Not sure how to check if signal is strong enough... My transmitter according to the freeview website is http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_H...itting_station |
New aerials/cables advice please
"JoeJoe" wrote in message o.uk... "Woody" wrote in message ... "JoeJoe" wrote in message o.uk... The setup that we inherited from the privious owners consists of 3 x aerials attachet to the (same) chimney and poll with separate cables running to each TV point. The aerials look very old and rusty, and so are the external cables. We now can just about get a signal strong enough for freeview from one of them. The other two appear to be dead (cables? connections? aerials? all?). A diagram of the current setup can be found he http://tinypic.com/view.php?pic=2lmuv86&s=3 With the painters coming over soon to paint the outside of the house providing easy access to the chimney , we are looking to replace everything with new aerial(s) and cables. TV point 3 is connected to Sky, but we would like to have Freeview there as well as a back up. TV points 1 + 2 need to be connected to Freeview only. Before I go ahead and do it there are a few considerations that I would appreciate if those in the know could comment on: - Should I go for 1 or 3 aerials? If at all possible then I would rather avoid having to use a distribution and/or amplifier box. This will probably need to be housed in the attic space which will mean having to come in and then out of the house again (only way to route the cables downstairs) + having to work out a new power source there. - Cable length. TV point 3 is at least 25 metres from the aerial. Would such a run be ok without amplifying the signal along the way? - Which cable should I use? - Connector along the way. The wall socket of TV point 3 is connected to a cable that runs under the house, and the new cable from the aerial will have to be joined to it. What is the best way to do this (the connection will be under the house)? Many thanks in advance for any advice/suggestion/comments. J. You've had half a million replies and not one single person has asked which transmitter you are using and how far away you are from it? If your signal is strong enough in the first place a single aerial and a three way passive splitter could easily suffice. Not sure how to check if signal is strong enough... My transmitter according to the freeview website is http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_H...itting_station PS: and I am at G62 7LB |
New aerials/cables advice please
JoeJoe wrote:
"JoeJoe" wrote in message o.uk... "Woody" wrote in message ... "JoeJoe" wrote in message o.uk... The setup that we inherited from the privious owners consists of 3 x aerials attachet to the (same) chimney and poll with separate cables running to each TV point. The aerials look very old and rusty, and so are the external cables. We now can just about get a signal strong enough for freeview from one of them. The other two appear to be dead (cables? connections? aerials? all?). A diagram of the current setup can be found he http://tinypic.com/view.php?pic=2lmuv86&s=3 With the painters coming over soon to paint the outside of the house providing easy access to the chimney , we are looking to replace everything with new aerial(s) and cables. TV point 3 is connected to Sky, but we would like to have Freeview there as well as a back up. TV points 1 + 2 need to be connected to Freeview only. Before I go ahead and do it there are a few considerations that I would appreciate if those in the know could comment on: - Should I go for 1 or 3 aerials? If at all possible then I would rather avoid having to use a distribution and/or amplifier box. This will probably need to be housed in the attic space which will mean having to come in and then out of the house again (only way to route the cables downstairs) + having to work out a new power source there. - Cable length. TV point 3 is at least 25 metres from the aerial. Would such a run be ok without amplifying the signal along the way? - Which cable should I use? - Connector along the way. The wall socket of TV point 3 is connected to a cable that runs under the house, and the new cable from the aerial will have to be joined to it. What is the best way to do this (the connection will be under the house)? Many thanks in advance for any advice/suggestion/comments. J. You've had half a million replies and not one single person has asked which transmitter you are using and how far away you are from it? If your signal is strong enough in the first place a single aerial and a three way passive splitter could easily suffice. Not sure how to check if signal is strong enough... My transmitter according to the freeview website is http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_H...itting_station PS: and I am at G62 7LB At the moment, a good quality group B aerial will give you all the analogue channels, and four of the digital muxes, after DSO 30/03/11 all digital muxes will be in group B. -- Adrian |
New aerials/cables advice please
Yes. On the version of the calculator on my PC, I'm developing a
"Find the best TX" program. For your postcode, it makes Black Hill a clear winner for all of current analog, current DTT Pre DSO, DTT Post DSO. The signal path to it is all but clear. Next best is Darvel, but my program makes it about 20dBm weaker, and the signal path to it has the tops of obstructions along the line of sight. Here's the contents of my site's info file for Black Hill (it's not laid out particularly readably because it's for programming use, but the basic info you need is there): /* Black Hill */ var NS830646 = [ { type:"Analog", bbc:"Scotland", itv:"Scottish", aergrp:"B", aerpol:"H", aerht:544, erp:500, channels:[{name:"BBC1",number:40},{name:"BBC2",number:46},{n ame:"ITV",number:43},{name:"Ch4",number:50}] }, { type:"Analog", itv:"Scottish", aergrp:"B", aerpol:"H", aerht:535, erp:500, channels:[{name:"Ch5",number:37}] }, { type:"DTTPre", itv:"STV Central", aergrp:"E/W", aerpol:"H", aerht:556, channels:[{name:"Mux 1",number:41,erp:20},{name:"Mux 2",number:47,erp:20},{name:"Mux A",number:44,erp:20},{name:"Mux B",number:51,erp:20},{name:"Mux C",number:55,erp:20},{name:"Mux D",number:65,erp:20}] }, { type:"DTTPost", itv:"STV Central", aergrp:"B", aerpol:"H", channels:[{name:"BBC A",number:46,erp:100},{name:"D3&4",number:43,erp:1 00},{name:"BBC B",number:50,erp:100},{name:"SDN",number:41,erp:10 0},{name:"Arq A",number:44,erp:100},{name:"Arq B",number:47,erp:100}] } ] On Sat, 8 Aug 2009 21:53:05 +0100, "JoeJoe" wrote: My transmitter according to the freeview website is http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_H...itting_station PS: and I am at G62 7LB ====================================== Please always reply to news group as the email address in this post's header does not exist. Alternatively, use one of the contact addresses at: http://www.macfh.co.uk/JavaJive/JavaJive.html http://www.macfh.co.uk/Macfarlane/Macfarlane.html |
New aerials/cables advice please
In article , Graham. says...
Use a masthead amplifier/splitter and send the power to it up the downlead from one of the TV points. Don't. They amplify all the **** as well as what you want and they fail. Get 3 decent antennas stuck up there. Maplin do some excellent wideband ones. They do a 71 element one which is extremely directional with a good high gain. Just the job for your truck then, but as the OP has not told us which Tx he is using, how can you know that a W/B aerial is appropriate? Because by definition, a wideband antenna will cover everything. -- Conor www.notebooks-r-us.co.uk I only please one person per day. Today is not your day. Tomorrow isn't looking good either. - Scott Adams |
New aerials/cables advice please
"Conor" wrote in message ... In article , Graham. says... snip Just the job for your truck then, but as the OP has not told us which Tx he is using, how can you know that a W/B aerial is appropriate? Because by definition, a wideband antenna will cover everything. Conor Badly, just like you Steve Terry |
| All times are GMT +1. The time now is 06:17 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2021, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
HomeCinemaBanter.com