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New aerials/cables advice please
"Conor" wrote in message ... In article b36ae398-0589-458c-a2e4-e31dee1ceac3 @k26g2000vbp.googlegroups.com, Owain 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. 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 To the OP, ignore this silly advice. I'm a pro rigger and this guy is either winding everyone up by posting deliberately poor advice, or he's clueless! Just for reference, the aerials he's recommended (pictured here http://images.maplin.co.uk/full/a20hg.jpg) are £39.99 EACH (x3). So forgetting the difficult mounting arrangemnets required, and how bloody awful it would look with 3 of these hanging from your house - the financial cost alone would be prohibitive. Their design is also poor. The plastic becomes brittle after a few months outside and snaps, causing the elements to gradually drop off. Bills advice is good. A good quality grouped aerial installed properly, with some benchmarked cable to replace the old stuff. Give it a while running the 12db attenuator & you'll know if you need an amplifier or not. Total cost will be far less than the above suggestion & it will look much neater. Job done. |
New aerials/cables advice please
"Petert" wrote in message ... On Mon, 10 Aug 2009 00:10:41 +0100, Conor wrote: In article , Bill Wright says... Ok, now I'll be serious. Firstly, ignore everything said by Mr Conor. His advice is worse than useless. I don't know what motivates him, but everything he says is wrong. Bull****. Shall we try "you're a **** stained old ******" for a start? I think your reply above helps prove Bill's assertion that what you write is worse than useless and wrong Yes. I don't think I'm all that **** stained. Not bad really for an old bloke. Bill |
New aerials/cables advice please
"-GB-Carpy" wrote in message ... Bills advice is good. A good quality grouped aerial installed properly, with some benchmarked cable to replace the old stuff. Give it a while running the 12db attenuator & you'll know if you need an amplifier or not. Total cost will be far less than the above suggestion & it will look much neater. Job done. Thank you Mr Carpy. It appears that Mr Conor is entirely discredited now, and can be ignored. Bill |
New aerials/cables advice please
"-GB-Carpy" wrote in message ... "Conor" wrote in message ... In article b36ae398-0589-458c-a2e4-e31dee1ceac3 @k26g2000vbp.googlegroups.com, Owain 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. 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 To the OP, ignore this silly advice. I'm a pro rigger and this guy is either winding everyone up by posting deliberately poor advice, or he's clueless! Just for reference, the aerials he's recommended (pictured here http://images.maplin.co.uk/full/a20hg.jpg) are £39.99 EACH (x3). So forgetting the difficult mounting arrangemnets required, and how bloody awful it would look with 3 of these hanging from your house - the financial cost alone would be prohibitive. Their design is also poor. The plastic becomes brittle after a few months outside and snaps, causing the elements to gradually drop off. Bills advice is good. A good quality grouped aerial installed properly, with some benchmarked cable to replace the old stuff. Give it a while running the 12db attenuator & you'll know if you need an amplifier or not. Total cost will be far less than the above suggestion & it will look much neater. Job done. Just one more question before I go ahead and order everything: According to the DigitalUK website the current aerial group is E & H, but after the switchover in 2011 this will be groups B and H. Assuming that I follow Bill's advice and install an E group aerial (say SR18E), will it still be ok after 2011? |
New aerials/cables advice please
Yes, the E group contains the B group, as follows:
Gp Cap clr Channel Range A Red 21 to 37 B Yellow 35 to 53 C/D Green 48 to 68 E Brown 35 to 68 K Grey 21 to 48 W Black/None 21 to 68 - that is, all of them, aka WideBand On Tue, 11 Aug 2009 16:27:40 +0100, "JoeJoe" wrote: Just one more question before I go ahead and order everything: According to the DigitalUK website the current aerial group is E & H, but after the switchover in 2011 this will be groups B and H. Assuming that I follow Bill's advice and install an E group aerial (say SR18E), will it still be ok after 2011? ====================================== 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
On Tue, 11 Aug 2009 13:02:30 +0100, Bill Wright
wrote: Bills advice is good. A good quality grouped aerial installed properly, with some benchmarked cable to replace the old stuff. Give it a while running the 12db attenuator & you'll know if you need an amplifier or not. Total cost will be far less than the above suggestion & it will look much neater. Job done. Thank you Mr Carpy. It appears that Mr Conor is entirely discredited now, and can be ignored. Him and little Jamie would be ideal for each other. Perhaps we could attach them to opposite ends of a very long elastic band stretched along the M62 and then let go. The splat would be worth seeing, preferably from somewhere out of the way of the mess, such as the top of Emley Moor. |
New aerials/cables advice please
Just one more question before I go ahead and order everything: According to the DigitalUK website the current aerial group is E & H, but after the switchover in 2011 this will be groups B and H. Assuming that I follow Bill's advice and install an E group aerial (say SR18E), will it still be ok after 2011? Good advice from Java Jive - all will be fine. H just means that the aerial rods should be horizontal for your transmitter. Sometimes they need to be vertically polarized for relay stations. |
New aerials/cables advice please
"JoeJoe" wrote in message o.uk... Just one more question before I go ahead and order everything: According to the DigitalUK website the current aerial group is E & H, but after the switchover in 2011 this will be groups B and H. Assuming that I follow Bill's advice and install an E group aerial (say SR18E), will it still be ok after 2011? Yes, the extension of frequency coverage from 730MHz (ish) to 860MHz (ish) has little effect on the Gp B performance. The problem with wideband aerials is when they have to include Gp A. By the way some suppliers don't keep Blake Gp E aerials, and some of Blake's staff don't seem to know that they exist, but in fact they do. Don't buy the cheap Blake 18 ele. You want the SR18. Triax do a Group E if you can find one. Bill |
New aerials/cables advice please
"Bill Wright" wrote in message ... "JoeJoe" wrote in message o.uk... Just one more question before I go ahead and order everything: According to the DigitalUK website the current aerial group is E & H, but after the switchover in 2011 this will be groups B and H. Assuming that I follow Bill's advice and install an E group aerial (say SR18E), will it still be ok after 2011? Yes, the extension of frequency coverage from 730MHz (ish) to 860MHz (ish) has little effect on the Gp B performance. The problem with wideband aerials is when they have to include Gp A. By the way some suppliers don't keep Blake Gp E aerials, and some of Blake's staff don't seem to know that they exist, but in fact they do. Don't buy the cheap Blake 18 ele. You want the SR18. I spoke to Blake today, and they put me in the direction of a local distributer that they claimed could get me anything they make. I'll pay them a visit later in the week. Triax do a Group E if you can find one. Bill Can't see it on their website... http://www.triax.co.uk/Products/Aeri...20Aerials.aspx |
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