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Budget TV signal strength meter
Alan wrote:
In message , Adrian C wrote An easy roof setup there, hope it's not raining :-) I hope you had permission to use that Promax photograph. Errr... In my defense m'lud, my computer's video card is powered by a million Hamlet trained monkeys splattering random red, green and blue spots at a digital framebuffer built of faulty memory. It just came out that way, completely coincidental, like. -- Adrian C |
Budget TV signal strength meter
On Fri, 11 Dec 2009 13:41:32 -0000, David WE Roberts wrote:
I am slowly working my way towards replacing my current aerial and would like to be able to align the new one whilst up a ladder without using the walkie talkie and beautiful assistant method. You could always use the walkie talkie and wife method instead. |
Budget TV signal strength meter
"Brian Gaff" wrote in message m... So he has to carry a portable tv and digibox onto the roof with him then? Adrian C posted a version of the image further Photo-Shopped with a portable TV, DTT box and long extension power cable. -- Graham. %Profound_observation% |
Budget TV signal strength meter
You could always use the walkie talkie and wife method instead.
No. Firstly there's AGC. Secondly the data is hoplessly distorted. Bill |
Budget TV signal strength meter
" wrote in message
... You could always use the walkie talkie and wife method instead. No. Firstly there's AGC. Secondly the data is hoplessly distorted. Bill Depends how loud you shout at the data processor Steve Terry -- Get a free Three 3pay Sim with £2 bonus after £10 top up http://freeagent.three.co.uk/stand/view/id/5276 |
Budget TV signal strength meter
"David WE Roberts" wrote in message ... Prompted by the thread about photos of roofs being used to advertise a meter..... Can anyone recommend a budget signal strength meter for aligning a TV aerial? I am slowly working my way towards replacing my current aerial and would like to be able to align the new one whilst up a ladder without using the walkie talkie and beautiful assistant method. Budget is under £20. TIA Dave R http://www.amazon.co.uk/Philex-SLx-2...ref=pd_cp_ce_1 Not sure what this thing will do if the signal is under 50dBuV but it's certainly cheap & cheerful |
Budget TV signal strength meter
At 10:31:04 Sun, 13 Dec 2009, -GB-Carpy wrote in
article : http://www.amazon.co.uk/Philex-SLx-2...GXQUNQ/ref=pd_ cp_ce_1 Not sure what this thing will do if the signal is under 50dBuV but it's certainly cheap & cheerful I'm sure this is the same product as the Labgear DVB-T Signal Finder. Bizarrely, I was sent two of these with my Philex *satellite* kit ! I tried one with my loft aerial, and didn't think it was much use in a weak signal area. It will give a result where the signal is stronger. The Philex satellite finder, on the other hand, I found very effective, with an audio tone which rises and falls in pitch with a slight nudge on the dish. If the DVB-T finder worked in the same way it would make all the difference. -- John Legon |
Budget TV signal strength meter
In article , -GB-Carpy
writes http://www.amazon.co.uk/Philex-SLx-2...B001GXQUNQ/ref =pd_cp_ce_1 Not sure what this thing will do if the signal is under 50dBuV but it's certainly cheap & cheerful I'm guessing this is being marketed under the Digital Misuse brand (TM). A cheap signal strength indicator marketed as "Ideal for Freeview DVB-T" despite indicating signal strength from any stray signal source in the band "Frequency Range: 40-862MHz", irrespective of whether it has any digital content at all. Perfect for confusing the user where strong analogue strays are swamping low level digital content reception. -- fred BBC3, ITV2/3/4, channels going to the DOGs |
Budget TV signal strength meter
At 18:10:42 Sun, 13 Dec 2009, Mike Henry
k wrote in article : In , fred wrote: In article , -GB-Carpy writes http://www.amazon.co.uk/Philex-SLx-2...B001GXQUNQ/ref =pd_cp_ce_1 Not sure what this thing will do if the signal is under 50dBuV but it's certainly cheap & cheerful I'm guessing this is being marketed under the Digital Misuse brand (TM). A cheap signal strength indicator marketed as "Ideal for Freeview DVB-T" despite indicating signal strength from any stray signal source in the band "Frequency Range: 40-862MHz", irrespective of whether it has any digital content at all. Perfect for confusing the user where strong analogue strays are swamping low level digital content reception. Surely "Frequency Range: 40-862MHz" means that is the range from within you can set it to look at a particular frequency? Nope, there is no means of adjustment. All I can say for certain is that two LEDs light up when the input is connected to the UHF output of a VCR modulator. Channel 31, I suppose. One LED lights up when the thing is connected to the bottom end of my aerial downlead. The aerial is group C/D, somewhere around channel 60. And yes, the "instructions" do give a frequency range from 40 - 862 MHz |
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