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TV distribution around the house - again
"Java Jive" wrote in message
... This is astonishing to me. I literally can not remember how young I was when I first learnt that an aerial is connected to the TV via a single lead! Have these people never noticed that in old houses where only one room is wired, the TV coax goes straight down to that room and not back up to the aerial again? snip top post A Sparks understanding rarely goes beyond ring mains Steve Terry -- Get a free Three 3pay Sim with £2 bonus after £10 top up http://freeagent.three.co.uk/stand/view/id/5276 |
TV distribution around the house - again
"Java Jive" wrote in message
... This is astonishing to me. I literally can not remember how young I was when I first learnt that an aerial is connected to the TV via a single lead! Have these people never noticed that in old houses where only one room is wired, the TV coax goes straight down to that room and not back up to the aerial again? Well you wouldn't use a ring main for a single socket, would you? -- Max Demian |
TV distribution around the house - again
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TV distribution around the house - again
On Jan 27, 2:22*am, Java Jive wrote:
This is astonishing to me. *I literally can not remember how young I was when I first learnt that an aerial is connected to the TV via a single lead! *Have these people never noticed that in old houses where only one room is wired, the TV coax goes straight down to that room and not back up to the aerial again? Don't forget that people become electricians almost by chance sometimes. The candidates don't necessarily have any special aptitude, and to be honest I find some site electricians (employees) to be of only average intelligence at best. They learn their own jobs monkey- fashion and that's the end of it. I very often have to liaise with these people because they often install our cables, and believe me, if a thing can be done wrong they'll do it wrong. I'll quote one example from many. Last year I found a gang of four busy installing in a large building, called Building 'A'. They were puzzled by a few anomalies and I had to point out that they were following the plans for Building 'B'. The two buildings were very similar but had slightly different shapes. Let's be fair, the rate of pay is pretty abysmal, and anyone with anything about them either gets promoted or becomes self-employed. Of course, I must say that I shouldn't tar them all with the same brush. I have encountered clever, thoughtful, intuitive site electricians as well as those discussed above. Many times I have completed my part of the work and I've been able to say to the electricans, "Well thanks guys, you've done a superb job for me." An example again from last year, when the sparks installed the whole TV network to our drawings, with 720 connections, and only made four mistakes. Bill |
TV distribution around the house - again
I met a very similar set up at the BBC pavilion at the Royal Welsh Showground at Builth Wells. Here the two ends of the ring had been connected to the outputs of a 2 output preamp. Of course the architect was the brother-in-law of one of the BBC Welsh Governors and the electrician was a relation. nuff said. Did it work? I always recall a plethora of aerials at the RWS pointing almost upwards at the Builth Wells relay about 1 mile above it. I'm sure the BBC pavilion had something "quirky" like a colour king or an XG8A in contrast to a sea of contract 10A and 18A aerials elsewhere on the site. |
TV distribution around the house - again
In article ,
Doctor D wrote: I met a very similar set up at the BBC pavilion at the Royal Welsh Showground at Builth Wells. Here the two ends of the ring had been connected to the outputs of a 2 output preamp. Of course the architect was the brother-in-law of one of the BBC Welsh Governors and the electrician was a relation. nuff said. Did it work? I always recall a plethora of aerials at the RWS pointing almost upwards at the Builth Wells relay about 1 mile above it. I'm sure the BBC pavilion had something "quirky" like a colour king or an XG8A in contrast to a sea of contract 10A and 18A aerials elsewhere on the site. I never saw what they finally fitted. Certainly, when I was there the aerial was a contract 10 ele. I suspect I specified ine with a balun, since there was a requirement for Ceefax reception. But it was all a long time ago. -- From KT24 Using a RISC OS computer running v5.16 |
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