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-   -   Difference between DTV and Digital TV (http://www.homecinemabanter.com/showthread.php?t=7257)

Bruiser August 3rd 04 04:17 PM

Difference between DTV and Digital TV
 
I've been reading on www.hdtvpub.com that DTV should not be confused with
Digital TV, but I can't find exactly why. Could someone please clear this up
for me? Thanks.

Bruce



Dave Oldridge August 3rd 04 07:22 PM

"Bruiser" wrote in
:

I've been reading on www.hdtvpub.com that DTV should not be confused
with Digital TV, but I can't find exactly why. Could someone please
clear this up for me? Thanks.


Well there's the satellite company called DTV (which broadcasts digital
signals, some of which are picked up from digital sources, others from
analog) and there's digital TV, which is an on-the-air method of
broadcasting TV content that is replacing analog TV signals (NTSC in the
USA and Canada).

Digital television transmissions can squeeze about four channels of
standard definition TV into a single VHF or UHF channel or one high
definition channel. Digital TV also permits full surround-sound 5.1
channel audio to be sent with the pictures. With the right equipment a
whole lot of additional information can be included with the audio and
video. For example, you could watch a movie and choose either the main
audio feed or the director's comments!

--
Dave Oldridge+
ICQ 1800667

A false witness is worse than no witness at all.


Dave Oldridge August 3rd 04 07:22 PM

"Bruiser" wrote in
:

I've been reading on www.hdtvpub.com that DTV should not be confused
with Digital TV, but I can't find exactly why. Could someone please
clear this up for me? Thanks.


Well there's the satellite company called DTV (which broadcasts digital
signals, some of which are picked up from digital sources, others from
analog) and there's digital TV, which is an on-the-air method of
broadcasting TV content that is replacing analog TV signals (NTSC in the
USA and Canada).

Digital television transmissions can squeeze about four channels of
standard definition TV into a single VHF or UHF channel or one high
definition channel. Digital TV also permits full surround-sound 5.1
channel audio to be sent with the pictures. With the right equipment a
whole lot of additional information can be included with the audio and
video. For example, you could watch a movie and choose either the main
audio feed or the director's comments!

--
Dave Oldridge+
ICQ 1800667

A false witness is worse than no witness at all.


Brad Houser August 3rd 04 09:27 PM


"Bruiser" wrote in message
...
I've been reading on www.hdtvpub.com that DTV should not be confused with
Digital TV, but I can't find exactly why. Could someone please clear this

up
for me? Thanks.


I don't think there is any confusion.

DTV is sometimes used as a shorthand for DirecTV, the satellite provider.
While it is using a digital stream to send video and audio, it has nothing
to do with the Digital TV standards. It should be obvious from the context.

DTV usually means Digital TV, as defined by the ATSC (Advanced Television
Systems Committee). www.atsc.org is their web. They created the standards
for the 18 different digital television formats:
http://support.gateway.com/s/CsmrElt...984faq42.shtml

If you could quote where it says there is a difference, I could respond to
that specifically.

Brad Houser






Brad Houser August 3rd 04 09:27 PM


"Bruiser" wrote in message
...
I've been reading on www.hdtvpub.com that DTV should not be confused with
Digital TV, but I can't find exactly why. Could someone please clear this

up
for me? Thanks.


I don't think there is any confusion.

DTV is sometimes used as a shorthand for DirecTV, the satellite provider.
While it is using a digital stream to send video and audio, it has nothing
to do with the Digital TV standards. It should be obvious from the context.

DTV usually means Digital TV, as defined by the ATSC (Advanced Television
Systems Committee). www.atsc.org is their web. They created the standards
for the 18 different digital television formats:
http://support.gateway.com/s/CsmrElt...984faq42.shtml

If you could quote where it says there is a difference, I could respond to
that specifically.

Brad Houser






Bruiser August 4th 04 02:06 AM

Brad Houser wrote:
"Bruiser" wrote in message
...
I've been reading on www.hdtvpub.com that DTV should not be
confused with Digital TV, but I can't find exactly why. Could
someone please clear this up for me? Thanks.


I don't think there is any confusion.

DTV is sometimes used as a shorthand for DirecTV, the satellite
provider. While it is using a digital stream to send video and
audio, it has nothing to do with the Digital TV standards. It should
be obvious from the context.

DTV usually means Digital TV, as defined by the ATSC (Advanced
Television Systems Committee). www.atsc.org is their web. They
created the standards for the 18 different digital television
formats:

http://support.gateway.com/s/CsmrElt...984faq42.shtml

If you could quote where it says there is a difference, I could
respond to that specifically.

Brad Houser


Brad,

I did mis-speak: while HDTVPub.com does use "DTV" to mean Digital TV, the
exact quote is:

"...please remember that digital cable is not DTV..."
(http://www.hdtvpub.com/reception/dtvcablecompany.cfm)

So if my cable company (Adelphia) is offering digital cable reception, that
only refers to the way it is piped in, but the format remains the same? In
other words, on an HDTV set with the proper STB, would digital cable
reception look any different that regular analog? I know it wouldn't be or
look like high def, but would there be any inherent benefit in upgrading my
service to a digital package if I didn't particularly care for the channel
lineup (Adelphia will rent me the STB for $9.95/mo in order to receive local
station in high def, without having to do the entire upgrade to digital
cable)?

My understanding is that digital cable allows the cable company to increase
the bandwidth and broadcast more channels with crisper audio, but that's
about it. Is this correct?

Bruce



Bruiser August 4th 04 02:06 AM

Brad Houser wrote:
"Bruiser" wrote in message
...
I've been reading on www.hdtvpub.com that DTV should not be
confused with Digital TV, but I can't find exactly why. Could
someone please clear this up for me? Thanks.


I don't think there is any confusion.

DTV is sometimes used as a shorthand for DirecTV, the satellite
provider. While it is using a digital stream to send video and
audio, it has nothing to do with the Digital TV standards. It should
be obvious from the context.

DTV usually means Digital TV, as defined by the ATSC (Advanced
Television Systems Committee). www.atsc.org is their web. They
created the standards for the 18 different digital television
formats:

http://support.gateway.com/s/CsmrElt...984faq42.shtml

If you could quote where it says there is a difference, I could
respond to that specifically.

Brad Houser


Brad,

I did mis-speak: while HDTVPub.com does use "DTV" to mean Digital TV, the
exact quote is:

"...please remember that digital cable is not DTV..."
(http://www.hdtvpub.com/reception/dtvcablecompany.cfm)

So if my cable company (Adelphia) is offering digital cable reception, that
only refers to the way it is piped in, but the format remains the same? In
other words, on an HDTV set with the proper STB, would digital cable
reception look any different that regular analog? I know it wouldn't be or
look like high def, but would there be any inherent benefit in upgrading my
service to a digital package if I didn't particularly care for the channel
lineup (Adelphia will rent me the STB for $9.95/mo in order to receive local
station in high def, without having to do the entire upgrade to digital
cable)?

My understanding is that digital cable allows the cable company to increase
the bandwidth and broadcast more channels with crisper audio, but that's
about it. Is this correct?

Bruce



Dennis Mayer August 4th 04 02:31 AM



Bruiser wrote:

Brad Houser wrote:
"Bruiser" wrote in message
...
I've been reading on www.hdtvpub.com that DTV should not be
confused with Digital TV, but I can't find exactly why. Could
someone please clear this up for me? Thanks.

I don't think there is any confusion.

DTV is sometimes used as a shorthand for DirecTV, the satellite
provider. While it is using a digital stream to send video and
audio, it has nothing to do with the Digital TV standards. It should
be obvious from the context.

DTV usually means Digital TV, as defined by the ATSC (Advanced
Television Systems Committee). www.atsc.org is their web. They
created the standards for the 18 different digital television
formats:

http://support.gateway.com/s/CsmrElt...984faq42.shtml

If you could quote where it says there is a difference, I could
respond to that specifically.

Brad Houser


Brad,

I did mis-speak: while HDTVPub.com does use "DTV" to mean Digital TV, the
exact quote is:

"...please remember that digital cable is not DTV..."
(http://www.hdtvpub.com/reception/dtvcablecompany.cfm)

So if my cable company (Adelphia) is offering digital cable reception, that
only refers to the way it is piped in, but the format remains the same? In
other words, on an HDTV set with the proper STB, would digital cable
reception look any different that regular analog? I know it wouldn't be or
look like high def, but would there be any inherent benefit in upgrading my
service to a digital package if I didn't particularly care for the channel
lineup (Adelphia will rent me the STB for $9.95/mo in order to receive local
station in high def, without having to do the entire upgrade to digital
cable)?

My understanding is that digital cable allows the cable company to increase
the bandwidth and broadcast more channels with crisper audio, but that's
about it. Is this correct?

Bruce


All Cable TV Programs, be they Analog, Digital, or Hi Def Digital

run thru the same cable but as Groups of channels at Different
Frequencies.

Do not buy the SD Digital Package... This does not guarantee a
Super

Picture ie: SD (Std Def). Purchase the Cable Analog package

plus the Hi Def package to get the best bang for the Cable Buck...

The Cable Hi Def 'QAM' Box may rent for $8/ month...

Dennis Mayer August 4th 04 02:31 AM



Bruiser wrote:

Brad Houser wrote:
"Bruiser" wrote in message
...
I've been reading on www.hdtvpub.com that DTV should not be
confused with Digital TV, but I can't find exactly why. Could
someone please clear this up for me? Thanks.

I don't think there is any confusion.

DTV is sometimes used as a shorthand for DirecTV, the satellite
provider. While it is using a digital stream to send video and
audio, it has nothing to do with the Digital TV standards. It should
be obvious from the context.

DTV usually means Digital TV, as defined by the ATSC (Advanced
Television Systems Committee). www.atsc.org is their web. They
created the standards for the 18 different digital television
formats:

http://support.gateway.com/s/CsmrElt...984faq42.shtml

If you could quote where it says there is a difference, I could
respond to that specifically.

Brad Houser


Brad,

I did mis-speak: while HDTVPub.com does use "DTV" to mean Digital TV, the
exact quote is:

"...please remember that digital cable is not DTV..."
(http://www.hdtvpub.com/reception/dtvcablecompany.cfm)

So if my cable company (Adelphia) is offering digital cable reception, that
only refers to the way it is piped in, but the format remains the same? In
other words, on an HDTV set with the proper STB, would digital cable
reception look any different that regular analog? I know it wouldn't be or
look like high def, but would there be any inherent benefit in upgrading my
service to a digital package if I didn't particularly care for the channel
lineup (Adelphia will rent me the STB for $9.95/mo in order to receive local
station in high def, without having to do the entire upgrade to digital
cable)?

My understanding is that digital cable allows the cable company to increase
the bandwidth and broadcast more channels with crisper audio, but that's
about it. Is this correct?

Bruce


All Cable TV Programs, be they Analog, Digital, or Hi Def Digital

run thru the same cable but as Groups of channels at Different
Frequencies.

Do not buy the SD Digital Package... This does not guarantee a
Super

Picture ie: SD (Std Def). Purchase the Cable Analog package

plus the Hi Def package to get the best bang for the Cable Buck...

The Cable Hi Def 'QAM' Box may rent for $8/ month...

Bruiser August 4th 04 02:57 AM

Dennis Mayer wrote:
Bruiser wrote:

Brad Houser wrote:
"Bruiser" wrote in message
...
I've been reading on www.hdtvpub.com that DTV should not be
confused with Digital TV, but I can't find exactly why. Could
someone please clear this up for me? Thanks.

I don't think there is any confusion.

DTV is sometimes used as a shorthand for DirecTV, the satellite
provider. While it is using a digital stream to send video and
audio, it has nothing to do with the Digital TV standards. It
should
be obvious from the context.

DTV usually means Digital TV, as defined by the ATSC (Advanced
Television Systems Committee). www.atsc.org is their web. They
created the standards for the 18 different digital television
formats:


http://support.gateway.com/s/CsmrElt...984faq42.shtml

If you could quote where it says there is a difference, I could
respond to that specifically.

Brad Houser

Brad,

I did mis-speak: while HDTVPub.com does use "DTV" to mean Digital
TV, the exact quote is:

"...please remember that digital cable is not DTV..."
(http://www.hdtvpub.com/reception/dtvcablecompany.cfm)

So if my cable company (Adelphia) is offering digital cable
reception, that only refers to the way it is piped in, but the
format remains the same? In other words, on an HDTV set with the
proper STB, would digital cable reception look any different that
regular analog? I know it wouldn't be or look like high def, but
would there be any inherent benefit in upgrading my service to a
digital package if I didn't particularly care for the channel
lineup (Adelphia will rent me the STB for $9.95/mo in order to
receive local station in high def, without having to do the entire
upgrade to digital cable)?

My understanding is that digital cable allows the cable company to
increase the bandwidth and broadcast more channels with crisper
audio, but that's about it. Is this correct?

Bruce


All Cable TV Programs, be they Analog, Digital, or Hi Def Digital

run thru the same cable but as Groups of channels at Different
Frequencies.

Do not buy the SD Digital Package... This does not guarantee a
Super

Picture ie: SD (Std Def). Purchase the Cable Analog package

plus the Hi Def package to get the best bang for the Cable
Buck...

The Cable Hi Def 'QAM' Box may rent for $8/ month...



Thanks, that's what I needed to know (I believe Adelphia's HDTV basic
package is $9.95/mo. on top of the ~$42 I'm spending on the classic cable
package).

So, back to basics: digital cable is pretty much pointless, quality-wise.
Digital TV, however, is the means by which HDTV can be broadcast, although
most stations do not do that exclusively (with the exception of PBS, I
guess), correct? So any station ID'd as, for instance, "Kxxx-DT" will be
broadcasting in 480p, which will be upped to 720p (or 1080i) for HD
content?

Guess you can tell I'm pretty new to all this. ;)




Bruiser August 4th 04 02:57 AM

Dennis Mayer wrote:
Bruiser wrote:

Brad Houser wrote:
"Bruiser" wrote in message
...
I've been reading on www.hdtvpub.com that DTV should not be
confused with Digital TV, but I can't find exactly why. Could
someone please clear this up for me? Thanks.

I don't think there is any confusion.

DTV is sometimes used as a shorthand for DirecTV, the satellite
provider. While it is using a digital stream to send video and
audio, it has nothing to do with the Digital TV standards. It
should
be obvious from the context.

DTV usually means Digital TV, as defined by the ATSC (Advanced
Television Systems Committee). www.atsc.org is their web. They
created the standards for the 18 different digital television
formats:


http://support.gateway.com/s/CsmrElt...984faq42.shtml

If you could quote where it says there is a difference, I could
respond to that specifically.

Brad Houser

Brad,

I did mis-speak: while HDTVPub.com does use "DTV" to mean Digital
TV, the exact quote is:

"...please remember that digital cable is not DTV..."
(http://www.hdtvpub.com/reception/dtvcablecompany.cfm)

So if my cable company (Adelphia) is offering digital cable
reception, that only refers to the way it is piped in, but the
format remains the same? In other words, on an HDTV set with the
proper STB, would digital cable reception look any different that
regular analog? I know it wouldn't be or look like high def, but
would there be any inherent benefit in upgrading my service to a
digital package if I didn't particularly care for the channel
lineup (Adelphia will rent me the STB for $9.95/mo in order to
receive local station in high def, without having to do the entire
upgrade to digital cable)?

My understanding is that digital cable allows the cable company to
increase the bandwidth and broadcast more channels with crisper
audio, but that's about it. Is this correct?

Bruce


All Cable TV Programs, be they Analog, Digital, or Hi Def Digital

run thru the same cable but as Groups of channels at Different
Frequencies.

Do not buy the SD Digital Package... This does not guarantee a
Super

Picture ie: SD (Std Def). Purchase the Cable Analog package

plus the Hi Def package to get the best bang for the Cable
Buck...

The Cable Hi Def 'QAM' Box may rent for $8/ month...



Thanks, that's what I needed to know (I believe Adelphia's HDTV basic
package is $9.95/mo. on top of the ~$42 I'm spending on the classic cable
package).

So, back to basics: digital cable is pretty much pointless, quality-wise.
Digital TV, however, is the means by which HDTV can be broadcast, although
most stations do not do that exclusively (with the exception of PBS, I
guess), correct? So any station ID'd as, for instance, "Kxxx-DT" will be
broadcasting in 480p, which will be upped to 720p (or 1080i) for HD
content?

Guess you can tell I'm pretty new to all this. ;)




Tim Keating August 4th 04 05:29 PM

On Tue, 3 Aug 2004 17:57:38 -0700, "Bruiser" wrote:

Dennis Mayer wrote:
Bruiser wrote:

Brad Houser wrote:
"Bruiser" wrote in message
...
I've been reading on www.hdtvpub.com that DTV should not be
confused with Digital TV, but I can't find exactly why. Could
someone please clear this up for me? Thanks.

I don't think there is any confusion.

DTV is sometimes used as a shorthand for DirecTV, the satellite
provider. While it is using a digital stream to send video and
audio, it has nothing to do with the Digital TV standards. It
should
be obvious from the context.

DTV usually means Digital TV, as defined by the ATSC (Advanced
Television Systems Committee). www.atsc.org is their web. They
created the standards for the 18 different digital television
formats:


http://support.gateway.com/s/CsmrElt...984faq42.shtml

If you could quote where it says there is a difference, I could
respond to that specifically.

Brad Houser

Brad,

I did mis-speak: while HDTVPub.com does use "DTV" to mean Digital
TV, the exact quote is:

"...please remember that digital cable is not DTV..."
(http://www.hdtvpub.com/reception/dtvcablecompany.cfm)

So if my cable company (Adelphia) is offering digital cable
reception, that only refers to the way it is piped in, but the
format remains the same? In other words, on an HDTV set with the
proper STB, would digital cable reception look any different that
regular analog? I know it wouldn't be or look like high def, but
would there be any inherent benefit in upgrading my service to a
digital package if I didn't particularly care for the channel
lineup (Adelphia will rent me the STB for $9.95/mo in order to
receive local station in high def, without having to do the entire
upgrade to digital cable)?

My understanding is that digital cable allows the cable company to
increase the bandwidth and broadcast more channels with crisper
audio, but that's about it. Is this correct?

Bruce

All Cable TV Programs, be they Analog, Digital, or Hi Def Digital

run thru the same cable but as Groups of channels at Different
Frequencies.

Do not buy the SD Digital Package... This does not guarantee a
Super

Picture ie: SD (Std Def). Purchase the Cable Analog package

plus the Hi Def package to get the best bang for the Cable
Buck...

The Cable Hi Def 'QAM' Box may rent for $8/ month...



Thanks, that's what I needed to know (I believe Adelphia's HDTV basic
package is $9.95/mo. on top of the ~$42 I'm spending on the classic cable
package).

So, back to basics: digital cable is pretty much pointless, quality-wise.


Digital cable signals are generally over compressed to the point
that either Direct Tv and Dish sat signals will look better.

Direct Tv and Dish maintain better QC on their digital signals.
For the most part they run all their nationally distributed signals
out of a central uplink location. That significantly reduces the
manpower needed to monitor signals.

Cable maintains hundreds, if not thousands of head ends. Which
would require tens of thousands of QC personal to match the SAT
providers. Since they don't have the desire or the money, they will
make additional compromises in quality.

Another nasty problem for Cable co's is that a significant portion
of their distribution system is tied up sending old style NTSC
signals.

Digital TV, however, is the means by which HDTV can be broadcast, although
most stations do not do that exclusively (with the exception of PBS, I
guess), correct? So any station ID'd as, for instance, "Kxxx-DT" will be
broadcasting in 480p, which will be upped to 720p (or 1080i) for HD
content?


As for receiving local digital (H)DTV broadcasts. For the most
part, cable co's can't improve it over what you can get at your house
using a low cost antenna setup. That is one reason why (H)DTV SAT
receiver set tops come with built in (8VSB) OTA tuners.

You put up you own antenna, pickup the local (H)DTV broadcasts for
free, and skip paying the Cable piggy. :-)

Tim Keating August 4th 04 05:29 PM

On Tue, 3 Aug 2004 17:57:38 -0700, "Bruiser" wrote:

Dennis Mayer wrote:
Bruiser wrote:

Brad Houser wrote:
"Bruiser" wrote in message
...
I've been reading on www.hdtvpub.com that DTV should not be
confused with Digital TV, but I can't find exactly why. Could
someone please clear this up for me? Thanks.

I don't think there is any confusion.

DTV is sometimes used as a shorthand for DirecTV, the satellite
provider. While it is using a digital stream to send video and
audio, it has nothing to do with the Digital TV standards. It
should
be obvious from the context.

DTV usually means Digital TV, as defined by the ATSC (Advanced
Television Systems Committee). www.atsc.org is their web. They
created the standards for the 18 different digital television
formats:


http://support.gateway.com/s/CsmrElt...984faq42.shtml

If you could quote where it says there is a difference, I could
respond to that specifically.

Brad Houser

Brad,

I did mis-speak: while HDTVPub.com does use "DTV" to mean Digital
TV, the exact quote is:

"...please remember that digital cable is not DTV..."
(http://www.hdtvpub.com/reception/dtvcablecompany.cfm)

So if my cable company (Adelphia) is offering digital cable
reception, that only refers to the way it is piped in, but the
format remains the same? In other words, on an HDTV set with the
proper STB, would digital cable reception look any different that
regular analog? I know it wouldn't be or look like high def, but
would there be any inherent benefit in upgrading my service to a
digital package if I didn't particularly care for the channel
lineup (Adelphia will rent me the STB for $9.95/mo in order to
receive local station in high def, without having to do the entire
upgrade to digital cable)?

My understanding is that digital cable allows the cable company to
increase the bandwidth and broadcast more channels with crisper
audio, but that's about it. Is this correct?

Bruce

All Cable TV Programs, be they Analog, Digital, or Hi Def Digital

run thru the same cable but as Groups of channels at Different
Frequencies.

Do not buy the SD Digital Package... This does not guarantee a
Super

Picture ie: SD (Std Def). Purchase the Cable Analog package

plus the Hi Def package to get the best bang for the Cable
Buck...

The Cable Hi Def 'QAM' Box may rent for $8/ month...



Thanks, that's what I needed to know (I believe Adelphia's HDTV basic
package is $9.95/mo. on top of the ~$42 I'm spending on the classic cable
package).

So, back to basics: digital cable is pretty much pointless, quality-wise.


Digital cable signals are generally over compressed to the point
that either Direct Tv and Dish sat signals will look better.

Direct Tv and Dish maintain better QC on their digital signals.
For the most part they run all their nationally distributed signals
out of a central uplink location. That significantly reduces the
manpower needed to monitor signals.

Cable maintains hundreds, if not thousands of head ends. Which
would require tens of thousands of QC personal to match the SAT
providers. Since they don't have the desire or the money, they will
make additional compromises in quality.

Another nasty problem for Cable co's is that a significant portion
of their distribution system is tied up sending old style NTSC
signals.

Digital TV, however, is the means by which HDTV can be broadcast, although
most stations do not do that exclusively (with the exception of PBS, I
guess), correct? So any station ID'd as, for instance, "Kxxx-DT" will be
broadcasting in 480p, which will be upped to 720p (or 1080i) for HD
content?


As for receiving local digital (H)DTV broadcasts. For the most
part, cable co's can't improve it over what you can get at your house
using a low cost antenna setup. That is one reason why (H)DTV SAT
receiver set tops come with built in (8VSB) OTA tuners.

You put up you own antenna, pickup the local (H)DTV broadcasts for
free, and skip paying the Cable piggy. :-)

Bruiser August 5th 04 01:49 AM

Tim Keating wrote:
SNIP

So, back to basics: digital cable is pretty much pointless,
quality-wise.


Digital cable signals are generally over compressed to the point
that either Direct Tv and Dish sat signals will look better.

Direct Tv and Dish maintain better QC on their digital signals.
For the most part they run all their nationally distributed signals
out of a central uplink location. That significantly reduces the
manpower needed to monitor signals.

Cable maintains hundreds, if not thousands of head ends. Which
would require tens of thousands of QC personal to match the SAT
providers. Since they don't have the desire or the money, they will
make additional compromises in quality.

Another nasty problem for Cable co's is that a significant
portion
of their distribution system is tied up sending old style NTSC
signals.

Digital TV, however, is the means by which HDTV can be broadcast,
although most stations do not do that exclusively (with the
exception of PBS, I guess), correct? So any station ID'd as, for
instance, "Kxxx-DT" will be broadcasting in 480p, which will be
upped to 720p (or 1080i) for HD content?


As for receiving local digital (H)DTV broadcasts. For the most
part, cable co's can't improve it over what you can get at your house
using a low cost antenna setup. That is one reason why (H)DTV SAT
receiver set tops come with built in (8VSB) OTA tuners.

You put up you own antenna, pickup the local (H)DTV broadcasts for
free, and skip paying the Cable piggy. :-)


Thanks for the info, Tim. The nice thing about the cable route is that you
don't have to buy a STB. But the stations offered are so surprising meager,
it almost cancels that out.

I would gladly invest in a STB (even a DirectTV compatible one) if I could
assured that OTA reception would be acceptable. Using a fairly standard
RadioShack indoor aerial for NTSC reception provides very mediocre results,
and I don't know if that would translate to(H)DTV reception or not.

BTW, why is it that satellite systems don't pick up local HD broadcasts? Is
it a technical issue or more of a licensing one?



Bruiser August 5th 04 01:49 AM

Tim Keating wrote:
SNIP

So, back to basics: digital cable is pretty much pointless,
quality-wise.


Digital cable signals are generally over compressed to the point
that either Direct Tv and Dish sat signals will look better.

Direct Tv and Dish maintain better QC on their digital signals.
For the most part they run all their nationally distributed signals
out of a central uplink location. That significantly reduces the
manpower needed to monitor signals.

Cable maintains hundreds, if not thousands of head ends. Which
would require tens of thousands of QC personal to match the SAT
providers. Since they don't have the desire or the money, they will
make additional compromises in quality.

Another nasty problem for Cable co's is that a significant
portion
of their distribution system is tied up sending old style NTSC
signals.

Digital TV, however, is the means by which HDTV can be broadcast,
although most stations do not do that exclusively (with the
exception of PBS, I guess), correct? So any station ID'd as, for
instance, "Kxxx-DT" will be broadcasting in 480p, which will be
upped to 720p (or 1080i) for HD content?


As for receiving local digital (H)DTV broadcasts. For the most
part, cable co's can't improve it over what you can get at your house
using a low cost antenna setup. That is one reason why (H)DTV SAT
receiver set tops come with built in (8VSB) OTA tuners.

You put up you own antenna, pickup the local (H)DTV broadcasts for
free, and skip paying the Cable piggy. :-)


Thanks for the info, Tim. The nice thing about the cable route is that you
don't have to buy a STB. But the stations offered are so surprising meager,
it almost cancels that out.

I would gladly invest in a STB (even a DirectTV compatible one) if I could
assured that OTA reception would be acceptable. Using a fairly standard
RadioShack indoor aerial for NTSC reception provides very mediocre results,
and I don't know if that would translate to(H)DTV reception or not.

BTW, why is it that satellite systems don't pick up local HD broadcasts? Is
it a technical issue or more of a licensing one?



Brad Houser August 5th 04 02:15 AM


"Bruiser" wrote in message
...
I did mis-speak: while HDTVPub.com does use "DTV" to mean Digital TV, the
exact quote is:

"...please remember that digital cable is not DTV..."
(http://www.hdtvpub.com/reception/dtvcablecompany.cfm)

So if my cable company (Adelphia) is offering digital cable reception,

that
only refers to the way it is piped in, but the format remains the same?


Pretty much. You still end up with 480i NTSC. The benefit is they get to
squeeze more channels in, and charge you more. The drawback is you need
their box ("cable ready" no longer applies). The channels _MAY_ look better
than analog (if you are on a noisy system or far from the head end) or it
could look worse, especially if they overcompress the picture.

In
other words, on an HDTV set with the proper STB, would digital cable
reception look any different that regular analog?


Most people can not tell the difference.

I know it wouldn't be or
look like high def, but would there be any inherent benefit in upgrading

my
service to a digital package if I didn't particularly care for the channel
lineup (Adelphia will rent me the STB for $9.95/mo in order to receive

local
station in high def, without having to do the entire upgrade to digital
cable)?


If you want HD see if you can only pay for that. If you don't care about the
digital channel lineup, then you won't get the other channels to look any
better, they stay analog. The STB still uses the analog channels, it also
decodes the digital channels.


My understanding is that digital cable allows the cable company to

increase
the bandwidth and broadcast more channels with crisper audio, but that's
about it. Is this correct?


You got it.

The "good" news is the cable industry and the FCC have agreed on a new
digital cable standard that will support HDTV and SDTV and allow new TVs to
include a standard digital tuner and "cable card" so you won't need a STB.
(The carda allows them to control access of course.) I say good in quotes,
because it remains to be seen how well this is embraced, as it will most
likely require some transition period where some boxes break and new ones
can't take advantage of the bandwidth until the old boxes are gone. Plus,
like HDTV, buyers aren't going to switch overnight. So we will see if this
actually ends up working as intended. Maybe in 20 years, but who knows?

Brad Houser

Bruce





Brad Houser August 5th 04 02:15 AM


"Bruiser" wrote in message
...
I did mis-speak: while HDTVPub.com does use "DTV" to mean Digital TV, the
exact quote is:

"...please remember that digital cable is not DTV..."
(http://www.hdtvpub.com/reception/dtvcablecompany.cfm)

So if my cable company (Adelphia) is offering digital cable reception,

that
only refers to the way it is piped in, but the format remains the same?


Pretty much. You still end up with 480i NTSC. The benefit is they get to
squeeze more channels in, and charge you more. The drawback is you need
their box ("cable ready" no longer applies). The channels _MAY_ look better
than analog (if you are on a noisy system or far from the head end) or it
could look worse, especially if they overcompress the picture.

In
other words, on an HDTV set with the proper STB, would digital cable
reception look any different that regular analog?


Most people can not tell the difference.

I know it wouldn't be or
look like high def, but would there be any inherent benefit in upgrading

my
service to a digital package if I didn't particularly care for the channel
lineup (Adelphia will rent me the STB for $9.95/mo in order to receive

local
station in high def, without having to do the entire upgrade to digital
cable)?


If you want HD see if you can only pay for that. If you don't care about the
digital channel lineup, then you won't get the other channels to look any
better, they stay analog. The STB still uses the analog channels, it also
decodes the digital channels.


My understanding is that digital cable allows the cable company to

increase
the bandwidth and broadcast more channels with crisper audio, but that's
about it. Is this correct?


You got it.

The "good" news is the cable industry and the FCC have agreed on a new
digital cable standard that will support HDTV and SDTV and allow new TVs to
include a standard digital tuner and "cable card" so you won't need a STB.
(The carda allows them to control access of course.) I say good in quotes,
because it remains to be seen how well this is embraced, as it will most
likely require some transition period where some boxes break and new ones
can't take advantage of the bandwidth until the old boxes are gone. Plus,
like HDTV, buyers aren't going to switch overnight. So we will see if this
actually ends up working as intended. Maybe in 20 years, but who knows?

Brad Houser

Bruce





Tim Keating August 5th 04 07:22 AM

On Wed, 4 Aug 2004 16:49:44 -0700, "Bruiser" wrote:

Tim Keating wrote:
SNIP

So, back to basics: digital cable is pretty much pointless,
quality-wise.

Digital cable signals are generally over compressed to the point
that either Direct Tv and Dish sat signals will look better.

Direct Tv and Dish maintain better QC on their digital signals.
For the most part they run all their nationally distributed signals
out of a central uplink location. That significantly reduces the
manpower needed to monitor signals.

Cable maintains hundreds, if not thousands of head ends. Which
would require tens of thousands of QC personal to match the SAT
providers. Since they don't have the desire or the money, they will
make additional compromises in quality.

Another nasty problem for Cable co's is that a significant
portion
of their distribution system is tied up sending old style NTSC
signals.

Digital TV, however, is the means by which HDTV can be broadcast,
although most stations do not do that exclusively (with the
exception of PBS, I guess), correct? So any station ID'd as, for
instance, "Kxxx-DT" will be broadcasting in 480p, which will be
upped to 720p (or 1080i) for HD content?

As for receiving local digital (H)DTV broadcasts. For the most
part, cable co's can't improve it over what you can get at your house
using a low cost antenna setup. That is one reason why (H)DTV SAT
receiver set tops come with built in (8VSB) OTA tuners.

You put up you own antenna, pickup the local (H)DTV broadcasts for
free, and skip paying the Cable piggy. :-)


Thanks for the info, Tim. The nice thing about the cable route is that you
don't have to buy a STB. But the stations offered are so surprising meager,
it almost cancels that out.

I would gladly invest in a STB (even a DirectTV compatible one) if I could
assured that OTA reception would be acceptable. Using a fairly standard
RadioShack indoor aerial for NTSC reception provides very mediocre results,
and I don't know if that would translate to(H)DTV reception or not.


Indoor aerials and modern construction techniques don't mix well.

Lots of metal in today's buildings.. metal wall studs, stucco
backing, rebar all bonded together, etc..each of which can
significantly reduce one's ability to receive RF signals.

Plug your zip code into www.antennaweb.org to find out what type of
outside antenna you'll need. Note: Don't overdue it and buy too much
antenna.. it can work against you.

I use a dinky Radio shack 15-2160 to pull in (H)DTV stations over 60
miles away. :-)

Modern OTA (H)DTV receivers can pull in digital signals that if they
were broadcast in NTSC (old style),would be considered unwatchable by
most people.


BTW, why is it that satellite systems don't pick up local HD broadcasts? Is
it a technical issue or more of a licensing one?


1. It would be redundant, since OTA (H)DTV is easy to receive, and
digital perfect. (Reduces the market value for alternative methods. )

2. It would require huge amounts of bandwidth.. (cost)
(At least 8 to 15x more sat transponders, which they don't
have and can't get. )

Tim Keating August 5th 04 07:22 AM

On Wed, 4 Aug 2004 16:49:44 -0700, "Bruiser" wrote:

Tim Keating wrote:
SNIP

So, back to basics: digital cable is pretty much pointless,
quality-wise.

Digital cable signals are generally over compressed to the point
that either Direct Tv and Dish sat signals will look better.

Direct Tv and Dish maintain better QC on their digital signals.
For the most part they run all their nationally distributed signals
out of a central uplink location. That significantly reduces the
manpower needed to monitor signals.

Cable maintains hundreds, if not thousands of head ends. Which
would require tens of thousands of QC personal to match the SAT
providers. Since they don't have the desire or the money, they will
make additional compromises in quality.

Another nasty problem for Cable co's is that a significant
portion
of their distribution system is tied up sending old style NTSC
signals.

Digital TV, however, is the means by which HDTV can be broadcast,
although most stations do not do that exclusively (with the
exception of PBS, I guess), correct? So any station ID'd as, for
instance, "Kxxx-DT" will be broadcasting in 480p, which will be
upped to 720p (or 1080i) for HD content?

As for receiving local digital (H)DTV broadcasts. For the most
part, cable co's can't improve it over what you can get at your house
using a low cost antenna setup. That is one reason why (H)DTV SAT
receiver set tops come with built in (8VSB) OTA tuners.

You put up you own antenna, pickup the local (H)DTV broadcasts for
free, and skip paying the Cable piggy. :-)


Thanks for the info, Tim. The nice thing about the cable route is that you
don't have to buy a STB. But the stations offered are so surprising meager,
it almost cancels that out.

I would gladly invest in a STB (even a DirectTV compatible one) if I could
assured that OTA reception would be acceptable. Using a fairly standard
RadioShack indoor aerial for NTSC reception provides very mediocre results,
and I don't know if that would translate to(H)DTV reception or not.


Indoor aerials and modern construction techniques don't mix well.

Lots of metal in today's buildings.. metal wall studs, stucco
backing, rebar all bonded together, etc..each of which can
significantly reduce one's ability to receive RF signals.

Plug your zip code into www.antennaweb.org to find out what type of
outside antenna you'll need. Note: Don't overdue it and buy too much
antenna.. it can work against you.

I use a dinky Radio shack 15-2160 to pull in (H)DTV stations over 60
miles away. :-)

Modern OTA (H)DTV receivers can pull in digital signals that if they
were broadcast in NTSC (old style),would be considered unwatchable by
most people.


BTW, why is it that satellite systems don't pick up local HD broadcasts? Is
it a technical issue or more of a licensing one?


1. It would be redundant, since OTA (H)DTV is easy to receive, and
digital perfect. (Reduces the market value for alternative methods. )

2. It would require huge amounts of bandwidth.. (cost)
(At least 8 to 15x more sat transponders, which they don't
have and can't get. )

Bruiser August 5th 04 07:26 AM

Brad Houser wrote:
"Bruiser" wrote in message
...
I did mis-speak: while HDTVPub.com does use "DTV" to mean Digital
TV, the exact quote is:

"...please remember that digital cable is not DTV..."
(http://www.hdtvpub.com/reception/dtvcablecompany.cfm)

So if my cable company (Adelphia) is offering digital cable
reception, that only refers to the way it is piped in, but the
format remains the same?


Pretty much. You still end up with 480i NTSC. The benefit is they
get to squeeze more channels in, and charge you more. The drawback
is you need their box ("cable ready" no longer applies). The
channels _MAY_ look better than analog (if you are on a noisy system
or far from the head end) or it could look worse, especially if they
overcompress the picture.

In
other words, on an HDTV set with the proper STB, would digital cable
reception look any different that regular analog?


Most people can not tell the difference.

I know it wouldn't be or
look like high def, but would there be any inherent benefit in
upgrading my service to a digital package if I didn't particularly
care for the channel lineup (Adelphia will rent me the STB for
$9.95/mo in order to receive local station in high def, without
having to do the entire upgrade to digital cable)?


If you want HD see if you can only pay for that. If you don't care
about the digital channel lineup, then you won't get the other
channels to look any better, they stay analog. The STB still uses
the analog channels, it also decodes the digital channels.


My understanding is that digital cable allows the cable company to
increase the bandwidth and broadcast more channels with crisper
audio, but that's about it. Is this correct?


You got it.

The "good" news is the cable industry and the FCC have agreed on a
new digital cable standard that will support HDTV and SDTV and allow
new TVs to include a standard digital tuner and "cable card" so you
won't need a STB. (The carda allows them to control access of
course.) I say good in quotes, because it remains to be seen how
well this is embraced, as it will most likely require some
transition period where some boxes break and new ones can't take
advantage of the bandwidth until the old boxes are gone. Plus, like
HDTV, buyers aren't going to switch overnight. So we will see if
this actually ends up working as intended. Maybe in 20 years, but
who knows?

Brad Houser


Thanks, Brad. As I indicated in my response to Tim, I'll give Adelphia a go
with just the HD lineup (slim pickings here in LA unfortunately), but will
also look into OTA and satellite. I'm limited to an indoor aerial which
might not be good enough, but I'd rather have sports channels than local
stations if I'm forced to choose. We'll see.

Bruce



Bruiser August 5th 04 07:26 AM

Brad Houser wrote:
"Bruiser" wrote in message
...
I did mis-speak: while HDTVPub.com does use "DTV" to mean Digital
TV, the exact quote is:

"...please remember that digital cable is not DTV..."
(http://www.hdtvpub.com/reception/dtvcablecompany.cfm)

So if my cable company (Adelphia) is offering digital cable
reception, that only refers to the way it is piped in, but the
format remains the same?


Pretty much. You still end up with 480i NTSC. The benefit is they
get to squeeze more channels in, and charge you more. The drawback
is you need their box ("cable ready" no longer applies). The
channels _MAY_ look better than analog (if you are on a noisy system
or far from the head end) or it could look worse, especially if they
overcompress the picture.

In
other words, on an HDTV set with the proper STB, would digital cable
reception look any different that regular analog?


Most people can not tell the difference.

I know it wouldn't be or
look like high def, but would there be any inherent benefit in
upgrading my service to a digital package if I didn't particularly
care for the channel lineup (Adelphia will rent me the STB for
$9.95/mo in order to receive local station in high def, without
having to do the entire upgrade to digital cable)?


If you want HD see if you can only pay for that. If you don't care
about the digital channel lineup, then you won't get the other
channels to look any better, they stay analog. The STB still uses
the analog channels, it also decodes the digital channels.


My understanding is that digital cable allows the cable company to
increase the bandwidth and broadcast more channels with crisper
audio, but that's about it. Is this correct?


You got it.

The "good" news is the cable industry and the FCC have agreed on a
new digital cable standard that will support HDTV and SDTV and allow
new TVs to include a standard digital tuner and "cable card" so you
won't need a STB. (The carda allows them to control access of
course.) I say good in quotes, because it remains to be seen how
well this is embraced, as it will most likely require some
transition period where some boxes break and new ones can't take
advantage of the bandwidth until the old boxes are gone. Plus, like
HDTV, buyers aren't going to switch overnight. So we will see if
this actually ends up working as intended. Maybe in 20 years, but
who knows?

Brad Houser


Thanks, Brad. As I indicated in my response to Tim, I'll give Adelphia a go
with just the HD lineup (slim pickings here in LA unfortunately), but will
also look into OTA and satellite. I'm limited to an indoor aerial which
might not be good enough, but I'd rather have sports channels than local
stations if I'm forced to choose. We'll see.

Bruce



Bruiser August 5th 04 07:38 AM

Tim Keating wrote:
SNIP
Indoor aerials and modern construction techniques don't mix well.

Lots of metal in today's buildings.. metal wall studs, stucco
backing, rebar all bonded together, etc..each of which can
significantly reduce one's ability to receive RF signals.

Plug your zip code into www.antennaweb.org to find out what type of
outside antenna you'll need. Note: Don't overdue it and buy too
much antenna.. it can work against you.


I did this earlier and the antenna recommended is a medium directional. I'm
only about 14.5 from the Mt. Wilson towers, but I rent an apt. in a
two-story, 8-unit building (about 60 yrs. old). I'm on the second floor, but
not on the side that faces NE toward the towers. I don't know how thrilled
the landlord would be about installing an outdoor aerial, so I was thinking
more indoor. Naturally the line of sight would be greater with something on
the roof. Maybe if I catch the owner on a good day...

I use a dinky Radio shack 15-2160 to pull in (H)DTV stations over 60
miles away. :-)

Modern OTA (H)DTV receivers can pull in digital signals that if they
were broadcast in NTSC (old style),would be considered unwatchable by
most people.


BTW, why is it that satellite systems don't pick up local HD
broadcasts? Is it a technical issue or more of a licensing one?


1. It would be redundant, since OTA (H)DTV is easy to receive, and
digital perfect. (Reduces the market value for alternative methods. )

2. It would require huge amounts of bandwidth.. (cost)
(At least 8 to 15x more sat transponders, which they don't
have and can't get. )


Thanks for the info.

Bruce




Bruiser August 5th 04 07:38 AM

Tim Keating wrote:
SNIP
Indoor aerials and modern construction techniques don't mix well.

Lots of metal in today's buildings.. metal wall studs, stucco
backing, rebar all bonded together, etc..each of which can
significantly reduce one's ability to receive RF signals.

Plug your zip code into www.antennaweb.org to find out what type of
outside antenna you'll need. Note: Don't overdue it and buy too
much antenna.. it can work against you.


I did this earlier and the antenna recommended is a medium directional. I'm
only about 14.5 from the Mt. Wilson towers, but I rent an apt. in a
two-story, 8-unit building (about 60 yrs. old). I'm on the second floor, but
not on the side that faces NE toward the towers. I don't know how thrilled
the landlord would be about installing an outdoor aerial, so I was thinking
more indoor. Naturally the line of sight would be greater with something on
the roof. Maybe if I catch the owner on a good day...

I use a dinky Radio shack 15-2160 to pull in (H)DTV stations over 60
miles away. :-)

Modern OTA (H)DTV receivers can pull in digital signals that if they
were broadcast in NTSC (old style),would be considered unwatchable by
most people.


BTW, why is it that satellite systems don't pick up local HD
broadcasts? Is it a technical issue or more of a licensing one?


1. It would be redundant, since OTA (H)DTV is easy to receive, and
digital perfect. (Reduces the market value for alternative methods. )

2. It would require huge amounts of bandwidth.. (cost)
(At least 8 to 15x more sat transponders, which they don't
have and can't get. )


Thanks for the info.

Bruce




Bob Miller August 5th 04 04:54 PM

Tim Keating wrote:
Thanks for the info, Tim. The nice thing about the cable route is that you
don't have to buy a STB. But the stations offered are so surprising meager,
it almost cancels that out.

I would gladly invest in a STB (even a DirectTV compatible one) if I could
assured that OTA reception would be acceptable. Using a fairly standard
RadioShack indoor aerial for NTSC reception provides very mediocre results,
and I don't know if that would translate to(H)DTV reception or not.



Indoor aerials and modern construction techniques don't mix well.

Lots of metal in today's buildings.. metal wall studs, stucco
backing, rebar all bonded together, etc..each of which can
significantly reduce one's ability to receive RF signals.

Plug your zip code into www.antennaweb.org to find out what type of
outside antenna you'll need. Note: Don't overdue it and buy too much
antenna.. it can work against you.

I use a dinky Radio shack 15-2160 to pull in (H)DTV stations over 60
miles away. :-)

Modern OTA (H)DTV receivers can pull in digital signals that if they
were broadcast in NTSC (old style),would be considered unwatchable by
most people.


BTW, why is it that satellite systems don't pick up local HD broadcasts? Is
it a technical issue or more of a licensing one?



1. It would be redundant, since OTA (H)DTV is easy to receive, and
digital perfect. (Reduces the market value for alternative methods. )


Now true with 5th generation LG/Zenith receiver due 4th quarter.

Alternate methods include satellite and cable. Why should someone pay
cable or satellite for delivery of local OTA channels? Why should local
OTA channels allow cable or satellite, competitive delivery methods, to
deliver desirable content they control?

Cable and satellite exist because of the problems of OTA reception and
the limited programming they could deliver in a given market. BOTH those
limitations are now removed. Cable and satellite have no reason to
exist. Cable has one advantage, high speed Internet and its VoIP
capabilities. However even there they are at risk because their culture
is one of monopoly and other wireless ventures can now ignore local
government monopoly granting powers and compete with cable.

I don't think either cable or satellite have a half life of 7 years in
anything like their present form.

Things change.

2. It would require huge amounts of bandwidth.. (cost)
(At least 8 to 15x more sat transponders, which they don't
have and can't get. )


Bob Miller August 5th 04 04:54 PM

Tim Keating wrote:
Thanks for the info, Tim. The nice thing about the cable route is that you
don't have to buy a STB. But the stations offered are so surprising meager,
it almost cancels that out.

I would gladly invest in a STB (even a DirectTV compatible one) if I could
assured that OTA reception would be acceptable. Using a fairly standard
RadioShack indoor aerial for NTSC reception provides very mediocre results,
and I don't know if that would translate to(H)DTV reception or not.



Indoor aerials and modern construction techniques don't mix well.

Lots of metal in today's buildings.. metal wall studs, stucco
backing, rebar all bonded together, etc..each of which can
significantly reduce one's ability to receive RF signals.

Plug your zip code into www.antennaweb.org to find out what type of
outside antenna you'll need. Note: Don't overdue it and buy too much
antenna.. it can work against you.

I use a dinky Radio shack 15-2160 to pull in (H)DTV stations over 60
miles away. :-)

Modern OTA (H)DTV receivers can pull in digital signals that if they
were broadcast in NTSC (old style),would be considered unwatchable by
most people.


BTW, why is it that satellite systems don't pick up local HD broadcasts? Is
it a technical issue or more of a licensing one?



1. It would be redundant, since OTA (H)DTV is easy to receive, and
digital perfect. (Reduces the market value for alternative methods. )


Now true with 5th generation LG/Zenith receiver due 4th quarter.

Alternate methods include satellite and cable. Why should someone pay
cable or satellite for delivery of local OTA channels? Why should local
OTA channels allow cable or satellite, competitive delivery methods, to
deliver desirable content they control?

Cable and satellite exist because of the problems of OTA reception and
the limited programming they could deliver in a given market. BOTH those
limitations are now removed. Cable and satellite have no reason to
exist. Cable has one advantage, high speed Internet and its VoIP
capabilities. However even there they are at risk because their culture
is one of monopoly and other wireless ventures can now ignore local
government monopoly granting powers and compete with cable.

I don't think either cable or satellite have a half life of 7 years in
anything like their present form.

Things change.

2. It would require huge amounts of bandwidth.. (cost)
(At least 8 to 15x more sat transponders, which they don't
have and can't get. )


Del Mibbler August 6th 04 07:19 PM

"Bruiser" wrote (in part):

I'm only about 14.5 from the Mt. Wilson towers, but I rent an apt. in a
two-story, 8-unit building (about 60 yrs. old). I'm on the second floor, but
not on the side that faces NE toward the towers. I don't know how thrilled
the landlord would be about installing an outdoor aerial, so I was thinking
more indoor. Naturally the line of sight would be greater with something on
the roof. Maybe if I catch the owner on a good day...


I'd think the smart thing for your landlord to do would be to put his
own antenna on the roof, with a distribution amp feeding all the
apartments. Wouldn't cost him much, and he'd avoid having all the
tenants wanting to install their own.

Del Mibbler

Del Mibbler August 6th 04 07:19 PM

"Bruiser" wrote (in part):

I'm only about 14.5 from the Mt. Wilson towers, but I rent an apt. in a
two-story, 8-unit building (about 60 yrs. old). I'm on the second floor, but
not on the side that faces NE toward the towers. I don't know how thrilled
the landlord would be about installing an outdoor aerial, so I was thinking
more indoor. Naturally the line of sight would be greater with something on
the roof. Maybe if I catch the owner on a good day...


I'd think the smart thing for your landlord to do would be to put his
own antenna on the roof, with a distribution amp feeding all the
apartments. Wouldn't cost him much, and he'd avoid having all the
tenants wanting to install their own.

Del Mibbler

me August 6th 04 09:38 PM

Del Mibbler wrote in
:

"Bruiser" wrote (in part):

I'm only about 14.5 from the Mt. Wilson towers, but I rent an apt. in
a two-story, 8-unit building (about 60 yrs. old). I'm on the second
floor, but not on the side that faces NE toward the towers. I don't
know how thrilled the landlord would be about installing an outdoor
aerial, so I was thinking more indoor. Naturally the line of sight
would be greater with something on the roof. Maybe if I catch the
owner on a good day...


I'd think the smart thing for your landlord to do would be to put his
own antenna on the roof, with a distribution amp feeding all the
apartments. Wouldn't cost him much, and he'd avoid having all the
tenants wanting to install their own.

Del Mibbler


The law says you can put one up not attached to the roof.


our tenants usually attach them to vent pipes

me August 6th 04 09:38 PM

Del Mibbler wrote in
:

"Bruiser" wrote (in part):

I'm only about 14.5 from the Mt. Wilson towers, but I rent an apt. in
a two-story, 8-unit building (about 60 yrs. old). I'm on the second
floor, but not on the side that faces NE toward the towers. I don't
know how thrilled the landlord would be about installing an outdoor
aerial, so I was thinking more indoor. Naturally the line of sight
would be greater with something on the roof. Maybe if I catch the
owner on a good day...


I'd think the smart thing for your landlord to do would be to put his
own antenna on the roof, with a distribution amp feeding all the
apartments. Wouldn't cost him much, and he'd avoid having all the
tenants wanting to install their own.

Del Mibbler


The law says you can put one up not attached to the roof.


our tenants usually attach them to vent pipes

Bruiser August 7th 04 02:07 AM

me wrote:
Del Mibbler wrote in
:

"Bruiser" wrote (in part):

I'm only about 14.5 from the Mt. Wilson towers, but I rent an apt.
in a two-story, 8-unit building (about 60 yrs. old). I'm on the
second floor, but not on the side that faces NE toward the towers.
I don't know how thrilled the landlord would be about installing
an outdoor aerial, so I was thinking more indoor. Naturally the
line of sight would be greater with something on the roof. Maybe
if I catch the owner on a good day...

I'd think the smart thing for your landlord to do would be to put
his own antenna on the roof, with a distribution amp feeding all the
apartments. Wouldn't cost him much, and he'd avoid having all the
tenants wanting to install their own.

Del Mibbler


The law says you can put one up not attached to the roof.


our tenants usually attach them to vent pipes


Thanks for all of the suggestions. Since the landlord has the first dollar
he's ever made, I think the magic words will be "I'll cover it." I have a
feeling it'll be a go after that. ;)

Bruce



Bruiser August 7th 04 02:07 AM

me wrote:
Del Mibbler wrote in
:

"Bruiser" wrote (in part):

I'm only about 14.5 from the Mt. Wilson towers, but I rent an apt.
in a two-story, 8-unit building (about 60 yrs. old). I'm on the
second floor, but not on the side that faces NE toward the towers.
I don't know how thrilled the landlord would be about installing
an outdoor aerial, so I was thinking more indoor. Naturally the
line of sight would be greater with something on the roof. Maybe
if I catch the owner on a good day...

I'd think the smart thing for your landlord to do would be to put
his own antenna on the roof, with a distribution amp feeding all the
apartments. Wouldn't cost him much, and he'd avoid having all the
tenants wanting to install their own.

Del Mibbler


The law says you can put one up not attached to the roof.


our tenants usually attach them to vent pipes


Thanks for all of the suggestions. Since the landlord has the first dollar
he's ever made, I think the magic words will be "I'll cover it." I have a
feeling it'll be a go after that. ;)

Bruce



me August 7th 04 04:05 PM

"Bruiser" wrote in
:

me wrote:
Del Mibbler wrote in
:

"Bruiser" wrote (in part):

I'm only about 14.5 from the Mt. Wilson towers, but I rent an apt.
in a two-story, 8-unit building (about 60 yrs. old). I'm on the
second floor, but not on the side that faces NE toward the towers.
I don't know how thrilled the landlord would be about installing
an outdoor aerial, so I was thinking more indoor. Naturally the
line of sight would be greater with something on the roof. Maybe
if I catch the owner on a good day...

I'd think the smart thing for your landlord to do would be to put
his own antenna on the roof, with a distribution amp feeding all
the apartments. Wouldn't cost him much, and he'd avoid having all
the tenants wanting to install their own.

Del Mibbler


The law says you can put one up not attached to the roof.


our tenants usually attach them to vent pipes


Thanks for all of the suggestions. Since the landlord has the first
dollar he's ever made, I think the magic words will be "I'll cover
it." I have a feeling it'll be a go after that. ;)

Bruce




The landlord does not have to pay yhe antenna

me August 7th 04 04:05 PM

"Bruiser" wrote in
:

me wrote:
Del Mibbler wrote in
:

"Bruiser" wrote (in part):

I'm only about 14.5 from the Mt. Wilson towers, but I rent an apt.
in a two-story, 8-unit building (about 60 yrs. old). I'm on the
second floor, but not on the side that faces NE toward the towers.
I don't know how thrilled the landlord would be about installing
an outdoor aerial, so I was thinking more indoor. Naturally the
line of sight would be greater with something on the roof. Maybe
if I catch the owner on a good day...

I'd think the smart thing for your landlord to do would be to put
his own antenna on the roof, with a distribution amp feeding all
the apartments. Wouldn't cost him much, and he'd avoid having all
the tenants wanting to install their own.

Del Mibbler


The law says you can put one up not attached to the roof.


our tenants usually attach them to vent pipes


Thanks for all of the suggestions. Since the landlord has the first
dollar he's ever made, I think the magic words will be "I'll cover
it." I have a feeling it'll be a go after that. ;)

Bruce




The landlord does not have to pay yhe antenna

hdtvfan August 8th 04 09:59 AM

Any small UHF antenna may work. That is if its a UHF station.
For that short of distance a small or mid sized outdoor radio shack
antenna might be in order. Try it in the attic, if it works, fine if
not you can still try to use it outdoors. You may need a matching
transformer at the antenna if you use the RG-6 type coax.

Good Luck,
hdtvfan

On Sat, 07 Aug 2004 14:05:49 GMT, me wrote:

"Bruiser" wrote in
:

me wrote:
Del Mibbler wrote in
:

"Bruiser" wrote (in part):

I'm only about 14.5 from the Mt. Wilson towers, but I rent an apt.
in a two-story, 8-unit building (about 60 yrs. old). I'm on the
second floor, but not on the side that faces NE toward the towers.
I don't know how thrilled the landlord would be about installing
an outdoor aerial, so I was thinking more indoor. Naturally the
line of sight would be greater with something on the roof. Maybe
if I catch the owner on a good day...

I'd think the smart thing for your landlord to do would be to put
his own antenna on the roof, with a distribution amp feeding all
the apartments. Wouldn't cost him much, and he'd avoid having all
the tenants wanting to install their own.

Del Mibbler


The law says you can put one up not attached to the roof.


our tenants usually attach them to vent pipes


Thanks for all of the suggestions. Since the landlord has the first
dollar he's ever made, I think the magic words will be "I'll cover
it." I have a feeling it'll be a go after that. ;)

Bruce




The landlord does not have to pay yhe antenna



hdtvfan August 8th 04 09:59 AM

Any small UHF antenna may work. That is if its a UHF station.
For that short of distance a small or mid sized outdoor radio shack
antenna might be in order. Try it in the attic, if it works, fine if
not you can still try to use it outdoors. You may need a matching
transformer at the antenna if you use the RG-6 type coax.

Good Luck,
hdtvfan

On Sat, 07 Aug 2004 14:05:49 GMT, me wrote:

"Bruiser" wrote in
:

me wrote:
Del Mibbler wrote in
:

"Bruiser" wrote (in part):

I'm only about 14.5 from the Mt. Wilson towers, but I rent an apt.
in a two-story, 8-unit building (about 60 yrs. old). I'm on the
second floor, but not on the side that faces NE toward the towers.
I don't know how thrilled the landlord would be about installing
an outdoor aerial, so I was thinking more indoor. Naturally the
line of sight would be greater with something on the roof. Maybe
if I catch the owner on a good day...

I'd think the smart thing for your landlord to do would be to put
his own antenna on the roof, with a distribution amp feeding all
the apartments. Wouldn't cost him much, and he'd avoid having all
the tenants wanting to install their own.

Del Mibbler


The law says you can put one up not attached to the roof.


our tenants usually attach them to vent pipes


Thanks for all of the suggestions. Since the landlord has the first
dollar he's ever made, I think the magic words will be "I'll cover
it." I have a feeling it'll be a go after that. ;)

Bruce




The landlord does not have to pay yhe antenna




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