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#11
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On 2/24/2011 7:53 PM, Woody wrote:
wrote in message ... DSO at The Wrekin is 20th April. Unfortunately the new channels spread across aerial groups A and B so you will need to get the aerial changed to wideband. If you want to watch Freeview before 6th April you may have problems as channels currently in use go right up to 57. http://www.ukfree.tv/shutdowndetail.php?tx=SJ628082 Before I get flamed let me explain. Your existing group A aerial will have a peak response in channels 21-34 and the response (gain) will tail off above that. As the lower channels are lower frequencies then there will be less loss in the cable so, with the associated higher gain, you will get very strong signals for some of the muxes and very weak ones from those 'out-of-band. Note also that some of the muxes on the oob channels are also lower power so you will be double disadvantaged. If you are not careful you could end up with a signal overload on some channels (and believe me, with DTTV you most certainly don't want that) and even end up with pixelation/freeze frame on some of the higher channels. If you replace the aerial then I would suggest a log-aperiodic as this have a much flatter wideband response, have a good front-back ratio, and you can get them with a slightly rising response which will help to overcome the additional cable losses at the higher frequencies. You should also consider replacing the entire downlead with a copper foiled screened variety as the braid on the old 'brown' stuff is vary loose and will leave the cable open to interference pickup. Even with strong solid signals a radiated switch click or similar picked up on the cable will at best cause pixelation, at worst temporary loss of picture/sound - it depends how your TV handles such issues. Many thanks for that comprehensive reply Woody, I hadn't realised that there were other issues beside mere Gain and rejection of rear signals, and particularly your comments re Signal Overload on some channels is worrying. In the light of the issues you have raised I am now considering a log-aperiodic as you suggested, (maybe I shall fit it now rather than patch up the old one) are there different types ( bands) of these particular aerials or does the wideband nature cover all frequencies? you mentioned a rising response at higher frequencies Which aerials would do this? Can you recommend a specific make/ model? Similarly with cable (copper foiled?) it would have a double screen then presumably? I live in a low pitch roofed bungalow so installation is not a problem to me, and with line of sight to the Wrekin it's easy enough to line up particularly with the info on this site which someone on this NG pointed to earlier: Mounting A Terrestrial TV Aerial In The UK - 3 Aerial Alignment Calculator (with internet mapping).mht Regards Don |
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#12
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On 2/24/2011 2:47 PM, Bill Wright wrote:
Gary wrote: On 24/02/2011 09:49, Terry Casey wrote: In on Thu, 24 Feb 2011 04:37:54 +0000 wrote: Is there an F-plug to coax connector gizmo that I can use that will not attenuate the signal substantially? http://www.tvcables.co.uk/cgi-bin/tv...t-adapter.html It seems to me that you want problems. If it was me, I would get the TV, connect it to the aerial that is giving good results and see if you have a problem. Even if there are problems it will be with the muxes that are not in Gp A, and altering the cable won't help that very much. Or do you mean that the existing cable doesn't go to the TV location? Bill Yes Bill, the piece of cable that I have is too short to go all the way to the Aerial on the roof, hence the need to splice it in the downlead within the loft space. However, having had further advice/info maybe I'll install the whole shabang with a new aerial and downlead instead of fiddling about with temporary solution. Thanks Don |
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#13
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On Thu, 24 Feb 2011 18:29:08 +0000, tony sayer wrote:
Don If the cable is the right OD (my old brown cable is - with a bit of grunt) you could cut it about a couple of feet from the end and use an F-to-F adaptor to put in a bit more cable. I was having trouble extending the cable by a yard as the co-ax connectors were very sensitive to position and any slight change caused the picture to break up. Going F-to-F has solved it and it has to last only until the new aerial ist installed. http://www.aerialsandtv.com/onlineca...ml#Fconnectors Yes thanks for that, it looks like a good idea and will suffice until the new broadband aerial plus cable goes in after they've finished messing about in October if we're lucky Don Surely something wrong with the co-ax connectors in use there then?.... Yes! Even so, co-ax is easily misaligned/strained/deformed whereas F-type is solid. -- Peter. The gods will stay away whilst religions hold sway |
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#14
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"Donwill" wrote in message
... On 2/24/2011 7:53 PM, Woody wrote: wrote in message ... DSO at The Wrekin is 20th April. Unfortunately the new channels spread across aerial groups A and B so you will need to get the aerial changed to wideband. If you want to watch Freeview before 6th April you may have problems as channels currently in use go right up to 57. http://www.ukfree.tv/shutdowndetail.php?tx=SJ628082 Before I get flamed let me explain. Your existing group A aerial will have a peak response in channels 21-34 and the response (gain) will tail off above that. As the lower channels are lower frequencies then there will be less loss in the cable so, with the associated higher gain, you will get very strong signals for some of the muxes and very weak ones from those 'out-of-band. Note also that some of the muxes on the oob channels are also lower power so you will be double disadvantaged. If you are not careful you could end up with a signal overload on some channels (and believe me, with DTTV you most certainly don't want that) and even end up with pixelation/freeze frame on some of the higher channels. If you replace the aerial then I would suggest a log-aperiodic as this have a much flatter wideband response, have a good front-back ratio, and you can get them with a slightly rising response which will help to overcome the additional cable losses at the higher frequencies. You should also consider replacing the entire downlead with a copper foiled screened variety as the braid on the old 'brown' stuff is vary loose and will leave the cable open to interference pickup. Even with strong solid signals a radiated switch click or similar picked up on the cable will at best cause pixelation, at worst temporary loss of picture/sound - it depends how your TV handles such issues. Many thanks for that comprehensive reply Woody, I hadn't realised that there were other issues beside mere Gain and rejection of rear signals, and particularly your comments re Signal Overload on some channels is worrying. In the light of the issues you have raised I am now considering a log-aperiodic as you suggested, (maybe I shall fit it now rather than patch up the old one) are there different types ( bands) of these particular aerials or does the wideband nature cover all frequencies? you mentioned a rising response at higher frequencies Which aerials would do this? Can you recommend a specific make/ model? Similarly with cable (copper foiled?) it would have a double screen then presumably? I live in a low pitch roofed bungalow so installation is not a problem to me, and with line of sight to the Wrekin it's easy enough to line up particularly with the info on this site which someone on this NG pointed to earlier: Mounting A Terrestrial TV Aerial In The UK - 3 Aerial Alignment Calculator (with internet mapping).mht Regards Don Sorry, minor mistake. The aerial that will give you the rising response is an E-group. Typically about 4dB gain at Ch21 up to 12dB gain around Ch55. The log periodic is much flatter. If The Wrekin is LOS and not too far away that is the one I would go for. Try to get one that has a ready fitted connector at the mounting end. I only found out recently that with a L-P the cable should be fed back through one of the tubes as so doing is part of the matching: if you get one with a connector already fitted then the match is done for you. -- Woody harrogate three at ntlworld dot com |
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#15
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The log periodic is much flatter. If The Wrekin is LOS and not
too far away that is the one I would go for. Try to get one that has a ready fitted connector at the mounting end. I only found out recently that with a L-P the cable should be fed back through one of the tubes as so doing is part of the matching: if you get one with a connector already fitted then the match is done for you. Odd!, Which make and model was that Woody?.. -- Tony Sayer |
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#16
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"tony sayer" wrote in message
news ![]() The log periodic is much flatter. If The Wrekin is LOS and not too far away that is the one I would go for. Try to get one that has a ready fitted connector at the mounting end. I only found out recently that with a L-P the cable should be fed back through one of the tubes as so doing is part of the matching: if you get one with a connector already fitted then the match is done for you. Odd!, Which make and model was that Woody?.. -- Don't ask me where I saw it - I've been to sleep since then! I must admit that I was a bit puzzled by the Physics - if indeed Physics is involved - but nonetheless it was there in black and white. Perhaps William might have some thoughts - printable please Bill? -- Woody harrogate three at ntlworld dot com |
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#17
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Woody wrote:
If you replace the aerial then I would suggest a log-aperiodic as this have a much flatter wideband response, have a good front-back ratio, and you can get them with a slightly rising response What log periodic gives a slightly rising response? Bill |
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#18
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Donwill wrote:
However, having had further advice/info maybe I'll install the whole shabang with a new aerial and downlead instead of fiddling about with temporary solution. Thanks Don Yes, I think your short cut was a long cut! Bill |
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#19
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Woody wrote:
Sorry, minor mistake. The aerial that will give you the rising response is an E-group. Typically about 4dB gain at Ch21 up to 12dB gain around Ch55. 'ang on a minute! A Gp E covers 35 to 68. You mean a Gp K, which covers 21 to 48 and like the unicorn* is a mythological creature, much discussed but never actually seen in the flesh. As for an aerial that covers 21 to 55, as you suggest, that would have to be wideband. The problem with wideband yagis is that because the gain is ****e at the bottom end the directivity is as well. The performance re ghosting and CCI is abysmal. *the unicorn is a type of colinear omnidirectional vertically polarised aerial used mostly for DAB reception on Vikings' integrated helmet radios. The active elements are stacked inside a horn-shaped radome (hence the name). In order to allow diversity reception the horn aerials are usually deployed in pairs, one on each side of the helmet. Bill |
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#20
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Woody wrote:
"tony sayer" wrote in message news ![]() The log periodic is much flatter. If The Wrekin is LOS and not too far away that is the one I would go for. Try to get one that has a ready fitted connector at the mounting end. I only found out recently that with a L-P the cable should be fed back through one of the tubes as so doing is part of the matching: if you get one with a connector already fitted then the match is done for you. Odd!, Which make and model was that Woody?.. -- Don't ask me where I saw it - I've been to sleep since then! I must admit that I was a bit puzzled by the Physics - if indeed Physics is involved - but nonetheless it was there in black and white. Perhaps William might have some thoughts - printable please Bill? I think there's a lot of ******** talked about log periodics. By trial and error designs have been found that work, then theorists have been trying to prove that they do in fact work. In theory a bumble bee can't fly, but it does. Allah the Great has given us the log-periodic; we should not question His wisdom. We should take the log periodic to our breasts and rejoice. Bill |
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