RG56 cable is not 75 ohm, it is used mainly for ham radio installations. TV antenna installations should use RG6 cable, RG11 for longer cable runs.
Antenna Web and DTV Answers are the last two sites I would go to for information. TV Fool (already mentioned in a post in this thread) and AVS Forum (has several OTA threads) are quality resources.
As far as antenna height goes, I have line of sight to a station 104 miles away. According to TV Fool, my signal strength increases as I lower my antenna. So higher isn't always better. The advantange of height is to get over obstructions - houses, trees, power lines, etc. Normal TV reception is generally limited to 60 miles over flat terrain due to the curvature of the earth. But factors such as differences in height above sea level and the actual height of the the transmitting tower, height above sea level at the reception location, mountains & hills in between, etc. can change that 60 mile standard dramatically, as is the case with the station I receive that is 104 miles from me. There are stations less than 50 miles away from me that I can't receive due to intervening mountains. While raising an antenna 10 feet may help, it probably will do very little regarding increasing the strength of the received signal.
Just my 2 cents.
Antenna Web and DTV Answers are the last two sites I would go to for information. TV Fool (already mentioned in a post in this thread) and AVS Forum (has several OTA threads) are quality resources.
As far as antenna height goes, I have line of sight to a station 104 miles away. According to TV Fool, my signal strength increases as I lower my antenna. So higher isn't always better. The advantange of height is to get over obstructions - houses, trees, power lines, etc. Normal TV reception is generally limited to 60 miles over flat terrain due to the curvature of the earth. But factors such as differences in height above sea level and the actual height of the the transmitting tower, height above sea level at the reception location, mountains & hills in between, etc. can change that 60 mile standard dramatically, as is the case with the station I receive that is 104 miles from me. There are stations less than 50 miles away from me that I can't receive due to intervening mountains. While raising an antenna 10 feet may help, it probably will do very little regarding increasing the strength of the received signal.
Just my 2 cents.