No, closer to the Midland, Bay City mid-Michigan area.Mike. Good to know. I will be south of you in the Fort Wayne to Muncie, IN corridor. If it can withstand those temps, it should be fine. Are you in the UP?
No, closer to the Midland, Bay City mid-Michigan area.Mike. Good to know. I will be south of you in the Fort Wayne to Muncie, IN corridor. If it can withstand those temps, it should be fine. Are you in the UP?
Mike. Good to know. I will be south of you in the Fort Wayne to Muncie, IN corridor. If it can withstand those temps, it should be fine. Are you in the UP?
Yeah, that is pretty much what I tried to tell this guy and he didn't get it. He thought that my testing different antennas and pre amps was a joke. He more or less said that. One size fits all mentality doesn't work for a lot of things including TV antennas and most anything where broadcasting of any type is concerned.Nobody can tell you for SURE, how any particular equipment will work at YOUR house. You'll just have to try, and see what happens.
You can be glad you won't be using this guy. Sounds like he thinks he knows more than he actually does.Yeah, that is pretty much what I tried to tell this guy and he didn't get it. He thought that my testing different antennas and pre amps was a joke. He more or less said that. One size fits all mentality doesn't work for a lot of things including TV antennas and most anything where broadcasting of any type is concerned.
Mike. Have run tests with two VHF Hi antennas so far. The Y-10-7-13 and the Newark deep fringe mentioned and both are catching the signals that I need but I do need a pre amp at least at five feet. Working on another idea for a guyed mast mount in the back yard also. Noted the peak of my roof is about 17 feet and something just above that should be fine if it is a good 20 to 30 feet away from the peak of the roof.You DO know of course that VHF rarely needs any sort of preamp? That's why I think the Televes preamp would work best for you, as it's agc controlled, and will throttle down if needed.
Have you checked around your house to make SURE you don't have electronic devices that are jamming your channel? Or, a local FM radio station blasting you? I had two: a Harbor Freight battery tender running in the garage, jamming RF12. I used an AM radio, and could pick up the radiated RF from that battery tender 300 feet AWAY from my property! I threw it away.
Then, a Dell laptop power brick started causing nearly the same issue. I replaced that with a new one, and problem solved again. Even some LED lightbulbs can cause issues on VHF, or a noisy power transformer on a pole, down the block from you...
This is a great filter, but I see they are temp out of stock: FM Filter
I have an old MCM Electronics FM filter in my system, ahead of the preamp (that already has an FM filter) because I have an FM tower that's twice the power of my most powerful local tv station...
Yes. This is a better option at my new location. This will likely be what I use for a second install if needed. I just have a knack for buying single floor homes that are not well suited to antenna installations. No chimney or stink pipe for mounts there either.I like your selection of an eave mount. I appreciate that eave mounts allow access while standing on a ladder and not while standing on the roof. Eave mounts also avoid penetrating the roof membrane and don’t need to be removed when the shingles require replacement.