Thanks for your thoughts. Feel free to link to the guide for newbs wanting a quick rundown on indoor antennas.
I prefer the homemade 4221.
http://www.digiblur.com/forum_pics/CM4221_home.jpg[[/QUOTE]
Hi Digiblur,
Does your home made antenna work on HI-VHF. I need an antenna that can work on VHF 7 and 12 plus UHF 19 to 63. I am in an apartment, patio facing south (took it for getting LOS for sats), where as all transmission towers are in North. There is no LOS to any Tx tower for me. I made a home made antenna similar to one made by [url=http://www.lumenlab.com/forums/index.php?showtopic=9613&st=650][I]BluBtl[/I][/url] and it works OK, leaving frequent breaks.
I prefer to keep the antenna in the storage room so that it is not visible to our apt owner. Any suggestion is appreciated.
Jim is right. Outdoor antennas are the best for reception, the higher the better and a small outdoor antenna mounted indoor will also do a good job.
Most TV consumers think of antennas as low-tech devices, but there is more behind some of the newer antenna designs than just bent metal and plastic. Many of the TV antenna designs on the market today, such as the Yagi and your rabbit ears have technology roots going back 30 to 50 years or more.
By the window or not, your rabbit ears are picking up Multi-path (bounced signals). These signals are bouncing off the walls in your home, confusing the ATSC tunner chip in your receiver.
The fact that most designs on the market now were developed prior to the advent of much of the computer technology, software and algorithms in common use today, left open numerous avenues to improve upon tried and true designs and develop new ones. Additionally, recent regulations and standards are opening new doors for antenna engineers to develop smaller antennas with improved performance and aesthetics.
Antennas Direct will have on the market in July a new indoor antenna, the Micron, pictured below. It's small, powerful and cool looking. If you can wait, try it. They offer a no-fault 90 day gaurantee. If it doesn't do the job for you, return it for a full refund or try a DB-2 (indoor/outdoor) antenna.
I like the CM4228 better The miracle antenna as I call it. But that's not indoors either, although I've seen one indoors.
They bot have their applications. I have a 4221 and get more channels than neighbors with the 4228. The weak point of the 4221 is the narrower beam width. I live close in to a city so the better beam width of the 4221 gets me al the cities in my area and some in the next. The neighboring 4228s just can't do that.
But if you are 50 miles form the transmittters and they are more or elss in a staright line go for the 4228.
Hi Digiblur,
Does your home made antenna work on HI-VHF. I need an antenna that can work on VHF 7 and 12 plus UHF 19 to 63. I am in an apartment, patio facing south (took it for getting LOS for sats), where as all transmission towers are in North. There is no LOS to any Tx tower for me. I made a home made antenna similar to one made by BluBtl and it works OK, leaving frequent breaks.
I prefer to keep the antenna in the storage room so that it is not visible to our apt owner. Any suggestion is appreciated.
Hi Digiblur,
Does your home made antenna work on HI-VHF. I need an antenna that can work on VHF 7 and 12 plus UHF 19 to 63. I am in an apartment, patio facing south (took it for getting LOS for sats), where as all transmission towers are in North. There is no LOS to any Tx tower for me. I made a home made antenna similar to one made by BluBtl and it works OK, leaving frequent breaks.
I prefer to keep the antenna in the storage room so that it is not visible to our apt owner. Any suggestion is appreciated.