Poor reception at new home.
I have moved about 3-4 miles. The old place had a StealthTenna with internal pre-amp and worked fine, using a distro amp. At the new place, about 300' higher in elevation IIRC, I wanted all the stations I was previously getting, plus improved Baltimore reception and possibly pick up an Annapolis station. So I put up a CM3671 with a Wineguard HDP-269 preamp. That particular pre-amp was chosen to avoid overloading on nearby stations yet help pull in distants. It is mounted on the mast just below the antenna and above the rotor. It feeds a CS-208 8 way splitter (currently feeding 4 lines, expected to feed 5 or 6 lines, most of which will be further split). The splitter is marked "all ports power pass." The preamp is fed from a feed in a bedroom. No diplexing, no separators. Trees are around both antennas, maybe a bit more in the new place.
Analogs mostly come in fair to poor. I get 67% on 9-1, 88% on 30-1, zero on 26-1 and 90% on 66-1. 4-1, 5-1, 7-1 & 14-1 all come in "no program." I am in zip code 22032.
Stations of primary interest follow. All are digital except 22, an analog PBS station:
WNVT-DT...30.1...IND...GOLDVEIN VA........217°.....15.0......30
WPXW-DT..66.1.....i......MANASSAS VA......210°......2.5......43
WJLA-DT......7.1...ABC...WASHINGTON DC...65°......15.3.....39
WUSA-DT.....9.1...CBS...WASHINGTON DC...65°......15.3.....34
WETA-DT....26.1...PBS...WASHINGTON DC...74°......10.9....27
WTTG-DT.....5.1...FOX...WASHINGTON DC...63°......15.4....36
WRC-DT.......4.1...NBC...WASHINGTON DC...67°......14.9....48
WFDC-DT...14.1...TFA...ARLINGTON VA.......67°......14.9....15
WNVC-DT...57.1...IND....FAIRFAX VA...........63°.......6.0....57
WDCW-DT..50.1...WB....WASHINGTON DC....68°......18.1....51
WMPT.........22.....PBS...ANNAPOLIS MD.......81°......40.0....22
I'd also love to get WWPB analog channel 31, PBS out of HAGERSTOWN, MD at 339°, 67.2 miles. There are other, more distant stations I'd like to get but are no big deal.
The 3671 was selected, vice a UHF only, to support current local analogs (in-laws!) and the reversion to VHF of some stations after the digital transition on 2/17/09. It was also hoped to pull in Annapolis and other more distant stations.
Options to improve reception:
1. Remove pre-amp, in the theory it's overloading nearby stations.
Probably not likely to be successful, since this pre-amp is good about not overloading, plus most of these stations are about 14.6 miles away, and some come in, some don't. I might look up ERP on each, but I'm near where I used to live and had no problems there. But it's easy to test this possible fix.
2. Replace 8-way with 4-way splitter to improve signal strength.
This might work, but I suspect would be insufficient. Further splitters exist on at least 3 of the legs, to feed both ATSC & NTSC inputs. Also, it will force additional splitters to feed more planned drops. But its relatively easy to try and does not involve running another outlet in an exceedingly hot attic.
3. Replace 8-way splitter with a distro amp. This may well drive the sometimes lengthy coax, and the extra splitters. But it means adding that attic outlet to power the distro amp. And it will require moving the pre-amp power inserter to the attic as well, since to the best of my knowledge there is no way to "power pass" thru a distro amp.
I am tempted to throw a coax off the roof and temporarily run it inside to see how the antenna with and without the pre-amp works as a direct feed to a TV. That might tell me something about the effect of the splitters on the signal. But I guess I could just remove the 8 way and put in a barrel connector to test any given leg.
Any thoughts on which would work, or is there another approach?
I have moved about 3-4 miles. The old place had a StealthTenna with internal pre-amp and worked fine, using a distro amp. At the new place, about 300' higher in elevation IIRC, I wanted all the stations I was previously getting, plus improved Baltimore reception and possibly pick up an Annapolis station. So I put up a CM3671 with a Wineguard HDP-269 preamp. That particular pre-amp was chosen to avoid overloading on nearby stations yet help pull in distants. It is mounted on the mast just below the antenna and above the rotor. It feeds a CS-208 8 way splitter (currently feeding 4 lines, expected to feed 5 or 6 lines, most of which will be further split). The splitter is marked "all ports power pass." The preamp is fed from a feed in a bedroom. No diplexing, no separators. Trees are around both antennas, maybe a bit more in the new place.
Analogs mostly come in fair to poor. I get 67% on 9-1, 88% on 30-1, zero on 26-1 and 90% on 66-1. 4-1, 5-1, 7-1 & 14-1 all come in "no program." I am in zip code 22032.
Stations of primary interest follow. All are digital except 22, an analog PBS station:
WNVT-DT...30.1...IND...GOLDVEIN VA........217°.....15.0......30
WPXW-DT..66.1.....i......MANASSAS VA......210°......2.5......43
WJLA-DT......7.1...ABC...WASHINGTON DC...65°......15.3.....39
WUSA-DT.....9.1...CBS...WASHINGTON DC...65°......15.3.....34
WETA-DT....26.1...PBS...WASHINGTON DC...74°......10.9....27
WTTG-DT.....5.1...FOX...WASHINGTON DC...63°......15.4....36
WRC-DT.......4.1...NBC...WASHINGTON DC...67°......14.9....48
WFDC-DT...14.1...TFA...ARLINGTON VA.......67°......14.9....15
WNVC-DT...57.1...IND....FAIRFAX VA...........63°.......6.0....57
WDCW-DT..50.1...WB....WASHINGTON DC....68°......18.1....51
WMPT.........22.....PBS...ANNAPOLIS MD.......81°......40.0....22
I'd also love to get WWPB analog channel 31, PBS out of HAGERSTOWN, MD at 339°, 67.2 miles. There are other, more distant stations I'd like to get but are no big deal.
The 3671 was selected, vice a UHF only, to support current local analogs (in-laws!) and the reversion to VHF of some stations after the digital transition on 2/17/09. It was also hoped to pull in Annapolis and other more distant stations.
Options to improve reception:
1. Remove pre-amp, in the theory it's overloading nearby stations.
Probably not likely to be successful, since this pre-amp is good about not overloading, plus most of these stations are about 14.6 miles away, and some come in, some don't. I might look up ERP on each, but I'm near where I used to live and had no problems there. But it's easy to test this possible fix.
2. Replace 8-way with 4-way splitter to improve signal strength.
This might work, but I suspect would be insufficient. Further splitters exist on at least 3 of the legs, to feed both ATSC & NTSC inputs. Also, it will force additional splitters to feed more planned drops. But its relatively easy to try and does not involve running another outlet in an exceedingly hot attic.
3. Replace 8-way splitter with a distro amp. This may well drive the sometimes lengthy coax, and the extra splitters. But it means adding that attic outlet to power the distro amp. And it will require moving the pre-amp power inserter to the attic as well, since to the best of my knowledge there is no way to "power pass" thru a distro amp.
I am tempted to throw a coax off the roof and temporarily run it inside to see how the antenna with and without the pre-amp works as a direct feed to a TV. That might tell me something about the effect of the splitters on the signal. But I guess I could just remove the 8 way and put in a barrel connector to test any given leg.
Any thoughts on which would work, or is there another approach?