I live in Atlanta very close (approximately 5 miles) to the OTA transmitters. So close, in fact, that they are in two different directions: UPN, ABC, and NBC (which is VHF, Ch. 10) at 280 deg. and the rest at 300 deg. My backyard is about 20 yards of open space leading to a pretty solid wall of trees about 100' high. There is no way to get any antenna above the treeline or even anywhere even close to it.
I put up my first antenna, an Antennas Direct DB-4, last November. Worked OK, but not good enough (I've got to have OTA reliability at least as good as the satellite, 'cause if that TV starts pixellating during Desperate Housewives, the spouse starts throwin' stuff!!) So I replaced it with a CM-4228 because it seemed to be the universally-endorsed antenna of choice on a lot of these boards. Worked great, except because of the narrower beam I couldn't "split the difference" between the two compass headings like I could with the DB-4, so I got a second 4228 and joined them on a single mast (stacked vertically) mounted on my back deck, about 15 feet off the ground. They are joined with equal lengths of quality RG-6 into a very good HDTV splitter/combiner, which in turn runs about 40 feet inside to the TV.
That worked great - high 80's to low 90's on all channels, very reliable for the most part except for very windy days, where I'd get some dropouts. At one point I tried moving the whole contraption up to the roof, which gave another 10 feet or so of height, but reception actually got worse so I moved it back.
Now it is spring, and the foliage is pretty much fully grown in. I am now experiencing much more multipath than I used to on certain stations (NBC, ABC, and, to some extent, CBS & Fox. UPN, WB, and TBS seem to be bulletproof for some reason). If there is any appreciable wind through the trees, then I get frequent pixellation on all these channels. I say multipath because my signals still peak at the high 80's and low 90's on my HR10-250 (yes, lousy OTA tuner, I know), but will bounce all over from there, whereas the better ATSC tuner in my Samsung TV has no problems at all with the same signal. Unfortunately, the HR10-250 is the only way we watch OTA because we are so addicted to Tivo, and for that same reason the D* HD locals are not an option pending release of the oft-discussed but never-seen HR20-250.
Now I read for the first time that the 4228 is not the best antenna for reducing multipath and that a good Yagi can do a better job in those situations!! Arrgh !!! Is this true? Would two good stacked or spread Yagis pointed at 280 or 300 do a better job with multipath than the two 4228's? If so, I assume at least one of them would need to be a VHF/UHF combo so I could pick up the NBC affiliate on Ch. 10? Would they need to be the really enormous kind, like the Winegard HD7082P, or could they be one of those more compact ones like the Antennas Direct 42XG or the CM 3022 / 3023 ?
I understand the physics and see why the Yagi may perform better, but just wanted to get some feedback on this before I sink any more time and dollars and see whether anyone thinks a Yagi solution would do away with the problem.
Thanks.
I put up my first antenna, an Antennas Direct DB-4, last November. Worked OK, but not good enough (I've got to have OTA reliability at least as good as the satellite, 'cause if that TV starts pixellating during Desperate Housewives, the spouse starts throwin' stuff!!) So I replaced it with a CM-4228 because it seemed to be the universally-endorsed antenna of choice on a lot of these boards. Worked great, except because of the narrower beam I couldn't "split the difference" between the two compass headings like I could with the DB-4, so I got a second 4228 and joined them on a single mast (stacked vertically) mounted on my back deck, about 15 feet off the ground. They are joined with equal lengths of quality RG-6 into a very good HDTV splitter/combiner, which in turn runs about 40 feet inside to the TV.
That worked great - high 80's to low 90's on all channels, very reliable for the most part except for very windy days, where I'd get some dropouts. At one point I tried moving the whole contraption up to the roof, which gave another 10 feet or so of height, but reception actually got worse so I moved it back.
Now it is spring, and the foliage is pretty much fully grown in. I am now experiencing much more multipath than I used to on certain stations (NBC, ABC, and, to some extent, CBS & Fox. UPN, WB, and TBS seem to be bulletproof for some reason). If there is any appreciable wind through the trees, then I get frequent pixellation on all these channels. I say multipath because my signals still peak at the high 80's and low 90's on my HR10-250 (yes, lousy OTA tuner, I know), but will bounce all over from there, whereas the better ATSC tuner in my Samsung TV has no problems at all with the same signal. Unfortunately, the HR10-250 is the only way we watch OTA because we are so addicted to Tivo, and for that same reason the D* HD locals are not an option pending release of the oft-discussed but never-seen HR20-250.
Now I read for the first time that the 4228 is not the best antenna for reducing multipath and that a good Yagi can do a better job in those situations!! Arrgh !!! Is this true? Would two good stacked or spread Yagis pointed at 280 or 300 do a better job with multipath than the two 4228's? If so, I assume at least one of them would need to be a VHF/UHF combo so I could pick up the NBC affiliate on Ch. 10? Would they need to be the really enormous kind, like the Winegard HD7082P, or could they be one of those more compact ones like the Antennas Direct 42XG or the CM 3022 / 3023 ?
I understand the physics and see why the Yagi may perform better, but just wanted to get some feedback on this before I sink any more time and dollars and see whether anyone thinks a Yagi solution would do away with the problem.
Thanks.