I am trying to improve reception of OTA channels in zip code 87506 and even after reading posts here and elsewhere, I still do not have a clear idea which antenna or antenna combo would be best. What I have now is an antenna that most closely resembles a CM3016 and even after pointing it to 210 degrees (the direction with the VHF Hi and UHF channels I am most interested in), the signal strength on my tuner is around 30 (out of 100) for the VHF channels. UHF reception is hit or miss. It is clear that the old antenna does not have the range needed, and this observation is reinforced by pointing it to 360 degrees and not getting any of those stations. I do not know if the content on any of the stations at 360 degrees is of interest, as I have not been able to check them.
There appear to be two approaches that might work - a longer range VHF Hi/UHF antenna, with or without a pre-amp, or separate VHF Hi and UHF antennas with a combiner. What I have been looking at include the AntennaCraft HD-1850, the CM 3679 and the Winegard HD8200U as single antennas or the combination of a VHF Hi antenna with an Antennas Direct 91-XG UHF antenna.
Since the two transmitter locations are at 360 and 210 degrees, a rotator or stacked antennas would be needed. A possible problem with trying a single antenna first is that their UHF range (at 60+ miles) might not be sufficient to check the stations at 360 degrees.
I would like to avoid using a rotator if possible, so stacked antennas would be the alternative. But if it takes the combo of a dedicated VHF Hi and UHF antenna, I would need two of each and a convoluted scheme of combiners and carefully matched coax lengths. The mast would have to be extended and guyed if I had to resort to that. A rotator would win in that case.
So, my main question is, based on my location and the above considerations, what recommendations do any readers here have?
Thank you.
There appear to be two approaches that might work - a longer range VHF Hi/UHF antenna, with or without a pre-amp, or separate VHF Hi and UHF antennas with a combiner. What I have been looking at include the AntennaCraft HD-1850, the CM 3679 and the Winegard HD8200U as single antennas or the combination of a VHF Hi antenna with an Antennas Direct 91-XG UHF antenna.
Since the two transmitter locations are at 360 and 210 degrees, a rotator or stacked antennas would be needed. A possible problem with trying a single antenna first is that their UHF range (at 60+ miles) might not be sufficient to check the stations at 360 degrees.
I would like to avoid using a rotator if possible, so stacked antennas would be the alternative. But if it takes the combo of a dedicated VHF Hi and UHF antenna, I would need two of each and a convoluted scheme of combiners and carefully matched coax lengths. The mast would have to be extended and guyed if I had to resort to that. A rotator would win in that case.
So, my main question is, based on my location and the above considerations, what recommendations do any readers here have?
Thank you.