I've found an easy way to increase the voltage supplied by the STB to the built-in signal amplifier in your OTA antenna from 13 to 18 Volts.
If you have an amplified OTA antenna (like Winegard Sensar II S2000A) that takes power from the VOOM STB via diplexer, and if you have reasons to believe that the amplifier does not get sufficient voltage (e.g. due to excessive voltage loss in a very long cable run), you can try the following trick:
Explanation.
Amplified OTA antennas require a source of power. For example, amplified Winegard Sensar II (S2000A) requires 12-18 Volts for its built-in amplifier. This voltage is normally delivered over the coax cable itself, so no additional wiring is required.
If you have a separate coax cable going from the antenna to the STB (no diplexers), you must use an additional power source, like Winegard's recommended PS-9370 (an 18-Volt power supply). The above trick does not apply in this case.
If you are using diplexers to combine OTA and satellite cables into a single coax cable, the antenna will share the power supplied by the STB to the LNB module in your dish. The voltage supplied to the LNB depends on the polarity of the satellite channel. Most channels on VOOM use "Right_Ve" polarity, so the STB sends 13 Volts in most cases. Some channels (e.g. 261, 301) use "Left_Horiz" polarity and the STB sends 18 Volts for those channels.
When you switch from one of those 18-Volt channels to an OTA channel, the STB continues sending 18 Volts (I have verified that with a voltmeter).
Under normal conditions the difference between 13 Volts and 18 Volts should not affect the OTA amplifier as it is designed to work with this voltage range. However, a long cable run (above 100-200 feet), old cables and other factors may cause an excessive voltage loss, so the effective voltage at the OTA antenna may be much less than the expected 12-13 Volts. In such cases the above procedure of boosting the STB-supplied voltage from 13 to 18 Volts could come helpful. Perhaps, not as a permanent solution, but as a trouble-shooting tip.
If you have an amplified OTA antenna (like Winegard Sensar II S2000A) that takes power from the VOOM STB via diplexer, and if you have reasons to believe that the amplifier does not get sufficient voltage (e.g. due to excessive voltage loss in a very long cable run), you can try the following trick:
1. Switch your STB to channel 261 or 301.
2. Switch to one of the OTA channels by directly entering the channel number on the remote (do not use ChUp/Down buttons).
This increases the voltage supplied by the STB from 13 Volts to 18 Volts! You can now use ChUp/Down button to switch between OTA channels, just don't switch to any satellite channel, or the voltage will drop back to 13 Volts.2. Switch to one of the OTA channels by directly entering the channel number on the remote (do not use ChUp/Down buttons).
Explanation.
Amplified OTA antennas require a source of power. For example, amplified Winegard Sensar II (S2000A) requires 12-18 Volts for its built-in amplifier. This voltage is normally delivered over the coax cable itself, so no additional wiring is required.
If you have a separate coax cable going from the antenna to the STB (no diplexers), you must use an additional power source, like Winegard's recommended PS-9370 (an 18-Volt power supply). The above trick does not apply in this case.
If you are using diplexers to combine OTA and satellite cables into a single coax cable, the antenna will share the power supplied by the STB to the LNB module in your dish. The voltage supplied to the LNB depends on the polarity of the satellite channel. Most channels on VOOM use "Right_Ve" polarity, so the STB sends 13 Volts in most cases. Some channels (e.g. 261, 301) use "Left_Horiz" polarity and the STB sends 18 Volts for those channels.
When you switch from one of those 18-Volt channels to an OTA channel, the STB continues sending 18 Volts (I have verified that with a voltmeter).
Under normal conditions the difference between 13 Volts and 18 Volts should not affect the OTA amplifier as it is designed to work with this voltage range. However, a long cable run (above 100-200 feet), old cables and other factors may cause an excessive voltage loss, so the effective voltage at the OTA antenna may be much less than the expected 12-13 Volts. In such cases the above procedure of boosting the STB-supplied voltage from 13 to 18 Volts could come helpful. Perhaps, not as a permanent solution, but as a trouble-shooting tip.