navychop said:
rick0725:
I gather from your description and avatar that your side mounted antenna has 2 legs made out of the conduit. So my impression that the tripod will be stronger is accurate. So it will be.
I'll keep that pre-amp in mind- but I don't want to lose the nearby stations. Any diff between that and the 7777? I will likely use a distro amp also, as I plan to feed 5 or 6 locations.
The winegard preamp HDP 269 was originally designed as a preamp to mate with the unamplified winegard squareshooter #SS1000. It was designed to operate in the suburban setting less than 30 or so miles from the towers. The winegard preamp HDP 269 has 12 Db of gain, very high overload tolerance (325,000 mv. which is 3 times more than the other high overload preamps), and only 3 db noise.
Preamps like the cm7777, cm7775, winegard ap8275, ap8700, ap 4800 were designed years ago to be used in the "boonies" over 35 miles to amplify weak signals where the signals were so weak that you did not have to worry about overload.
It is too bad that the hdp 269 has not yet caught on...and I have been plugging it like crazy. At my home, I am 19 miles from the towers, with an oversized antenna the HD8200P. There is an FM tower less then a mile from my home. I could NEVER use a conventional higher powered preamp until now...I tried but I got overload.
At my home I needed amplification of some sort because I split my signal 6 ways...4 short run and 2 long run. Since preamps overloaded my system and I am TOTALLY AGAINST using attenuators since attenuators affect and weaken all channels in the tv spectrum...I had to settle with a distribution amp.
This is where using an HDP269 is so cool.
It is a better alternative where you would have used a distribution amp to improve the signal for long cable runs in your home or could not use conventional preamps installed at the antenna.
Here is why...
-you are amplifying the signal at the antenna, not down the line thereby amplifying the signal closer to the source as opposed to after the signal has a chance to get noisy at the distribution amp point in the house.
-the gain is not much more than a standard in home distribution amp...12 db -vs 8 db which is typical.
-the preamp has only 3 db noise -vs.- 6db typical of distribution amps
-is more tolerant to overload because of its design (325,000 mv vs 85000 mv typical of other high tolerant preamps).
-has an internal FM trap to attenuate FM stations that can overload the signal if FM is an issue.
-is designed to not overload your ota receiver in the suburban and urban setting.
I am very happy with the results and wanted to share this alternative with you. I now have no need for attenuation, disconnected the distribution amp, and the pictures are very clean even on the weaker analog channels.
When I want to play and receive distant channels, I get the bonus of amplifing right at the antenna where I could not accomplish that before with preamps like the cm7777 in my suburban setting.
Hope I explained this well...because this is a great opportunity for folks needing to amplify in the urban and suburban setting 0-35 miles or so from towers.