I put about a 2 foot peice of RG6 with about 6 in of copper showing on one end on my 510 and it helped alot.
Airblair said:
I guess the only "concern" would be that you are now transmitting your TV2 output (CH-60?) OTA. Likely not an actual problem, but probably against FCC rules.aamert said:... Then i splitted the cable into two again with one going in to the TV and other output i connected the remote extender.
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Stargazer said:I did not think one could transmit channel 60 that easily OTA with a UHF antenna. Can someone actually pickup a good signal that way as a replacement to a wireless A/V sender? I live out in the country so its not like its going to affect anybody else.
Yup, I own one. Battery powered, about the size of a cigarette pack. When I bought it I opted for CH-14. Company was closed down a few months later. Indeed, connecting the CH-60 output to a decent antenna will result in transmission OTA.Stargazer said:I know that there used to be a device that was sold that would allow you to broadcast on a UHF channel but I do not think such a device is being sold anymore due to it not being legal.
You may be better with the round UHF loop that used to come with every TV before they became coax only. It is smaller and less unwieldy than rabbit ears. You may need to adapt it from lugs to the F connector.ralfyguy said:I replaced the existing short UHF remote antenna, that comes with the receiver with a old non amplified rabbit ears antenna and connected it to that input with a short coax. The old antenna provides better receiption than the standard short thingy that screws into the receivers back. Works like a charm.