I'm planning on getting a HDTV tuner card for my PC soon. I think I've settled on the DVICO Fusion HDTV5 RT Lite. I live in Canada just North of Montreal. Right now there are two local HDTV stations broadcasting and one currently broadcasting that I should be able to pick up from the US. In the Fall about 4 more HDTV channels from the US should start broadcasting.
I have an antenna on a tower with a rotator, and with it I'm able to pick up Analog US stations, although some have a little snow and others have quite a bit of snow but are still watchable. The US Towers are about 60 miles away.
I'm wondering if I can currently watch the analog stations, when they start broadcasting Digital should I still be able to see them? Does anybody have experiences similar to this? In most cases is the broadcast area larger or smaller with digital broadcasting?
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Thread: HDTV Reception in fringe areas
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One of the over the air digital signals I receive is 60+ miles away. The digital signal is clear at times at other times the signal drops out for a few seconds to a minute every now and again. To receive this signal the antenna must be aimed spot on.
Hopefully when they change over to HDTV, they will up the transmitter power and you will get an improvement in signal strength. If you have a good UHF fringe antenna, you may be lucky. With digital you won't get any snow, just dropouts with a weak signal as cal_tony mentioned or a blank screen. For the US stations, it depends on which direction they have their antennas pointed.
I'm trying to improve my TV reception. Right now I have an antenna on a tower whose cable goes into the basement, it's split to a TV there then up into my bedroom where it's split again into my TV and computer.
The reception in the basement is noticeably better than in my room. Would getting a coax amplifier for the basement help? I'm looking at this
http://www.thesourcecc.com/estore/Pr...roduct=1501118
or this
http://www.thesourcecc.com/estore/Pr...roduct=1501116
Should I get the amplifier with a single output and use a splitter, or get the dual output amp?
Should I buy better splitters? The one currently in use are some cheapo dollar store ones.
When I get a HDTV receiver will the amplifier adversely affect the reception? or should it improve a digital signal as well as an analog one?
Thanks for the help.
That sounds like an amplifier would help. But I would go with a name brand as all amplifiers aren't the same. Here's one to consider: http://www.summitsource.com/winegard...00-p-5434.html They appear to ship to Canada, or you may find one on a site locally. It has dual output, so you could eliminate the splitter.
Or you could go with an antenna mounted amplifier if you have a long cable run and lossy cable: http://www.winegard.com/offair/amplifiers.htm
The amplifier should help with a HDTV receiver. But still, you will either get a signal or not. There is no snow, just no picture if the signal is too weak.
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