Members The Gainster Posted November 1, 2005 Members Posted November 1, 2005 Highly Directional High front-to-back ratio helps reject unwanted multi-path signal corruption. This ensures densely populated urban areas receive clear HDTV and data broadcasting signals. Even Response A flat forward gain slope delivers balanced reception throughout UHF. Ensures all channels are received to the same quality Proven in the Field Silver Sensor proven itself in front of the FCC, but it is now the "reference antenna" for data broadcasting. Easy to Install 75 Ohm, Gold Plated "F" Connector for Antenna Inputs :thu: :thu:
Members Cowinacape Posted November 1, 2005 Members Posted November 1, 2005 Damn and I thought it was going to be some self unfolding "modernist" Christmas tree.
Members GuyaGuy Posted November 1, 2005 Members Posted November 1, 2005 and i was wondering where the input jack is...
Members Demented Avenger Posted November 1, 2005 Members Posted November 1, 2005 Is that thing true bypass?
Members yaz75 Posted November 1, 2005 Members Posted November 1, 2005 Where do you put the tin-foil balls to increase reception?
Members RamaLama Fafafa Posted November 1, 2005 Members Posted November 1, 2005 Awesome. Not sure what the words you posted mean, but it looks like a nice piece of deco sculpture. I'm guessing it helps you watch T.V. If so, it's cool that some cotemporary designers (of practical stuff) have been influenced by the Bauhaus (not the band.)
Members The Gainster Posted November 1, 2005 Author Members Posted November 1, 2005 It's "THE" HD antenna........Cheap AND works.
Members The Gainster Posted November 1, 2005 Author Members Posted November 1, 2005 http://www.hdtvprimer.com/ANTENNAS/silver.html http://www.antennaweb.org/aw/Address.aspx
Members hoerni Posted November 1, 2005 Members Posted November 1, 2005 Originally posted by The Gainster http://www.hdtvprimer.com/ANTENNAS/silver.htmlhttp://www.antennaweb.org/aw/Address.aspx Thanks for the links. I was wondering if that was log-periodic or not (not an antenna guy, but i work with a few of them). How big is that thing? It's for UHF band, right? I really like the 2 antenna beam former example! Good example of why switched diversity (often called "true diversity" in guitar circles) is better than simply connecting two antennas.
Members The Gainster Posted November 1, 2005 Author Members Posted November 1, 2005 Originally posted by hoerni Thanks for the links. I was wondering if that was log-periodic or not (not an antenna guy, but i work with a few of them). How big is that thing? It's for UHF band, right? I really like the 2 antenna beam former example! Good example of why switched diversity (often called "true diversity" in guitar circles) is better than simply connecting two antennas. Most HD signals are UHF.
Members jcn37203 Posted November 1, 2005 Members Posted November 1, 2005 I wish they'd sell something like that for XM.
Members hoerni Posted November 1, 2005 Members Posted November 1, 2005 Originally posted by The Gainster Most HD signals are UHF. Show's how completely out of touch I am. At this point I watch at most 2 hours of broadcast TV a week. At one point I was really interested in HDTV, now I don't even know band it uses. I doubt I'll buy anything HDTV related so long as I can still play DVDs on my equipment. More money for musical stuff this way...
Recommended Posts
Archived
This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.