FightingIrish said:joesixpack said:I'm having so much fun barely getting any channels at all, and when I do get some channels the signal goes in and out, or it turns into a bunch of pixels. I remember the good old days when all I had to do was move the rabbit ears a little bit and the signal would come in, sometimes not perfect but still good enough to watch. Nowadays, with the new and improved Digital TV, if you move your antenna even a millimeter away from where it's supposed to be, your screen goes black. Wasn't this DTV transition supposed to improve our TV viewing experience? I've lost at least four or five affiliates here. Very annoying.
I'm starting to think this was all just some big conspiracy to force us all to buy cable (which I have no plans on doing, by the way).
The DTV transition also requires some transition on the part of viewers. Channels will come in differently than before.
You didn't mention how far away you were from broadcast centers/towers. That is definitely a factor.
Prior to DTV, I got hardly anything, and I live about 10 miles from most of the towers in town. With DTV, I get every channel in the market crystal clear. Sometimes I do get a little tiling and blocking, but it just requires a little adjustment of the antenna.
This site might prove helpful. Shows how far away stations are, and recommends the best types of antennas to use:
http://www.antennaweb.org/aw/welcome.aspx
I for one prefer digital. I get all the channels (plus the subchannels!) and no more static and ghosting.
When the transition happened, I went out and bought a flat RCA antenna. I've gone through other antennas already, none of them have given me better results. My TV doesn't need a converter box.
I live about 30 miles away from Houston. Before the transition, I got every channel. Now, I barely get any. In fact, instead of Houston's CBS affiliate (KHOU), I get the one from College Station (KBTX)! I have no idea why that happens.
I agree, when DTV actually works for me, I love it. The picture is better and so is the sound. But it hardly ever works for me.