Anybody else have problems with the picture dropping out occasionally? Switching away and back to 12 brings the picture back for awhile, but then it drops out again.
Just wondering.
Thanks.
Just wondering.
Thanks.
Mike said:Anybody else have problems with the picture dropping out occasionally? Switching away and back to 12 brings the picture back for awhile, but then it drops out again.
KeithE4 said:I have occasional issues with 8 and 12, but 10 is far and away the worst in my area near 44th St. & Chandler Blvd.
landtuna said:KeithE4 said:I have occasional issues with 8 and 12, but 10 is far and away the worst in my area near 44th St. & Chandler Blvd.
Same here. I have one internal antenna (UHF loop with VHF ears) and TV combo that can tune 10.1 with very little pixelation/freezing but the other two are normally so bad I have to use 10.2. I'm near McClintock & Warner.
All VHF's seem to have trouble when the setting sun is directly behind the S, Mountain towers.
KeithE4 said:I've also had it affect Channels 15 and 45 (RF 26) - probably the other lower-UHF channels as well, but I don't watch them.
landtuna said:KeithE4 said:I have occasional issues with 8 and 12, but 10 is far and away the worst in my area near 44th St. & Chandler Blvd.
Same here. I have one internal antenna (UHF loop with VHF ears) and TV combo that can tune 10.1 with very little pixelation/freezing but the other two are normally so bad I have to use 10.2. I'm near McClintock & Warner.
All VHF's seem to have trouble when the setting sun is directly behind the S, Mountain towers.
dhett said:What I did find to be a problem on a trip I recently took is that trees will destroy a DTV signal, especially if the foliage is dense.
landtuna said:dhett said:What I did find to be a problem on a trip I recently took is that trees will destroy a DTV signal, especially if the foliage is dense.
I've got two pine trees between the antennas and the towers but they are not dense and my problems seem to be intermittent and more weather/sunshine related. I would think if it were the trees the problems would be frequent.
Unfortunately, they are on a neighbor's property so I can't thin them or cut them down.
If you'll remember I had much the same problem with my big outdoor combo antenna up on the roof. The indoor loops actually seem to work better.
dhett said:Sometimes, what's in front of you isn't the only problem. If what's behind or to the sides of you is reflecting signal, you may still experience multipath. I sometimes gather TV signals when I travel, and at times, I've actually had to point the antenna away from the signal source to get the best signal. The sunset issue you get is the weirdest thing I've ever heard of. Unfortunately, I'm seldom home by sunset to experience that problem. As for weather-related issues, if you experience more problems when it's windy, then my bet is trees.
Again, when DTV has optimal conditions, it's great, but if not, it can be frustrating beyond belief.