Scott Fybush said:This is not correct, on several counts. The ATSC DTV signal most certainly has a carrier associated with it, and at 4300 feet from my local DTV stations, I can testify that it is absolutely possible to overload an amplifier, creating images and intermodulation products and front-end receiver overload.
One of my locals is on RF 45. When it's on, and when I'm using an amplifier at my rooftop antenna, a signal in a neighboring market on RF 44 will not decode under any circumstances. Turn off my local 45 and 44 comes in like a local. Remove the amp and use a sufficiently directional antenna, and 44 decodes just fine.
With DTV, the important thing isn't raw signal strength at the receiver - it's the signal-to-noise ratio. Many inexpensive amps (and some expensive ones) have such high noise figures that they actually do more damage to the signal than good. If you're at a great distance from the desired signals, a low-noise amp is likely to help. If you're close enough to an antenna farm that an FM trap is needed, you likely have enough RF coming in that an amp is of questionable value, especially "cranked."
It is true that a powerful nearby FM signal can also overload an amplifier, and that the use of a trap can reduce this. But it's also perfectly possible to use a combo antenna to receive FM and VHF DTV. I use a CM Quantum 1110 for just that purpose, and it works just as well (at least on the signals remaining on VHF, which are fewer) in the digital era as it did in the analog days. I don't run an amp on the VHF antenna, and I trap my local FMs at the receiver end (using Microwave Filter in-line traps) when I'm using that antenna for TV.
I find, at my location close to a tower farm, that the most critical factor is directionality. Being able to get a reasonable null on the locals - FM, analog TV or DTV - makes an enormous difference across the rest of the dial, which is why one of my summer projects will be replacing the CM 4248 corner reflector I'm using for UHF with a 7' parabolic.
There is no carrier on an ATSC DTV signal. There IS however, plenty of RF in your area. Certainly enough to overload many, if not most, mast mounted preamps. This RF is the digital modulation. Although ATSC emits no carrier, the digital modulation of the ATSC signal is most definitely RF and can swamp a nearby RF amp.
Second paragraph (45's effect on 44 and your solution) is 100% correct.
Third paragraph is 100% correct. However, many- if not most -people aren't subject to those RF conditions.
Fourth paragraph is 100% correct.
Fifth paragraph is also 100% correct. My experience tells me that installing the Channel Master 4251 will not quite yield the results you are hoping for. It is a monster to install, requires a very sturdy mounting structure, looks pretentious and/or goofy, and looking at TV Fool's signal rosette, it doesn't seem to provide any extra signals to justify the expense and goon work involved. AFIK, 49 in Buffalo provides the same programming as 44, plus 49 has a local newscast. I suggest a Winegard HD 9095P, HD 9032 or an AntennaCraft MXU-59. For RF amp I suggest the Antennacraft 10G201 (good overload performance), 10G202 (high gain) or the 10G212. The 10G212 has a remote gain control that can knock off 10dB in overload situations and also a remote switchable FM trap. The 10G212 unfortunately has a NF of 4, compared to the 202's 2.6 and the 201's 2.5 NF.
I currently run a MXU-59 at 30 feet AGL with the 10G201 amp. I have a new 10G202 amp that I will eventually get off of my ass and install. Maybe I'll be able to get a fourth ION channel, an NBC shop at home channel and a Daystar channel when I do. Whoopee! It will be interesting to see how the 10G202 will work with trop this summer, but the 10G201 is currently doing all right. Stick with a corner reflector yagi for good directivity. Sometimes less is more.
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