I've had good luck as well, with reception from Indianapolis (40 miles) and Louisville (70 miles). But....when the band opens and distant signals show up, the signals I watch clearly 99% of the time are either gone or torn up so badly as to be unwatchable. That really is a bummer when you've DVR'd a show and discover later that the whole show was not watchable. My first clue that lightning affected it was in a shopping mall in a town 50 miles from Indy. A Tornado Warning was issued and WISH TV's Local Weather Station was on the cable system feeding a TV in the mall. Every time lightning struck, the picture froze and/or pixeled out & the audio muted, making a good product totally useless when lives depended on it...and this was on cable! One would have to assume that the cable head end poured more resources into reception hardware than Joe The Plumber would have. Not to mention, there are a lot of folks in rural areas who are content to watch an analog signal with snow at 80+ miles. Now, unless I've underestimated the technology, these people will go from having a few snowy channels to no channels at all--after buying convertor boxes, or worse yet, a $2000 TV set...at which point, Congress is gonna get an ear full...Juan Bodley said:Hey Dougie B...it's been my experience that outdoor antennas that have a good ground system (as in their own ground rod) and indoor antennas on better quality RG-6u don't get a lot of atmospheric interference.
I've been told by some "brains" in the RF world (a guy with Spaun) that HDTV, no matter how well engineered, is more susceptible to interference. (I don't remember the exact reasons...that's been about 7 years ago that I heard it, and this was before HDTV was in the area.) But if the aim of the stick is good, the antenna is level, the mast is plumb, then it should work. Level and plumb. I've not had any trouble sticking with that, and I've got probably 8 or 9 recent installed antennas that work great.