vibe said:
I have friends/relatives in Southington CT as well as Kensington CT (probably about 3-4 mi (max) from the south side of New Britski.
Parts of Southington are horrible for OTA, parts are capable of getting 2,3,4,5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 11, and 13 on VHF analog w/ an outdoor antenna. Lots more on UHF. Parts get 3 and 8, maybe ome real fuzzy NYC stuff with the same rig.
Same thing for Kensington. In most of South NB you get diddly squat, same thing in parts of Kensington, other areas will get a station on pratically every VHF frequency (w/ an outside rig).
And in areas in North New Britain, particularly on the hillsides that abut Stanley park and Farmington Ave, you get the boatload of stations vs the handfull in many other areas of town.
Having lived at the bottom of a hill for my first 25 years or so, I promised myself to always live on top of a hill since water (and other things) flow downhill. I kept that promise except for several years where I moved from one end of town with about 30 stations avail OTA (w/ an antenna) to a very low lying area that had only 4 good ones (with a good indoor antenna). If U like OTA TV, live in a location condusive to high quality (and quantity) reception like on top of (or at least on the correct side) of a hill.
I used to bemoan living on the first floor with crappy reception but remembered there's someone living in a basement with even crappier reception.
One thing that will definitely improve reception, particularly for 3-4 months a year is to take the TV outside, sit uder the stars, drink some beeer, and hope to hell you don't trip over the TV, converter box and power cords (or beer bottles).
I used to live on Washington St. in New Britain almost across from the Boy's Club back in the late 70's to early 80's and it's was a 2 floor house in back of one of your typical 3 family jobbies, with an old channel master antenna (I think it was the model that claimed "75 mile range") with rotor on it. It was on the house when we moved in, and I only added an additional 5 foot section to the mast below the rotor and of course added a new set of wires as the old ones were shot. This area wasn't exactly on a hill. In fact, to the east was flat. North was Farmington Ave. which is a hill. West is Broad Street which is also a hill. Finally, South is Walnut Hill.
Here's a partial list in channel order of what I can remember pulling in at the time on a regular basis, note that out of market (NYC, BOSTON) VHF stations came in consistently by no later than 4pm and the rest of the band depended on adjacent channels and also time of day (WMUR & WBZ) would be difficult until the signal was strong enough to get in. UHF, was similar but not as difficult. I'm not going to bother with listing the occasional DX like ch 2 WPBT in Miami as this really is meant to be local.
* = after 4pm on most days | # = usually all day, but perfect at night | @ = only after local sign-off
*WCBS NYC
*WGBH Boston
@KYW Philly
WFSB Hartford
*WBZ Boston
*WNBC NYC
#WCVB Boston
*WNEW NYC (we are talking pre 1986 here)
*WTEV/WLNE New Bedford (hard catch at times due to local FM)
*WABC NYC
*WNAC/WNEV Boston
WTNH New Haven
*WMUR Manchester
*WOR/WWOR Seacaucus
#WJAR Providence
(RARE) WTEN Albany
*WENH Durham
(RARE) WPIX NYC
#WPRI Providence
There were 3 channel 13's and none of them were strong, only rarely coming in, and that was over with the sign-on of Hartford's WRDM, they were Newark, Albany and sometimes Portland
WHCT Hartford
*WCDC North Adams (better at night)
WTXX Waterbury (not clear, much multipath)
*WLIW Garden City
WWLP Springfield
WEDH Hartford
*25 Boston (er, forgot the old call WHLL?)
WTWS (forgot when they came on)
*27 Boston (also forgot the call, WSNL?)
30 WVIT New Britain
(RARE) WSBE Providence
(RARE) WSBK) Boston
WHYN/WGGB Springfield
(WEAK) WXTV Patterson
(RARE) WGBX Boston
(WEAK) WEDY
(WEAK) WEDN
(RARE) WLVI Boston
WGBY Springfield
WTIC Hartford
(RARE)WMFP Lawrence
(WEAK)WNAC Providence (What was the old call again?)
(RARE)V66
Pretty much it, except I'm forgetting a few in the upper UHF, there was 67 & 68 in the NYC area (NJ?) also playing music videos like V66, came in more often though, and 68 in Boston on rare occasion, 25 & 31 in NYC were very difficult as well. I remember 55 on Long Island back then, but I forget if I got that in New Britain or when I first moved to Middletown, that would be about 1986? At that point I started getting some other interesting little things like ch 69 Hartford - "The Box" and same thing a few times on a boston station on ch 32.
I think I missed a few, it was pretty much anything on band in southern New England and NYC/Northern NJ area with some Philly tossed in late nights or after sign-off.
As far as here in Middletown, i don't live in the same place I did when I first got here, so I don't have access to a roof antenna now, but one time with just a wire across the attic floor I pulled in WJAR and on occasion I do get 25, 27, & 56 Boston and 28 Providence. About 10 years ago, I was allowed to put up a rotor with roof antenna, but as the chiminey here was very old and weak (even though the installer said it would be fine). The following day there was a winter storm (it was early April, I didn't expect snow!) and was enough to cause the thing to crumble in on itsself and taking the antenna with it. Ironically I was up early trying to DX and was watching WCBS 2, never got to see anything else and of course the landlord will not allow any more antennas up on the roof, he never said anything about inside the roof, but that extra 10 feet and being outside does make all the difference.