sathman01 said:
Recently, I "cut the cable" and I can receive just about every local DFW channel except for WFAA. I did some research and learned that WFAA is running their channel on RF-8 while the others are above RF-13 including KERA at RF-14.
I am wondering if WFAA being on RF-8 has any bearing on the signal and if so why doesn't WFAA move to a higher band?
What kind of antenna are you using? I work for a station on RF-10, and we've been plagued by the sale of junk antennas in big box stores. If your antenna doesn't have "ears" (think the old-fashioned "rabbit ears"), I'd return it. Really, the old rabbit ears are *still* the best indoor antenna you can buy.
"Boosted"/"Amplified" indoor antennas are also a bad idea, even if they have "ears". If you're close enough to the towers to get a useful signal from an indoor antenna, you're close enough that any amplifier is likely to be overloaded by other signals.
*Many* viewers in a particular neighborhood about ten miles east of our tower have found that replacing a "flat panel" or "boosted" antenna with rabbit ears brings in our station with a perfectly reliable signal -- and delivers several other channels the viewer didn't know about.
If you're too far from the towers to receive the stations with rabbit ears, you're too far to use an indoor antenna. Sometimes, an "outdoor" antenna installed in the attic (or garage eaves) is a good option. But again, the older antenna designs are best -- you need the "crosspieces" you saw with the older antennas.
Bottom line is, modern "digital" antennas are designed for appearance, not for electrical performance. It's kinda like selling a car with a Ferrari body but a 2-cylinder lawnmower engine.
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Why not move to a higher band? The reason varies from station to station but I think there are three most likely explanations:
- VHF operation is a LOT less expensive. Lower powers are required to cover the same area. Our station uses a 7,500-watt transmitter; UHF operation would require roughly ten times as much power. That means ten times the utility bill. (not to mention a more expensive transmitter)
- A UHF channel might not have been available that would deliver the same interference-free coverage.
- Now, with "spectrum repacking" on the horizon, the UHF options are even fewer.