I'm not at all surprised, KR4BD, that you can see WBNA-DT Channel 8 so far out from the transmitter at Brooks, KY. That's an advantage to living out away from the city! The problem here in the city is close-in terrain shielding from hills situated between their antenna site (Brooks, Bullitt Co., KY) and the city of Louisville proper. These hills, north of the tower, which is itself shorter than most in height, obliterate the digital signal for most viewers in the shadow zone.
You name it, from downtown high-rises with MATV system antenna elements rotated right at Brooks (bearing 190 degrees from my building), through sets with built-in ATSC tuners, to set-top amplified antennas feeding DTV converter boxes at street-level apartments, there's a wide area of the city that WBNA-DT doesn't reach over the air.
And it'll be even harder in some spots when Museum Plaza (height 706') goes up, and worse still if the 886' tower rumored to be on the drawing board for downtown Louisville comes into being. If I were WBNA management, I'd be looking into a low-power repeater or translator in the Floyds Knobs, IN antenna farm just NW of the city. Even with the good cable penetration in the market, they're blind to too many screens...and ratings meters!
You name it, from downtown high-rises with MATV system antenna elements rotated right at Brooks (bearing 190 degrees from my building), through sets with built-in ATSC tuners, to set-top amplified antennas feeding DTV converter boxes at street-level apartments, there's a wide area of the city that WBNA-DT doesn't reach over the air.
And it'll be even harder in some spots when Museum Plaza (height 706') goes up, and worse still if the 886' tower rumored to be on the drawing board for downtown Louisville comes into being. If I were WBNA management, I'd be looking into a low-power repeater or translator in the Floyds Knobs, IN antenna farm just NW of the city. Even with the good cable penetration in the market, they're blind to too many screens...and ratings meters!