Maybe it's my antenna, then. It works better at the higher frequencies. What kind of antenna do you have, Butch?I am pretty close to CP and must have gained 12 to 15 new channels most of them are duplicates and home shopping/informacial types.. Have not touched my antenna. In the past sometimes I would lose channels late at night, I would recommend rescanning at different times of the day.
I need to get a compass. I know I need to aim about twenty degrees west of due north, but guessing is not cutting it any more.
I have this one on a 10' pole from the peak of my roof and I get it all. I am closer to the Sears tower than you.
This is the one I was looking at today. You're getting all of the stations you had before?
LTE filters also help I found. I live a half mile away from a cell tower and it helped clean up my signal a bit.
I live within 2 miles of three or more. I wonder if an LTE filter would help.
All,
I work for a major wireless carrier whose construction efforts to build out 5G are the reason for the rescan.
All,
Back to tv reception, keep in mind how far up you ate putting your antenna.
You might be able to get away with putting up a flagpole and mount the antenna to that. Or go up higher on a windmill in some rural areas.
Think about the surfaces around the antenna too.
Maybe it's my antenna, then. It works better at the higher frequencies. What kind of antenna do you have, Butch?
https://www.fcc.gov/media/engineering/dtvmaps
Our local CBS station moved to a frequency that our church's microphone was using.
I had to do the "walk of shame" and take a different mic up to the singer on stage in the middle of the service.
https://www.fcc.gov/media/engineering/dtvmaps
Our local CBS station moved to a frequency that our church's microphone was using.
I had to do the "walk of shame" and take a different mic up to the singer on stage in the middle of the service.