Forum Discussion
- OldmeExplorerStill happy after a doing the replacement to a
Jack several years ago. - Bill_S_1ExplorerThere is nothing majic about the Jack antenna. It is a lower gain, broader beam antenna, compared to the Winegard with Wingman. If you are in an area with OTA signals coming from different compass headings, the Jack will probably pick them up better, without turning it each time you change channels.
The Winegard/Wingman will pick up signals from a greater distance, but will require more "tweaking" of the antenna's direction, when switching channels.
I've had both. I like the Winegard better, and it is less likely to cause damage from a low branch. - Tennessee_NomadExplorerOur Jack antenna works very well... Once I figured out I was aiming it backwards!
- Bill_TExplorerThe Jack antenna works well for us. But from first hand experience I can tell you it is easily removed by tree limbs. The base stayed secure to the roof but the wing section came off. Duct taped the wing to the base to get home. So be conscious of low hanging limbs, especially during rain when the limbs will be even lower.
- BumpyroadExplorer
1775 wrote:
There are a lot of major market areas with main channels still broadcasting on the VHF band.
out of curiosity exactly where are the main channels not broadcasting on 2-13?
bumpy - 1775ExplorerThere are a lot of major market areas with main channels still broadcasting on the VHF band.
- deandecExplorerChris, good point. Especially since I am replacing my old Braund antenna which caught several trees while it was lying down......
- Chris_BryantExplorer IIMy concern with the full Jack is the combination of the base being fairly light weight plastic combined with the fact that it doesn't stow adds up to a branch catcher capable of leaking a huge amount of water in to the roof.
That said- it is ideal for the same market the old Winegard omni had- rental rigs and folks who want to watch TV while driving, or those who forget to stow the antenna. - deandecExplorerIt would appear then that the Jack is not as versatile as the Winegard Sensor due to VHF channels still broadcasting in some areas.
Thank you for the replies. - BumpyroadExplorerin the Washington/Baltimore area all of the major networks are on 2-13. isn't that the case most everywhere? I mean UHF stations used to be public broadcast, etc.???????
bumpy
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