Forum Discussion
20 Replies
- wa8yxmExplorer IIIThat is not an Omni, it's a bi-directionsl (Figure 8 pattern) like the famous Winegard Batwing.. But I too have never seen one before.
- MHGeneExplorerJennifer
I have replaced the Continu-us TV Antenna on my 2017 Northwood Arctic Fox. You are welcome to it if you want. It is located in Morgan Hill, CA. so pay shipping and it is yours.
Replaced it with a Winged Rayzar Automatic and went from zero stations parked next to the house to 16 Digital and 3 Analog. with the Continu-us TV Antenna I received zero (0). - fdnydaveExplorerOmni Directional RV Antenna Digital TV
- MHGeneExplorerJennifer
Your antenna looks exactly like the one I have on my 2017 Arctic Fox 27-5L. It is made by a company called Continu-us. A link to the product page on their website is below.
http://continu.us/products/antennas/ca-2500/
I am looking at replacing mine because it does not seem to be able to pick up stations. I have tried it in Morgan Hill, CA, Riverside, CA, and Tucson, AZ without any luck.
Good Luck - dclark1946ExplorerYour antenna looks like the one that came on our new KZ Spree. It is sold by a company called Continu.us. They do have a web site and technical support. I have talked to their tech support and found them helpful. They sell primarily through distributors directly to RV manufacturers. I have also talked with the distributor that KZ buys this antenna from and found that he did not understand the technical difference between the two models which may be why KZ is selling trailers with no AM radio capability. It is also possible (based on another response to your post) that this style antenna is sold under several brand names from a single supplier in China.
I will probably eventually replace ours with a Winegard Sensar TV only antenna since I am adding a conventional AM/FM mast antenna for the radio. - Johno02ExplorerSorry, the Antennapoint website does not seem to be working now. But there are others that do the same thing.
- Johno02ExplorerCompared to what stations are available in the area, and what others in the area can receive OTA. Antennapoint will show what stations that should be available. If it will receive anything at all it is working, how well is another question.
Depending on location, I am sure there are lots of areas in Colorado that have no OTA at all, but in somewhere like Denver for instance, there should be several. Where we are, there are only three available, but the strongest will come in on a coathanger.
Personally, I use a Sensar IV with the added Sensar Pro meter, and can usually get any stations up to about 50 miles. - SCVJeffExplorer
Johno02 wrote:
Without getting into a debate thats been covered at at length, "Do it work" is a relative statement. Compared to what? An antenna that nobody has seen, nobody has, and there are no published spec's on
Before saying to trash it, does it work?? If it does, is the damage cosmetic, and can it be patched? If all answers are yes, then use it as is. Very few folks are going to climb up to see if it is factory perfect. Most folks will never see it anyway. - Johno02ExplorerBefore saying to trash it, does it work?? If it does, is the damage cosmetic, and can it be patched? If all answers are yes, then use it as is. Very few folks are going to climb up to see if it is factory perfect. Most folks will never see it anyway.
About RV Must Haves
Have a product you cannot live without? Share it with the community!8,804 PostsLatest Activity: Feb 27, 2026
