Forum Discussion
164 Replies
- 2oldmanExplorer III'd just like to see Verizon spelled correctly.
- Bill_SatelliteExplorer II
timmac wrote:
Bill.Satellite wrote:
timmac wrote:
Bill.Satellite wrote:
I understand its just a antennae, but a few on here attacked me just cause I used the word Digital Antennae seem to set them off..
As they should have. There is NO such thing as a digital antenna. Not sure why you continue to promote this myth. - Tom_M1ExplorerFrom Wikipedia search for Television Antenna:
"Starting in 2006 many countries in the world switched from broadcasting using an older analog television standard to newer digital television (DTV). However generally the same broadcast frequencies are used, so the same antennas used for the older analog television will also receive the new DTV broadcasts. Sellers often claim to supply a special "digital" or "high-definition television" (HDTV) antenna advised as a replacement for an existing analog television antenna; at best this is misinformation to generate sales of unneeded equipment, at worst it may leave the viewer with a UHF-only antenna in a local market (particularly in North America) where some digital stations remain on their original high VHF frequencies."
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Television_antenna - timmacExplorerI knew that link I posted about the Digital atennea would spark some one, hey go argue with the link I posted, its not my words, just pasted what the link says..
I could care less.. :)
https://www.wisegeek.com/what-is-a-digital-tv-antenna.htm - Alan_HepburnExplorer
timmac wrote:
What is a Digital TV Antenna?
A digital TV antenna is a television antenna that allows you to receive digital signals over the air. It is similar to an analog antenna because it interprets signals it receives in order to provide you with television entertainment and media. However, digital signals generally provide a clearer picture, and television is no longer sent over analog signals.
Nope - the antenna does NOT interpret anything - it receives the incoming signal and sends it to the receiver. The antenna is a completely passive device - basically a piece of wire that reacts to RF vibrations in the air, by vibrating at the same frequency as those vibrations. That sympathetic vibration is then sent through a wire to the input of the receiver, where it is "interpreted", and transformed into light and sound waves that we experience.A traditional analog antenna, or "rabbit ears" as they were sometimes called, used to pick up analog RF signals in the air. The antenna could receive the information and display television programming. Digital antennas serve essentially the same function, but the information they are receiving is transmitted digitally, and not with analog RF signals.
Rabbit ears are simply a type of antenna - there are other types ranging from a simple wire to a yagi explicitly cut to a length equal to the wavelength of a specific signal. Rabbit ears were a compromise to allow the user to easily adjust their aim to receive a slightly stronger signal. Rooftop antennas are modified yagis - they have different elements cut to different lengths so they can effectively receive several wavelengths - the user can adjust their aim by using an antenna rotator. Those rabbit ears, or ANY antennas, do not "display" anything - they merely transfer the signal from the air to the receiver. The rabbit ears you bought back in the 1950s will still work today. They don't care what kind of information is included in the signal - they simply pass it along to the receiver.A digital TV antenna can be attached directly to your TV. It has to be able to pick up a digital signal, however, so a signal has to be available from a satellite or from another source of digital programming such as a local broadcast station. It can also be attached to the roof of a home where it has access to a digital signal.
The antenna does not care what is contained in the signal - that's the job of the receiver. The antenna sees the carrier signal and passes it on. Whatever is encoded on that carrier signal gets passed along with it. A single antenna will receive signals from TV stations, radio stations, CB radios, VHF radios, wi-fi routers - basically anything that is emitting an RF signal in the vicinity, and pass it along to a receiver, which will select the signal that it was designed to recognize.
In order to transmit the television programming to a TV, the TV must be able to decode the digital signals it receives from the digital TV antenna. All televisions produced and sold after February of 2009 have the ability to decode digital signals built in. Televisions produced prior to 2009 may or may not be able to receive signals from a digital tv antenna, depending on whether the television has a digital converter or not.
You're placing way too much intelligence to that piece of wire called an antenna - it will pass on whatever signal it sees, regardless of what's encoded in the signal, and regardless of the capabilities of the receiver to understand it. It's the receiver that will see the signal, and if the signal is recognized as something that it was designed to interpret then that signal gets processed. It's no different that a radio antenna: another piece of wire that receives RF signals - it doesn't know whether it's connected to an AM radio, an FM radio - it simply passes the signal to the radio, which is designed to process AM or FM signals, and ignores whatever signals that don't match what it was designed to process. - pnicholsExplorer II
Bumpyroad wrote:
I don't enjoy watching movies and have them frequently pause and catch up and start again. i like my cable/dish etc.
bumpy
Good point!!
You need either a faster Internet data speed and/or a better router to fix that. And if you're "rural in America" ... good luck on the faster Internet speeds. (Unless you go the satellite Internet route - which has data limits unless you sign up for a $$$ plan.)
We're both rural (slow Internet speeds) and have a renter who - 100 feet away - lives off our home's router signal, so I finally installed a decent modern router so we both could realize just barely fast enough Internet speeds to watch HD (1080P) streaming without pauses. - pnicholsExplorer II
timmac wrote:
STBRetired wrote:
Well, get SBC to give me more than 3mbs at the S&B and I might consider cutting the cord. That is the highest download speed available in my area. Based upon our data usage, I would need to pay Verizon about $600 per month even before we add in the streaming GB data.
For now, I'm sticking with DTV satellite service for my video.
Well if you are a Version customer they now have a New 30 gig per month wifi hotbox with unlimited slower wifi after 30 gig inside the month and resets each month back to higher speed for only $20 per month prepaid.
Its unlimited on the road almost anywhere..
Shop around cause mobile hot spots from cell phone companies are in a war to compete with unlimited wifi at a cheap cost with a sign up with there cell phone service..
Unlimited Internet on the go is making its way back folks..
Well ... the problem with those so called "unlimited" Internet access plans via the cellular tower system is ... they're unlimited with regards to data but they throttle the speed down after a certain data quantity is reached. We would need more than 100 gigabits per month kept "at speed" (greater than 5-6 Mbps) in order to cut the cord.
It's a neat marketing trick/lie they're pulling on us when they state that they're offering "unlimited" service.
The first trick is on the road or at home - be able to cut the cord and stream from the Internet with an "always on" unlimited data and constant full (4G or greater) speed cellular tower based Internet service.
The second trick and better still approach is ... when on the road or camping with the RV ... be able to get and afford - UNLIMITED DATA AND CONTINUOUS FULL SPEED satellite based Internet access inside the RV. That'll be the day! - BumpyroadExplorer
Tom_M wrote:
Sounds a bit like the Rockwell Retro Encabulator:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RXJKdh1KZ0w&list=PLNZodcmttc6IcROoVpZJiudVNpo4XPO-I
what, no flux capacitor?
bumpy - timmacExplorerWhat is a Digital TV Antenna?
A digital TV antenna is a television antenna that allows you to receive digital signals over the air. It is similar to an analog antenna because it interprets signals it receives in order to provide you with television entertainment and media. However, digital signals generally provide a clearer picture, and television is no longer sent over analog signals.
A traditional analog antenna, or "rabbit ears" as they were sometimes called, used to pick up analog RF signals in the air. The antenna could receive the information and display television programming. Digital antennas serve essentially the same function, but the information they are receiving is transmitted digitally, and not with analog RF signals.
A digital TV antenna can be attached directly to your TV. It has to be able to pick up a digital signal, however, so a signal has to be available from a satellite or from another source of digital programming such as a local broadcast station. It can also be attached to the roof of a home where it has access to a digital signal.
In order to transmit the television programming to a TV, the TV must be able to decode the digital signals it receives from the digital TV antenna. All televisions produced and sold after February of 2009 have the ability to decode digital signals built in. Televisions produced prior to 2009 may or may not be able to receive signals from a digital tv antenna, depending on whether the television has a digital converter or not.
https://www.wisegeek.com/what-is-a-digital-tv-antenna.htm
I guess this puts a end to my Digital antennae term, certain folks are not so geeky as they thought.. sorry about that...
:p:R - Ralph_CramdenExplorer II
Tom_M wrote:
Sounds a bit like the Rockwell Retro Encabulator:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RXJKdh1KZ0w&list=PLNZodcmttc6IcROoVpZJiudVNpo4XPO-I
Thanks. ROFLMAO.
I say it's a case of Industrial Espionage and patent infringement....Looks like a carbon copy of a GE Schwansoculatron.
About RV Must Haves
Have a product you cannot live without? Share it with the community!8,804 PostsLatest Activity: Jan 05, 2026