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TV while traveling

ddro
Explorer
Explorer
Hello we have just purchased our 20ft Tt and are wanting to get help and ideas from veteran travelers. Our TT came wired and equipped with and antennae but we are wondering if it is going to be worth purchasing a television. I understand some resorts have cable tv and yes our TT is prewired for it but also has a crank up antennae. With all stations going digital will it work and what kind of TV should I purchase? I am thinking a 30 inch lcd is the way to go but am concerned as to if it will even get reception and how to set it up and search for signals.
Also if we won't be moving for a month should we jack up the TT to get the weight off the tires or is it OK to let it just sit.
We are getting excited to start our adventures and appreciate any and all help any of you might be able to share. Thanks for reading and look forward to your advice.
25 REPLIES 25

luvourtoys
Explorer
Explorer
We have out trailer parked on our property, believe it or not we still use the old analog televisions with the old digital convertor box, we get all the major networks. It is nice to be able to watch the local weather forecast, as well as watch some late night TV before bed. My 14 year old son enjoys catching shows like Big Bang Theory repeats, Saturday Night Live, etc.
Jennifer
Husband Dennis
2 boys 11 and 18
1 dog Joe Boxer
2007 PUMA 29-FKSS at the Lake
2005 Bass Tracker PT175

cruz-in
Explorer
Explorer
I still have the ole unlimited data plan from Verizon. Using Dish Anywhere on the cellphone and mirroring the display to the tv, we can watch anything that is in our home package. Live shows, and all. Even can control/watch shows from the DVR at home.

Works very well, but obviously the key is still having the ole unlimited data plan from Verizon....video is lots of bandwidth....
2011 Monaco Vesta
Interesting Coach
This particular one was the prototype.

BubbaChris
Explorer
Explorer
Another tip is to run the Audio Out from the TV into the TT's sound system. I just use a basic cable that is only attached during DVD watching. But other folks may want a full-time hookup.
2013 Heartland North Trail 22 FBS Caliber Edition
2013 Ford Expedition EL with Tow Package

ADK_Camper
Explorer
Explorer
With today's digital TV, precise positioning of the antenna can make the difference between a stunning HD picture and nothing at all. antennaweb.org will show you exactly where to point your antenna for reception at any given address. It even shows a map with your position. You can drag/move your position if you need to get a more accurate position. My camper has an omni-direction antenna so antanna positioning is not necessary, but it is not a particularly good antenna so reception is pretty spotty.

Mark_and_Linda
Explorer
Explorer
ddro wrote:
Hello we have just purchased our 20ft Tt and are wanting to get help and ideas from veteran travelers. Our TT came wired and equipped with and antennae but we are wondering if it is going to be worth purchasing a television. I understand some resorts have cable tv and yes our TT is prewired for it but also has a crank up antennae. With all stations going digital will it work and what kind of TV should I purchase? I am thinking a 30 inch lcd is the way to go but am concerned as to if it will even get reception and how to set it up and search for signals.
Also if we won't be moving for a month should we jack up the TT to get the weight off the tires or is it OK to let it just sit.
We are getting excited to start our adventures and appreciate any and all help any of you might be able to share. Thanks for reading and look forward to your advice.


Hey, we live near Nashville also. Our travel travel was purchased used. It came with a tv mounted in the bedroom plus it has prewired connections in the rear. We camp in the various campgrounds around Nashville, Cedars of Lebanon, Bledsoe, Cedar Creek, Montgomery Bell. We have had very few problems receiving the local stations. We take along my laptop which I am using now, hook up some extra speakers to it and watch movies off of it, if we are not in the bedroom. Enjoy your new TT...got any reservations made yet for the Army Corps or State Parks? When you crank up your antenna don't forget to put something on the crank to remind you it is up...just in case you forget!
Mark

rockhillmanor
Explorer
Explorer
Kemahsabe wrote:
One more thing... You can use the TV Fool antenna locator to find out which way to point your antenna.



When you pull into the CG look at what direction 'all' the RV's have their antenna pointed! :W:B

Just point it in the same direction everyone else has.

We must be willing to get rid of the life we've planned,
so as to have the life that is waiting for us.

xzyHollyxyz
Explorer
Explorer
If you have an iPhone or iPad, get the free app - TVTOWERS. It's a map using your location, and showing all OTA channels and the direction to point your antenna.

If you tap on an icon, say NBC, it will give you an approximate broadcast radius and you can see if you fall within that circle.

Very cool app.

Here's the app's logo:
2015 Fun Finder 189FDS
2013 Nissan Frontier Crew Cab SV 4x4

dockmasterdave
Explorer
Explorer
Parked in a site, we added the wingman and went from 12 channels to 32.
With no other changes. Took under a minute to install, no tools, and cost about $30 at CW.
The stock batwing isn't designed to be good at picking up the old UHF, that is why the same Co. invented the wingman.
Can you use it without, yes.
Will I ever do it again, NO.
YMMV
2014 F 150 ecoboost
2008 Chrysler Aspen
09 Amerilite 21 (modified)
2013 Bendron 14' enclosed cargo
2011 4x8 open cargo

CavemanCharlie
Explorer II
Explorer II
jfkmk wrote:
We don't watch too much TV camping either, just catch the news in the morning and maybe watch one of those $5 movies at night. We bought a 19" TV with a built in DVD. 19" is tiny by today's standards, but we put the TV on the dinette table. The crank up antenna works better than you would think, but if the site has cable we use that.

Agree with everyone else, no need to jack up the trailer if it sits for a month opr so.

Happy camping!


Me too.

I just go camping locally and I get about 2-7 channels around here. As long as you TT came with the antenna you might as well buy a 150 dollar TV and see what you can get.

TrailerTravele1
Explorer
Explorer
I guess we're the exception. My husband wants to watch NCAA basketball and we're leaving for our 3 months out west early March... Having said that, we used our HD built-in antenna on our 2014 Lance 1685 4000 miles from Illinois east down the coast all the way to Key West FL. Most of the time, almost all the time, we were able to get a couple PBS stations ... or maybe several Latino stations from our HD antenna. Through the Outer Banks etc. Had cable in campgrounds twice in 6 weeks.

We bought a portable satellite TV system (adding a "room" to our home DirecTV) for our 3 months out west. Local channels were somewhat of a challenge, but I think we figured it out... if you're interested, here's a post I did on our research... http://trailertraveler.net/ins-outs-of-portable-satellite-tv-for-rv/Ins & Outs of Portable Satellite TV.

We don't watch alot of TV, but both love Big 10 NCAA Basketball & "the big dance"....
Cheers! Jan & David

Just returned from our First "Snowbird" Winter ... 25,000 miles, 26 states, 23 National Parks ... and counting....

TrailerTraveler.net

rbpru
Explorer II
Explorer II
During our 6 week adventure across ND to the Rockies I would say that about half the campsites had over the air TV reception, and much of that was PBS.

Those campsites with cable were nice because the programming is the same everywhere.

Not all national affiliates run the same programming you get at home. Fortunately I am only interested in the local news and weather. Our TV is about a 25 inch that was built in to the TT.

Some of the motorcoaches we parked next to had satellite dishes.
Twenty six foot 2010 Dutchmen Lite pulled with a 2011 EcoBoost F-150 4x4.

Just right for Grandpa, Grandma and the dog.

dadmomh
Explorer
Explorer
Seems like we never camp anywhere with cable or satellite. It's whatever local we can get and not much to get excited about. We usually take about 6 movies with us and if the weather is too cold/hot/wet/whatever, we may watch a movie or two. That's about it for us. Other times we're more into Scrabble, dominoes, cards. Honestly, camping without TV is part of the charm of camping for us.
Trailerless but still have the spirit

2013 Rockwood Ultra Lite 2604 - new family
2007 Rockwood ROO HTT - new family
2003 Ford F-150
4 doggies - We support Adopt/Rescue.
Sam, you were the best!
Cubbie, Foxy, Biscuit and Lily - all rescues!

DutchmenSport
Explorer
Explorer
The antenna on the roof of your trailer will work perfectly fine for any television you may have, unless it's an older one. You will get "over the air" programming and it will all be digital, and the antenna will do just fine. Any television you purchase NEW TODAY will be ready to go. Just hook up your coax cable from the jack in the trailer to the connection on the television and set the television to search for the stations.

Yes, every location you travel to outside your current spot, you'll have re-scan for the stations. Yes, if you turn the antenna slightly, you may get some channels and some you may not.

A simple tip when you are pulling into a new campground, is to notice the other campers that are set up and look at the roof of their trailers. See what direction the majority have their antennas facing. This will give you a rough idea what direction to start yours off with when you first crank it up and then scan for your stations. You may need to turn the antenna slightly if you get pixel freeze, and some stations may come in at different times of the day depending upon signal strength.

I WOULD NOT change anything on your new camper until you have at least use it for a while. I've had 3 travel trailers and the oriignal install antenna has worked perfectly fine for us. We also have DISH satellite, but we always watch local stations over the air too, no matter where we are. There are some stations over-the-air you simply cannot get on cable or satellite (like ME-TV).

Don't change anything. Get a new television, hook up and go! If you are THEN disapointed .... THEN consider making changes!

Good luck! Congrats on the new camper!

EDIT: You do not need to jack up the camper to get the tires off the ground. You run the risk of bending the frame, and trailers are designed to sit on the wheels. The jacks on your camper are use for stablizing, not lifting. Just snug them up so the camper does not bounce up and down on the springs. That's their intended purpose. If you are permanently parking the camper and it will never move, then you need to get proper supports under the frame, then you remove the tires, like a mobile home. Otherwise, no!

tatest
Explorer II
Explorer II
How important is TV too you? For many people, it is so important that they buy satellite TV service. Others never turn their TV on when RVing, TV is one of the things they are getting away from. I have friends who do not even have TV at home, it is just not important enough in their lives, but they do have computers and are on the Internet.

Any TV you buy new today will receive over-the-air digital broadcasts. The antenna that comes with your TT works for this. You raise the antenna, point it directly at the TV station's antenna tower or repeater. Most TVs have signal strength tools to help with aiming.

How far broadcast TV carries depends on the broadcaster's power, antenna height, and terrain. UHF, and the little VHF still used, is line of sight. In central Florida, we could regularly pick up stations 50-75 miles away. Expect the same in other flat areas with few stations broadcasting at high power. But in the Rockies, we sometimes could not get a station 20 miles away if it was on the other side of a mountain and we were down in a valley.

In NE Oklahoma, edge of the Ozarks, I have similar terrain to western and central Tennessee, mostly plateau 600-1000 ft above MSL with at most a few hundred feet of sharp relief in valleys. Atop a hill, I can pick up stations 30-50 miles away, but I may have to choose between aiming the antenna at one city or another, or yet a different direction to pick up a nearby low-power repeater for the PBS station.

If I am down in a valley, I might not be able to pick up a station 15-20 miles away. At our COE parks, if we want a waterfront site, it might not work so well for watching TV. Or for cell phone reception, as well.

Digital broadcast TV has changed effective distances, because it is sort of all or nothing. Where an analog tuner could bring in a fuzzy image from a weak signal, digital might be intermittent or just not there. I live in a place where the transition to digital moved me from "fringe market area" to "out of market area" but if I take the RV to a nearby hill I can pick up stations that don't get to houses in town, which is in a river valley.

Cable at RV parks has been changing. Around 2000, when cable providers started adding digital channels to their analog lineup, RV parks would repeat the untrapped analog stations by coax out to each parking site. Franchise rules at the time were that "local" broadcast stations had to be carried analog, and other content providers (direct marketing, religious stations) usually contracted with the cable company to be carried the same way.

"Premium" services were carried digital, some in the clear so a "digital cable ready" TV could show them, others encrypted or trapped so that you needed a cable TV receiver, or sometimes a "cable card" for a "cable card ready" TV.

Since, more and more cable providers have been going all-digital (mine is one of the late ones, working on the transition right now). If that happens at a RV park, you'll need a digital cable receiver (or card) encoded to be recognized by the park's cable provider. This might be loaned to you "for free" (meaning cost is included in your fee, whether you want the service or not, on the hotel model) or it might be rented to you on a daily basis, to cover the per-customer fees charged to the park operator by the cable company.
Tom Test
Itasca Spirit 29B