Mar-24-2015 10:08 PM
Mar-25-2015 09:36 AM
Mar-25-2015 08:58 AM
rwbradley wrote:robsouth wrote:
From what I have read here and other places, there is no such thing as a "digital antenna", only those sold as such. As stated, if the one you have works well now, it will work well with new TV. It may take a little fine tuning to aim it properly toward the desired station.
Not meaning to correct someone publicly but I think the OP may need some additional information. In the old days with VHF and UHF TV most home antennas were tuned to receive all the UHF and VHF channels. Generally if you remember the old anennas, the larger "arms" were for the VHF channels, and the tiny "arms" at the back of the antenna were used to receive UHF. When US and Canada started the switch to digital TV, this also meant that as the old analog channel 10 started broadcasting in both digital and analog during the transition, they kept broadcasting Analog in the old VHF band but moved the digital broadcast into the UHF band. Once the transition was completed they just stopped broadcasting the analog on the VHF band.
My understanding is that now all the original VHF channels (2-13) are now broadcasting their digital in the UHF bands. This means that you need a different antenna "arm" to pickup channel 10 digital vs channel 10 analog.
With older RV antennas like the Wineguard Batwing which is common. The 2 metal arms (about 3ft span in total) are tuned to be optimal for receiving the old analog channels (because they were in the VHF Band). Yes these antennas did also receive the UHF bands.
Now with the need to only pickup channels in the UHF bands, strictly speaking there is no digital vs analog antenna, however digital signals only need the UHF portion of the antenna. This allows companies to optimize the antennas to only receive UHF. This is the reason why the Wingman attachment for the Batwing (with the tiny arms) and some of the smaller newer antennas improve reception on Digital, because technically they are optimized to pickup only UHF vs VHF and that just makes it a happy accident that they appear to be optimized to pickup digital vs analog. Typically these UHF "digital" antennas are not required but because they are tuned for UHF only they do typically improve reception of the UHF "digital" channels.
Mar-25-2015 08:48 AM
rwbradley wrote:
My understanding is that now all the original VHF channels (2-13) are now broadcasting their digital in the UHF bands.
To receive digital TV signals from all stations, it is important that your antenna be able to receive both VHF channels (channels 2-13) and UHF channels (channels 14-51).
Mar-25-2015 08:15 AM
robsouth wrote:
From what I have read here and other places, there is no such thing as a "digital antenna", only those sold as such. As stated, if the one you have works well now, it will work well with new TV. It may take a little fine tuning to aim it properly toward the desired station.
Mar-25-2015 07:11 AM
Mar-25-2015 07:01 AM
DWeikert wrote:
The antenna doesn't care...
Mar-25-2015 06:54 AM
Mar-25-2015 06:38 AM
Mar-25-2015 05:49 AM
robsouth wrote:
From what I have read here and other places, there is no such thing as a "digital antenna", only those sold as such. As stated, if the one you have works well now, it will work well with new TV. It may take a little fine tuning to aim it properly toward the desired station.
Mar-25-2015 05:45 AM
Mar-25-2015 05:36 AM
Mar-25-2015 05:14 AM
Mar-25-2015 03:29 AM
Mar-25-2015 01:43 AM