[kwlug-disc] Home made indoor TV Antenna
Jason Locklin
locklin.jason at gmail.com
Wed Apr 16 12:58:52 EDT 2014
On Wed 16 Apr 2014 12:30:26 PM EDT, Khalid Baheyeldin wrote:
> On Wed, Apr 16, 2014 at 12:20 PM, <zixiekat at gmail.com
> <mailto:zixiekat at gmail.com>> wrote:
>
> I think one of the largest factors in me getting stations from
> Toronto, is Baden tower is directly between my house and toronto.
> And being only 4km away, CKCO interferes.
>
The Baden tower is VHF, while all the CN tower stations are UHF (except
CTV). Your best bet would be to massively attenuate VHF signals with a
high-pass filter. I have a UHF/VHF combiner that you could borrow to
test. They are about 10 bucks, and you can just leave the VHF tap
unconnected or connected to a short wire to ensure that nearly all of
CKCO's signal is blocked.
-Jason
> I'd be willing to try a nice yagi antenna, but don't really want
> to put out the money just to test something I get via streaming
> (CBC).
>
>
> I know they stream section by section here
> http://www.cbc.ca/player/News/Canada/
> Which means you have to "hunt" for what segment/show.
>
> Is there a live stream of CBC News without the hunting in a browser?
>
>
> Sent from my BlackBerry 10 smartphone on the Rogers network.
> *From: *John Johnson
> *Sent: *Wednesday, April 16, 2014 11:43 AM
> *To: *KWLUG discussion
> *Reply To: *KWLUG discussion
> *Subject: *Re: [kwlug-disc] Home made indoor TV Antenna
>
>
> Thanks Joe, for reading and commenting.
> I did mention: additional elements, such as directors and
> reflectors,...
>
> I would put your Fresnel lens and waveguide and "boost"
> technologies would come under additional elements.
>
> Regards
> JohnJ
>
> On 2014-04-16 11:28, Joe Wennechuk wrote:
>>
>>
>>> Basically: more metal in the sky == more captured signal (YMMV)
>>>
>>>
>> You can also use fresnel lense, or some type of waveguide antenna to boost the signal. There is a lot of DIY about this. I have never built one for Television, but I did do a Pringles can waveguide for wifi, and it was amazing how good it actually worked.
>>
>> ________________________________
>>
>>> Date: Wed, 16 Apr 2014 11:11:13 -0400
>>> From: jvj at golden.net <mailto:jvj at golden.net>
>>> To: kwlug-disc at kwlug.org <mailto:kwlug-disc at kwlug.org>
>>> Subject: Re: [kwlug-disc] Home made indoor TV Antenna
>>>
>>> On 2014-04-16 09:55, Colin Mackay wrote:
>>> I have one of these:
>>> <http://cdn3.volusion.com/m5ytq.j6phj/v/vspfiles/photos/CM-3000A-2.jpg?1385029454> <http://cdn3.volusion.com/m5ytq.j6phj/v/vspfiles/photos/CM-3000A-2.jpg?1385029454>
>>> [ edit ]
>>> Did try an 8-bay like in the walmart link above, to no avail.
>>>
>>> While I do not have recent experience with RF, my experience with
>>> antenna technology goes back, way back. Perhaps, a decade or 2 or 3 or
>>> 4.
>>> That said, IMHO, the basic principles remain.
>>>
>>> Please note that I am trying not to sound pedantic. Nor write an essay.
>>>
>>
>>> And I apologize for any perceived pedantry and the length.
>>>
>>> RF is really a higher frequency of the Electro-Magnetic radiation.
>>>
>>> And RF itself covers a wide range of frequencies, for the purposes of
>>> this discussion from MW (medim-wave used for AM radio) though to
>>> microwave.
>>>
>>> Excluding the plumbing and stripline technologies of microwave,
>>> reception of the lower frequencies, including VHF, UHF, UHF-HD, etc.
>>> depend on the first principle, i.e. signal capture.
>>>
>>> By "signal capture" I mean the capture of the RF radiation in "the
>>> ether", in the desired frequency band. This "signal" will include a
>>> multitude of channels or sources, each with its own content modulation
>>> methods. This "signal" will also include channels or sources from
>>> frequency bands outside of the desired frequency band.
>>>
>>> Presumably one of the channels or sources is the desired source in the
>>> desired frequency band. After "signal capture" a variery of
>>> technologoies come in to play to suss out the desired channels or
>>> source from the "captured signal". These technologies include filters,
>>> amplifiers, tuners, etc. And are not the point of this discussion.
>>>
>>> Returning to "signal capture", the first principle mentioned above,
>>> involves the principle of induction, i.e. the generation of an
>>> electrical signal in a conductor by the RF energy "in the ether".
>>> Tesla, Hertz, Lenz, Faraday, Maxwell and Fessenden (a Canadian in the
>>> bunch) and others have studied, researched and documented this process.
>>>
>>
>>> However, basically, the strength of the induced electrical signal in
>>> the conductor depends on the properties of the conductor and the
>>> strength of the RF radiation at the point of induction.
>>>
>>> We cannot do much about the strength of the RF radiation at the point
>>> of induction.*
>>>
>>> That leaves the conductor, and the properties of the same. One of the
>>> properties of the conductor is its "size" or "length" relative to the
>>> frequency of the RF radiation. The "size" or "length" of the conductor
>>> can be used to "tune" the conductor to specific frequency bands. This
>>> can be in a 1:1 relation (full wave) , or in 1:n where n is even
>>> multiples, or more common n:1 where the conductor is in even fractions
>>> of the frequency, e.g. half-wave, quarter-wave, etc.
>>>
>>> Basically: more metal in the sky == more captured signal (YMMV)
>>>
>>> IMO Antenna packaging like flying saucer is like that of fishing lures
>>> at Canadian Tire. The item must first attract the buyer and whether or
>>> not the item actually works in the wild is secondary.
>>>
>>> * Some technologies can improve the strength of the RF radiation at the
>>>
>>
>>> point of induction. These include placement and orientation of the
>>> conductor, i.e. antenna. These also include additional elements, such
>>> as directors and reflectors, as seen on Yagi VHF antennas and the
>>> bow-tie on on the Walmart HI-DEF antenna.
>>>
>>> /essay
>>>
>>> Regards
>>> John Johnson
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
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>>>
>>
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>>
>>
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> Khalid M. Baheyeldin
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