How To Choose The Perfect HDTV Antenna | The Communication Blog

Monday, August 9, 2010

How To Choose The Perfect HDTV Antenna

By Jeff Smith

You may be considering a change to broadcast television from cable TV. The cost is certainly less than cable. Even buying an antenna costs less than most cable fees and is a one-time expense, not monthly. But choosing the right HDTV antenna will require some homework. Once some questions have been answered, you should have a better idea of which ones might be right for you.

Begin with what channels are available in your area. Since reception depends on line of sight, you may have problems if there are buildings or mountains in the way. Fortunately there is a non-profit organization that can give you this information for free.

There are various ways to discover what stations are out there in your neck of the woods or city. The retailers can input your address and give you a list of what broadcast channels you could receive. They often can give you a good idea of how easily any one station might be captured.

The sorts of antennas available are table top or TV top antennas as well as several sorts of roof top antennas. If your location is flat and unimpeded, then set top might work. Your investment could be smaller than the roof top arrays.

However, if one or more of the signals you want to acquire is quite weak, you may want to consider a roof installation. There are at least two types to consider. Directional arrays must point toward the signal. If everyone is broadcasting from the same tower you get them all. But if you want one that comes from another direction you will need to either turn the antenna by hand or get a motorized tuner that will move it mechanically from inside. These may breakdown of course. So, there is yet another option.

The omni-directional roof installed antenna is a round disk. It accepts signals from all directions. It generally has a small powered amplifier that allows weak signals to be boosted to reasonable quality. It can cost around one hundred dollars. It is still less than a single month of cable but among the most expensive.

So there are several varieties of the HDTV antenna out there. Costs range from less than twenty five dollars to over one hundred dollars. Which one you might want will depend on the reception strength of the stations you want as well as the amount you want to invest. But knowing which stations are out there is where to start.

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