phucheneh
Diamond Member
I just cancelled my cable and figured I'd DIY an antenna and see what I could get OTA.
I see so much choosiness among antennas. This works, this doesn't, this only gets me two channels, whatever. People pay a hundred bucks or more for the bigger ones.
Is there any point in this other than catching signals out in the boonies?
I ask because of my experience just now...I'm super cheap when it comes to anything I can improvise, so I just took some of the like 100ft of abandoned cable wire that comcast left, cut off about ten feet, screwed the end into the TV, and proceeded to start stripping a few inches off the other end to attach to some kind of homebrew antenna (buy a receptacle for a screw-in connection? Bah!). And I figured...hey, I wonder what will happen with just this three inches or so of exposed wire.
...I get just as many clear channels as anyone around me is getting with an antenna, that's what.
How do people fail at this? I'm not too far from most of the stations, I'm sure, but I'm certainly not unusually close.
I see so much choosiness among antennas. This works, this doesn't, this only gets me two channels, whatever. People pay a hundred bucks or more for the bigger ones.
Is there any point in this other than catching signals out in the boonies?
I ask because of my experience just now...I'm super cheap when it comes to anything I can improvise, so I just took some of the like 100ft of abandoned cable wire that comcast left, cut off about ten feet, screwed the end into the TV, and proceeded to start stripping a few inches off the other end to attach to some kind of homebrew antenna (buy a receptacle for a screw-in connection? Bah!). And I figured...hey, I wonder what will happen with just this three inches or so of exposed wire.
...I get just as many clear channels as anyone around me is getting with an antenna, that's what.
How do people fail at this? I'm not too far from most of the stations, I'm sure, but I'm certainly not unusually close.