What is the signal strength? A half inch of shake shouldn't cause much of an issue with strong signals.A firmly installed antenna on roof moves/shakes perhaps half inch on strong wind. Is that enough to cause momentary receiving pixelation, or there is something else caused by the wind itself ? Connections are solid. No waving trees nearby.
I never thought about energy bands like that. Thanks for the education.On UHF it's not just the vertical height that matters, you also have to be in the strong signal band during destructive interference changes.
Thanks gentlemen. Cannot tell the signal strength. Reception fails only in high winds.What is the signal strength? A half inch of shake shouldn't cause much of an issue with strong signals.
What kind of an antenna? Maybe you are getting metal-on-metal movement that you are not aware of.
What kind of down lead? Down leads bouncing around in the wind have ALWAYS causes reception problems.
This is something us old timers have lived with for ages. Dynamic Multi-path reception has been a weakness of ATSC since day one. Some modern receiver chips are much less affected by it (effective Equalization). The antenna just receives what's on the air at the signal levels determined by its radiation pattern. What happens between the transmitter and receiver is usually out of your control so the receiver, the antenna type and location is what you can change.Not on boat. Roof on mast. And I want omni for my location.
prof : That is the feel... even indoors, strong wind does something to the signal -¿?-
What does TVFOOL.COM say about the signal strengths?Cannot tell the signal strength.
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