I've had good luck with the Philips mant510 antenna.  It has 50dB 
Amplification.  It is an indoor antenna and works with VHF, UHF, FM, and 
HDTV digital.

http://www.p4c.philips.com/files/s/sdv2510_27/sdv2510_27_pss_aen.pdf

or

http://tinyurl.com/5nzdx2

Regards,

LelandJ


Pete Theisen wrote:
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>   
>> Analog signals that come in weak will be seen as fussy, or not at all. 
>> Digital signals that come in weak will be able to be readjusted to look 100 
>> percent perfect when initially sent out because of how digital signals are 
>> broadcasted / made. I am studying it in networking 101 right now. With 
>> digital, the signal is either on (1) or off (0)n therefore when the signal 
>> is recieved, if there is any signal measuring above (zero) then it is viewed 
>> as a on (1).
>>
>> If you want me to get into the science behind the digital signals, let me 
>> know and i will go more in depth.
>>
>> You don't need a digital antenna.
>>
>> The website below answered all of my questions;  especially, since my 
>> signals come from three different compass points.
>>
>> To get all of the compass points without having to turn the indoor 
>> antenna, I got a GE Amplified Quantum Antenna #24775.
>>
>>  From Froogle:
>>
>> http://www.google.com/products?q=Quantum+Antenna+%2324775&btnG=Search+Products&scoring=p
>>
>> It has three panels so I was able to capture signals from three 
>> compass points up to 26 miles from me.
>>
>> My suggestion:  try your current antenna first.
>>
>> Analog drops dead at midnight on February 17, 2009.  All full-power 
>> television stations in the United States will stop broadcasting in 
>> analog and switch to 100% digital broadcasting.
>>
>> At 10:42 PM 10/29/2008, you wrote:
>>     
>>> Check out this website:
>>>       
>
>   
>>> http://www.antennaweb.org
>>>
>>> Enter your address (you don't need to enter your name) and it will tell
>>> you where the closest broadcasting stations are.
>>>
>>> I helped my neighbor hook up a large antenna inside his attic (HOA won't
>>> let us put one on our roof) and we did some tests.  We then hooked up a
>>> signal booster very close to the antenna (within 5') and re-tested.  The
>>> improvement was remarkable.  These boosters need some power, but he had
>>> an outlet in his attic that also ran his furnace.
>>>
>>> The booster would not work as well if placed closer to his "digital to
>>> analog converter" box.  Having the booster closer to the antenna is key.
>>>       
>
> Hi Guys!
>
> Thanks for all the responses. The antenna I am using is an amplified 
> rabbit ear affair like this one (same model, not my photo), this is 
> maybe 10 years old.
>
> http://madison.craigslist.org/ele/876809215.html
>
> The ring turns and that knob in front of the ring also turns 360 but 
> there seems to be no precise index, just a line on the knob and 12 lines 
> on the case for maybe 60 clicks. It worked a few months ago on a small 
> portable in the kitchen but never in the living room where I would like 
> to use it. I have a Sperry SP-5A meter but I don't know if that would 
> tell me anything or what I should measure if it would.
>
> Of course, if there is no signal to receive that would explain it. I 
> can't determine if any of our local stations are broadcasting digital or 
> not. As it is, I have been getting all the news I get from the horrible 
> local papers and on the web.
>
> On the antenna web thing I put in the zip code and they come back with a 
> screen that they want your whole address. If you do put in the address 
> and uncheck the box for sending you ads they put you in a loop that 
> doesn't tell you anything so who knows? I haven't tried clearing my 
> private data and rebooting to get out of the loop but it seems that this 
> would be the only way.
>
> That three panel GE antenna looks interesting. Haven't seen any of those 
> in the local stores though, so perhaps they don't work around here. I am 
> so close to downtown that there is a lot of ghosting and snow on analog.
>
> The roof over my unit hosts several huge ac units which I am sure do not 
> help. The insulation on the walls and ceiling has a lot of aluminum foil 
> on it which may also block the signal, not that there is much signal anyway.
>
> Everybody around here uses cable but that is about $70 to $150 a month 
> and I don't have that kind of money to spare from my slim Social 
> Security check. The people who have cable pay for the cable and still 
> get all the ads, how messed up is that? The broadcast stations get paid 
> for their signal from the cable companies, so they have an incentive to 
> cut the broadcast power so people have to pay.
>   



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