Is there an indoor HD antenna that will work in NYC?
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Any way to get HD signal with an antenna in Manhattan building? I just got an HDTV, and considering not getting cable. Planning to use XBMC for everything... well, almost everything. The only thing I don't know how to get is HD sports. I read that I can get a digital antenna, but I live in an apartment in Manhattan (2nd floor in a 7 story building) - my window faces another building's wall, so I'd think the chances of getting an HD signal are pretty low.. right? Or is it possible with some kind of very powerful indoor antenna?
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Answer:
gnutron. I don't think that's correct. An old VHF tv antenna will perform very badly, if at all for most HD signals. Most HD signals are broadcast on the UHF band (though some are in the VHF band, PBS in Houston, for instance is VHF.) You can build a decent UHF antenna for probably less than 10 dollars. It looks like crap, but it works. See here: http://uhfhdtvantenna.blogspot.com/ Or, seach google for http://www.google.com/search?source=ig&hl=en&rlz=1G1GGLQ_ENUS305&=&q=diy+hd+antenna&btnG=Google+Search. Most are variants of a "hoverman" design, and they're very directional. It helps to look up the location of the transmitters near you, and aim the antenna towards them. I found in my case the reflector did more harm than good. And rainstorms seem to destroy reception. From what I've seen, the transition to digital signals is basically a disaster. When it works, it works perfectly, when it's even slightly less than perfect, it's unwatchable. The smooth degradation of the old analog TVs is replaced with unwatchable crap at the edge of reception, and this edge begins not far from the transmitter at all.
zavulon at Ask.Metafilter.Com Visit the source
Other answers
If your new tv has a digital tuner (and it prolly does), any old antenna will get you hd broadcast signals. You may get better reception with a powered antenna.
gnutron
Thanks, it does have a tuner. My only concern about the antenna is that I'm in Manhattan, NYC.. My window is facing the wall of another building - about 20 feet distance. There's very little sunlight in my apartment... does that not matter for the antenna?
zavulon
my bad. i believe smcameron is right about the VHF/UHF thing. my point was that you don't need a fancy "hd" antenna to get hd reception. i am currently getting awesome hd broadcast reception with this http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B001GGAIGI/metafilter-20/ref=nosim/ also, http://antennaweb.org/ is a great resource.
gnutron
The standard response here is "put your address into http://www.tvfool.com, guesstimate how high you are above ground." What it'll tell you, though, is that your nearest transmitter is http://maps.google.com/maps?client=safari&q=40.748435+-73.985695&oe=UTF-8&ie=UTF8&hl=en&ll=40.74831,-73.985099&spn=0.002325,0.004442&t=h&z=18. So try with a cheapo set-top loop/ears combo pointed in the general direction of the Empire State Building -- there are a couple of VHF stations that will need the rabbit-ears -- see how that works, and only then start thinking about DIY coathanger antennas.
holgate
Just to add: "digital antenna" or "HDTV antenna" is basically marketing guff to get people to upgrade. Digital TV is mainly UHF with a bit of VHF-Hi for a few stations, and if you have a decent enough UHF/VHF combo to suit your local stations, then you're sorted.
holgate
Get a cheap indoor set-top antenna at Radio Shack or really any big boxretailer and TRY IT. You will likely be amazed how well it works. No really, just go do it and stop wondering. It'll be great. cable is for chumps
intermod
Note that if your window faces another building's wall, the strongest signal you get may be bouncing off that wall from the Empire State Building. So play around a bit with positioning the antenna if you don't get a signal right away.
zsazsa
that ant from amazn looks good. im getting one for me:D and yes you should just stop thinking about it and play around for the signal, you'll be fine i think.
hjohnson
If you've got high speed internet coming into the house you should try running the coax cable into the back of your TV. I did that and get most HD stations perfectly clear. If it works, you can then just use a splitter to share the cable.
gfrobe
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