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Combining the signal from two antennas |
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#26 |
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Forum Member
Join Date: Dec 2007
Posts: 955
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The easiest way to get your preferred region first in the list is to tune the preferred transmitter manually, then the secondary transmitter manually.
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#27 |
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Forum Member
Join Date: May 2008
Posts: 759
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Quote:
That's because the duplicates use higher UHF channels for the Muxes than the stronger ones. The problem the OP has is because there is no clear split between the two transmitters and they are mixed in together. Your solution will not work with the OP's transmitters. You would probably do better with a proper combiner. Channels are added on a auto tune by scanning UHF channels 21 - 68, not by signal strength. Duplicates found during the scan are stored at 800 plus. Only if all the channels of one transmitter are stored before the second one is found will you get the two transmitters seperated at 800
http://aerialsandtv.com/ampsandsplit...FromTwoAerials Note Freeview+ pvrs often will not work properly with 2 transmitters tuned. The duplicate MUX play havoc with the broadcasters CRID codes, You would need a pvr for each transmitter and manually tune both. Where a local regions’ service is in SD only, I have moved it to 999/998/997. I then moved the HD channels to single digits so CH 4 HD, for example, is on 4 rather than 104. (I find that a lot of people are watching the main channels in SD single digit numbers rather than going to 101 etc. - even though they have HD televisions. Incredible but true, a number of people don’t know where the HD channels are located - or are too lazy to use the 3 digit numbers). I don’t have the problem that you have highlighted regarding Freeview PVR’s as I have a Freesat PVR. |
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