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HD TV antenna
Has anyone had an antenna installed on their house in The Villages?
Did you have to get approval? What guidelines/limitations are there? Who do you recommend for installation? Costs involved? |
There’s been many discussions about this…try the search function.
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For the thousandth time, THERE IS NO SUCH THING AS A HD ANTENNA!
They are the same thing as they were back in the day when everyone had one on the roof. The FCC has the last word on antennas, no one can prohibit them. For a good review on antennas go to Antenna Man - Cut The Cord |
I would add to be respectful of your neighbors and not put up a big tower. There have been many success stories of antennas in the attic (did not work at our house), and how to aim the antenna. In general you will need one rated for 75 miles or more and an amplifier if not included with the antenna. I used a 4 port amplifier so that I did not have to install any splitters.
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I would not bother, your reception in TV is not very good.
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Right you the Villages can't stop you from putting up an antenna but they can restrict where it is placed on the house and how it's installed. For example if i mount a Dish or TV antenna on a mast on the center post of my front window of my designer home, no good. Common sense rules here. Just look around your area and see how others installed theirs then to play it safe put in an ARC form, get approval and install your antenna. Besides astetics it has to be installed correctly and safely so a storm doesn't knock it down and potentially cause damage or hurt someone.
In NY a couple of years ago, some apartment buildings were able to ban dish antennas installed on apartment balconys because in high winds some came down and hurt people walking below. As long as the apartment building was able to provide comparable service either through multiple cable companies and or a central Dish system mounted on the roof, there was little people could do. Also today, you can stream almost everything via the internet with a smart TV and or a media player like a Firestick or AppleTV for example eliminating the expense of cable TV, cable boxes, antenna installs and maintenance. But you have a choice now which is better than the way it used to be. |
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Attic TV Antenna
[QUOTE=Bilyclub;2075917]Maybe that's your experience or opinion. I have very good reception.
We are looking into getting an attic TV antenna. Can you please share the details of yours, since you seem to have good reception? Location, brand name, range, and do you get all the network channels? Thanks! |
[QUOTE=Happytalk;2116506]
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https://www.amazon.com/Antennas-Dire.../dp/B0074H3IU6 |
Private message sent
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Has anyone be able to get decent Orlando TV antenna reception from Marion county in The Villages?
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I paid $375 a few months ago for my antenna installation. Very fickle. The Villages is in a difficult place for reception generally, so get the best antenna you can and good luck!
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TV Reception
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Tom from Villages audio video installed an antenna with a signal booster in our attic about seven years ago and we get a lot of free broadcast channels from Orlando, including 3 of the 4 major networks. All we have for television is what our antenna brings in and the DVD’s that we watch. Over the years we collected a substantial library of movies on DVD’s from estate sales, usually for 50 cents apiece. About once a year I run the channel search function in the set up menu on the TV to recalibrate the tuner to optimize the broadcast signals it receives. Once, a lightning strike close to the house blew out the signal amplifier but it was an easy fix. I took out the old one and found an exact match on Amazon and swapped it out. I keep another new signal booster handy in case that happens again. Our Villages home is north of 466 and we get a bunch of channels from Orlando, so I would guess the newer homes being built south of 44 (and closer to Orlando) would have no problem picking up lots of free broadcast channels with a properly installed antenna and signal booster.
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I posted in a now closed thread about mounting an antenna in the attic and getting 50+ channels. Wanted to follow up to say I believe the heat in the attic fried my preamp, so I have lost all reception.
Going to try again once the weather cools down with one that does not have the preamp built into the antenna. I will put the amp a bit downstream so I can mount it in the (relatively) cooler garage. Hoping I can still get the networks and stronger stations out of Orlando. FYI, I live in McClure. |
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[QUOTE=Bilyclub;2116584]
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The speculation about what can be restricted can be settled by reading the FCC rules. In summary, TV cannot stop you from putting up an antenna where it gets a good signal. It specifically allows TV antennas. Declares things like deed restrictions are invalid. Please read and learn.
Over-the-Air Reception Devices Rule | Federal Communications Commission h-t-t-p-s://w-w-w.fcc.g-o-v/media/over-air-reception-devices-rule (take out the dashes if link above gets hidden) |
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[QUOTE=Ritagoyer;2137112]
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A quick and cheap test is to get a cheap flat panel antenna from Amazon and put it in a window facing southeast. I tried it and get NBC and CBS from Orlando. It gave me confidence to get an antenna company to put in an outdoor antenna. You can find an amplified indoor window mounted antenna from amazon for under $20. Don't be temped by the claims of more distance for more expensive antennas. This is only a cheap test to see if you can get anything. Before you stick the antenna use some blue tape to test position and direction.
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A cheap flat panel and $20 cheap antenna cost more than a good antenna. There are webpages and apps that predict what kind of reception, if any you will get.
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Next Gen ATFC (3.0) tv from Orlando
As a side note:
According to the fcc website, Orlando has Next Gen TV ATFC(3.0). You will need a Next Gen receiver to get them. Apparently it is easier to get Next Gen stations over long distance. I'm new here & don't have my antenna yet. These are the Next Gen stations they list. WESH NBC WKMG CBS WFTV ABC WKIF CW WFCF PBS WRDQ WOFL FOX WRDW FOX Plus |
ATSC 3.0 is the newest standard.
Deployments - ATSC : NextGen TV The homes south of 466A have foil heat barrier roofs...Attic antennas probably won't work. |
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I didn't see any foil and my antenna works fine and I'm South of 466A. So not all unless, somebody cut corners when building my house. |
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After a few attempts, and a failed antenna with a built-in pre-amp (think the attic heat fried it) I went with a large (7 foot long) Yagi antenna without a built in pre-amp and mounted it in my garage attic. I'm fortunate that the orientation of the house allowed me to fit it between joists and still point it towards Orlando. Also, no metal foil on the underside of the roof to block signal.
Tested the antenna without the pre-amp and had at least one bar on every channel. I then added the pre-amp at the point where the antenna cable entered the garage, and rescanned. I received 70 channels, some that I had not captured in the past. Signal strength for the major network channels between 3 and 5 bars. I had struggled to get channel 9 (ABC) consistently without pixelization, but no longer an issue. FYI, the TV probably has about a 50 foot run of cable between it and the antenna. Everything purchased on Amazon. Antenna was the Long Range UHF- HDTV 91 Element Yagi Antenna from Steller Labs. The separate pre-Amp was Winegard LNA-200 Boost XT HDTV Preamplifier, TV Antenna Amplifier Signal Booster, HD Digital VHF UHF Amplifier. I already had a mast from the other antenna, so my total cost for everything this go around would be about $100. I live down in Fenny, so if you are more north "Your mileage may vary" so they say. And if you decide to mount this outside, your neighbors will probably hate you, because it is really big and ugly. But getting it out of the attic would probably help your reception chances. It doesn't replace cable entirely - no cable news channels, Food Network, ESPN, etc., but if you are OK with that, you can save some money. You can pick up some streaming services for other things. For example, I buy ESPN+ during the college basketball season, and cancel it around mid-March. And ESPN3 is included with Xfinity internet, and probably Spectrum as well. ROKU is my preferred platform (I have a Roku TV), but Amazon Fire and Apple work just fine. If you have Xfinity, they will give your their Flex streaming box for free, and I get their Peacock channel which has live sports, movies, and original TV programming too. Happy viewing! |
i dont think it's allowed to mount an antenna outdoors but some do and it's only a problem if someone complains
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Installing Consumer-Owned Antennas and Satellite Dishes | Federal Communications Commission |
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Airtv anywhere
Just get an AIRTV ANYWHERE unit from Winegard.com and connect it to your antenna. Download SingTV on your Smart TV and go with their free package and under Local Channel setup it will connect with the AirTV through your WIFI. This will integrate your local channels with the free cable type channels provided by Sling TV for free into the channel guide once you run the channel scan. The AirTV unit also has a built-in DVR.
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