Analog TV signals are the kind now received by your standard "batwing" RV rooftop antenna. When will the analog broadcasts end?
Under current law, full-power broadcast stations must complete the transition to digital television by Feb. 17, 2009. After that date, analog TV broadcasts will cease. The digital TV transition plan received final approval from Congress and was signed into law by President George W. Bush in February of 2006.
You may need to prepare for the transition!


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Trouble Shoot Your Converter Box

My First Experience with DTV Digital to Analog Converters

I ordered two free $40 cards in January 2008 and received them in March. I purchased the converter at Walmart in April. Walmart was out of the RCA units which they advertise but they had stacks of the Magnavox model # TB100MW9. It comes with a remote control complete with two AA batteries. Also one short cable with "F" connectors is provided. The cost, after allowance for the card, was $14.36 including taxes. The card was swiped like a credit card to receive the $40 credit.

The converter provides audio and video connections along with the standard "F" connections. I used the standard "F" connections to connect to the TV and to the antenna booster. The unit has an Off/On switch on it's right side. It's remote control handles the "Standby"/"On" functions along with the other available functions.

The initial setup was very easy but the instructions must be followed. There were several options available during setup. Your TV must be set to channel three or four.

The roof-top booster that is built-in your RV performs well and must still be used. Your TV remote control must still be used to turn the TV On/Off and to control the volume.

I received perfect pictures on all channels except when a signal was very weak then the picture "broke up". There is an on screen signal strength meter, it can be used to adjust your antenna rotation for the best signal. I received more channels than I did without the converter!

You can use a standard splitter to connect more than one TV to the output of the converter.

It is possible for it to control all of the TVs in the RV, it depends on how the booster output(s) and your cabling is connected. If the converter is in the living room and you want to watch TV in the bedroom then your remote must be able to "see" the converter box. (or you could purchase one of those infrared T/R units.)

If you dry camp and use 12 volt TVs then you will need an inverter to power the 120 volt AC converter.

Click here to download an Owners Manual for the converter and therefore see all that the unit has to offer.

I am very pleased with the unit so far.

George Taylor 4-9-2008


I sent an email to Winegard Technical Service asking for comments concerning use of the "batwing" antenna and booster with the future (2009) digital signals. This is the company that builds the "batwing" TV antenna as used on many RV rooftops.
Knowing that the antenna itself would receive the digital signals as well as it now receives the analog signals my question was concerning the booster that is located in the center portion of the antenna between the wings. It's 12 volt DC power is sent up through the same coax cable that brings the analog signal down to the TV set.
Following is their response to my email:

George thank you for your email,
All of our Sensar (Batwing) antenna are Digital/HDTV compatible. The only thing that might become an issue is signal strength or range.
An analog signal is like climbing a hill. As you get closer to the top of the hill, your picture gets better and better until you get to the top. Then you start to overload the system with too much signal and start going back down the other side.
Digital is a plateau. Until you have enough signal, you will not get a picture. Once you have any picture it will be perfect until you get too much and it overloads. Then again you will have no picture. Overloading is not normally an issue but it is something that occasionally comes up.
Basically, if you are getting good strong analog signals now, your antenna is more than likely fine for the Digital Era. If you are struggling now, then you will want to contact us to see if there is a problem with the system or if you need to look into a bigger antenna.
Winegard Technical Service

Now having heard from the people that know what they are talking about we must make a decision. Seems we have three choices, one is to replace the old analog TV with a new digital TV. The second being purchasing a satellite system. The third being that we can add a converter box inside the rig which must be connected between the TV and the incoming signal cable. Yes, this brings up several questions that I can't address at this time due to lack of information about the converter, booster power supply, rig wiring, etc.


Millions may face digital TV reception troubles

By Roy Furchgott Published: February 11, 2008

Nearly six million people in the United States with digital receivers may still lose TV signals when digital-only broadcasts begin next February, a new study says.

The study by Centris, a market research firm in Los Angeles, found gaps in broadcast signals that may leave an estimated 5.9 million TV sets unable to receive as many channels as they did before the changeover. It may affect even those who bought government-approved converter boxes or new digital televisions. To keep broadcast reception, many viewers may have to buy new outdoor antennas, the study found.

The Centris study predicts greater disruption of service than government agencies like the Federal Communications Commission have acknowledged.

The federal government estimates that 21 million American households have primary TV sets that receive only over-the-air signals. But it says most will continue to get digital signals by means of digital-to-analog converter boxes, which cost about $50 to $70. It is helping to underwrite the cost of converter boxes by issuing $40 coupons.

Centris said it had looked at a more detailed method for predicting the coverage pattern of TV signals than the government had used.

However, the problems with reception could be far worse, according to engineers who have taken signal measurements. One study of the first HDTV station by Oded Bendov, the consultant hired to replace the broadcast antennas on the Empire State Building, found that digital signals did not travel as far as either model had predicted.

"For the people with rabbit-ear antennas, I would say at least 50 percent won't get the channels they were getting," Bendov said. "I would say a lot of people are going to be very unhappy."

Digital reception is more affected by hills, trees, buildings and other interference than analog has been. An analog TV picture degrades gradually, getting more snow or ghosting as a signal becomes weaker.

But digital TV is subject to the "cliff effect" - the picture is excellent until the signal gets weak and the picture suddenly drops out.

The number of sets that the Centris study projects will fail varies from city to city, based largely on the landscape. In Las Vegas, which lies in a flat basin, the study estimates that 2.5 percent of over-the-air TVs would lose at least one of five major networks. In Philadelphia, which has more hills, 5 percent of over-the-air TVs would lose reception, while in St. Louis, 10 percent would lose reception.

Centris says, based on the FCC's data, a digital signal would travel 60 to 75 miles, or 95 to 120 kilometers, in those three cities. However, Centris says its own model showed that the signals would degrade at 35 miles.

Whether a TV gets a strong digital signal may depend on seemingly minor impediments, said David Klein, executive vice president of Centris. "Are there big trees in your area? Is there a big retaining wall next your house?" he said. "It's not a matter of, 'Is reception good in your neighborhood'; it's a matter of, 'Can I get the signal?' "


Campaign tries to clear up digital TV signal confusion

By David Lieberman, USA TODAY

Amid reports of massive consumer confusion, government and television industry officials this week kick off a series of campaigns to prepare the public for one of the boldest technology conversions ever attempted: the federally mandated transition on Feb. 17, 2009, from analog broadcast TV to digital.

The requirement for about 2,000 stations to stop broadcasting analog signals and just offer digital puts at risk an estimated 117 million analog TV sets that use antennas instead of cable or satellite dishes.

And it poses special problems for about 14 million households that depend exclusively on analog signals. "About 42% of those who'll have no TV signal after the transition have no plans to do anything about it," says Consumers Union Senior Counsel Chris Murray, citing a December survey by Consumer Reports.

That survey also found that 36% of all consumers don't know about the digital TV conversion. Most of the people who are aware misunderstand what it's about or how it will affect them.

The Commerce Department hopes to change that with promotions for a program taking effect Tuesday to help consumers buy boxes that convert over-the-air digital transmissions into analog signals.

The department's National Telecommunications and Information Administration (NTIA) will mail out coupons that can be used to buy the boxes at retailers including Wal-Mart (WMT), Best Buy (BBY) and Radio Shack (RSH).

Each household can receive as many as two vouchers, each worth $40. They can only be used for basic, government-approved converters that typically cost $40 to $70.

The agency has already received 2.6 million requests for 5 million coupons.

In addition to the general promotions, NTIA will reach out to seniors, low-income and rural households, the disabled and minorities, says NTIA acting Assistant Secretary Meredith Attwell Baker.

Broadcasters are devoting $1 billion worth of airtime for public-service announcements about the digital transition. Cable operators will kick in about $200 million in airtime.

As many as 1.4 million households in 2008 and 2009 will simply sign up for cable or satellite service — doubling those industries' annual subscriber growth rates — according to Bernstein Research. Pay TV customers with analog sets should see little or no changes after the transition.

Consumers Union will be on the lookout for efforts to stampede people into signing up for these services, or to buy a digital TV.

"We should have a way to help consumers find the cheapest way to sort through this," Murray says.

Stay tuned.
George Taylor


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