Eric- the crossed loop configuration is omni-directional, I believe. And the question about splitting the signal does not relate to whether there are any other devices on-line, just whether they used signal splitters at the various patch panels (one input and several outputs, like with your cable TV). Maybe you should ask the people who did the wiring.
Anntenna Question
Hi,
I recently had electricians put a Radio Shack FM antenna on my roof. It's wired with RG-6U cable through a couple of patch panels down to where my receiver is located. Probably about 100' of wire in all.
It doesn't help reception -- in fact, I've gone back to the little wire dipole anenna that comes with the receiver because it sounds better. I put a little Radio Schack antenna amplifier in the mix about 10' from the antenna, and that doesn't help either.
The problem is that I don't know of any way to check whether there's actually a signal on this wire! I have access to bench-quality DVM, but that's about it. Would I require an oscilliscope to check?
I'm also not sure this is the right type of wire, or that I'm hooking it to the receiver correctly.
Any advice appreciated. Thank you!
- Eric
I recently had electricians put a Radio Shack FM antenna on my roof. It's wired with RG-6U cable through a couple of patch panels down to where my receiver is located. Probably about 100' of wire in all.
It doesn't help reception -- in fact, I've gone back to the little wire dipole anenna that comes with the receiver because it sounds better. I put a little Radio Schack antenna amplifier in the mix about 10' from the antenna, and that doesn't help either.
The problem is that I don't know of any way to check whether there's actually a signal on this wire! I have access to bench-quality DVM, but that's about it. Would I require an oscilliscope to check?
I'm also not sure this is the right type of wire, or that I'm hooking it to the receiver correctly.
Any advice appreciated. Thank you!
- Eric
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- 19 posts total
- 19 posts total