The TV channels
Hertz (Hz) means cycles per second. (Heinrich Hertz was the first to build a
radio transmitter and receiver while understanding what he was doing.) KHz means 1000 Hertz, MHz means
1,000,000 Hertz, and GHz means 1,000,000,000 Hertz
The radio frequency spectrum is divided into major bands:
Frequency:
Wavelength
(in
meters):
VLF
very low frequency
3 KHz – 30 KHz
100 Km – 10 Km
LF
low frequency
30 KHz – 300 KHz
10 Km – 1 Km
MF
medium frequency
300 KHz – 3 MHz
1 Km – 100 m
HF
high frequency
(a.k.a. short wave)
3 MHz – 30 MHz
100 m – 10 m
VHF
very high frequency
30 MHz – 300 MHz
10 m – 1 m
UHF ultra high frequency
300 MHz – 3 GHz
1 m – 100 mm
SHF
super high frequency
3 GHz – 30 GHz
100 mm – 10 mm
EHF
extremely high frequency
30 GHz – 300 GHz
10 mm – 1 mm
A TV channel in the U.S. will always occupy 6
MHz of this spectrum.
·
Channels 2-6
occupy consecutive spectrum from
54 MHz to 88 MHz.
(with one small gap)
·
Channels 7-13
occupy consecutive spectrum from
174 MHz to 216 MHz.
·
Channels 14-69
occupy consecutive spectrum from
470 MHz to 806 MHz.
Frequency Table
Any of these channels could contain either an
analog channel or a digital channel.
Note that “channel 25-1” is a virtual channel name and does not indicate
what channel the station physically occupies.
Channels 2-13 are the VHF channels. They are split into two groups so that
antennas will work better: In
general, an antenna designed for frequency N will also work well at 3N, but very
poorly at 2N.
The wavelength of a radio wave is:
λ = 300/F where F is the
frequency in mega-Hertz and λ is the wavelength in meters. Antenna elements are typically about a
half-wavelength long.
Decibels
Decibels (dB) are commonly used to describe
gain or loss in circuits. The
number of decibels is found from:
Gain in dB = 10*log(gain factor)
or

In some situations this is more complicated
than using gain or loss factors.
But in many situations, decibels are simpler.
For example, suppose 10 feet of cable loses 1 dB of signal. To figure the loss in a longer cable,
just add 1 dB for every 10 feet. In
general, decibels let you add or subtract instead of multiply or divide. There are some special numbers you might
want to memorize:
20 dB = gain factor of 100
10 dB = gain factor of 10
3 dB = gain factor
of 2 (actually 1.995)
0 dB = no gain or
loss
-1 dB = a 20% loss of
signal
-3 dB = a 50% loss of
signal
-10 dB = a 90% loss of signal
(Decibels
can be used to describe changes in voltage.
But this website will use them only to describe changes in power.)
Noise
Whether a signal is receivable is determined by
the signal to noise ratio (S/N).
For TVs there are two main sources (classes) of noise:
- Atmosphere noise. There are many types of sources for this
noise. A light switch creates a radio
wave every time it opens or closes.
Motors in some appliances produce nasty RF (radio frequency) noise.
- Receiver noise. Most of this noise comes from the first
transistor the antenna is attached to.
Some receivers are quieter than others.
Receiver noise dominates on the VHF and UHF
bands, and atmospheric noise is usually insignificant. On an analog channel, noise looks like
snow. If there were only a barely
perceptible amount of snow, this would correspond to how noise-free a DTV signal
must be for a DTV receiver to lock-on to it.
Signal Amplifiers, Preamplifiers
Many people think that connecting an external amplifier to the antenna will
improve the performance of the antenna.
This is usually wrong.
Receivers always have more gain than is necessary. (The receiver has an
Automatic Gain Control circuit, AGC, which will reduce strong signals. The AGC makes all stations the same
strength at the demodulator. When
you add a preamplifier, the TV receiver lowers its own gain, usually by an
equivalent amount.)
Normally the signal to noise ratio will be set
by the receiver’s first transistor.
But if an external amplifier is added, the first transistor in that amplifier
determines the S/N ratio. (Since
the external amp will greatly magnify its own noise as well as the signal, the
receiver’s noise becomes insignificant.)
Since there is no reason to think the external amp’s first transistor is
quieter than the receiver’s first transistor, there is generally no benefit to
the S/N ratio from an external amplifier.
But an external amplifier will compensate for
signal loss in the cable if the amplifier is mounted at the antenna. Without this amplifier, a weak signal,
just above the noise level at the antenna, could sink below the noise level due
to loss in the cable, and be useless at the receiver.
RG-6 will lose 1 dB of the signal every 18 feet
at channel 52. For a DTV channel, 1
dB can be the difference between dropouts every 15 minutes (probably acceptable)
and every 30 seconds (unwatchable).
This author recommends a mast-mounted amplifier whenever the cable length
exceeds 20 feet. (If you are in a
good-signal area or you have no high-numbered UHF channels, you can to an extent
ignore this advice.)
The preamplifier should have a gain equal to
the loss in the cable (for your highest channel) plus another 10 dB (to keep the
receiver’s first transistor out of the picture).
The amplifier can usually exceed this target by another 10 dB without causing
trouble.
When figuring the cable loss, be sure to
include the loss in any splitters and baluns.
If a 2-to-1 splitter were 100% efficient then you would figure a 3 dB
loss since each TV gets half of the power.
But splitters are usually 80% to 90% efficient.
2-to-1 splitter
3.5-4 dB
3-to-1 splitter
5-6 dB
4-to-1 splitter
7-8 dB
75W-to-300W balun
0.2-2 dB
(a balun is an adapter)
The antenna and the amplifier both have gains
measured in dB, and many people add these two numbers (and then maybe subtract
the losses) to find the strength of the signal at the receiver. But this sum is worthless. The net gain in front of the amplifier
should always be kept separate from the net gain that follows.
You might not need an amplifier if the antenna
is too big. But an amplifier can
never make up for an antenna that is too small.
Receiver noise
Actually there is a reason to think the
external amplifier is quieter than the receiver.
Long ago designers made an effort to make the TV’s first amplifier stage
very quiet. But now 90% of homes
use cable or satellite boxes (strong sources) and most of the rest are rural
homes using antennas that have mast-mounted amplifiers. So the TV’s noise is rarely a factor. Some TV makers no longer put any effort
into making their sets quiet.
Suppose you live in an apartment 15 miles from
the transmitter. Your indoor
antenna mostly works, but you are troubled by dropouts and some snow appears on
analog channels. Will adding an
amplifier right at the TV improve things?
Yes, if it is quieter than the TV.
Unfortunately TV makers see no reason to publish the noise figures for
their receivers. So buying an
amplifier for an indoor antenna is a total crapshoot. This author recommends that you try a
Channel Master Titan or Spartan amplifier, but make sure you can return it if it
is no help.
Transmission cable
Twinlead (ribbon cable) used to be common for TV antennas. It has its advantages. But due to its unpredictability when
positioned near metal or dielectric objects, it has fallen out of favor. (Such objects, even if not touching the
cable, cause a portion of the signal to bounce, return to the antenna, and get
retransmitted.)
Coaxial cable is recommended. It is fully shielded and not affected by
nearby objects. Transmission cable
has a feature called its characteristic impedance, which for TV coax
should always be 75 ohms. (50-ohm
coaxial cable is also common. Avoid
that cable.) Although rated in
ohms, this has nothing to do with resistance.
A resistor converts electric energy into heat. The “75 ohms” of a coaxial cable does
not cause heat. Where it comes from
is mathematically complicated and beyond our scope here.
But coax also has ordinary resistance (mostly
in the center conductor) and thus loses some of the signal, converting it into
heat. The amount of this
dissipation (loss) depends on the frequency as well as the cable length.
Type:
Center conductor:
Cable diameter:
RG-59
20-23 gauge
0.242 inches
RG-6
18 gauge
0.265 inches
RG-11
14 gauge
0.405 inches

The above chart is only approximate. There are many cable manufacturers for
each type and there is no enforcement of standards. If the mast-mounted amplifier gain
exceeds the cable loss then it shouldn’t matter what cable you use. But there are two problems with this:
1.
Some cable has incomplete shielding.
This is most common for RG-59, another reason to avoid it.
2.
When the cable run is longer than 200 feet, the low-numbered channels can
become too strong relative to the high-numbered channels. In this case, RG-11 or an ultra-low-loss
RG-6 is recommended. (These
alternatives are expensive.)
Alternatively, frequency compensated amplifiers will work.
This author usually recommends RG-6 for all TV
antennas. It can be stapled in
place using a staple gun with common 9/16” T25 staples.
How long the cable lasts depends solely
on how long you can keep water out of it.
3M Vinyl Electrical Tape is a good waterproofer. Even better is an asphalt putty called
“Coax Seal” (Radio Shack 278-1645), but it is so tenacious it should not be used
for temporary connections. Cover
the connectors completely.
Baluns
A balun is an adapter that adapts a balanced line to unbalanced line. If a balanced transmission line (such as
twinlead) is connected directly to an unbalanced line (such as coaxial cable)
the two lines become a long-wire antenna, which is undesirable for VHF and UHF. All baluns are passive bi-directional
devices. They are usually above 90%
efficient. There are two types:
4-to-1 balun - This will connect 300-ohm twinlead to
75-ohm coaxial cable. This balun is
usually a ferrite transformer.
1-to-1 balun - This will connect a 75-ohm balanced load
to 75-ohm coaxial cable. This balun
is often just some ferrite beads slipped over the coax.
Comparing some common 4-to-1 baluns

The 15-1253 is not suitable for outdoor use.
Signal Amplifiers, Preamplifiers, part 2
There are two types of signal amplifiers:
Preamplifiers
(Mast-mounted
amplifiers) - These should be mounted as close to
the antenna as possible. Usually
the amplifier comes in two parts:
- The amplifier. This is an outdoor unit that is normally
bolted to the antenna mast. It must have
a very low noise figure, and enough gain to overcome the cable loss and the
receiver’s noise figure.
- The power module (power
injector). This is an indoor unit that
commonly lies on the floor behind the TV.
It is inserted into the antenna cable between the amplifier and the TV. This module injects some power, usually DC,
into the coaxial cable where the amplifier can use it. The power injector is the amplifier’s power
supply.
Distribution amplifiers - These are simple signal boosters. They are often necessary when an antenna
drives multiple TVs or when the antenna cable is longer than 150 feet. Distribution amplifiers don’t need to
have a low noise figure, but they need to be able to handle large signals
without overloading. Commonly,
distribution amplifiers have multiple outputs.
(Unused outputs usually do not need to be terminated.)
Never feed an amplifier output directly into another amplifier. There should always be a long cable
between the preamplifier and the distribution amplifier. Placing the two amplifiers close
together can cause overload and/or oscillation.
A mast-mounted amplifier’s most important
characteristic is its noise level, usually specified by the noise figure. But many manufacturers don’t take this
number seriously. If it is given at
all, it is often wrong. If all
makers don’t do them right then comparison-shopping is not possible. The author is inclined to rate
amplifiers for their noise figures as follows:
0.5 dB superb (anything better runs
into thermal atmospheric noise)
2.0 dB excellent
4.0 dB fair
6.0 dB poor
10 dB awful
The noise figure is a number you must subtract from the antenna’s gain. The noise figure tells how much of the
antenna’s gain you are throwing away by not buying a quieter amplifier. This loss is gone and cannot be made up
later.
Comparing some common antenna amplifiers
The following noise figures were measured by the author:

* measured at channel 30
**
+13V=FM trap in, -13V=FM trap out.
***
This is the longest RG-6 cable that satisfies the rule “The gain should
equal the cable loss plus an extra 10 dB” at channel 30, assuming the power
injector is at the TV.
Note 1:
Still the King. The other
777x amplifiers probably behave the same.
Note 2:
Winegard’s best. It has the
best FM trap, but few people who need this amplifier need an FM trap.
Note 3:
The 15-1109 is Radio Shack’s best.
The 10 dB variable attenuator is in the power module. Be delicate when adjusting the
attenuator. It will break easily.
Note 4:
The 15-1170 is modest but problem free.
It is a good 2nd amp in a very long cable.
Note 5:
The 15-1108 is terrible. It
often oscillates unpredictably.
Very noisy. I bought a second unit
to prove to myself that the first wasn’t broken.
If you need 300W inputs, you can use a 15-1109 with a 15-1140 balun,
but then the noise figure becomes 4.6 dB.
The “Cable length” from the above table is a
telling statistic. It makes clear
that there is generally no good reason to buy a Radio Shack amplifier.
7777
The Channel Master 7777 preamplifier has separate inputs (and separate amplifier
circuits) for VHF and UHF, which are then combined without loss. There is a switch inside that will allow
VHF and UHF input via the same connector.
The unit usually comes with the switch in the “separate input” position. A second switch disables the FM trap. You have to remove the 4 base screws to
access the switches.
Receiver overload
Signal amplifiers are supposed to be linear. That is, the output is a magnified but
otherwise unaltered version of the input.
But too much signal can make an amplifier non-linear, usually clipping
off the tops and bottoms of the sine waves.
When this happens, all channels are affected, not just the one
that is too strong. In fact, the
too strong signal is usually not a TV station.
A close FM station or police station is more likely.
If you add a good amplifier to your antenna
system and your results get worse instead of better then you have overload, and
you need to reconsider more carefully what you are doing.
Overload never causes any equipment damage.
An attenuator is a resistor network that
can be used to reduce the gain of an amplifier.
6 dB attenuators are available at Radio Shack. If an antenna system needs two
amplifiers, where the output of one amp feeds into the other amp, too much gain
(overload) can result and an attenuator is usually the simplest solution. If you don’t have two amplifiers, it is
unlikely that you will ever need an attenuator.
If you are close to an FM station, there might
be a narrow range between too much and too little amplifier gain. (Too little gain = dropouts, too much
gain = overload.) You can make that
range larger by using an amplifier with an FM trap or by using a more
directional antenna. VHF
preamplifiers usually include FM traps that can optionally be disabled. Freestanding FM traps are also
available. FM traps can either
cover the entire FM band or can be single frequency traps that you tune to the
offending station. The former are
less effective and tend to attenuate channel 6.
If the FM station is close enough you might need more than one FM trap.
Grounding outdoor antennas
For TVs, the main benefit of grounding is lightning protection. Lightning is a powerful radio wave
generator and any elevated wire is an antenna for it. A lightning strike in your neighborhood
can generate hundreds of volts, even thousands, on the coaxial line. These voltages can damage your
equipment.
To reduce these voltages the antenna cable
should have a grounding block (Radio Shack 15-509) at the point where it
enters the house, and that grounding block should be wired to a ground rod
driven into the ground as close as possible to the grounding block. An effective ground rod is one driven
deep enough to reach into moist soil.
The ground rod should also connect to the mast
via a heavy wire. #8 aluminum wire
(Radio Shack 15-035, $7) is readily available for this. Ground wires should be as short and
straight as possible. Turns should
be curves with a 6-inch radius.
Ground wires do not need insulation.
Some people will tell you “Don’t ground the
coax. That just makes the antenna a
lightning rod”. But the coax is
already grounded through your receiver’s power cord, so you can’t prevent it
from being a lightning rod. All you
can control is how much of your house the high current will go through before it
reaches the ground.
Another advantage: Appliance RF noise can travel up the
outside of the coaxial cable to the antenna, and then back down on the inside to
interfere with reception. The
grounding method described above will often eliminate that.
The grounding method described above conforms
fully to Channel Master recommendations.
It does not fully conform to NFPA recommendations.
The NEC requirement
The National Electrical Codes (document NFPA 70) requires another wire be added
to the grounding described above.

This 6-gauge wire, shown in red, connects the
new ground rod to the breaker box (typically).
This wire will help absorb the lower frequency components of a direct
strike. If this seems like too
much work for too little benefit, don’t be discouraged from at least installing
the ground rod. But if your antenna
is situated where a direct strike is likely then installing this wire is
strongly advised. The wire should
run close to the ground so that side flashes will likely arc to the ground. It is OK to run this wire around the
exterior of the building. In this
case keeping the wire 6” to 12” above ground is best. As with all ground wires, turns should
be curves of large radius.
Winegard and others recommend putting the
antenna near the breaker box so that the house ground rod can ground the
antenna. But this author considers
that to be overly risky, as does Channel Master.
Many people have been killed when their antenna fell into the power
lines. (Also power lines can
interfere with TV reception.)
Some additional NEC rules
- Do not attach an antenna to
the power line service entrance power mast.
Outside the building, the antenna coaxial and grounding wires shall not
come closer than:
- 2 feet from exterior power
lines of 250 Volts or less.
- 10 feet from exterior power
lines of greater than 250 Volts.
- 1 foot from underground power
lines.
- 6 feet from lightning rod
wires.
(Although
these are safety rules, they also reduce the pickup of appliance noise.)
- If the antenna mast or wires
come within 5 feet of a swimming pool, they must be bonded to the pool’s bonding
grid.
- Grounding wires and grounding
blocks are permitted to be interior to the building.
- Grounding connections must be
constructed so that they will not come loose or corrode away. (Any connection joining two different kinds
of metal will corrode very rapidly if the connection can get wet.)
- An interior cold water pipe
is acceptable as a ground rod if the connection point is within 5 feet of where
the pipe enters the ground. (You must
verify that the underground water line is not plastic.)
- Indoor antennas (including
attic antennas) are not generally susceptible to direct strikes. In such cases a grounding block is not
required by the rules, but is probably a good idea when the cable is longer than
30 feet.
There is nothing that you can do to guarantee
that your electronics will survive a direct strike. If you have any uncertainty about a
safety issue, seek the advice of a registered electrician.
Related topics
Balun wire
positioning (adjusting the
balun wires)
DC block (when are they necessary?)
F-connectors (Should you
assemble your own cables?)
Join-tenna (a device for combining antennas)
Rotors (motorized antenna pointing)
Splitters/combiners/diplexers
(What do they do?)
75-ohm
terminators (Are these
necessary?)
Masts (What kind are available?)
Impedance (What is this?)
Polarization (Why are TV
antennas horizontal?)
Mismatch (Does this matter?)
Historical trivia
Who invented radio? This honor is generally accorded to
three people:
In 1864, James Clerk Maxwell declared
that radio waves had to exist.
Studying his “Maxwell’s equations” convinced him of this. His prediction was perfect.
In 1886, Heinrich Hertz correctly
assembled a crude transmitter and receiver.
But Hertz was a professor just trying to prove Maxwell’s assertion. It doesn’t seem to have occurred to him
that radio waves were useful.
In 1894, Guglielmo Marconi read about
Hertz’s experiment and instantly recognized that radio was a signaling device. He devoted the rest of his life to
developing practical equipment. He
is usually called the “father of radio”.
Many people are convinced that experiments by
Nikola Tesla preceded Marconi’s by a few months. But Tesla was disorganized and his work
in this area had no impact.
The inventions of Edwin Armstrong:
1912: The vacuum tube oscillator
1914: The regenerative receiver
(uses feedback to increase gain and reduce bandwidth)
1918: The super-heterodyne receiver
(uses frequency translation downward to reduce bandwidth)
1922: The super-regenerative receiver
(uses exponential buildup of oscillations to increase gain)
1933: Frequency modulation
(more immune to interference)
This page is part of “An HDTV Primer”, which starts at www.hdtvprimer.com