Viesturs, I should have read your message more investigatively. In our area, DVB-T is no problem because everybody still have the old antennas on the roofs and the transmitted channels are the same, to. If you don't have the rakes anymore, try to get one from people who have gone satellite. Identify from which direction the signal is coming (or find out where the transmitters are) and try to find out their frequency for maximum gain. Here in our village home, in the open on the back terrace, I get about 20 programs with a 8 cm antenna plugged directly into the back of the TV set. Even better is an old room antenna, the sort we put on top of the living room closet, from way back when.
Peter Viesturs La-cis schrieb: > 2012/3/22 Peter Blodow <p.blo...@dreki.de>: > >> First: are you sure the dish is directed correctly to the satellite? >> > > My apologies for not stating it clearly - it is DVB-T signal, > terrestrial, not satellite. > > Thanks, Kirk and Gene! > The antenna is ~2m long, its orientation is "the same as previous > antennas". I guess I might try another session of catching better > signal, once it will get little warmer. Now the sun is really warm, > but wind is nasty cold already on ground, so I do not want to know, > what is it on the roof (although it is only 3-4 m higher:) ). > ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ This SF email is sponsosred by: Try Windows Azure free for 90 days Click Here http://p.sf.net/sfu/sfd2d-msazure _______________________________________________ Emc-users mailing list Emc-users@lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/emc-users