A:AnswerIt will depend on the direction which you need to turn your antenna for each TV station. The antenna has to be facing or aimed toward the receiving tower if the receiving tower does not send out strong signal. This is often the case for PBS station tower in Monticello. If you have concrete walls or on first floor there may be interference with signal transmission.
A:AnswerIn my opinion a directional antenna pointing in the right direction is best. The Antenna Point app is awesome. The Clearsteam 4 max antenna is a 360 degree multi directional antenna.
A:AnswerI have a similar arrangement with my TV transmitter locations, directly north and south from me. I receive from both directions, well
If your antenna is on or very close to, an imaginary line directly connecting the transmitters, one to the other, in opposite directions, you may receive both directions without having to turn your antenna, given that adequate signal strengths are available to your location.
IOW, if you had to turn your directional antenna in any other direction than in a 180-degree direction, e.g., 90-degrees, you may still have to turn your antenna to face the desired transmitter.
A:AnswerNo specific info on your question in the brochures for this antenna by Antennas Direct. Call them at 1-877-825-5572 9am to 9pm Mon to Sat, Sun 10am to 6pm central time. My 2 cents , you will loose signal at 500 ft. Is it enough to kill all channels? No idea. The app called Antenna Point will however give you an idea of signal at the antennas location. There are electric signal amplifiers on the market that may do the trick
A:AnswerI recently bought a PingDingPing 150 mile antenna. I had to troubleshoot the power getting to the antenna, but once I did, it was a perfect picture.
A:AnswerIt will work in any zip code. The issues is how far away from the broadcast towers you are and if anything in the path of the tower is hindering the reception. You just have to try it to find out.
A:AnswerI live about 25-30 miles from the tower. I had a very hard time getting a consistent good picture. I think it’ll work well if you are in or close to an urban area, but not so good if you are rural. Ended up buying another product.
A:AnswerSome TVs have a better receiver. This might be the problem you are experiencing. A signal booster with a variable gain control should fix this.
A:AnswerThis is not an Omni-directional and must be aimed (however it does get signals 180 degrees (opposite direction) from where you aim it. My antenna is on a pole approximately 30 ft up. I live in Mobile,AL. With a variable gain booster I am able to get channels from Pensacola, FL. (60+ miles away!) with a strong 90% signal strength! It takes a lot to interfere with signal strengths above 80% using this antenna! I have no signal loss or distortion.
My closest local station tower is 30 miles away in downtown Mobile. I live in West Mobile, btw. FYI: Goto Antennaweb.org to see where you need to aim your antenna, and TitanTV.com provides a channel guide letting you know what is on the channels!
A:AnswerNo. It receives from only one direction. You download an app for your smartphone and that finds the direction toward the transmitting towers in your area. Choose one of those towers to point the antenna toward. You can change that direction if the first one you choose does not bring in satisfactory results.