1-2 of 2 Answers
box for inside and roof antenna
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.Hi Gilo. Best Buy carries a variety of indoor antennas from a few different manufacturers and you will need to have one on their Sales Associates qualify you on which one is best suited for your needs to receive over-the-air broadcasts on the LG - 60" Class - LED - UJ6300 Series - 2160p - Smart - 4K UHD TV with HDR, Model # 60UJ6300. To select the best antenna for your location, you'll need to determine what channels are available in your location. If you live in or near a metro area, you’ll probably have several to choose from, including major network affiliates (CBS, NBC, ABC, Fox, etc.) and PBS. There are sites online that you can use to help you find out what's available according to your address. The sites also show you how strong the channels will come in. Once you know what's available, then you will need to select an antenna based on where your local broadcasting stations are in relation to your location. An omnidirectional antenna is best suited for different networks that are coming in from all sides of your location. You'll get the most channels from every direction but you will sacrifice signal quality. If all the channels you get only come from one direction, like the nearest major city, then you will want a directional antenna. Directional antenna are stronger and can reach further so channels will come in more clearly. You also will have to decide if the antenna should pick up UHF channels or VHF channels or both. Lower numbered channels between 1 and 13 will likely be VHF and the higher numbered ones UHF. Most popular antennae can pick up both, but are far better at receiving UHF than VHF. Directional antennae or ones with a signal loop pick up UHF channels well. Many VHF channels are network affiliates and broadcast powerful signals, so even antennae that don’t specialize in them can pick them up well—assuming you’re close to the source. If you know the channels you want are the low-numbered ones, make sure you get an antenna that can pick them up clearly. If a company doesn’t say which type of channels it’s capable of receiving, assume it’s UHF...^IFV
Sorry, there was a problem. Please try again later.
