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#1
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Hello:
I have been trying to find the answer to my question on the front-to- back ratio on UHF antennas, and so far have been unsuccessful. I think I understand what the front-to-back ratio is, but the specs on my Winegard PR-8800 (8 bay bowtie) show negative front-to-back ratios (-9 dB @ ch 14; -17 dB @ ch 32; -11 dB @ ch 50; -9 dB @ ch 69). The "dB over reference dipole" is: 10.7 dB @ ch 14; 12 dB @ ch 32; 11 dB @ ch 50; 12.5 dB @ ch 69. How can the front-to-back ratio be negative, and is this good or bad? I am assuming this could be bad in my case as I would like the signal at the back of the antenna to be minimal. I am currently trying to improve our HDTV reception. I currently have the PR-8800 antenna in our attic hooked to a Radio Shack 30 dB mast amp. This antenna works very well overall. But from time to time, on a couple channels the HD signal strength will drop all the way down, enough to drop the signal or cause break-up. I've been considering a Winegard HD9095P or PR9032 to use in conjunction with the PR-8800 since they have a higher gain than the PR-8800, then rotate the PR-8800 the other way to receive some different stations. I really appreciate the help and feedback on this!! Thanks, -- Chris |
#3
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In alt.tv.tech.hdtv Bert Hyman wrote:
| (szilagyic) wrote in | ups.com: | | I think I understand what the front-to-back ratio is, but the specs | on my Winegard PR-8800 (8 bay bowtie) show negative front-to-back | ratios (-9 dB @ ch 14; -17 dB @ ch 32; -11 dB @ ch 50; -9 dB @ ch | 69). The "dB over reference dipole" is: 10.7 dB @ ch 14; 12 dB @ | ch 32; 11 dB @ ch 50; 12.5 dB @ ch 69. How can the front-to-back | ratio be negative, and is this good or bad? I am assuming this | could be bad in my case as I would like the signal at the back of | the antenna to be minimal. | | Showing the F/B ratio as negative is non-standard, but I -guess | they're just trying to emphasize that the signal received off the | back of the antenna is less than that received from the direction | it's pointing. Looks like negative DB is used for any direction to indicate how much less the signal will be relative to the main lobe. Whether side or back or any other direction, the circles are labeled with negative DB, more negative as you move to the inner circles. See: http://www.hdtvprimer.com/ANTENNAS/cm4228.html -- |---------------------------------------/----------------------------------| | Phil Howard KA9WGN (ka9wgn.ham.org) / Do not send to the address below | | first name lower case at ipal.net / | |------------------------------------/-------------------------------------| |
#4
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On Jul 2, 10:49 am, szilagyic wrote:
Hello: I have been trying to find the answer to my question on the front- to- back ratio on UHF antennas, and so far have been unsuccessful. I think I understand what the front-to-back ratio is, but the specs on my Winegard PR-8800 (8 bay bowtie) show negative front-to-back ratios (-9 dB @ ch 14; -17 dB @ ch 32; -11 dB @ ch 50; -9 dB @ ch 69). The "dB over reference dipole" is: 10.7 dB @ ch 14; 12 dB @ ch 32; 11 dB @ ch 50; 12.5 dB @ ch 69. How can the front-to-back ratio be negative, and is this good or bad? I am assuming this could be bad in my case as I would like the signal at the back of the antenna to be minimal. I am currently trying to improve our HDTV reception. I currently have the PR-8800 antenna in our attic hooked to a Radio Shack 30 dB mast amp. This antenna works very well overall. But from time to time, on a couple channels the HD signal strength will drop all the way down, enough to drop the signal or cause break-up. I've been considering a Winegard HD9095P or PR9032 to use in conjunction with the PR-8800 since they have a higher gain than the PR-8800, then rotate the PR-8800 the other way to receive some different stations. I really appreciate the help and feedback on this!! Thanks, -- Chris 30 dB is quite a bit of gain on top of a decent gain antenna. If you're _far_ from the stations OR they're still running reduced power it can be justified but as a point of reference, I use a Winegard squareshooter (4-5 dB gain), no amplifier split 4 ways with 100' of RG-6 35 miles from the LA transmitters. SIgnal strength reported as 80% on the HDTV Wonders. I wonder if perhaps you're almost overloading either the preamp or the front-end of the TV. As Bert mentioned, the negative front-to-back number just referencing the front gain of the antenna. Again, I wouldn't use so 'much' preamp unless I was 50+ miles from the nearest station. GG |
#5
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On Mon, 02 Jul 2007 10:49:39 -0700, szilagyic
wrote: Hello: I have been trying to find the answer to my question on the front-to- back ratio on UHF antennas, and so far have been unsuccessful. I think I understand what the front-to-back ratio is, but the specs on my Winegard PR-8800 (8 bay bowtie) show negative front-to-back ratios (-9 dB @ ch 14; -17 dB @ ch 32; -11 dB @ ch 50; -9 dB @ ch 69). The "dB over reference dipole" is: 10.7 dB @ ch 14; 12 dB @ ch 32; 11 dB @ ch 50; 12.5 dB @ ch 69. How can the front-to-back ratio be negative, and is this good or bad? I am assuming this could be bad in my case as I would like the signal at the back of the antenna to be minimal. I am currently trying to improve our HDTV reception. I currently have the PR-8800 antenna in our attic hooked to a Radio Shack 30 dB mast amp. This antenna works very well overall. But from time to time, on a couple channels the HD signal strength will drop all the way down, enough to drop the signal or cause break-up. I've been considering a Winegard HD9095P or PR9032 to use in conjunction with the PR-8800 since they have a higher gain than the PR-8800, then rotate the PR-8800 the other way to receive some different stations. I really appreciate the help and feedback on this!! Thanks, Get that antenna OUT of your attic. Put it outside on your roof, no more than 12 feet mast. All your problems will go away. |
#6
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szilagyic wrote:
Hello: I have been trying to find the answer to my question on the front-to- back ratio on UHF antennas, and so far have been unsuccessful. I think I understand what the front-to-back ratio is, but the specs on my Winegard PR-8800 (8 bay bowtie) show negative front-to-back ratios (-9 dB @ ch 14; -17 dB @ ch 32; -11 dB @ ch 50; -9 dB @ ch 69). The "dB over reference dipole" is: 10.7 dB @ ch 14; 12 dB @ ch 32; 11 dB @ ch 50; 12.5 dB @ ch 69. How can the front-to-back ratio be negative, and is this good or bad? I am assuming this could be bad in my case as I would like the signal at the back of the antenna to be minimal. I am currently trying to improve our HDTV reception. I currently have the PR-8800 antenna in our attic hooked to a Radio Shack 30 dB mast amp. This antenna works very well overall. But from time to time, on a couple channels the HD signal strength will drop all the way down, enough to drop the signal or cause break-up. I've been considering a Winegard HD9095P or PR9032 to use in conjunction with the PR-8800 since they have a higher gain than the PR-8800, then rotate the PR-8800 the other way to receive some different stations. I really appreciate the help and feedback on this!! Thanks, -- Chris 1) If you can, you'd be better off if you can get it out of the attic, as UHF doesn't like roofing and other stuff between your antenna and the signal source. (I think this has already been mentioned). Getting it up in the air above the roof may help a bit, but it is always worth trying various heights to find the "sweet spot". Antenna reception isn't always quite like the theories would indicate... 2) UHF is also really susceptible to reflection. If you recieve the direct signal and a reflected signal at the same time (the reflected signal typically will be out of phase and tend to reduce the direct signal, or if severe, look like ghosts on analog) you will have difficulties during reception of the reflection. One place I lived had a periodic loss of signal (didn't actually go away, just got messy/snowy, it was in the analog days). Signal would get bad from a half to a couple of seconds, and had an odd period. Certain times of day it was every couple of minutes, other times it took hours to show up. After beating around for a long time, discovered the problem seemed to be related to reflection off of jets taking off from an airport partway between us and the transmitter site... In messing about with the antenna, found an "off axis" reflection off of something on a hill offside to us (antenna was swung about 30 degrees to one side off of direct line of sight) and, though the signal was a bit lower overall, the periodic fading disappeared completely.... 3) Radio Shack amplifiers tend to be way over-hyped. They rarely meet the specs they claim, and tend to be somewhat unstable over time. Better to get a commercial TV brand than Radio Shack, if you've a chouce. If you're into home brew, you could use one of the mini-circuits monolithic amplifiers and know you have decent gain. They're pretty easy to work with, even at UHF frequencies, and stable to boot. If you're really getting 30db from the Radio Shack amp, look at the coax between your antenna and the receiver. Good quality coax can help keep the signal you've taken so much care to obtain. 4) just for grins, try the exsisting system outside the attic without the amplifier and see if you have a decent level of signal. You may be surprised to see it isn't as bad as you think. As one person suggested, you may actually have too much gain in the amplifier (though with RS, you're actual gain may change with temperature and seemingly even the phase of the moon...) Not familiar with the model of antenna you have, though the "typical" double bow tie (with 4 copies in your case)are mounted in front of a mesh screen. In your case it looks like open elements as a reflector. Sometimes you can get a better front to back ratio by adding a solid reflector in place of the mesh/reflector rods. I would think in your case it would help, and wouldn't take much trouble to try. Front to back ratio is just that, the ratio of signal between what is received from the front and the back of the antenna. A front to back ratio of 3db means you have twice the amount recieved from the front than the back. A high front to back means you will be essentially "blocking" potential interference from the back side of the antenna by the ratio indicated. 10 or 12 db of forward gain means your recieved signal is about 10 to 16 times as strong as a dipole hanging in the air. If you interpret the negative number as the amount the signal is down from the forward gain, the numbers given (9 to 17db) would indicate reception off the back side would be somewhere near a dipole in open space (1 db net) to -5db (about 1/3 of the signal of a dipole) pickup from the back. I have used aluminum sheet (tested prior with aluminum foil) tied to the mesh to completely block reception from the back (a near infinite front to back ratio) in an extreme case where I had significant multipath reflections coming in from the back. It really cleaned things up. In your case you may not need to go to this rather severe step. Looking at alternate antennas, the two you've indicated would likely help, but you're only getting about 3db better signal (double the power). They do have narrower beamwidth, so if your interference is coming off axis, you may be able to use one of these to solve your problem. Personally, I tend to like this type of antenna over the big flat looking bowties. Especially out in the weather, there's only a single connection to worry about, rather than the phasing array connecting the 8 separate bow ties of the one you have now. Another alternative to higher gain antennas would be if you have all of your HDTV channels in the same relative band. Antennas like you've looked at so far are compromises because they are set up for the entire UHF channel set. If you have a relatively small set of close by channels, you could get an antenna that is better matched to that set. (I haven't looked in about 10 or 12 years, but you used to be able to purchase antennas optimized for about a 10 channel spread, and they had great gain and front to back specs.) Hope you're not in an antenna restricted neighborhood, they can be the pits to deal with. If you've currently got the bow tie in the attic due to your neighborhood, look around and see if there's a place at one end of the attic where you can pretty much shoot through a single wall. Replacing the wallboard/t1-11/sheathing/siding with a plastic panel that is about the size of the antenna reflector area could help increase the signal strength without replacing the antenna. Of course, before getting this drastic, I'd mount it temporarily outside of the attic at that location first to see if it actually helps... Good luck! --Rick AH7H |
#7
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![]() "Rick Frazier" wrote in message ... szilagyic wrote: Hello: I have been trying to find the answer to my question on the front-to- back ratio on UHF antennas, and so far have been unsuccessful. I think I understand what the front-to-back ratio is, but the specs on my Winegard PR-8800 (8 bay bowtie) show negative front-to-back ratios (-9 dB @ ch 14; -17 dB @ ch 32; -11 dB @ ch 50; -9 dB @ ch 69). The "dB over reference dipole" is: 10.7 dB @ ch 14; 12 dB @ ch 32; 11 dB @ ch 50; 12.5 dB @ ch 69. How can the front-to-back ratio be negative, and is this good or bad? I am assuming this could be bad in my case as I would like the signal at the back of the antenna to be minimal. I am currently trying to improve our HDTV reception. I currently have the PR-8800 antenna in our attic hooked to a Radio Shack 30 dB mast amp. This antenna works very well overall. But from time to time, on a couple channels the HD signal strength will drop all the way down, enough to drop the signal or cause break-up. I've been considering a Winegard HD9095P or PR9032 to use in conjunction with the PR-8800 since they have a higher gain than the PR-8800, then rotate the PR-8800 the other way to receive some different stations. I really appreciate the help and feedback on this!! Thanks, -- Chris 1) If you can, you'd be better off if you can get it out of the attic, as UHF doesn't like roofing and other stuff between your antenna and the signal source. (I think this has already been mentioned). Getting it up in the air above the roof may help a bit, but it is always worth trying various heights to find the "sweet spot". Antenna reception isn't always quite like the theories would indicate... 2) UHF is also really susceptible to reflection. If you recieve the direct signal and a reflected signal at the same time (the reflected signal typically will be out of phase and tend to reduce the direct signal, or if severe, look like ghosts on analog) you will have difficulties during reception of the reflection. One place I lived had a periodic loss of signal (didn't actually go away, just got messy/snowy, it was in the analog days). Signal would get bad from a half to a couple of seconds, and had an odd period. Certain times of day it was every couple of minutes, other times it took hours to show up. After beating around for a long time, discovered the problem seemed to be related to reflection off of jets taking off from an airport partway between us and the transmitter site... In messing about with the antenna, found an "off axis" reflection off of something on a hill offside to us (antenna was swung about 30 degrees to one side off of direct line of sight) and, though the signal was a bit lower overall, the periodic fading disappeared completely.... 3) Radio Shack amplifiers tend to be way over-hyped. They rarely meet the specs they claim, and tend to be somewhat unstable over time. Better to get a commercial TV brand than Radio Shack, if you've a chouce. If you're into home brew, you could use one of the mini-circuits monolithic amplifiers and know you have decent gain. They're pretty easy to work with, even at UHF frequencies, and stable to boot. If you're really getting 30db from the Radio Shack amp, look at the coax between your antenna and the receiver. Good quality coax can help keep the signal you've taken so much care to obtain. 4) just for grins, try the exsisting system outside the attic without the amplifier and see if you have a decent level of signal. You may be surprised to see it isn't as bad as you think. As one person suggested, you may actually have too much gain in the amplifier (though with RS, you're actual gain may change with temperature and seemingly even the phase of the moon...) Not familiar with the model of antenna you have, though the "typical" double bow tie (with 4 copies in your case)are mounted in front of a mesh screen. In your case it looks like open elements as a reflector. Sometimes you can get a better front to back ratio by adding a solid reflector in place of the mesh/reflector rods. I would think in your case it would help, and wouldn't take much trouble to try. Front to back ratio is just that, the ratio of signal between what is received from the front and the back of the antenna. A front to back ratio of 3db means you have twice the amount recieved from the front than the back. A high front to back means you will be essentially "blocking" potential interference from the back side of the antenna by the ratio indicated. 10 or 12 db of forward gain means your recieved signal is about 10 to 16 times as strong as a dipole hanging in the air. If you interpret the negative number as the amount the signal is down from the forward gain, the numbers given (9 to 17db) would indicate reception off the back side would be somewhere near a dipole in open space (1 db net) to -5db (about 1/3 of the signal of a dipole) pickup from the back. I have used aluminum sheet (tested prior with aluminum foil) tied to the mesh to completely block reception from the back (a near infinite front to back ratio) in an extreme case where I had significant multipath reflections coming in from the back. It really cleaned things up. In your case you may not need to go to this rather severe step. Looking at alternate antennas, the two you've indicated would likely help, but you're only getting about 3db better signal (double the power). They do have narrower beamwidth, so if your interference is coming off axis, you may be able to use one of these to solve your problem. Personally, I tend to like this type of antenna over the big flat looking bowties. Especially out in the weather, there's only a single connection to worry about, rather than the phasing array connecting the 8 separate bow ties of the one you have now. Another alternative to higher gain antennas would be if you have all of your HDTV channels in the same relative band. Antennas like you've looked at so far are compromises because they are set up for the entire UHF channel set. If you have a relatively small set of close by channels, you could get an antenna that is better matched to that set. (I haven't looked in about 10 or 12 years, but you used to be able to purchase antennas optimized for about a 10 channel spread, and they had great gain and front to back specs.) Hope you're not in an antenna restricted neighborhood, they can be the pits to deal with. If you've currently got the bow tie in the attic due to your neighborhood, look around and see if there's a place at one end of the attic where you can pretty much shoot through a single wall. Replacing the wallboard/t1-11/sheathing/siding with a plastic panel that is about the size of the antenna reflector area could help increase the signal strength without replacing the antenna. Of course, before getting this drastic, I'd mount it temporarily outside of the attic at that location first to see if it actually helps... Good luck! --Rick AH7H Gee, I want an isotropic antenna! After all, it's the standard for comparison. (If you don't recognize this as an attempt at humor, then God bless you.) |
#8
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Hi Chris
Much has already been said about your problem. I just have a few more points to add.. - One of the initial "reasons" for masthead preamps was to reduce/remove the loss of the coax run. Quoting the preamp gain in this case is useful but in reality it is much more important to have a preamp device that is low noise or will give you a better signal to noise ratio at low signal levels. There is actually a hard limit based on Boltzmanns constant and the system bandwidth that is the thermal noise on Earth. (ie you can use it mathematically to check your system) If it is spec'd look for the lowest preamp noise figure (NF). Unfortunately low NF tends to go hand in hand with not so good large (undesired) signal performance. If however you don't have other strong signals around you it works well. Some bad preamp designs even "take off" producing their own interference and contributing towards the problem. - One of the killers for low level signal reception is that the local noise near your antenna varies above the "constant" mentioned above. Although rare on UHF, electrical interfering sources can "raise the noise floor" such that the s/n of the wanted signal gets smaller. Ways around this include a good antenna install with very good directivity to the signal source. In some cases you can use the antenna nulls and polarization to reduce interfering signal and of course finding and fixing the interfering source. Your "couple of channels" dropping out could be a local noise problem or equally a propagation/bending/reflection issue. (Reflection problems tend to be short lived though) It may be worth logging the failures to see if they fit a pattern. What frequency the channels are on can also help in the hunt. (eg someone using a 900MHz cordless phone while your weak signal is at the top of the UHF band...) It might be worthwhile finding out what channels the distant stations are on, then purchasing an antenna more centered on that frequency. As a general rule high gain is inverse to bandwidth so for the same amount of metal/size an antenna made to cover (say) 5 channels may have 5dB more forward gain and better f/b performance than a wide band one. A narrower band antenna may also have better undesirable lobes so a local noise problem may be helped. I realize that you are more after a commercially available system but your own design/build may even be an option. In a perfect world an antenna would receive nothing from everywhere except the desired direction! Unfortunately most radiation patterns look like wildflowers on steroids! Wide band antennas are especially horrible. The front to back ratio is not the only important figure. Some antennas have lobes maybe 30 degrees off the back that are only a few dB down from a dipole! Hope this helps. Cheers Bob W5/VK2YQA szilagyic wrote: Hello: I have been trying to find the answer to my question on the front-to- back ratio on UHF antennas, and so far have been unsuccessful. ... I really appreciate the help and feedback on this!! |
#9
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snip
10 or 12 db of forward gain means your recieved signal is about 10 to 16 times as strong as a dipole hanging in the air. If you interpret the negative number as the amount the signal is down from the forward gain, the numbers given (9 to 17db) would indicate reception off the back side would be somewhere near a dipole in open space (1 db net) to -5db (about 1/3 of the signal of a dipole) pickup from the back. I have used aluminum sheet (tested prior with aluminum foil) tied to the mesh to completely block reception from the back (a near infinite front to back ratio) in an extreme case where I had significant multipath reflections coming in from the back. It really cleaned things up. In your case you may not need to go to this rather severe step. snip Good luck! --Rick AH7H 10 or 12db of forward gain goes NOT equal 10 "times" the received signal strength. |
#10
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![]() "Bishoop" wrote in message ... snip 10 or 12 db of forward gain means your recieved signal is about 10 to 16 times as strong as a dipole hanging in the air. If you interpret the negative number as the amount the signal is down from the forward gain, the numbers given (9 to 17db) would indicate reception off the back side would be somewhere near a dipole in open space (1 db net) to -5db (about 1/3 of the signal of a dipole) pickup from the back. I have used aluminum sheet (tested prior with aluminum foil) tied to the mesh to completely block reception from the back (a near infinite front to back ratio) in an extreme case where I had significant multipath reflections coming in from the back. It really cleaned things up. In your case you may not need to go to this rather severe step. snip Good luck! --Rick AH7H 10 or 12db of forward gain goes NOT equal 10 "times" the received signal strength. Then what do you think it is equal to ? |
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