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#1
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This has always intrigued me. I live in a typical southern house built
in the 70s. No frills architecture, one-storied,mostly wooden, a small backyard and no basement. If I were to set up an external antenna, how do I get the Coax feed inside. I don't own this house, so I don't wanna drill holes in the door/window frames or on the walls. Any hope for me ? In the worst case , I'd have to get the feed through the fire-place chimney thats no longer used. -Nick |
#2
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you can use that bluetooth technology. don't they have wireless
communicator's yet for communication between antenna and radio? Nick wrote: This has always intrigued me. I live in a typical southern house built in the 70s. No frills architecture, one-storied,mostly wooden, a small backyard and no basement. If I were to set up an external antenna, how do I get the Coax feed inside. I don't own this house, so I don't wanna drill holes in the door/window frames or on the walls. Any hope for me ? In the worst case , I'd have to get the feed through the fire-place chimney thats no longer used. -Nick |
#3
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Not that I am aware of.
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#4
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I've heard of people running the coax through the same route that the power
or telephone lines take into the house. For bluetooth to work you would have to have a considerable amount of processing already done on the signal --- if you had the entire radio outside, you could use bluetooth to send the audio output from the radio into the house, but how would you control the radio's tuning etc? I think you're stuck with finding a way to get coax into the building. "Nick" wrote in message oups.com... This has always intrigued me. I live in a typical southern house built in the 70s. No frills architecture, one-storied,mostly wooden, a small backyard and no basement. If I were to set up an external antenna, how do I get the Coax feed inside. I don't own this house, so I don't wanna drill holes in the door/window frames or on the walls. Any hope for me ? In the worst case , I'd have to get the feed through the fire-place chimney thats no longer used. -Nick |
#5
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One good method is to cut a piece of wood that fits your window opening then
drill your holes in that. A nice 1*4 or 1*6 works well. Other folks use antennas mounted in the attic, drop the line down into a wall cavity and fish it out at a wall plug or phone jack... Just a couple ideas. "Nick" wrote in message oups.com... This has always intrigued me. I live in a typical southern house built in the 70s. No frills architecture, one-storied,mostly wooden, a small backyard and no basement. If I were to set up an external antenna, how do I get the Coax feed inside. I don't own this house, so I don't wanna drill holes in the door/window frames or on the walls. Any hope for me ? In the worst case , I'd have to get the feed through the fire-place chimney thats no longer used. -Nick |
#6
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Run the coax into an attic vent, then feed it from the attic down between the
walls. Or in the alternative, poke a small hole in the closet ceiling where it won't be noticed and feed it from the attic into the closet. |
#7
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The least destructive method I've seen is to cut a piece of 1x4 to fit your
window then drill that instead of your house. "LawsuitJoe" wrote in message ... Run the coax into an attic vent, then feed it from the attic down between the walls. Or in the alternative, poke a small hole in the closet ceiling where it won't be noticed and feed it from the attic into the closet. |
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