Originally Posted by Iain
The other trap I have found with STB's is the 'strength meter', it (depending upon the box) can read signal strength 80%, but 80% of what???
It is a trap for the unwary and those who do not understand RF or the principles of digital recption.
You simply cannot have a bad picture, it cannot happen.
My STB work as low as 28db microvolts which is very low, some of the crappy ones will start to bomb out at around low 50's.
On analogue TV is pretty much unwatchable at about 55dbmv.
To make a digital analogy, imagine you are standing in a river and your mate is 100 metres downstream, he wants a beer, so you tip a can of beer in the river and he has to get it and seperate the beer from the water, thats analogue.
Digital, you put the can in the river and let him retrieve the can and open it himself.
No pollution, just the content of the can, its a bit more complex than that but essentially thats why you get such a clean image.
Digital arrives in coded blocks and the STB decodes that block of signal from the beer can, pull the antenna out of the wall and the transmission will continue for 2-3 seconds then freeze before going off.
That is because the STB has all the information and is still decoding what is on board and relaying to your TV until it runs out.
What can cause problems is a line of sight interuption like a tree in the wind, a large truck passing by etc.
Anyway, the more signal you have the better the chances of an uninterupted TV reception.
NB. Groggy and I went to the same school, as did Cliff Rogers and a few others here, albeit a few years apart.