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R.Smyth
 
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"Charlie Bress" wrote in message
...
"R.Smyth" wrote in message
...
I have a TV antenna as a back up to my dish.
I believe the head end unit of the antenna amplifier is defective. It is

on
the antenna.The twin lead from the antenna connection goes in one end

and
the coax goes on the other. The coax then goes to a plug in unit in the
house which is connected to the TV.
Is this unit on the antenna a special device or is it nothing more than

a
standard converter from 250 ohm twin lead to 75 ohm coax?
If so, that will save me buying a whole new amplifier.
Thanks
DS


=^..^=


What makes you think it is defective? What is the " plug in unit in the
house"? It has to have some sort of identification.

It could be an amplifier up there with a power supply down below or the

unit
below might be the amp and the part on the antenna is just a 300 ohm twin
lead to 75 ohm cable transformer. But if your signal has deteriorated and
you have an amplifier you really have to find out where it is. The
transformers themselves rarely go bad, but the connections out in the
weather may have corroded. Tell us what you have.

Charlie

The unit on the antenna is just a small box, about the size of a small

candy bar. There is no power going to it. The only wires are the twin lead
at one end and the coax at the other. (If it's an amplifier, it would need a
power lead, no?) The other unit is a box , maybe a little bigger than a
cigarette box, which plugs into the wall in the house. The coax from the
antenna goes on one connection and a coax cord to the TV set goes on the
other. There is a gain control on it and an FM signal trap. This would seem
to be the actual amplifier. It's a Radio Shack product.
I believe the top unit is defective because I may have broken something in
getting the old coax connector loose. I'm just wondering what will happen if
I merely replace the top unit with a 250 to 75 ohm transformer.
Thanks.
ds