In article .com,
wrote:
It's not just a cap; it is a metal connector with a 75 ohm resistor
inside it to act as a load when a TV is not connected to the outlet.
Splitters are designed for specific loads on the outputs. If a load
is missing, all kinds of ugly things happen such as reflections, huge
losses at some frequencies etc. etc. etc.
Thanks for explaining why we may need a "cap" on unused TV connectors
in a splitter. Currently, I only plan on replacing DirecTV with Dish
Network, and Dish Network will have four cables coming in to connect to
four receivers; this means there will not be any splitter involved, and
^^^^^^^^^
there will not be any unused connector. Therefore, I don't need to
worry about "cap" for now.
This info will become helpful if I later on decide to install a HDTV
antenna for getting off-the-air HDTV signal; in that case, I will need
to use a splitter to split video signal coming from the HDTV antenna,
and I will likely have some connectors in the splitter unused.
Jay Chan
Re the vocab used he what is a "receiver"?
A plain tv or vcr -- or something specially related to satellite connections?
Thanks,
David
Another question: (as you can see I know *nothing* about satellite tv, not yet)
Say you've got four tv's in the house.
And two dishes -- per earlier post from someone, so that you
can see foreign tv too (if that is true).
Now, how do you hook each tv to this system, in a way that
each one can watch whatever channel it wants, plus whether
foreign or not?
Is there some kind of a network-controller that distributes the
desired signal to the tv that wants it?
Or just physical connection to each, with a rats-nest of
cables hooked in behind each tv?
Or what?
Thanks
David (totally ignorant on this subject, eager to learn)
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