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On Mar 12, 2:31*pm, mm wrote:
On Sat, 12 Mar 2011 07:49:09 -0500, "Ed Pawlowski" wrote: "mm" wrote I thought that letting a VCR or DVD recorder or TV scan for channels was only to compile a list in advance of stations a device could receive, by checking out every channel and noting which had signals. Right, that is usually a one time deal and then the TV has a memory of those channels. *You can usually edit the channel listing also. *By eliminating the ones you never watch, the TV will skip over them when you hit the UP or DOWN buttons. And that pushing 1 3 on the remote would go to channel 13 whether one had scanned for channels or not, whether digital station frequencies had changed since the last time one scanned or not. Yes As effectively as if one scanned the whole spectrum, and then channeled up or down to get to 13. Am I right about the paragraph just above? Yes And that for timed recording, when the dvd recorder goes to channel 13 directly, it looks for it if necessary, just like scanning does. Don't think so. *It will go to 13 but it won't scan looking for it AFAIK And if it gives some reception, though bad reception, even though the transmitter is only 10 miles away, it's not because it's off frequency? *But because the signal is bad. I don't have OTA so I'm not going to comment Or are digital tuners different from analog, in that scanning first and whenever the channel frequency changes is essential? Why would the frequency change? The tv station can change the frequence it uses. *They do this on rare occassions I think. Or, maybe a power failure at my house could cause it to forget things. IIRC, unplugging an analog tv long enough would cause it to forget *which* stations are preset, but of course it would have no trouble going to one directly. What happened is that one of 3 network statiosn whose transmitting antennas are less than 10 miles away stopped coming in. *After about 3 days, I emailed them and they wrote back a short nice letter saying with some tvs I need to rescan and would I try that please. *(In other words, his transmitter is working as normal, he thinks) * After I wrote them, I noticed that another of the 3 network stations wasn't working and the third sometimes didn't, EVEN though the independent stations in DC, 45 miles away were working. Now I'm wondering if my antenna amp is malfunctioning and putting out too strong a signal for the strong stations. *Hmm, there is a way to test that without going into the attic. Sounds like you have a bad antenna amp or failing signal splitter... ~~ Evan |
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