My stereo receiver is in the basement with no outdoor antenna. I've been using just a dipole I made from some speaker wire. Even some of the local stations are noisy with the stereo light flickering in and out.
I spotted this outfit today in a store I was at and decided to try it. I'm disappointed to say the least. I wasn't expecting DX but I had hoped it would clean up the signals I do get. I can't tell any difference at all from my old antenna.
It may be defective. Tomorrow I'll try exchanging it for another one.
Some registered account users are experiencing password recognition issues. The issue appears to have been triggered by a PHP update last night. If this is occurring, please try logging in and using the "forgot password?" utility. Bear in mind auto-generated password reset emails may appear in your spam folder. If this does not work, please click the "Contact Us" option near the lower right hand corner of the index page to contact me via email.
Thank you for your patience!
- M.W.
Thank you for your patience!
- M.W.
Terk Amplified Indoor FM Antenna
Re: Terk Amplified Indoor FM Antenna
I've had Terk antennas and found them to be junk.
Re: Terk Amplified Indoor FM Antenna
Pretty sure this thing is defective. Adjusting the gain control has no effect. Disconnecting power from the unit has no effect.
Re: Terk Amplified Indoor FM Antenna
Their FM antenna is completely worthless.
A Terk AM antenna, however, is awesome. I scored one at a thrift shop some years ago for $1.
A Terk AM antenna, however, is awesome. I scored one at a thrift shop some years ago for $1.
Re: Terk Amplified Indoor FM Antenna
You're right. I've seen nothing but good reviews for that one. I have a similar one made by Grundig. It too is awsome.
This newest one, I took back to the store and exchanged it for another one. It works no better than the first one.
The store has a No Refunds policy. you can only exchange or get a store credit for something else. I won't waste any more time exchanging this one. I'll just get a credit.
-
- Posts: 123
- Joined: Wed Apr 27, 2011 10:26 am
- Location: 49270
Re: Terk Amplified Indoor FM Antenna
You're likely seeing a lot of QRM on top of a weak signal, given that it's in the basement. You won't really 'clean up' a signal very well, no matter how much you amplify the signal. The signal to noise ratio will remain the same, the receiver will just be a bit more "confused" and signals that were slightly in stereo before, will now lock in stereo with lots of static present. The stereo carrier is above a certain threshold now, thus it will lock - with more noise. Basements are tough for receiving much of anything unless you live a few blocks away from the tower farm.
If you can't/don't want to tap into an antenna feed somewhere readily, try running some coax somewhere where there's daylight, and strip the end of it to make a dipole.
If you can't/don't want to tap into an antenna feed somewhere readily, try running some coax somewhere where there's daylight, and strip the end of it to make a dipole.
My DTV DX reports
http://www.rabbitears.info/dxlocation.php?id=257
http://www.rabbitears.info/dxlocation.php?id=257
Re: Terk Amplified Indoor FM Antenna
In most situations you do not want to use any kind of amplifier for FM reception. They increase noise and overloading if you have nearby transmitters. A folded dipole or a loop made out of 10 feet worth of wire is an indoor antenna. Location is the other important factor. It could be an attic or near a window where reception is best. Try testing the radio stations on a portable radio first.