Looking at the house aerial will show the correct orientationSome transmitters are horizontally polarised and others are vertically polarised. With directional aerials this can make a difference and the aerial may need rotating through 90 degrees so that the vanes are upright rather than flat.
Thanks for the tip CC.@AlyJay
I fitted a vision plus to my first van, never again absolutely appalling product, exactly the same problem as you described it would give the impression there was signal but often absolutely nothing unless in a really strong signal area with good line of sight
I also messed about horizontal vertical pointing it 180 out etc.
On both my current vans I now use the truly incredible Necvox magnetic antenna, if there’s signal out there these will pick something up where the vision plus would not.
I also have a fire stick however for 100% reliable tv I carry a portable satellite dish in the vans as backup, for when there’s no mobile or terrestrial tv signal often there’s not even radio 4 in large parts of the UK!
A good rule of thumb there.When we are approaching a camping area I try to scan nearby houses and see what type of aerials the local houses have, smallish looks to be OK/good signal areas, long pole/high up large aerial arrays I know it's probably sat dish area time.
I'm not sure how many DTV channels we get in house as we just use IPTV all the time, I expect a lot more than 12 thoughGlad you got semi sorted enough to know something is at least working although 12 channels don't seem a lot - how many do your home TV's tune in? When we are approaching a camping area I try to scan nearby houses and see what type of aerials the local houses have, smallish looks to be OK/good signal areas, long pole/high up large aerial arrays I know it's probably sat dish area time. Good luck and glad you've got it working after all your hard effort/time.
Yeah that would help if there was a stored settings ability for the auto tuner definitely.A good rule of thumb there.
I have the same kind of setup as AlyJay but also have a Snipe Sat system installed which I would probably choose to use though in a clear sky area. (Problem with Satellite on a motorhome is the receiver dishes are low compared to house installs and more prone to line-of-sight issues - I can't use mine where I park due to the house but Terrestial is useable).
I wish these "Motorhome TVs" had the ability to save multiple tuning sets so if you go to a couple of places regularly you can just select that set insteasd of having to go through the whole tuning process each time. One of the advantages to using the sat dish is it is the same tuning info for just about anywhere likely to be going![]()
Or radio 1 going over to FM.beats the old days when the exciting news was Channel 4 opening![]()
275 285 national radio oneOr radio 1 going over to FM.
That's very comicalI used to listen to Radio Luxemburg with a home made crystal set and headphones.
I think the diagram came from The Eagle. (I wasn't allowed the Beano or Dandy.)
All I did was join the "Dennis the menace " club - and I thinkI used to listen to Radio Luxemburg with a home made crystal set and headphones.
I think the diagram came from The Eagle. (I wasn't allowed the Beano or Dandy.)
I can't remember the details, but when I was at school- so mid 70's, one of the boys used to convert standard radios (the classic 'trannies') into transmitters. Probably got the info from something like "popular electronics" magazine or somesuch.To be honest, it was anything but impressive, and my crystal set was nothing like a radio.
It was two or three dirt cheap components, no volume control, no power, the aerial dangled out of my bedroom window, and the headphones were cheap bakelite. But it did work, sort of.![]()