Installing a TV aerial

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This article gives some practical advice on installing your own TV aerial. Note that while in theory this does not sound like a difficult task, it may involve working safely at height. Also note that while some installations are straightforward and can be attempted by any competent DIYer using common sense and some educated guesswork, the more tricky installs present a not insignificant technical challenge, and may require access to special equipment. If you have doubts about your ability to complete the job safely, then its better to call for professional help than risk falling off a roof!

There are many choices to make in selecting and installing a TV aerial. These choices can make the difference between lousy reception with no digital channels and near perfect reception.

Loft, Rooftop & Set-top

Small set-top aerials vary in performance from poor to useless in most areas. In strong signal locations one may be ok for a portable TV. The advantages are minimal cost, no installation, and portability.

A rooftop gives the best vantage point for TV aerials for several reasons.

  • Being higher up there's less to get in the path of the signal from the transmitter.
  • There is no interaction with roofing materials.
  • The aerial is further from sources of electrical interference in the house, improving S/N ratio
  • TV aerials are affected to some degree by metalwork in the loft. Very high gain aerials are especially prone to this.

n practice roof mounting gives a much stronger and better quality signal than a loft aerial. A loft aerial will be quite satisfactory in many cases, but not always. Rooftop is of course less convenient and more expensive. Outdoor aerials, poles and cables cables have limited life, so the expense is repeated over time.

Aerial position

Aerial position can have a huge impact on the performance of an aerial. In a strong signal area, this may be of little concern, however in poor reception locations, it can make the difference between a good picture and something unwatchable.

Choose the first location in this list you can use. Each step down the list results in further loss of quality that can not be made up for in any way.

  • Use a rooftop aerial whenever possible
  • Loft aerial is 2nd best
  • A medium gain indoor aerial mounted as high up as possible
  • Set-top aerials are a last resort, and give a junk quality picture in most locations. For use when portability is necessary.

As an example of how much difference aerial location can make, here is an example of someone finding a 15-21dB difference between loft and roof mount.

About Aerials

CAI Approval

Many aerials and related equipment lack features which, while often not always necessary for good analogue reception, are important for good quality digital reception. CAI approved equipment meets the necessary requirements.

CAI approved aerials are divided into categories 1,2 and 3.

  • 1 is for very high gain aerials for difficult reception areas (eg Televes DAT75)
  • 2 aerials are suitable for most properties
  • 3 are lower gain for locations close to the transmitter

Wideband aerials

Many aerials currently being sold are wideband. Wideband means it will receive the full range of TV transmission frequencies used in the UK, making them a safe (but not necessarily optimal) choice. Traditionally all the TV transmissions from single transmitter were grouped together in a smaller subset of the available set of frequencies. This enabled the use of more efficient "grouped" aerials for reception. However with the changes being introduced to accommodate the switchover to digital transmission, it has not always been possible to stick rigidly to this plan. As a result there are some areas where a wideband aerial will either be required now (during the transition), or after switchover is complete, to receive all the channels.

There are two different types of wideband aerial that you will encounter. The commonly available Yagi design (this is the traditional TV aerial design) is available in a wide ranges of sizes (and hence gains) and qualities, and the log periodic. The log offers slightly lower gain that the higher gain yagi aerials but does perform very consistently across the full range of frequencies used for TV transmission in the UK. Hence if you need wideband and are not in a fringe reception area, it is often a good choice.

Make sure when choosing a wideband aerial to go for a CAI approved one.

Grouped aerials

Grouped aerials receive less than the full range of TV transmission frequencies, but perform significantly better within their more limited frequency range (particularly noticeable on the lower frequencies). Hence where wideband is not needed, performance can be improved, or a smaller and cheaper aerial used, by selecting a suitable aerial for the group.

Choose an aerial that is the correct group for your transmitter. All the channels you need to receive can be determined by looking up the channels on which you:

A grouped aerial will need to receive all those frequencies.

Gain

Depending on the power of your selected TV transmitter, and how far you are from it (plus the effects of any obstructions etc) the strength of the signal available to you may vary considerably. This means that you need to select an aerial appropriate for the location. A strong signal will require a modest aerial with a relatively low "gain" figure. Poorer reception areas however may require an aerial with more gain. Fringe reception areas may require a high gain aerial and some active amplification to get a useable signal.

In its simplest sense, the gain of an aerial is a measure of how much signal it can deliver for a particular strength of transmission where you are. However gain is a complex subject when dealing with TV aerials, since although many catalogues will quote the gain as a single figure (say 12dB), this does not really tell you much, since the gain of any aerial will vary with the actual frequency you want to receive - and the figure quoted will usually be just the peak figure.

Manufacturer's specs aren't always honest, making comparison of manufacturer specs can be misleading. Also real life aerial performance varies widely with frequency, so a single dB figure is of limited use. Real aerial performance can be compared using a graph of frequency vs gain for the major brands of aerial.

In reality you need to see a detailed graph of the response of the aerial plotted against frequency to make a meaningful comparison of any two aerials. Its not uncommon to find that a big high gain wideband aerial will have a larger gain quoted than a smaller far less elaborate grouped aerial, and yet the grouped aerial will outperform it at the frequencies that are of interest to you.


Have a look at the excellent ATV site to see how real aerials compare.

Lower gain aerials tend to:

  • Be cheaper
  • Physically smaller and lighter - and hence produce less wind loading on their mounting masts and fixings
  • Last longer

Higher gain aerials tend to:

  • Be more expensive
  • Are often more fragile
  • Will require more substantial masts, brackets, and fixings etc
  • Will have a narrower angle of acceptance - and hence require better alignment

Very high gain aerials (CAI 1) are used for problem locations, but very high gain aerials can be very large and have all the issues described above as well as being ugly! So ensure all other installation issues are solved before resorting to one of these.

The CAI have some broad categories of aerials to give some guidance:

  • CAI 1 are very high gain aerials, and are good for fringe reception areas, but are only suitable for rooftop use. They don't work well in other locations.
  • CAI 2 aerials are suitable for most locations
  • CAI 3 lower gain aerials are suitable for houses close to the transmitter

Polarization

TV signals are broadcast with either horizontal or vertical polarization. The usual yagi TV aerials should be positioned horizontally for horizontally polarized signals, and vertically for vertical signals. Check (online) the polarisation of the transmitter you're receiving, or just turn the aerial to see which gives better reception.


Practical advice on installing an aerial

First choose your aerial, and suitable cable.

While not optimal, in reasonable signal areas a loft aerial may be fine. If you are unsure it may be worth trying anyway since installing in a loft is safer and easier, and the aerial will probably last indefinitely without being used as a rest stop by every overweight pigeon in the area!

Loft aerials

Tips:

  • Keep away from wiring and metalwork where possible.
  • Results looking "through" a gable wall may be dramatically different from looking through the tiles or slates.
  • Don't choose a position where it will have you eye out every time you climb through the loft hatch!
  • Try alternate positions if you are not getting the result you would like

Be prepared to accept that a loft mount may just not be good enough.

Roof Mounting

Roof mounted aerials usually have the best chances of giving satisfactory performance. Aerials mounted on a gable wall or a chimney stack adjacent to a wall are the easiest to install. Mounting on a chimney that is in the middle of a |hipped roof can present more of a challenge.

General Guidance:

  • Choose appropriate mounting hardware - you may need a lashing kit for fitting to a chimney, and you will normally need a bracket to hold the mast and provide some standoff to move the mast away from the building or chimney. Buildings with sizeable corbelled sections of brickwork or deep overhangs at the eaves may require longer brackets or a "cranked" mast (i.e. one with a double bend in it).
  • Galvanised bracketing will last much longer than painted steel.
  • Ali masts are light and easy to handle - but choose an appropriate size 40 - 50mm diameter ones with 1.6mm walls are far stronger than a thin walled inch thick mast.
  • Spread the load - with a gable wall fixing use two brackets (often called T and K brackets) for the larger aerials and space them well out.
  • Drill into the centre of the bricks, not the weaker mortar joints.
  • Take care near the top of a gable wall - there is little weight of brickwork resting on it, so it is not that strong and you can easily dislodge a brick.
  • Pay careful attention to the wind loading of an aerial - big aerials can exert a significant force in a strong wind that can pull out fixings, or snap masts that are too long or thin. In extreme cases you can easily bring down a slender chimney stack with an oversized aerial!
  • Use appropriate fixings - ordinary wall plugs and screws may only be acceptable for smaller aerials in more sheltered locations. Bigger aerials may need coach screws and matching plugs or even expanding sleeve anchors.

Adjusting position for difficult reception conditions

  • If more than one location is available, do a survey at each position to see which is best. The easiest chimney to get to may no offer the best results!
  • Height is important - raising an aerial as little as a meter can make a big difference to the signal level (and may be preferable to using a larger aerial). The counterpoint to this advice may be where the problem is cause by tall trees. Using a lower location that can "see" under the branches may actually help here.
  • If line of site is obstructed by a hill, try angling the aerial up slightly, or aiming slight to the side of the hill even if that is not as "accurate" as straight at it.
  • If multipath (i.e. ghosting) is a problem, try a more directional aerial, and try different bearings. Iy may be preferable to switch to a different transmitter if one is available. Try Digital TV! Digital terrestrial receivers are far less bothered by ghosting than analogue ones. (and you may as well get digital working now since that will be your only choice soon).

Extreme installations

To obtain long distance (DX) TV reception, the following methods can be used to boost reception range. They're not required for standard domestic setups.

Tower mounted aerials can achieve long distance line of sight reception, avoiding all obstacles. (Don't attach huge rods to chimney stacks, they will only cause a collapse.)

Phased aerial arrays combine the outputs of multiple aerials for greater output without the addition of noise that an amplifier causes.

Narrow band aerial arrays consist of a set of narrow frequency aerials, with outputs combined. The result is full frequency reception with the better performance of narrow band aerials.

In most cases of extreme reception an Aerial amplifier or booster will be required to get adequate signal levels. Note however that amplification can only help with low signal levels. If the problem is caused by interference, then amplification will probably only make it worse.

Testing

The simplest test is to "suck it and see". If the picture quality is fine, then there is a fair chance you have an adequate solution. You can add a little finesse to the testing process by trying the new aerial with a 6dB attenuator inline with the connection to the TV. Ensuring it still works with this should mean there is a little "headroom" to cope with days where signal reception is not as good generally, and with the slight drop in performance as the system ages. Try all the channels as well.

Test equipment

The simplest test equipment for an aerial installation is a TV. However taking this up onto a roof is often not to be advised. A helper watching the TV while in contract via a walkie talkie or a cordless/mobile phone can make things much simpler. If you are working alone, a TV in the garden on an extension lead where it can be seen from the roof may help. Note that some digital TV set top boxes also have diagnostic capabilities that allow them to report signal strength and signal quality. Search the menus to see what yours has.

More tricky installs can be very frustrating to DIY, because much of the time you are working without adequate information. Alas a multimeter is not going to help you much here, and a set of professional TV reception test gear could set you back several thousand pounds. Rental may be an option, however there are some intermediate level test gear products that can provide massive assistance without breaking the bank such as Terry from Swires Research.

See Also