Tuesday, October 25, 2011

RV Television Antennas Considered


!±8± RV Television Antennas Considered

Most people who are serious Recreational Vehicle folks have Satellite Television and normally do not rely on attempting to get a local television signal where ever they go. Why is this the preferred option? Well with Direct TV for instance you can have all the channels and still subscribe to your local station for your RV. You also can take all the Movie Channels too so you do not need to take a DVD collection or VHS Movie Collection with you. But nevertheless, sometimes it pays to have a back-up redundant system.

For instance consider if you will installing a TV antenna to pick up local stations if you need too. Why? Well when it is terrible over caste weather or super stormy you will not be able to pick up the Weather Channel in case you need to know about something as uneventful as an F-5 Tornado or a Category III Hurricane which will turn your RV into an out of control aircraft. That is a good reason yes? Indeed, so I would to make a recommendation on this topic.

Install a TV antenna such as a Winegard Roadstar antenna. They work great as long as you clean them every so often. The Bandpass works on 54-216 MHz for VHF and FM and on 470-810 MHz for UHF. Personally, I do not use it often, but in the times I really need it such as a bad weather situation, it has proven itself worth its weight in gold. Besides it looks kind of cool up there like a UFO disk on a tri-pod and it works like a charm. So consider this in 2006.


RV Television Antennas Considered

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