Directional aerials

MaxHeadroom
MaxHeadroom Forum Participant Posts: 110
edited January 2018 in Caravan & Motorhome Chat #1

Hi, I have a 2017 Swift Major 4 EB. It came with an omni-directional aerial which the salesman said was great because there's no need to swivel it looking for a tv signal anymore. So far I've been very disappointed with the lack of TV reception and am thinking about replacing it with a directional aerial. Would this be a prudent thing to do? 

If I have to go down this route the model I've been considering is the Vision Plus Status 570 but it's quite pricey.

Any advice/help would be welcome.

Cheers, Andy.

Comments

  • JVB66
    JVB66 Forum Participant Posts: 22,892
    1000 Comments
    edited January 2018 #2

    The  so called"omni directional"aerial has never been very good unless in direct site and close to the transmitter, the majority of caravan manufacturer's now use  the status directionals and they are by far superior 

    i am not sure but I think the amplifier you should have with your currant aerial  can be used so it may not work out quite so expensive,you could always e-mail vision plus and ask

  • Hakinbush
    Hakinbush Forum Participant Posts: 286
    edited January 2018 #3

    I'm supprised that any modern van comes without a digital directional arial, easy peasey when your booking in look where the warden has his facing and copy..

  • Navigateur
    Navigateur Club Member Posts: 3,880 ✭✭✭✭✭
    1000 Comments
    edited January 2018 #4

    It might be worth you trying a £10 antenna off e-Bay first to see if it makes any difference from the one fitted. You can plug it straight in the back of the TV and work along from there to find if the signal drops. If you can see the red lights on the TV mast at night then an omnidirectional antenna should work fine.

    If it does not then you could well have a loose connector somewhere. They are not always easy to find as sometime there is a cable run join hidden behind furniture.

  • ABM
    ABM Forum Participant Posts: 14,578
    1000 Comments
    edited January 2018 #5

    No  such  thing  as  a  "Digital Aerial"  Hakinbush  --  just  good  ones,  fair  ones  &  terrible  ones  !

     

    MaxH,  you  say  "Lack  Of  Reception"  does  this  mean  you  get  no  reception  at  all  or  just  poor,  limited  reception..

    If  you  get  NO reception  I  have  to  ask  -->  you  are  tuning  your  T.V.  at  each  stop  --  if  not  you  wont  get  a  piccy  anywhere.

    Brian  A B M

  • mickysf
    mickysf Forum Participant Posts: 6,474 ✭✭✭
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    edited January 2018 #6

    This article is very informative with no nonsense critical advice.

    http://www.aerialsandtv.com/touringaerials.html#OmniAerial

    Hope it helps

  • SteveL
    SteveL Club Member Posts: 12,303 ✭✭✭
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    edited January 2018 #7

    As Nav says in a good signal area the Omni aerial should work fine. Same with the directional one, in a good area it does not really matter where you have it pointing. However, when the signal strength drops they really come into there own. The difference is as great as no channels / lots of channels, depending on where you have it pointing. They also have the advantage that you can tilt them on there side when the signal is vertically polarised. Sometimes the case with smaller repeater transmitters.

  • S-max Jonny
    S-max Jonny Forum Participant Posts: 81
    First Comment
    edited January 2018 #8

    The omni-directional aerials are pretty useless and can't understand why they are still fitted.

    Most CC sites have aerial points on the bollards these days so very rarely need a good aerial.

    I bought a directional one off Ebay years ago and fitted it myself. A huge improvement.

  • indoors
    indoors Forum Participant Posts: 222
    edited January 2018 #9

    Don't know which type of TV you use Max we have a status directional on our Hymer which comes with a fitted tv. ( terrestrial/freeview & satellite/satview + DVD. Having used satellite systems for many years we recently purchased a SatGear set up from Amazon £130-00, on ours neither the box or the sat finder of use as it's plumbed in on the telly. I'd consider this alternative sooner than pay whatever for a directional.

    https://www.amazon.co.uk/Portable-Satellite-Caravan-Receiver-Satfinder/dp/B071LN275M/ref=sr_1_11?ie=UTF8&qid=1515672933&sr=8-11&keywords=caravan+satellite+system

    Happy caravanning.

  • Waffler
    Waffler Forum Participant Posts: 149
    edited January 2018 #10

    Depends on the type of omni directional. We had an Avtex one and the only times it worked was when the transmitted signal was vertical. Even within sight of the main transmitter it did not work because they transmit horizontally.  We have a status directional which is called a log aerial. The poles on it, hidden inside, are different sizes so that at least one will pick up a signal and another will act as a reflector to enhance the signal. With the supplied amplifier not failed to deliver in the last 5 years. The new one we have (2017) does not have a signal strength meter built in like the old one so I have downloaded an app on my phone , Antenna Aligner, which has worked well.  By the way I told the supplying dealer that the aerial was not fit for purpose and threatened to sue them. The directional was fitted!!!!.