






📺 Elevate Your Viewing Game with RCA's Yagi Antenna!
The RCA Compact Outdoor or Attic Yagi HD TV Antenna offers an impressive 75-mile range for digital reception, supporting both VHF and UHF frequencies. Its ultra-compact design allows for easy installation in tight spaces, while its compatibility with 4K/8K TVs ensures you're ready for the future of broadcasting. With the ability to receive up to 100 channels, this antenna is perfect for any modern viewing setup.








| Impedance | 75 Ohm |
| Maximum Range | 369600 Feet |
| Number of Channels | 100 |
| Color | Silver |
J**S
Dumping Cable TV
This is my experience with this Antenna, please check all facts before trying this, I am not a professional. I bought this as part of my new TV setup so I could dump cable. So far everything has worked out well, just one small hitch.I decided to put it in my loft as that was an easier option for me. There is one thing I didn't see mentioned and so didn't know about until I opened the instructions, you have to buy some extra parts to be able to install the Antenna. It HAS to be grounded, otherwise you might find your house on fire one day. You will need to purchase a long enough length of grounding wire to go from the Antenna to a grounding point, like your electrical service ground. If you look around the Internet the IEEE has videos on the correct way to do this. You will also need two clamps, one to clamp the ground wire to the antenna and one to clamp the other end to the service panel ground. You will also need a grounding block to ground the Antenna coax cable, to prevent electrical surges.It was easy to put the Antenna in my loft and secure it to an upright beam away from all the other stuff up there. I downloaded a free Android Compass App and searched on Antennaweb for the direction of my local stations so I could point the Antenna in the right direction before I decided where to put it. I would suggest that you test your ground clamp hookup and do a dummy run of clamping the antenna before you go up in the loft, so when you get up in the heat and low light, you already know what to do, I had a couple of small problems that would have been avoided if I did that first. I secured the Antenna and hooked up the ground wire first, and then the coax, making sure it was secure and the grounding wire was tight at each connection, I scraped off some of the gray paint from the Antenna mount so that the ground clamp was metal to metal.Once everything was hooked up and secure I fed this into my existing cable TV coax run, so I could feed all the rooms without running any new cables. One thing, from what I have researched, this Antenna feed cannot share the cable Internet coax, so keep that separate if you still get your Internet that way.I tuned in my TV's by using the scan function and lots of channels appeared, the picture is very clear and better than my cable feed. There was a lot of foreign and local channels that didn't interest me, so I had to go through them and switch those off on each TV. The channels I kept are: CBS, NBC, COZI, CW, Antenna, This, ABC7, LWN, KCAL9, FOX, KCOP, BOUNCE, MOVIES, KCET, ION, ION LIFE, QUBO, KXLA, PBS SoCal, PBS OC, KDOC, METV, KLCS, PBS Kids, CREATE, KBEH.I have had this a few weeks and have not had one problem.I am also using this to feed a Homerun HD receiver that I also bought on Amazon, I will review this on the appropriate page, but this means that using an old PC running Windows Media Center, X-Boxes that I already had along with the Homerun and the Antenna, I now have the whole house hooked up with a DVR system that can record 2 channels while watching another, and playback my shows whenever I want to. Adding Amazon Prime and Netflix means that a few weeks in and I don't miss cable at all.UPDATE 12/24/13:I got rid of my Homerun and got a Tivo Roamio and it also works great with this antenna. It plugged in and I got setup with no problems. 2 Months later and I still have crystal clear reception with no dropouts.
J**R
Surprisingly powerful little antenna
UPDATE DEC 2014: I wrote this back in Sep 2011, and three years and a couple of months later, this antenna is still up in the attic doing its job. My neighbors tree has gotten "leafier" in the last few years, so I have some issues with a few rogue channels, but all the important ones I have no problems with. Great purchase.Original Review: I had to cut cable TV earlier this year due to money issues, and from about May till September I was operating with good old rabbit ears in the house. When they worked, it worked great. But I was getting fed up of the constant moving of the rabbit ears, or the twiddling of the dial to get this channel or the other. There was some sort of interference inside my house preventing them from working well enough. Once in a blue moon, I'd get lucky, find a sweet spot and get everything, but it didn't last long. I was unwilling to go on the roof for an antenna, so I was thinking about the attic.I've been around TV for a long time, and my "head" tells me that to get better reception, you need to get a bigger antenna. I figured with a large tree in my neighbor's house, as well as it being an attic, I was looking at something large up there. Specifically this (Antennas Direct DB8 Multidirectional HDTV Antenna). I was looking at getting the DB8, when a friend of mine who was going to help me by mounting it in the attic suggested I might get by with something smaller. He recommended the antenna I'm writing about now. I was initially skeptical (again, the bigger is better attitude). But I read through a ton of reviews, and there were a lot of happy people. At the time I bought it, there were 220 reviews on Amazon with an average star rating of 4.5 out of 5. That's actually a higher review than the DB8 I was looking at. So I started reading, and was thinking perhaps I'd go with this.Then while we were thinking about how to run cable, I remembered when my wife and I got the house 9.5 years ago (as of Sep 2011, when I'm writing) it was wired for Cable TV. I dropped the Cable TV, but the wires were all still there. Which meant that there was a cable run there already. So I decided to run a test. I took the same stupid $6 rabbit ears I was at the time using (RCA ANT111R Basic Indoor Antenna), and took 'em into the attic. I found the cable that went to the jack by my TV, and plugged the rabbit ears into it. Rescanned, and wow. Not only was my interference gone, it was picking up a lot more channels than I knew about. The most I got with the rabbit ears inside the house was about 35-40. It was more here. So I figured with the rabbit ears doing that much better, perhaps I didn't need the overkill DB8, and opted for this antenna, the ANT751R.Did my research beforehand. Hit up antennaweb as well as tvfool for compass directions. Personally I think tvfool has way better antenna resources than antennaweb, but that's a side story. I got it installed in the attic (you can see a picture of my installation in the photo gallery here on Amazon). The mounting was fairly painless, although I will say what others have said. It's quite a value that the antenna comes with the mounting brackets and the pole in the box. Not all antennas do. The one thing that was missing was the wood screws needed to actually bolt the bracket to whatever you're attaching it to. The instruction manual even says to use a couple of wood screws (not included). Given they gave you the more expensive pole in the box gratis, you'd think they'd throw in a few wood screws, but that's a minor quibble.Once I got it up there and hooked up, I reran a scan on the TiVo. I was bloody well amazed at what it found! The total number of channels it found was 79. Granted, several of those are inactive, or are otherwise things I don't care about. There were also a couple of channels it found which were on neither antennaweb's or tvfool's reports. Since I live right outside of Dallas, the majority of these kinds of channels are spanish speaking something or other. Given that's not my language, they're of little interest to me. What WAS of interest to me are the major networks (PBS, ABC, NBC, CBS, FOX, & one local "old UHF" channel that broadcasts Texas Rangers games).All of these channels are quite strong. Even with the large tree outside and being in an attic, the average signal strength of these channels (according to the signal strength meter on the TiVo) is around 80-85 or so. PBS is a bit low (mid 60's), but the same friend who lives about 3 miles away from me says that PBS is his weakest signal too, but it's not an issue unless there's some epic storms out, but we're probably not watching much TV at that time anyway. At least one or two of the channels that are of lesser concern to me are quite strong - I had a couple of them as high as 98 on the meter : Oh, before I forget, in the Dallas area, the majority of the antennas (especially the major networks) are in the same general area, as it's the highest point in the general D/FW metroplex. According to tvfool, I'm anywhere from 28.2 to 30.7 miles from the transmitters (except for a few rogue close ones that are about 8 or 14 miles), and they all are 80-85 or so in an attic mounted, non powered antenna.There is no signal booster on here. It's just the antenna that was in the box hooked up through a cable run that used to be used for Cable TV into my TiVo box, and then on into my HDTV, which is this, BTW. The quality is astounding. The signals are rock solid, and I have to say, I'm quite happy with my purchase of this antenna.While the old rabbit ears worked "OK" enough (especially for $6), it wasn't quite a universal solution. I'd have to fiddle with the antenna depending on what I wanted to record. Given I TiVo everything, having to worry about where the antenna was pointed meant I was back to the pre-TiVo days of caring what the broadcaster's schedules were. Didn't like that, so I looked into what became this choice of antenna. I'm quite happy with it. I suppose the only negative I could say is that the antenna is sold as an outdoor antenna. When I was putting it together, I felt like it wouldn't hold up to extreme winds, and things of that nature outside. It works great, but if left outside to the elements, I'm not sure how well it would hold up. But as an attic antenna, it won't have to deal with any of that, so it should last a good long time up there.I was inititally concerned that this being a "cheaper" antenna wouldn't function well enough as one that was into the $100 range or so. I was wrong. This works really quite well for me.
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