FCC maps digital TV coverage on its Web site
Last week, more than 400 stations nationwide turned off their analog signals and went all digital as part of the DTV transition—and many consumers suddenly lost TV channels. That’s because digital signals can be harder to pick up by antenna than their analog counterparts. The Federal Communications Commission has launched a Web site http://www.fcc.gov/
mb/engineering/maps/ that might indicate whether you’re likely to have trouble.
Enter your ZIP code or address, and you’ll see a page listing your local television stations. (Click on image at right for a sample.) Click on a station and a box will pop up showing basic information about the station, including its direction and distance from your house—information you’ll need to choose and use the best type of antenna. It takes a little time for the stations in your area to load, so be patient.
At the bottom of the pop-up box, clicking on "Gain/Loss Map" will take you to a color-coded map (bottom image) showing where the station's signal is strong and weak. Green indicates good signal strength, yellow is moderate, orange is weak, and red means no signal. The maps are small, but you can enlarge them by clicking anywhere on the map.
The map also shows the outer limits of a station's broadcast signal, a dashed-line for analog coverage and a solid line for digital. This demonstrates very clearly that digital signals do not travel as far or cover exactly the same "footprint" as analog signals. That's why some households need a more powerful antenna to pick up the stations they got before, or find that they can’t pull in the digital version of a station at all.
Many more consumers will undoubtedly discover these inconvenient truths of physics as the rest of the country's television stations switch off their analog signals over the next few months. All full-powered stations are supposed to discontinue analog broadcasts by June 12th.
A site called AntennaWeb.org (sponsored by the Consumer Electronics Association and National Association of Broadcasters) offers a similar analysis of signal strength for specific addresses. Interestingly, it suggested signals for the address we provided would be weaker than the FCC site indicated.
In the end, the only way to be sure is to try it yourself. Start with an inexpensive indoor UFH/VHF antenna and tinker with placement and position before you even think about buying anything more expensive.
—Bob Williams

Previous


















Posted by: everett whitney | May 1, 2009 8:17:02 AM
TO: GLENN - " FCC MAP is a Joke ..."
IS your outside antenna the appropriate type for the TV Band(s) used in your Market?
Some - including ours - need an outside "combo" - meaning both Hi VHF + UHF - and - others can do well with strictly an outside UHF Band only unit!
"IF" that FCC site didn't "DO" well, have you attempted to use the alternate one ?
www.antennaweb.org
ONLY input your ZIP -leave all else blank - do check digital only & listed WILL be all your available DTV Stations, Compass Directions, which Band(s) & by a color coding, appropriate family of outside antenna.
www.solidsignal.com
stocks & displays great images of essentially all antennas possible.
DO connect that outside antenna w/ only QUAD RG-6 Coax in an un-spliced length directly to the HDTV and/or Converter & all WILL "GO!"
everett
Posted by: Glenn | Apr 27, 2009 1:56:27 PM
The DTV map is a joke. The maps show the analog and projected digital signal. Well the digital signal is wrong. When stations go from analog to digital, the will be broadcasting with LESS power, but should provide similar coverage. --NOT SO. Just do a search for WETA. The digital signal should be good, but it is not. I have GREAT difficulty piking up WETA.