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10-26-2018 12:00 AM - edited 10-26-2018 09:24 PM
I saw this advertised and am wondering if it is another "too good to be true" item. According to the article the antenna can be attached to your television set and you can get 100 channels with no monthly cost. I saw it for a special at 45% off, $69.99 for two. We have three television sets, one of which is seldom used but if we buy three the cost is $99.99. Anyone out there familiar with the item? If so I would love to hear from you.
10-26-2018 01:37 AM
I have been receiving emails for this in my spam lately. I,too, am curious but since it is going into spam I wonder about it. Would also like to know about it.
10-26-2018 02:34 AM
The reviews are very poor, and reviewers were refused refunds.
I would steer clear of this product .
10-26-2018 02:35 AM
@Lindsays Grandma. If you'll go to the electronics forum and do a search on "cutting the cord", you'll find many ideas on what many of us have done to get rid of satellite and cable.
There are many interior antennas on the market and, generally, there are not too good to be true. Many of us have purchased the Mohu Antenna at either Walmart or Amazon. It's a flat white thing that looks like a piece of poster board. It has a cable that you screw into the appropriate place in the back of your TV, then you hang it on the wall high in the room you're using. You switch your source to "antenna", let your TV run through the channels and you're in business.
These antennas work best in urban areas. You buy the size that corresponds to your approximate distance from the local transmitters. Mine are about 15 miles away so I was able to use the cheapest which was $12., on Amazon. You need one for each TV.
I get about 50 channels including NBC, ABC, CBS, PBS, QVC, Q2, HSN, JTV. I get the local news on the network channels which I get in HD. There is a channel that shows nothing but the national weather. There are many religious, Spanish and channels showing old sitcoms. The Justice Channel, which shows older crime shows 24/7 has become my "go to" when nothing else is on. I do lose some channels temporarily when the weather is bad as our transmitters are atop a 10,300ft mountain. The ones I lose are some of the UHF channels.
I believe Mohu Antenna has a website where you can input you zip code to determine how many channels are available in your area. Little, unmechanical me connected these antennas myself, with no help or advice, in about 15 minutes. They are a wonderful thing.
10-26-2018 04:27 AM
I do know that if you are in a mountainous area, you probably will get very little - if anything. Several people who have vacation cottages where we do tried these types of things and were unable to get any channels for any length of time and then only about 2 that the signal went in and out constantly. When they called complaining, the company told all this to them and said only good for those in larger cities without mountains around. They were not refunded their money either.
10-26-2018 07:57 AM
With any anntena it is all about location. The location you live, the location where the anntena is placed, the location of the broadcast towers, etc....Also found out the weather conditions will determine your reception. Sometimes it is a catch 22.
10-26-2018 09:48 AM
Never heard of it but my commonsense is that it isn't worth the money and it won't live up to it's claims. You can get an Amazon Fire Stick for $29.99 this week. The regular price is $39.99.
10-26-2018 09:58 AM - edited 10-26-2018 10:17 AM
As Kachina wrote, please do a forum search for "cut the cord".
Also search "rabbit ears", since the most recent discussion was under that.
I currently receive about 75 channels.
I've never paid to watch TV.
I have 2 newer, but very cheap antennas, and I also use a 50 yr old, metal telescoping antenna, which works just as well.
The magic isn't in the antenna. It's in you're proximity to multiple TV broadcasters, and the variety of programming they broadcast.
10-26-2018 09:23 PM
@Kachina624 wrote:@Lindsays Grandma. If you'll go to the electronics forum and do a search on "cutting the cord", you'll find many ideas on what many of us have done to get rid of satellite and cable.
There are many interior antennas on the market and, generally, there are not too good to be true. Many of us have purchased the Mohu Antenna at either Walmart or Amazon. It's a flat white thing that looks like a piece of poster board. It has a cable that you screw into the appropriate place in the back of your TV, then you hang it on the wall high in the room you're using. You switch your source to "antenna", let your TV run through the channels and you're in business.
These antennas work best in urban areas. You buy the size that corresponds to your approximate distance from the local transmitters. Mine are about 15 miles away so I was able to use the cheapest which was $12., on Amazon. You need one for each TV.
I get about 50 channels including NBC, ABC, CBS, PBS, QVC, Q2, HSN, JTV. I get the local news on the network channels which I get in HD. There is a channel that shows nothing but the national weather. There are many religious, Spanish and channels showing old sitcoms. The Justice Channel, which shows older crime shows 24/7 has become my "go to" when nothing else is on. I do lose some channels temporarily when the weather is bad as our transmitters are atop a 10,300ft mountain. The ones I lose are some of the UHF channels.
I believe Mohu Antenna has a website where you can input you zip code to determine how many channels are available in your area. Little, unmechanical me connected these antennas myself, with no help or advice, in about 15 minutes. They are a wonderful thing.
Thank you so much Kachiina624. I will definitely check out the electronics forum and everything else you suggested. Somehow I feel we can always count on you to be here for us.
10-26-2018 09:37 PM
Electronics is an excellent start, but do a forum search.
This subject comes up frequently, under a variety of thread titles, and can be posted in a few other forums.
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