Tired of paying Comcast slightly over $30 a month for 5 broadcast networks and little else, I embraced OTAR: over the air reception of television. I built an antenna, ascended a learning curve and 90% of the time the signals arrive “free to air.”
I do not recommend
such self-help for anyone living in an area considered fringe at best. Penn State is centrally located “in the middle
of nowhere” with only one local broadcast television signal translator. The other stations lie from 20-75 miles away,
typically separated by a line of mountains.
Digital signals appear crystal clear, but can evaporate for no apparent reason. Actually, the reasons include a slight
reduction in signal strength, weather conditions, or a change in antenna angle,
a risk anytime a cold front comes barreling from the northwest.
Prior
antenna designs did not work for me, because they combined VHF and UHF
reception, something I considered necessary because I need to receive channels
3, 6 and 10. Wrong! With repacking of television spectrum to
accommodate more wireless broadband, broadcasters agreed to change frequencies
for a significant cut in auction revenues paid by cellular radio carriers. I did not know that VHF broadcasters get to
keep their low channel designations even though television sets (and antennas) typically
need to tune to much higher UHF channels.
Software using the Program and System Information Protocol instructs
television sets on which frequency to receive a broadcast television signal and
what possibly different channel to display.
Who knew?
In any event,
I needed to build a UHF only antenna optimized for tuning in the higher and
more volatile frequencies. I made the
plunge without the anticipated “win back” attempts from Comcast. I guess they gladly parted company with a low
value customer knowing that I still need their 6-18 MHz of broadband access
spectrum.
If only
Comcast priced its basic tier at a fair price, I would have stayed. Instead, they regularly raised the base rate,
then added a broadcast channel retransmission fee, then started to charge for
the first set top box and also snuck in a few “shipping, handling, shop fee”
type charges. They could have offered a
few more channels as well. Is it profit
maximizing for Comcast to include CSPAN-1 in the basic tier, but not CSPAN 2
and 3? They could have reduced the per
channel cost below $4 a month!