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The McDuory Outdoor Digital TV Antenna delivers crystal-clear HDTV signals up to 150 miles away, supporting both UHF and VHF frequencies. Featuring a motorized 360-degree rotation controlled by an infrared remote, it optimizes reception effortlessly. With dual TV outputs, it powers two TVs simultaneously without a splitter. Designed for easy, tool-free installation with included mounting pole and 40ft RG6 cable, it’s built tough to withstand harsh weather and lightning, making it the ultimate outdoor antenna for premium free broadcast TV.
Brand Name | McDuory |
Item Weight | 6.59 pounds |
Product Dimensions | 5.19 x 4.82 x 16.5 inches |
Country of Origin | China |
Item model number | WA-2608+POLE |
Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
Color Name | Silver, Black, Grey |
Specification Met | UL |
Impedance | 75 Ohm |
E**S
Great Antenna - Picked up Over 50 Channels with it Setup in my Dining Room
I bought this antenna to replace the indoor pad type I purchased a few months ago. It did okay but the stations faded out now and then and they were not real clear at times. I even lost one the other day and no matter where I moved the antenna I could not get my Peoples Court....what !!!!!I just got this antenna today and put it together in about 10 minutes. No tools required, just snaps together - except for the bracket where you need some pliers or a crescent wrench. I clamped it to my dining room table and pointed it toward the towers nearest me. Going through the walls and some thick pine trees in front of my house, I picked up over 50 channels. All the ones I wanted and more. Super clear HD pictures too.It's winter here now in Michigan so I was not looking forward to climbing a ladder in the cold and mounting it on the roof somewhere. For now that is on hold. I'll just find somewhere I can mount it out of the way inside and wait until warmer weather to do the final installation. I'll probably try if in my attic too and if it works as well there, I'll just leave it.Very pleased with the product. Easy to assemble, light weight and very well made. Haven't tried the remote control yet, but the console control worked fine. Very quiet operation. I don't even see a need to rotate it since I have all the stations I wanted. Since I dropped cable this was the only missing piece. Worth every penny.Highly recommend this antenna for indoor or outdoor use. Especially if your single like me and can just clamp it to your dining room table :)
D**E
Works great as an antenna - but rotation function is pretty silly
Overall, this is a really good antenna. I didn't even need the instructions to assemble it - lots of parts but it was very intuitive to snap it all together. I already had a "roof tower" that I use for other sorts of antennas on my garage (man cave) room so within an hour of receiving the box I had the antenna on the roof and in the air. The included 40' cable was EXACTLY the right length out of the box.I really like this antenna for how well it receives - better than my previous one.But the silly part is the rotator - it's almost useless unless you have someone outside on a cell phone telling you when it's aimed about right. There is NO indicator on the control box for where it's pointing, and no actual directional control. It just goes one direction until 360 degrees, then it turns around and goes the other way. And it turns pretty FAST so you really need someone outside on a phone telling you when to let go of the button ("stop").I realize it's a pretty cheap setup so in that light, I give it a full 5 stars - just know the rotation function is just not very useful if you're trying to point a specific direction to then scan for channels. Were the price higher (like over $100) I'd vote it down a star or three. But at the price it is, and given how well it pulls in signals, I'm happy with it.
R**D
Works OK, has a few quirks.
Update- 4/25/22 (bottom of review):I'll start off by saying that I didn't expect much from this product. I installed it on a cabin about 100 miles south of Dallas, about 60 miles east of Waco, a couple hundred miles north of Houston, and about 50-60 miles west of Tyler. Kind of in the middle of nowhere. So I chose this product based on its advertised range of 150 miles.I have this installed right at 20' above the ground, thinking this would be OK since the terrain is fairly flat in the region.Assembly was very easy, I had it put together in about 15 minutes, and installed about an hour later.Powered it up, and pointed it west toward Waco since they are the biggest market with the least amount of likely interference between us. I am able to get 17 channels total from them, a couple of them duplicate. And it seems to require a minor amount of adjustment to get one half, or the other half, to come in clear and strong.Next I pointed it toward Dallas, which is the largest market feasible, but with two decent size towns between us as sources of potential interference. After a very brief time of searching I could not get a single channel. Time will tell if I just wasn't being meticulous enough in my efforts.So lastly I pointed it at Tyler, and got 7 channels. Smallest market, but least likely for any interference. This is the position in which the antenna will likely live the most, because I get MeTV, Grit, and Antenna Network, yeah, I'm an old fart who likes vintage tv shows.So overall I'm not dissatisfied at all. In fact, somewhat impressed for the money. I do think that I'll be able to fine tune and get some Dallas channels to eventually, just haven't yet.One thing that is tedious is, when adjusting/rotating the antenna either using the remote or the button on the receiver unit, the antenna does not rotate the same way as the button might indicate. In fact, it's about a 50/50 shot as to which way it's rotating. This makes tuning in channels by yourself very frustrating. Now, given the fact that I paid less than $40 for this thing, it actually gets reception, and does actually rotate as well, I feel I got my money's worth from it. I figure if it lasts over a year before it breaks somehow, I'd be inclined to buy it again.Update:Well, Just under a year old and it no longer receives any channels at all. This past weekend, in an effort to get better reception, I raised the antenna an additional 10' from ground level putting it right at 30' off the ground. It had stopped getting any channels for more than a choppy sentence or two over a month ago. So I went thru the effort to guy-wire the mast and add 10' to it. Still nothing, so I'm guessing either the antenna or amplifier are faulty. It still rotates, still rather unpredictably as mentioned above, but that function still works, surprisingly. So I'm at a crossroad now, buy another and see how long it lasts? Try another economical version> Or drop a few hundred bucks for a nice setup? At this point the hassle of dealing with it yearly is pushing me toward a more expensive but more permanent solution.Not going to drop the star rating because it did work for a while, just not the full year mentioned above.
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2 months ago
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