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Anything else will require some imagination. While there is still some, I think this device eliminated any blockiness that existed due to the signal being split out.I cannot speak to the long cable runs as my longest run is only about 50 feet, but that run does look great. My only hangup is that it's pretty clear the manufacturer wants you to use their utility boxes for wiring. Once I plugged this in, I noticed a definite improvement on my analog cable signal (signal that doesn't come through a box). So if you keep all your RG6/cat5 hubs in a cabinet, you may find this a little frustrating to mount.Otherwise a great piece of equipment. But I also noticed a significant difference with how digital and HD looked afterward as well. And since that was my greatest concern, I would have been happy there. What I noticed most was the lack of 'blockiness' that tends to occur with fast moving video images.
i had a 6 way splitter where the cable came in the house.when i replaced it with the powered spliter it was job done,move on with life, tv problems over. i am on anolog cable, split 6 ways. i had tried several in line amps with no help. i had a grainey picture with a slow rolling line thru it.
My wife was skeptical. The cable enters on one end and then splits in three directions. (reception was not as good on higher channels) I couldn't understand because the lower channels were OK, not perfect but OK. From there it splits off to the rest of the house with a cable to each jack.
My house has 14 cable jacks, I installed the cable myself, burried from the street into my house. I installed this video amp splitter and have been amazed how much it improved the reception on all my TV's. Someone told me a video amp was what I needed. The house is 80 ft.
The problem I had was some of the channals on the TV's past the machinal room were fuzzy. My wife apologized for doubting. long. Two cables go to TV jacks, the third cables runs 25 feet to my machinal room.
The amp is designed to fit on an Open House video mounting and If that is what you have you are good to go. This video amp cleared up some lousy pictures on my cable TV. It was packaged on a hardboard that can be used as a templet to make a mount. But if you do not have Open House mountings you will need to fabricate something, which in my case, was not very difficult. I had several splitters daisey chained to feed my cable signal to five TV tuners and the picture was pretty poor. This amp cleared up the picture noise and wavy lines and has worked great for several weeks now.The only problem is mounting it.
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