Yep,
I'm with Vlad on this one. The real answer on this is ...... it depends. The best performing mobile DTV installations I have seen have been very carefully researched and set up. The most recent one I came across used an omnidirectional (and amplified) dome antenna in the spot usually reserved for the GPS antenna on the roof of the car.
Good results have been obtained with discriminating antennas (two antennas and electronic smarts to figure out where the strongest signal is coming from) and a high quality DTV tuner.
Around the big cities (not right inside the concrete canyons) you might get good reception from a simple on-glass antenna (or even the existing glass mounted radio antenna) and the included tuner. You might also get absolutely crap results.
FWIW the factory supplied DTV systems all seem to provide more than adequate results. These tend to use the two discriminating antenna setup. If your ride didn't come fitted with one of these systems then the next para applies.
If you really want and need good digital TV in your ride, be prepared to spend lots of time and oxford's to get a good result. Experimentation is the key here because no two cars or systems are alike.
That's my 5c worth.
Cheers,
Iain
Iain
VK3BIT
03MY Range Rover HSE Td6
Nudge Bar, Sat-Nav, Cargo Barrier, IC-450, IC-706 and Codan 9350, DT-90 DBS, Chipped!
LROCV DTU member
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