SpaceGazelle wrote:Move house. You're welcome.
djchump wrote:When you say "regular aerial", is it one of the newer, larger digital style aerials, or an old school analogue-era aerial? When things were going digital we had to upgrade our aerial as our reception was shit, much better now. Probably set you back £150 or something. You could try a signal booster first I suppose - I got one and it'll give you a bump from something like 60% signal strength to 70%, but I doubt it'll help much if the strength is that low to start with.
Elmlea wrote:But I just did that!SpaceGazelle wrote:Move house. You're welcome.
You need to get eyes-on and see what your actual aerial is up there.Elmlea wrote:No idea; I've never looked at the roof! Across the street they have larger, digital-style ones. Here I have no idea and no idea if it's even shared across other homes in the block or if it's individual.
Elmlea wrote:Do indoor aerials ever work? Signal strength is literally 10%, so I'm not sure if a booster will achieve anything with that?
Don't throw away that used toothbrush, it can be used to clean those hard to reach bits when washing your car wheels.M0stly harm13ss wrote:A 'Take a Break' style top tip from Live there... Also an old sock can make a great and free tea strainer.
adored wrote:Cost us £90 for a new digital aerial, fitted. If it's an old aerial then you'll probably need a 4G filter if you're not replacing it.
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