Sunday, January 24, 2010

What's the difference between analog TV with rabbit ears and TV connected to analog cable?

How are they different in terms of picture image quality? Or reception? Do they look different from each other?What's the difference between analog TV with rabbit ears and TV connected to analog cable?
Rabbit ears and analog cable contain the same analog signal except one is connected with a cable directly and the other pulls the signal from the air, more susceptible to signal loss and interference.





They shouldn't look different if both have adequate signal, though since the digital conversion, analog signal is a thing of the past since both are probably not used anymore.What's the difference between analog TV with rabbit ears and TV connected to analog cable?
Analog cable is slightly below analog broadcast, because they have to reduce the bandwidth to fit all the channels in there beside each other.


Broadcast had room to allow full bandwidth video and audio.





They also had a different channel layout, in which cable had a lot of channels that in open air are used for two-way and non-TV broadcast services. Some cable systems also use the 88-108 band for TV instead of radio.
Hi,


It basically means this is what you get to watch for free and this is what you get to watch for paying the money. The whole point ot the cable system was so they can make money off of you by offering channels of your choice and delivering them to you by a cable. If they put those channels on air, then everybody can pick them up without paying anything.


Here in Canada, nobody like over the air channels, most people have either cable or satellite.


Thanks for your question.


Have a nice day!

No comments:

Post a Comment