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Is Cox scrambling OTA TV signals to get more customers away from free TV?
I have sent letters to the FCC asking to rent equipment or if they can see why my OTA TV gets scrambled on weekends from around noon time Saturday until early on Monday afternoon. I have a very good rotary antenna on my roof that I installed years ago. I am a master electrician and new digital TV OTA (over-the-air) has a better picture than cable. After sending a couple of letters to the FCC I noticed that my TV was no longer getting pixelated signals but that only lasted a few weeks. Last night 6/7/2023 my picture started up again with pixelization on all channels. This morning I rescanned my TV and was receiving 58 channels. This afternoon I am getting zero! ** can this be possible without outside interference? I am betting that Coc cable has something to do with this! Any thoughts?
DRVEGAS
Valued Contributor
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410 Messages
2 years ago
How can you be getting scrambled channels using an OTA antenna? Are you referring to the Cox cable local channels or your OTA channels? What city are you in?
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Lovemylab
Contributor III
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136 Messages
2 years ago
I don't know any practical way Cox could scramble OTA signals. Have you checked the tower directions recently? In my area (Omaha) several of the stations quit using the towers northeast of here and switched to towers almost due south. With a Yagi design you can't pick those up without rotating the antenna. I actually swapped to a less directional antenna. (I've worked with rotors before, especially for long range FM. It's convenient with a single device but not so handy with multiple devices. These days the Yagi provides a dedicated feed to one room, and the dipole feeds the old amplifier which feeds the coax running around the house.
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WiderMouthOpen
Esteemed Contributor III
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3.5K Messages
2 years ago
Could it have something to do with ATSC 3.0 DRM?
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Darkatt
Honored Contributor
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1.9K Messages
2 years ago
There is no way that Cox can scramble OTA signals, since this signals are broadcast from the network broadcast station themselves, and have nothing to do with Cox Communications. I would look for some kind of localized EMI or RF interference.
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