
Channel Master CM 3018 UHF / VHF / FM HDTV Antenna - 60 mile range (CM3018) Product Description:
- Reception Range: Channels 2 thru 69 up to 60 miles
- Picks up UHF, VHF, FM and HD
- Easy Installation
- Number of Elements: 30
- Optimized for HDTV and Digital FM Signals
- Antenna Size: 152 x 95 x 22 Inches
- Reception Range: Up to 100 miles
- Superior signal strength in weak signal locations
Product Description
The Channel Master CM 3020 is a pre-assembled outdoor TV antenna which will receive UHF and HD signals. This antenna has a signal range of 100 miles and will pick up available local digital and HD signals. With an HD television you will pick up any crystal clear HD signals being broadcast in your area.
Customer Reviews
Most helpful customer reviews
29 of 29 people found the following review helpful.Exceptional Reception
By Michael L. Andrews
After much research and trying the Winguard antenna that DirectTV sells, plus an amplified indoor antenna from Radio Shack, I did my research and came upon this gem.I live 36.7 miles from the transmiting station and have never been able to receive ABC off the air in HD. My receiver showed about 23% reception with the DirectTV antenna. Upon installing this antenna and pointing on the correct azimuth, my ABC reception went to over 90%. I flawlessly get all the major networks off the air and in HD.I also found this model about ten bucks cheaper at my local Lowes store.If you're using the antennaweb.org to determine your antenna needs, this one prints the colored pie chart right on the box, which the outdoor Radio Shack antenna did not do. They also print the db gain on the spec page on channel master's website. BTW, this one covers all the way to the Violent range.I noticed that Channel Master's web page specs showed a range of 40 miles for this antenna, but when I picked it up at Lowes the box said 30 miles. Being 36.7 miles away I was worried....needlessly. Reception is excellent.The only draw back is the size. My wife nearly fainted when I put this thing on the roof. She thinks I'm trying to contact an alien mothership or something. Actually, once it was on the roof on my 2 story house it didn't look too bad. If the HOA complains I do have room in the attic to put it.
8 of 8 people found the following review helpful.Great antenna
By buyer
Initially I bought the db8 antenna which did great on UHF and the upper VHF. I was able to get channel 2 with some drop-outs but once I used an amplifier (DB8) and a splitter, I completely lost the channel. That channel had about a <50% signal strength before the amp or the splitter. I decided I wanted to go with a better VHF antenna since the cm-7778 amp will allow me to combine inputs form two antennas. Once I connected it, it worked flawlessly. The strength after the amp and the splitter jumped from 23% to 79%. The only drawback is that channel 7 which used to be 85% with the DB8, dropped to about 75% which is fine with me since with a digital signal you either receive a channel or you don't! I believe that is due to the fact that the 3018 is directional and it wasn't exactly facing the channel 7 towers.I am assuming a lot of folks are trying to do the same thing that I did which is get a good VHF/UHF to 4 different TV outlets so I am going to list what I used.First problem would be which amp and how would I power the amp. I went with the channel master 7778. The great thing about it is that you can put the power supply inside the house and it will send the power through the cable line to the amp outdoors. The trick is you have to use a "power pass through splitter". The one that I used is sold by amazon. Do a search for "4-Way Digital Cable and Satellite Splitters". If you live very far from the tower, you can try the CM 7777 which has a slightly better gain but could result in an overload if you live close.For the antenna choices, it depends on your location. In my case I am about 40 miles away from the towers. I went with the DB8 for the UHF channels and the Channel Master 3018 for the VHF. I recommend going with two antennas because the DB8 is not directional and it does not have to face the towers and the 3018 is. The DB8 has about 75 miles range for UHF. The 3018 has 35(as per the box). For VHF, the DB8 is unclear, and the 3018 has a 60miles. If you only care about UHF (channels 14 and up), the DB8 would be just fine. If you live far from the towers, you can go with one of the higher end deep fringe antennas from channel master. It doesn't do any good to spend more money on a bigger bulkier antenna if you really don't need it.
13 of 15 people found the following review helpful.Bad material for good Antenna
By K.Kiss
It is a good one but not suitable for outdoor. I had this product for last 40 days and during summer its black plastic material gets crack due to heat. Now the elements are hanging on wires and swinging when wind blows. It is not good for environment looks dirty shows cheap quality antenna. The company covers warranty for 90 days. Look like its life is 90 days and after that you are looking again to buy new.KK
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