A spinning satellite could aim no more than a third of its solar cells toward the sun at one time, and
the omnidirectional antennas would broadcast signals indiscriminately in all directions, wasting a lot of the power the satellite collected.
The narrow beam means there is less «overspill» of radiation than with existing
omnidirectional antennas.
If you want the maximum amount of channels, and you're going to mount an outdoor antenna to your home, you will want
an omnidirectional antenna.
My question is, will a powerful outdoor
omnidirectional antenna be pretty likely to get me some additional channels from Greenville, SC (Laff), and Anderson, SC (Comet, Bounce, Grit), or do you advise something different?
The third option, called
an omnidirectional antenna, is worth a little more explaining.
Available in either black or white,
this omnidirectional antenna works well with UHF and high VHF channels, but not with low VHF ones (channels 2 - 6).
Well,
this omnidirectional Antenna with its circular design allows you to do just that!
Not exact matches
Flat
antennas are
omnidirectional (no aiming required in most cases), easy to hide, paintable, and inexpensive since they can be made very cheaply.
I'm thinking that I will definitely need the an outdoor
antenna, probably
Omnidirectional.