I had a new Sony Bravia 8 TV earlier this year. It replaced an older Samsung non-digital set. From the start I was getting short duration (1-2s) loss of vision and sound, random with regard to timing and channel, normally twice in a short interval, then maybe again an hour or so later. Not more than a couple of times in a night’s viewing typically 2200 to 0030. This was on terrestrial TV via conventional aerial, not router. VIdeo of this event finally captured and sent to Sony’s appointed engineers who changed the motherboard to no effect.
They then suggested it was a signal fault which I am inclined to agree with because of the random nature. I brought in a local aerial engineer who diagnosed low signal quality on physical channel 28, affecting all tv channels received through it. Signal quality was dropping to around 50/100, signal strength remained 90/100. Aerial here is tuned to Crystal Palace, we are probably 30 miles away. This was isolated to the coax connection between the wall socket and the TV. He replaced this ready made cable with a heavier coax cable with old fashioned aluminium plugs; problem solved and we both congratulated ourselves. Signal quality on all channels is now 100/100 except (clearly) when it drops out but I can only measure strength/quality on the TV itself, so can never catch it when it drops out.
Except it has started doing it again, not quite so often and on stations other than physical channel 28. The TV is fed from a powered 8 way splitter in the roof, cabled to a conventional roof aerial. The splitter feeds several other TV’s, including another Sony digital one next door, a few years older and some non-digital ones which we hardly ever use. The Samsung non-digital TV which used to be on this same coax lead never had any such problem although there was some pixelation on one or two channels, mainly TV channel #8 I think. The other Sony digital TV in the next room, on a separate coax to the same splitter also has no issues.
So, apologies for the length of this story, but any ideas? I am now sure it is a signal issue but from what source? It is easy to suspect the cabling from the roof splitter to the wall socket but why doesn’t this affect other TVs, or the old TV when it was in the same room. Could there be local drops in signal quality from the transmitter due to atmospherics? - but this has been ongoing from February to June. Local interference: switching, microwaves, WHY.
Grateful for your thoughts.
They then suggested it was a signal fault which I am inclined to agree with because of the random nature. I brought in a local aerial engineer who diagnosed low signal quality on physical channel 28, affecting all tv channels received through it. Signal quality was dropping to around 50/100, signal strength remained 90/100. Aerial here is tuned to Crystal Palace, we are probably 30 miles away. This was isolated to the coax connection between the wall socket and the TV. He replaced this ready made cable with a heavier coax cable with old fashioned aluminium plugs; problem solved and we both congratulated ourselves. Signal quality on all channels is now 100/100 except (clearly) when it drops out but I can only measure strength/quality on the TV itself, so can never catch it when it drops out.
Except it has started doing it again, not quite so often and on stations other than physical channel 28. The TV is fed from a powered 8 way splitter in the roof, cabled to a conventional roof aerial. The splitter feeds several other TV’s, including another Sony digital one next door, a few years older and some non-digital ones which we hardly ever use. The Samsung non-digital TV which used to be on this same coax lead never had any such problem although there was some pixelation on one or two channels, mainly TV channel #8 I think. The other Sony digital TV in the next room, on a separate coax to the same splitter also has no issues.
So, apologies for the length of this story, but any ideas? I am now sure it is a signal issue but from what source? It is easy to suspect the cabling from the roof splitter to the wall socket but why doesn’t this affect other TVs, or the old TV when it was in the same room. Could there be local drops in signal quality from the transmitter due to atmospherics? - but this has been ongoing from February to June. Local interference: switching, microwaves, WHY.
Grateful for your thoughts.
