Robert Urbanek
Platinum Member
This evening I was watching the Michigan St. vs Michigan game on the ABC broadcast channel on my 32-inch ROKU TV. I was sitting about eight feet away on my sofa. The set is connected to an indoor antenna facing a window about four feet above the TV. Behind me to the right, about four feet away on a small stand, is my WI-FI router.
Sometimes I do not get good reception on ABC but this evening I was getting a good signal. However, as I got up to go to the bathroom, the signal started to break up with those typical blips and jagged lines. When I returned and sat down the strong signal resumed. About 15 minutes later I again left the sofa to refill my pill dispenser on my dining table, which is an additional eight feet from the sofa. Again, the signal began to break up but resumed when I finished my task and returned to the sofa.
Is there something about the physical composition of the human body that helps “ground” a broadcast signal? Or is something else going on?
Sometimes I do not get good reception on ABC but this evening I was getting a good signal. However, as I got up to go to the bathroom, the signal started to break up with those typical blips and jagged lines. When I returned and sat down the strong signal resumed. About 15 minutes later I again left the sofa to refill my pill dispenser on my dining table, which is an additional eight feet from the sofa. Again, the signal began to break up but resumed when I finished my task and returned to the sofa.
Is there something about the physical composition of the human body that helps “ground” a broadcast signal? Or is something else going on?