With great difficulty as the minimum frequency the antenna would work on is 470 MHz. You might be able to cut it down to work on 1296 MHz but you would also have to remove the inbuilt 5G filter - which is what is causing those jagged lines on the display.
@@GordonHudson a video on the process would be interesting considering terrestrial tv antennas are plentiful full and cheap. Just a thought and I don’t see many other videos going deeper than it won’t work. How many ways can you make it work? I think is a more challenging question.
This questionI've needed to know for a week. I'm so glad you exist
Teach me to code in kotlin?
Muy difícil cable sordo no Toto por calle
How about what it takes convert the tv antenna to work ham bands.
A much more interesting topic.
With great difficulty as the minimum frequency the antenna would work on is 470 MHz. You might be able to cut it down to work on 1296 MHz but you would also have to remove the inbuilt 5G filter - which is what is causing those jagged lines on the display.
@@GordonHudson a video on the process would be interesting considering terrestrial tv antennas are plentiful full and cheap.
Just a thought and I don’t see many other videos going deeper than it won’t work.
How many ways can you make it work? I think is a more challenging question.