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HOLLAND HDA-1000 1 Giga Hertz 34 db Gain Amplifier

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Price$189.95
Manufacturer CodeHDA-1000
Stock Level: 28
Qty
AvailabilityUsually ships in 24 Hrs

Highlights

Lo Distortion, Hi Channel
34 dB Gain
Wide Frequency
Range (54-1000 MHz)
Passive Return (5-42 MHz)
Push-Pull, SMD Circuitry
High Output

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Holland HDA-1000 HDTV DTV 34 dB Gain/ Passive Return Digital CATV Amplifier
The HDA-1000 is a unique amplifier combining the features of our push-pull high output designs with a wide 1000 MHz range, making this amplifier applicable to CATV, Hi Speed Internet and TV Antenna Home and Office distribution. (Forward Gain 34 dB Return Gain -2.5 dB). The “SMD” surface mount design insures reliability and performance at the highest frequencies. This Amplifier is for Indoor or Environmentally Protected Shelter use only.

spec. sheet



Spec. Sheet

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If you have a very large home (maybe with separate additions) or a MDU property with 10's and 100's of outlets like Apartment Buildings, Hotels, Motels and the like!!! This is the Distribution amplifier you've been looking for. It is return band passive to maintain Modem and Subscriber set-top terminal connections. In addition, it comes with an adjustable Gain control, so you can find that sweet spot and save (in reserve) some gain for future additions and signal splitters, or balance the amplifier out to feed another amp at the other end of a cable segment to extend your systems reach to another building. With HD Digital Signals, the Signal Level is actually lower than the analog, and with increased Channel Capacity, not enough is there to feed your SMATV (Satellite Master Antenna TV) or MATV (Master Antenna TV System with Off-Airs only) Distribution System. Check Your Picture quality where the Cable TV feed enters your complex, if it's good there, you can replace connectors, cable and splitters to bring your installation up to the newest specifications. If you are feeding numerous TV sets with Set-Top Converters or Digital Boxes with Pay Per View Movies (this Amp can feed Ton's o' TV's), Cable Modems and/or long Distances, use this Amplifier before the Splitter to maintain Signal Quality. If the Picture quality is Poor at the Feed point of your property (the Cable Company usually has a gray box used as a Demarcation Point for this Purpose), call your Cable TV Company, so they can effect repair.

 

 

 

 

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Amplifiers

All of these Amplifiers will Pass HDTV, DTV and Analog Signals. Those that have a Specific Band-Pass of up to at least 890 MHz are good for VHF/UHF and FM also... Making Them Suitable for Home use of Off-Air Antenna Television Carriage. Those Amplifiers with Band-Pass Specific to 2150 MHz means that they Boost Satellite Signals... If these same Amplifiers have a Start Frequency of between 5 and 54 MHz, they are Wide-Band and Carry Cable TV or Off-Air in Addition to the Satellite Signals. If the Star Frequency is around 950 MHz, then they are Solely for Satellite Carriage.

Amplifiers- Should be utilized for these two reasons:

  • To increase already adequate signal as to pre-emphasize the level to balance out losses after the amplifier such as splitters and cable in the distribution system on its way to various TVs in the house, and
  • To maintain Signal level to noise at the origin (your antenna) so that low signal levels from far away stations are not lost in a longer than average cable run to the location in the house where the signals would be further distributed to the TVs desired.

About the Numbers

Amplifiers and Preamplifiers come with various gain numbers. Old Analog signals needed a high Carrier to Noise to get a high Signal to Noise Ratio of the Picture on your TV set, it was a one to one relationship and more was sometimes better. Digital Signals are lower in amplitude in comparison to Analog (a benefit) and that commensurately, the threshold at the TV is lower for a perfectly good picture. Very little in between, you either get a good picture or you don´t. Snow in the old analog pictures has been replaced by "Tiling" or little blocks within the picture not keeping up with the scene changes in today´s Digital TV viewing. Tiling is therefore today´s Digital Snow. It means (more often than not) that you are not far enough above the threshold of signal level into your TV to prevent little hiccups, drop-outs and interferences in signal from interrupting the Stream of Data. Remember that lots of things can happen from the Station on the way to your TV set!

Pre-Amplifiers are mistakenly used with the rational that it will bring in Stations that weren´t there before... It won´t, and what´s worse, using the same antenna and pre-amp with FM and TV stations close by (20-30 miles) may overdrive the amp and actually impede your ability to provide goods signals to you TVs. If you desire to use a pre-amplifier, don´t use a high gain when you have local stations, get one with a FM trap to keep FM radio stations from over-driving the amp and remember that today´s Digital Signals don´t need to be high to get a picture. Some Pre-amps come Band Selective as well, realizing that the difference in antenna UHF/VHF gain means that one band needs to be amplified as opposed to the other.

The gain of a Line Amplifier should be selected to zero out the loss that follows it. In other words, if you have fifty feet of cable and a two-way splitter, then a 10 db amplifier will be fine. Conversely, if you have an eight-way splitter and hundreds of feet of cable, you will need an amplifier with a higher gain. Just as in the case of a Pre-Amplifier, however, bigger is not always better.

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