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Antennas
To enjoy a clearer picture, use an outdoor antenna. The following is a brief explanation of
the types of connections that are used for a coaxial cable. If your outdoor antenna uses
a 75-ohm coaxial cable with an F-type connector, plug it into the antenna terminal at the
rear of the TV set.
1. A 75-ohm system is generally a round
cable with F-type connector that can
easily be attached to a terminal without
tools (Commercially available).
2. A 300-ohm system is a flat “twin-lead”
cable that can be attached to a 75-ohm
terminal through a 300/75-ohm adapter
(Commercially available).
When connecting the RF cable to the TV set,
do not tighten F-type connector with tools.
If tools are used, it may cause damage to
your TV set. (The breaking of internal circuit,
etc.)
Preparation
Connecting Antenna Cable
• Connect the antenna cable to the TV using one of the methods in the illustration as
shown (
"
,
#
,
$
or
%
).
F-type connector
300-ohm twin-lead cable (flat)
F-type connector
75-ohm coaxial cable
(round)
75-ohm coaxial cable
300-ohm twin-lead cable
75-ohm coaxial cable (round)
75-ohm coaxial cable
IN OUT
300-ohm
twin-lead cable
VHF
ANTENNA
UHF
ANTENNA
Combiner
(commercially available)
300/75-ohm adapter
(commercially available)
300-ohm twin-lead cable (at)
75-ohm coaxial cable (round)
Cable TV lead-In
Cable without a CATV converter1
Coaxial cable
(commercially available)
Coaxial cable
(commercially available)
Home Antenna
terminal (75-ohm)
Home Antenna
terminal (75-ohm)
or
or
VHF/UHF antenna2
Combination VHF/UHF antenna3
Separate VHF/UHF antenna4
To TV antenna terminal