Ontario
A place to discuss all the news and events taking place in the province of Ontario, Canada.
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Find out what stations you can pick up with https://www.fcc.gov/media/engineering/dtvmaps
Then check the TV Guide: https://www.tvguide.com/Listings/
applies to canada?
An amplified antenna can help. I use a 20$ one I got from the evil corp a few years back. It is fine for outdoor use. I run it out my window and onto a pole to get around / over obstructions.
Not in Toronto, but near a US market, I get anywhere between 45 and 60 channels depending on weather and such.
In Kitchener/Waterloo I would get maybe 5 or 6.
One of the fixed outdoor heavy duty HDTV antennas would always be best, but they are expensive and are not friendly in limited spaces.
One thing I have found with the small antennas is that the cord placement is as important as where you place the antenna in getting the max signals.
The packaging should also mention the range the antenna is capable of. Look for one with 100km or more.
If you're feeling really frisky, you can make your own HDTV antenna with some wood, wire, mesh/screen, and screws (and a few trivial electrical components if you want to get super frisky fancy)
If you have this kind of antenna you will only receive limited channels, as those are build to receive local feeds and wont get match channels. I don't think it will receive more.
Check this for channels that can picked up.
http://freetoronto.tv/clist.htm
https://www.hometechexperts.ca/pages/hd-tv-antenna-channel-listing
https://www.cbc.ca/frequency/index.html
Guide
https://www.ontvtonight.com/ca/guide/
~~ps: if you want to receive more channels, then you have to get a satellite dish.~~
This type of antenna exists, works way way better and can receive more channels.
What did you find when you googled it?
Probably a post on something like reddit, you know, where people ask questions, and helpful people answer, and those helpful answers show up in the results.
But, google being google, these days it's probably not what they were looking for because they used a word that confused the ai and produced no useful results.
Also, being a specific question, about a specific situation, in a specific region, by someone who hasn't had experience in the topic of their inquiry in 20 years, it may be hard to know where or how to look for relevant information and the best option is to ask real people who can provide real answers specifically relevant to the person asking.
Does that help?