Andrew Rossmann said:
The age of the TV alone isn't a good clue. It depends on the brand and
model. My parents have an old 12" Zenith from the early/mid 80's that
receives all channels fine.
I have an RCA CTC185A7 which I use on Comcast digital cable. I
don't even bother with the set's own tuner--just connected the cable
box to the TV, set the unit's tuner on channel 4, and that was it.
As to connecting a so-called "cable ready" TV of 1990 or earlier
vintage to cable, then finding the auto-scan doesn't find channels
above 61 or so, I agree with the person who suggested using a VCR as a
cable tuner. A friend of mine has a small Panasonic TV (1980s vintage
or so, I would guess--it's one of those cute little AC/battery 5"
portables with a continuous tuner covering channels 2 through 69)
which is not cable ready; however, he uses the set just fine with
Comcast cable by setting the TV's own tuner on channel 4, then using
his VCR to select channels. His set now receives all Comcast analog
cable channels as well as my RCA color set.
I would suggest this to anyone wanting to convert any TV, even the
very old ones with detented VHF tuners and no UHF, to cable. This will
work on any TV set capable of receiving North American television
signals and of being tuned to channel 3 or 4. One advantage to this is
that there will be no further wear and tear on the set's original
tuner. Just set it to channel 3 or 4 and forget it. If desired, you
can remove the channel strips except channel 3 or 4 (depending, of
course, on which is not an active station in your area) from a
strip-tuned tuner. Then, just set the tuner to your VCR's output
channel and forget about it, as above. This is a great way to extend
the useful life of a TV set you may have had for years and which still
works on ch. 3 or 4 (for example), but just don't have the heart to
throw out because you like the sound quality, the looks of the
cabinet, etc. The same dodge, using UHF-to-VHF converters, saved
hundreds of thousands of VHF-only TVs from premature obsolescence when
the UHF channels arrived in the mid-1960s.
Kind regards,
Jeff Strieble, WB8NHV (mailto:
[email protected])
Fairport Harbor, Ohio USA