#16
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Well I brought my parents Roku over to my place and tried it out at my place and it worked fine at my place, so I don't know why it wouldn't work at their place anymore but it works fine at my place.
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#17
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Does the new one work ok at their place?
jr |
#18
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Try using your HDMI cable at her place. Disconnect hers and use yours. Also try repeating the Roku set up procedure/WiFi settings.
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Last edited by etype2; 02-19-2022 at 02:27 PM. |
#19
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#20
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Well like I said their old one works fine at my place and I was using all the original cables that came with it.
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Audiokarma |
#21
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Curious. Do you have a combined modem/router or a separate modem/router at your place?
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#22
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I have a combined modem/router just like my parents have, the only difference is that at my place we have the newer style Comcast/Xfinity modem/router that looks like a large cube that has the status lights on the top and my parents have the older style modem/router that looks like a large 3D rectangle with the status lights down the front..
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#23
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Okay. I’m glad your parents Roku is working again. Still some unknowns. If their new house was older in years, they may have older style cable throughout the house. Or the internet signal might be split more times than the previous house. Some newer homes, but not all have Cat5 cabeling.
But since the new Roku is working with the same setup at your parents house and the old one is working at your house, I think the reconnection at your house removed corrupted RAM (memory) from the device. Also the reconnection at your parents house probably removed corrupted RAM from the modem/router. Sometimes the television is the problem and power cycling the TV will fix the problem.
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#24
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Quote:
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#25
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Quote:
However, I was glad to read in your post that the problems were corrected and your folks are now enjoying cable service as it should be. The northern Indiana area is considered part of the Chicago metro, but I'm not sure Chicago's TV and FM stations reach the area as well as they reach the closer-in suburbs of the city. I am in a similar situation where I live, in east-central Lake County, Ohio. I am some 30 miles from downtown Cleveland, and about 15 miles further southwest from the city's TV stations' towers; the TV reception here isn't bad except for the CBS station on channel 19, which was moved several years ago from channel 8 when the station was sold. For some reason, I don't know why, channel 19 simply does not reach here without cable. I live in an apartment building, so cannot erect an outdoor TV antenna; this all but forces me to have cable to get decent TV reception (including CBS channel 19). When I lived in suburban Cleveland, the CBS station was on channel 8 until the late 1980s or early '90s, and reached my home at the time (Wickliffe, a Cleveland suburb 15 miles east of the city) quite well. However, when I moved to my apartment in 1999, things changed drastically; that is, I could receive most of the stations, except CBS 19, well enough to watch, simply using an indoor antenna. As I said, I don't know why channel 19 does not reach here without cable. The studios are located in Shaker Heights, an eastern Cleveland suburb; the transmitter is located in Parma, a southwestern suburb, and so should reach the entire Cleveland area without cable. The city where this station's transmitter is located is in fact a Cleveland suburb, which the station should reach with no problems, using a simple indoor antenna. Since all of Cleveland's TV stations do in fact reach the entire metropolitan area (about 50+ miles), there should be absolutely no reason whatever why channel 19 should not reach my area. Before DTV, channel 19 had a 3.762-megawatt (ERP) signal, and reached most of the metropolitan area (with the exception of far-eastern and far-western suburbs) quite well. I don't know, however, just how much coverage was lost after the DTV switch, but it must have been quite a bit since the station lost a lot of its coverage area from then on, and still has dead spots in its coverage area to this day. (A repeater station was installed recently to fill in the area where channel 19's DTV signal does not reach well, or at all.) To make matters worse, he transmitter was damaged by lightning about six months after the station's initial sign on in 1985; this may well have had something to do with the reduction in the coverage area (the transmitter may have been operating at sharply reduced ERP output after the lightning strike, and may still be to this day), but I'm not sure.
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Jeff, WB8NHV Collecting, restoring and enjoying vintage Zenith radios since 2002 Zenith. Gone, but not forgotten. Last edited by Jeffhs; 04-14-2022 at 01:02 PM. |
Audiokarma |
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