I don't want to split to two recievers. I want to unplug my reciever and move it to another room to watch. So I want a cable runing from my dish.. to a splitter and after one cable running to one room and another cable running to another room. I plug in the reciever to teh run out of the cable I want. Surely this is possible? Do I just involve a two-way switch? I see some of these hva eone of the splits with power and one lacking power.. does this make a difference?
Answers: As long as you're lone using the one receiver... yes, you can use a simple 2-way splitter. If you own trouble with signal strength (through the coax, not the dish's signal reception), you might want to use a better-quality splitter or an inline amp.
Edit:
The poster below's solution would also work if you don't want to move the beneficiary. :)
Sure. You must have the dish running directly to the reciever and split the output sour to another tv. This is not too hard but will require more flex, a splitter and maybe a butt or two.
An option to look at is a repeater that you can hook up contained by the other room and still control your reciever from anywhere you have a repeater.
The answers post by the user, for information only, CeQnA.com does not guarantee the right.
Related Questions :
Frequency scanner interrogate?
What program will allow my computer to recieve any radio signal resembling 800 Mhz?
Why would you want to use a mechanism where on earth the output force is smaller number than the input force?
My DVD player have a reprimand. Is near a website where on earth I can find out what's wrong and how to fix it?
Does a switch exist that will allow me to turn stale a specific feathery that typically must be unplugged?
Bang & Olufsen A8 Headphones or Bose In-Ear Headphones?
Which GPS Navigation system to win?
My cell phone won't charge?