Connection between Reception Booster and Youview

in Discussion
What do I need to connect from my TV reception booster to the in connection port on my Humax youview box?
I can connect everything apart from the connection from the booster to the YouView in port.
I can connect everything apart from the connection from the booster to the YouView in port.
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Any of these look familiar?
At a guess, I expect it is a female F-type socket, and I know the YouView input is a female coax socket. But they are electrically compatible, and coax cable is coax cable, so it is just a case of getting the plugs right.
So you could make up a lead with a length of coax cable and a F-type male plug on one end and a coax male plug on the other.
Or, you could use a ready-made male to male coax cable, F-type plugs both ends or coax plugs both ends, doesn’t matter which, whichever is cheaper or handier.
If F-type plugs both ends, use a female F-type to male coax adapter for the YouView end.
Or if coax plugs both ends, use a female coax to male F-type adapter for the booster end.
Happy coupling!
Please see attached 2 pics, one is the booster and the other is an antenna lead male to female connector, the problem being the male connects to the booster but the female end doesn't fit to the antenna in port on the YouView box.
Can you help please with the pics?
I take it the connectors in my pic are different from the input on the YouView box?
But what you have is a female to male plugs coax cable, such as you would use to go from the coax out on a YouView box onward to the TV.
You can either buy, or find in your bits box (if you have one), such a male to male cable, or you can get a male to male coax adapter, put it on the female end of your M-F cable, and turn it into an M-M cable that way.
But as a new M-M cable and an M-M adapter cost about the same, I suggest you buy the cable, and use that M-F cable you have to pass the aerial signal onward to the TV, for when the YouView box is busy recording two programmes and you want to watch a third.
So, what exactly do I need to ask for so that I can attach the aerial cable to the booster and have a coax lead from the booster out to the antenna in on the YouView box?
So I just require to purchase a male to male cable similar male end size as my male black coax image, and you say that should fit into the antenna in port on the YouView box?
That male image end should fit in the aerial antenna input on youview, am I right with this?
Edit:
I've tested inserting the male cable end into the YouView box antenna in and it does fit as you've said so thanks.
I tried at first inserting it into the wall aerial socket and it wouldn't go right in, why would this be as I thought that both ends of the aerial cable from the wall to the box were the same but obviously not, at least the male ends connect with the booster and the aerial in on youview box.
By using the M-F coax cable, you can pass the aerial signal on to the TV, and use the TV tuner to watch any third channel you like, without restrictions.
I see the other question is covered below.
If the wall socket is actually a male, then it is probably an FM radio socket, not a TV socket.
If you are the second or subsequent owner/renter of your property though, there is no telling how a previous owner may have arranged things,
If it is a cable from your TV socket, the one shown in your photos that doesn’t look quite right and won’t accept a male plug pushed right into it, you may not be getting a decent signal into the booster in the first place.
And if so, you need to get that wall socket replaced with a new one.....
The booster has a gain of 23db.
Which do do you think the main 6 are?
Put your postcode and house number into this checker, by using the Change Address feature there, and see what transmitter(s) you are likely pulling in at what signal strengths.
Oh, and 23Db is a gain of 203x, so you should be able to hear a mouse fart in a thunderstorm with it
You buy a booster for when your aerial system is as good as it can be, but the signal is still weak.
Remember that a booster will amplify the noise as well as the desired signal, as has been mentioned above, so you want the signal you are amplifying to be as clean as it possibly can be.
But the key measure is Signal Quality. If that is 100%, even if the Signal Strength is lower, you should be fine.
OTOH, 100% Strength, with less than 100% Quality, would be the result of boosting a signal that was too weak or too noisy in the first place.
If you can avoid that, you are fine.
I've noticed 5select having pixelation issues but can live with that.
Oh, and by the way, for as close as you can get to your new address, do you see all green for the Blackhill muxes?
Now, remember I said I had 100% for strength and quality since the introduction of the booster? well I recorded Strictly It Takes two on BBC TWO tonight and I'm aware of a loudish pop noise during it, could this be what was causing the picture to disappear prior to the booster?
I'll need to check out the recording again to hear if that same noise can be heard on the recording or maybe it came through just as the recording was being played at a random time.
Can't see it being 4G interference as the aerial itself has a 4g filter but so does the booster and maybe the two are having issues with interference together