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RCA TVPRAMP12E Digital Signal Preamplifier for Outdoor Antennas Black 5.90in. x 4.10in. x 3.90in.

  • Based on 2,208 reviews
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Arrives Saturday, Feb 15
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Features

  • Extends range for outdoor Antennas and enhances performance in low signal strength and difficult reception areas; mounting hardware included
  • New and improved model optimizes performance with a combined input for UHF/VHF amplification and a new enhanced voltage Regulator with short circuit protection
  • Preserves signal purity with extremely low noise (eln) amplifier circuitry to give you a crystal-clear HD picture
  • Outperforms all preamps made for old analog TV signals; the TVPRAMP12E is made for todays HD digital signals
  • Switchable FM trap to prevent interference from FM signals
  • Preamplifier for outdoor antennas extends range in low signal strength areas
  • RCA's advanced SmartBoost technology amplifies weak signals to deliver the most channels possible
  • Optimizes performance with separate UHF/VHF amplification
  • Switchable FM trap to prevent interference from FM signals
  • Use in all difficult reception areas
  • Designed and engineered in the USA
  • ** VERY IMPORTANT**DISCLAIMER: Reception quality and channels received will depend on distance from towers, broadcast power, terrain and other factors. Hence kindly refer the User Manual before use.

Description

Enhances and amplifies UHF/VHF antenna reception increases and improves Wideband RF amplification between the receiver and antennacompensates for signal loss/weak signal that occurs during long cable runs or multiple TV/VCR connections

Antenna: Television


Brand: RCA


Color: Black


UPC:


Manufacturer: Audiovox Accessories Corporation


Number of Items: 1


UPC: 044476137471


Manufacturer: Audiovox Accessories Corporation


AntennaDescription: Television


Brand Name: RCA


Color: Black


Frequently asked questions

If you place your order now, the estimated arrival date for this product is: Saturday, Feb 15

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Top Amazon Reviews


  • So far good product/ great value.
Ok, some previous reviews were really negative towards this product. I purchased a 3 amp switcher power supply, in case the supplied wallwort quit. My findings after installation: RCA did a good job on designing a low cost/good performance preamp/booster. **NOTE**: The preamps sole job is to amplify tv signal so as to overcome feedline loss. I have replaced my coax as part of my install with a high quality flooded type Rg6 coax. So far I have not had any problem at all with my RCA preamp and it had outperformed the channel master spartan I took down that I had for years. This unit has a fm trap to help with close fm broadcast transmitters, which I did switch on. I cannot coment on its ability to handle overload strong nearby tv transmitters, as I am located in a extreme fringe reception area. Overall I think RCA did a pretty good job. (Don't over tighten coax to the connectors) (hand tighten is sufficient). It's a good product that I found so far. I will do an update review later probably 6 months-a year to give a full honest review. 73 GOD bless. K5EWM. UPDATE,: RCA has done an amazing job in bringing an affordable/guallity product for consumers. Mine has been up now over 2 months and has performed flawlessly. I did puchase a replacement wallwort power supply @ 12 volts 3 amp capacity (switcher) to operate it should it fail. The supplied power supply is still going strong. When I put mine up I used a coaxial discharge unit that is grounded with it's dedicated ground wire and ground rod. This is for lightning protection. The unit bleeds off the static charge that builds up and the spike energy from a close strike. If the lightning is super close it will blow out the discharge unit, but at the same time saving the preamp from damage. Amazon has these discharge units and they work very well. Now in a direct strike; there is nothing that can be done about that. It becomes a non functioning crispy critter. (Blitzed) (junk). RCA designed this product to operate on 12 volts via the injector and wallwort. Always use high quality coax feedline for less signal loss. I used a swept tested flooded Rg6 cable I made up off a spool (the good stuff). Being a flooded cable it doesn't assorb moisture leading to signal degrading and last a very long time. They said my cable was suitable for direct burial (not string trimmer proof) I didn't do that. RCA 👍 did a good job. Just don't over tighten the coax connectors/use good quality coax/ consider the use of antenna discharge units with ground rod & wire. Make certain when building a coax assembly feedline, be absolutely sure none of those small wires of the sheild can short the center conductor and blow out that wallwort power supply. Also very important; ( DO NOT LOCATE YOUR ANTENNA ANYWHERE NEAR POWER LINES) Let's be safe so we can enjoy all that wonderful free tv reception. Also it is a good thing to have a helper on an antenna project, and extra set of eyes to spot potential danger, and warn you of it and if a accident does happen they can call 911 if and when you can't. Be careful on ladders and roofs a fall from even a single story House roof can very well be fatal. Practice safety, it's for your own health and well being. Ok, I guess it's time to get off the soap box. Lol. Saftey-saftey-saftey in practice keeps you out of the hospital. 73 and GOD bless K5EWM. UPDATE: I made a mistake in my previous installation. With the outdoor portion amplifier mounted, I didn't leave enough slack in the input and output coax cables. I'm using a very stiff flooded version of RG6 swept tested 75 ohm coax. I used vinyl electric tape to secure both coax to the mast. Over time the taps shrank, much like heat shrink tubing. This caused extra pressure against both the coax fittings in the bottom side of the outdoor booster amp. That caused the fragile connections to break internally to the amplifier. This was my fault as I didn't leave enough slack, and was worried about wind vibration causing fatigue and then failure of the connections. I replaced both the power supply (indoor portion), and the outdoor amplifier portion, leaving more slack, so as not to repeat the same problem again. Anyone can make a mistake, including me. Lol. Tv reception fully restored and working great now. When I get time I will checkout the outdoor unit to see if I can repair it. If so, there will be more to come. These inexpensive preamp boosters work pretty good, considering the price point. Off air tv signals can be pretty complex in extreme deep fringe areas, like I'm in, so large antenna array are necessary to ensure satisfactory results. The boosters sole job is to help overcome signal loss of the coaxial feed line. Adding more amplifier gain, won't do much to get more channels. Bigger antennas or stacking for more gain is a much better route to improved signal. Hope this helps someone out. 73 Earnest K5EWM. Informational update: I have had good luck with this product and it works very well considering it's price tag. **NOTE**; for my install, I already had a good quality amplified splitter to distribute TV signal via RG6 to other rooms of the house. Typically most non-amplified splitters have horrible loss in signal and then the cable runs to each tv in the home. RCA has an inexpensive amplified splitter, using one of these instead of a non amplified splitter with killer signal loss can help out considerably to ensure you get signal sufficient to operate your tv and minimize signal loss in your multiple tv set installation. The RCA distribution amplifier isn't the absolute best money can buy; but for consumers trying to achieve tv reception goals on a budget, it's probably a game changer. All tv booster/amplifiers do 1 thing only: ( amplify a weak signal to overcome signal loss in coax feed line run). All boosters/amplifiers do generate noise (distortion) in the process of amplification. Now the lower the noise and higher gain is to the better. RCA has put together products in their upper line that will do ok performance for most applications and do so on a reasonable budget. I am talking about their higher end tv antenna amplifier products only. To really benefit and get high performance, the antenna must gather enough useable signal on its own to start with. I started working with tv antennas and improving reception from age 12; I am 65 years of age now and held amateur radio operator license since 1976 to present. I try to convey my findings to give an honest review that anyone can understand and benefit from. Enough about me, I have tinkered with this stuff my whole life. Now about safety (yours); DO NOT LOCATE ANY ANTENNA OR MAST ANYWHERE REMOTELY CLOSE TO ANY POWER LINE EVER! NEVER EVER ATTEMPT TO DO AN OUTDOOR ANTENNA PROJECT WITHOUT A HELPER. IF THERE IS AN ACCIDENT; THE HELPER CAN CALL 911 FOR HELP IF YOU CAN'T. SAFETY IS NUMBER ONE PRIORITY AT ALL TIMES! BE ABSOLUTELY POSITIVE CLEAR THAT WHEN USING LADDERS, THE LADDER IS SECURE AND WILL NOT SLIDE/BECOME DISLODGED OR NOT LOCKED INTO PLACE. ALWAYS HAVE YOUR INSTALL BUDDY LOOK THINGS OVER BEFORE THE JOB STARTS. CARRY NECESSARY TOOLS WITH YOU IN YOUR POCKETS, SO YOU CAN SAFELY COMPLETE THE INSTALL. 73 and GOD bless Earnest K5EWM. New update after 3 years continuous service. This preamp booster amplifier is built by parent company that owns Audiovox. The model I have has the 12 volt switching wall watt power supply rated at 200 ma. I use the fm trap to eliminate strong signal overload from a newly added FM broadcast radio station with pep transmitter rf output of 30kw. My tv antenna installation is less than 1/4 mile from the FM broadcast radio station transmitter and the FM trap is working well. 73 Earnest K5EWM. UPDATE: ***************** 09/22/2024 MY CHANNEL MASTER EXTREME DEEP FRINGE DUAL BAND VHF/UHF preamp booster amplifier has died. It didn't take a lightning hit. It failed in good weather and not a cloud in the sky. It is an expensive booster too. I pulled out old reliable RCA and redo my connections and im watching tv again via tv antenna. Performance result is every bit as good (as far as I can tell, without measuring -dbm output). I get identical signal bar levels on tv display for each channel. Those high end boosters look great on paper and there are applications where some difference can be realized, but not in my installation. RCA has designed a pretty good product at a value pricepoint that favors the consumer well. The perfect tv preamp booster amplifier will never exist, but useful bang for the buck (RCA HAS IT DONE RIGHT). SAVE YOUR MONEY; BUY RCA. I had to climb 120 feet of tower to change out the Channel Master booster to reinstall the RCA. A preamp/booster sole job is to overcome download cable loss. That is all it can do. Yes you can buy better, will it make that huge of difference; (if you use quality coax); probably not. Your antenna captures the signal, use the best possible antenna, a good quality support mast, high quality rg6 coax with good quality connectors, and a good quality preamp booster and a good quality amplified splitter in the house for coax feedline runs to other rooms of your home. Once a tv channel signal is lost due to feedline loss; its gone. It can't be reanimated by a booster amplifier, no matter its cost. Thats why boosting the signal at the receiving antenna works best. This is probably the final chapter in my review and update of this product. Im happy with my RCA it works when the high dollar Channel Master booster amplifier kicked the bucket 🪣 and cost 1/3 the price too. Stay safe with your install. Outdoor antennas are not a 1 man job. Get help. I personally know a amateur radio operator that did the lone wolf antenna install by himself. He is now a silent key 🗝️ because of his bull headed decision to work on the roof and ladder by himself. {[( SILENT KEY = GRAVEYARD DEAD }]). It cost him his life. So he was an experienced ham radio operator with lots of outdoor antennas experience and he died by himself, because he didn't have a helper. }}))!!!!!! 73 GOD BLESS EARNEST K5EWM. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on October 9, 2020 by Earnest W. Matlock Jr.

  • Works Perfect, Easy To Install, Maximizes Signal
I live in the East Bay of the San Francisco Bay Area. I'm about 26miles line of sight from Sutro Tower (NW of me) in SF, but some of the channels I want come off of Mission Peak area, 13mi to my SE. Being a bit in the middle I wasn't sure how to pick up both. I was able to get an old Channel Master CM 3016 UHF / VHF / FM HDTV Antenna - 45 Mile Range (CM3016) antenna from my brother, and purchased a Winegard DS-3000 J Pipe Mount for Antennas to mount it. In my home I have several rooms already wired with RG6 that run to a central TV box outside. My living room however does not run there as it's RG6 runs much shorter to the Dish Network Dish. I extended that cable to the central location where the CM3016 is mounted, and also one RG6 goes from the TV box to there as well, and all this is from a 4-way splitter up on the roof. This presents a couple of issues: 1) The main room has a short length and better signal off the antenna. 2) Therefore the other rooms which are getting, by way of a 2nd 4-way splitter, weaker signal. Since most 4-way splitters have about a 7db drop, my run to the TV box was -14db loss, plus some more loss due to the long 100'+ run there, and then the individual runs to each room. I was not able to get KQEH very well in the bedroom due to this issue, but was getting it fine downstairs. This station is coming in from Mission Peak area, but on the backside of my directional antenna. This is where the RCA TVPRAMP1R Preamplifier for Outdoor Antenna Performance Enhancement & Extension (use with ANT3038XR & ANT3036XR), Black comes in. I mounted it using the included hardware to the mast, and cut a few more cables using some double shielded RG6, Ideal 33-632 F Compression Tool, Brand New Ideal Video Coaxial Stripper Rg59/Rg6, and PPC EX6XLPLUS RG-6 Quad Seal Outdoor/Indoor Compression Connector, (Pack of 50) + Qty 5: F-81 F-Type PPC CF81GHZC 3GHZ Coax Barrels Coupler. I put a new WINEGARD TV-2900 82-Channel Weatherproof Transformer onto the CM3016 as well. I set the FM- Trap to off since I want to use it for FM reception and most of the channels in my area are UHF anyways. I also set it to the combined setting since I don't have a separate VHF antenna. To properly pass the power from the power inserter from one of my rooms up to the preamp I switched out two 4-way splitters to a couple PcConnectTM F-Pin (Coax) Splitter, 4 way, 2 GHz 90dB, 1-DC Passing. These block power to 3 ports and allow it to pass up the one port where it's clearly marked. This could be a reason why some folks have had no results and given bad reviews. They may not know how to properly use the power inserter. I have the cables from the Preamp going into one of the 4-way splitters. One output from there goes to the TV box where the other 4-way splitter is. Another output goes to a another regular 4-way splitter near the first one. This one is used to attenuate the signal another 7db and then have two outputs that are short runes. One to the living room, and one to the Patio for FM reception on a receiver. Inside the main living room is another 2-way splitter. One feeds my HTPC with built in AVerMedia A188 HD Duet - Dual ATSC PCI-E TV Tuner for Windows Media Center. The other feeds a SiliconDust HDHomeRun PLUS 2-Tuner ATSC DLNA/UPnP HD Compatible Streaming Media Player, HDTC-2US. I put the power inserter into the gym/extra room were I have an older HDTV LCD up on the wall. I was able to get about 14 more channels vs without the Preamp. The KQEH that I really wanted and couldn't upstairs comes in super clear. I was afraid that living in such a OTA signal saturated area a preamp would make the the already strong signals too strong, and tried to over come this by making sure to get -14db of drop through two runs through splitters, and it looks like the combo is very effective. I get nearly full strength on all channels now. I'm very satisfied with this preamp. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on July 28, 2014 by G. Bains G. Bains

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