Cut the cord, not the quality! 📺
The MohuLeaf Plus Amplified Indoor TV Antenna offers a remarkable 60-mile range, allowing you to access free HDTV channels in stunning 1080p. Its sleek, paper-thin design is both reversible and paintable, ensuring it seamlessly blends into your home decor. With easy installation options and advanced amplification technology, this antenna is perfect for urban and suburban living, dorms, and even RVs. Say goodbye to cable bills and hello to endless entertainment!
Impedance | 75 Ohm |
Maximum Range | 60 Miles |
Item Dimensions L x W x H | 11.5"L x 0.04"W x 10"H |
Color | Black / White |
K**J
Best change I’ve made in a long time
Works great easy to install. Such a savings to get rid of cable and use the antenna I get a ton of channels only question I ask is why did it take me so long to switch
P**I
Great product
Extremely happy this antenna does an excellent job. Granted I am near New York City. That I suppose has something to do with it. Especially since CBS broadcasts on VHF no switches on the antenna. In the old days you had to switch between uhf and VHF. Those days are gone
J**A
MOHU Leaf + 60 mile range INDOOR AMPLIFIED ANTENNA: Satisfactory, but imperfect performer
MOHU Leaf + 60 mile range INDOOR AMPLIFIED ANTENNA: Satisfactory, but imperfect performer...ProsEasy to installSeems more stable than 'rabbit ears' and other plate DTV antennas once fixed in a good positionIt can feed both a DTV and the FM Stereo Tuner of a HI-FI Stereo Receiver at once with an RF distributorConsA little on the expensive side of the budgetStill affected by radio interference, weather, bounced signals and windows orientationWith 'rabbit ears' dipole antennas, you can usually receive lower frequency digital TV stations, but one of the problems you may confront is the constant reorienting of the dipoles and the occasional channel re-scanning to get the best reception for all your liked channels. To that effect, I gave a try to the MOHU Leaf + INDOOR AMPLIFIED ANTENNA.It was easy to install. And the simpler the installation layout, the better. The design of the antenna seems to be better for higher frequency digital TV stations than for lower frequency ones. In the beginning, I installed on a window with the lighter side looking out it to feed the the TV and the FM tuner of a High Fidelity Stereo receiver using a coax RF distributor (See included photos (c) 2022 by reviewer): FM Stereo reception was nice and most of the area's TV channels showed up and were stable, plus one or 2 new ones came up thanks to the amplifier, but not always.Two favorite TV channels with sub-channels #.1 to #.4 and #.1 to #.3 which operate on the lower side of the TV channel frequency spectrum in our neighborhood had the tendency of suddenly disappearing within hours of a channel scan, no matter were we located the antenna plate. I thought that the Internet WiFi router had something to do with this. WiFi routers are not the only culprits: you'll be surprised by the kinds of sources of radio frequency interference (RFI) you may be having at home unknowingly. Fortunately, they usually affect at most a couple DTV channels frequencies and when you move the TV antenna farther away from the offending RFI source or even remove the offending source, channels come back fine... if the antenna is well oriented and its amplifier works. In this case, moving the antenna plate farther from the router didn't work: those 2 channels disappeared again hours after.I went ahead and removed coax wire extensions, relocated the plate and scanned progressively: same issue. I ended up disconnecting the antenna from the coax RF distributor, connecting the antenna cable directly to the TV: still, inconsistent reception of the same aforementioned channels. Finally, per their FAQ page, I removed the amplifier, connected the antenna directly and scanned the TV once more: unable to get liked channels and scanned channels amount came down from 44 to 29. I called their technical support and the very helpful associate reviewed all steps I did and then suggested me to try placing the antenna in a southeast side window. The problem is that all the windows of my apartment point the other way. Well, I guess may I have to live with those channels being intermittent or else...The lesson: research your favorite channel frequencies and transmitter positions before ordering.I still believe that the MOHU Leaf + INDOOR AMPLIFIED ANTENNA has the potential to be a 5-star contender because it works fine with DTV channels in the upper side of the spectrum and if you have antenna positioning flexibility. But, for me, it's going to be 4 stars.
T**.
Did not get channel I wanted.
Didn't work for my needs. I am using the new cable with my old mohu leaf 30 to get the channel I need. I didn't have an issue with my old leaf antenna except the cable broke. I did not send the item back because I am using the cable. Hopefully it gets the channels others are wanting.
A**R
Cable length is wrong!
Antenna works. However, I needed a 16 foot cable for it to work. Description stated twice that it came with a 16 foot cable. Box came with a 12 foot cable which is too short for my room. Very disappointed!
R**N
Cut the cord with this product !
Get off the cable or satellite. This works so good I didn't even know I was using an antenna. All the channels I want seamlessly captured. Get it
J**G
Free tv!
Easy to install. Picks up all local publicly transmitted TV channels.
D**.
"60 mile range" is unlikely in many (most?) cases. Make sure your purchase is returnable.
Let's say you are really trying to get close to 60 mile range, without line of sight to a broadcast tower. Good luck with that. The current HDTV standard is very susceptible to multipath (used to cause "ghosts" on analog broadcasts) and other interference. This may work OK at lesser distances with line of sight reception (no obstacles between antenna and broadcast tower). In my case the stations are only 30 miles away but there are obstacles in between and I can only receive one channel reliably, unless I position the antenna on a pole at one particular point in one room and rotated in just the right direction. Also it would be better to have an external amplifier or a way to bypass the internal amplifier. Sad to say, but the current HDTV standard will require an outdoor antenna (plus outdoor amplifier and/or rotor) for many people, and there are very few people that even know how to install them anymore. Hopefully they will speed up the deployment of the new ATSC 3.0 HDTV standard and then maybe cheap indoor antennas may work.
Trustpilot
4 days ago
1 week ago