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📡 Amplify your home entertainment — never miss a moment in HD!
THE CIMPLE CO Antenna Amplifier Kit is a powerful indoor digital TV signal booster featuring up to 24 dB adjustable gain, compatible with VHF, UHF, FM, NTSC, and ATSC signals. It includes a high-quality RG6 coaxial cable and a durable metal housing with built-in coax mounting ports and a power indicator light. Designed to enhance existing strong signals, it delivers sharper, clearer over-the-air TV and radio reception, making it an essential upgrade for millennial professionals seeking flawless streaming and broadcast quality at home.







| Asin | B084YQX5Q6 |
| Best Sellers Rank | #4,280 in Electronics (See Top 100 in Electronics) #584 in Home Audio Accessories |
| Brand Name | THE CIMPLE CO |
| Customer Reviews | 3.8 3.8 out of 5 stars (3,886) 3.8 out of 5 stars |
| Item Dimensions | 5.9 x 2.56 x 2 inches |
| Manufacturer | THE CIMPLE CO |
| Model | CMP-AMP-RF-24DB-KIT |
| Number Of Channels | 1000 |
| Part Number | CMP-AMP-RF-24DB-KIT |
| Unit Count | 1.0 Count |
| Upc | 840003310160 |
| Warranty Description | 10 Year Warranty for THE CIMPLE CO products. See manufacturer website for more information. |
User
Outstanding product
Amplifier works well. Without it I can not pick anything. Neareast signal is 60 miles away. Would buy again.
User
Makes a Weaker Signal Strong & Adds Channels
This signal amplifier is fantastic. It works so well at getting our living room TV more clear channels, we ordered two more to put in a bedroom and the basement. (If it were logistically possible, I'd just put one on the line-in, but this works too.) We're out in the rural'ish exurban outskirts of a metropolitan area. Weather events like wind and rain, and even the leaves on the trees in the summer, impact reception. With this amplifier, everything becomes stable and clear. The same signal that at times produced iffy reception after going through the house's coaxial cable infrastructure, is now amplified to produce channels we didn't before have available. Public television is now watchable! 60+ channels are watchable and clear on a regular day. That's pretty good for our area! I also suspect that the additive properties of having 3 of these might be clearing up signal even more in some unknown way. I'm writing this glowing review, because I've tried so many varieties of gimmick amplification devices, and most of them did nothing. There is a lot of garbage out there. This, however, is the real deal. It works. It produces an overall improvement in signal strength, and it's measurable. This is the one. It doesn't seem to produce much if any heat, either, which is fantastic when you consider this might get installed on a wall somewhere-- and it has built-in mounts to do so. I'm not using the mounts, but am glad they're present.
User
Easy to install
It works very good
User
Super happy, this just worked, very glad I picked this one
I don't have time to go on and on about this, but very much want to share that amidst the dizzying array of questionable products from overseas offered, and questionable reviews, I managed to select this distribution amplifier and I am super happy with the purchase so far. It just worked out of the box for my application. Excellent quality, I hope it lasts.I noticed a lot of confusion in the Q&A on Amazon for these types of products. I'll share quickly what I learned. I purchased an amplified antenna on here (https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B09J1X2J3S), which also works great as a fixed pointing ATSC TV antenna on my roof. My wires all go to my basement, including all the coax to all the room outlets. So, the antenna control box and power injector must be at the other end of the cable from the roof in the basement. That powers the amplifier on the roof (this is a "Preamplifier", meant to amplify the weak signal off the air), which boosts and drives the signal through that long wire to my basement. The control box puts out a lovely TV signal, but that only works for a nearby TV. How, then to get that signal to all the TVs on the other ends of all the coax ends in the basement? That's where this product comes in--a "Distribution Amplifier". meant to take a strong signal and make it stronger so that it can push through a splitter (power divider) and then through more long cables through the house to all the TVs.This product has one output, if you have more than one distant TV you need to run coax from this box to a splitter (1:2, 1:4, 1:8, etc.), and connect all the coax cables to the splitter. Don't use more gain in this product than you need. I find I need the max gain pushing through my 8:1 splitter and long cables.That's it, good luck!
User
Tune the Amplifier Gain To Not Overdrive the TV Tuner
TL/DR: I added this amplifier to boost the signal on a distant station with occasional pixelation and dropouts. At maximum gain, I could not receive the station at all. I Googled "what happens if an ota antenna has too strong an amplifier" on Microsoft Edge. The AI response indicated the signal can be too strong, which will cause the tuner to drop the station when it struggles to decode the signal. I reduced the gain to about the midpoint and improved the signal. It took a LOT of patience to adjust the gain for the best picture. As a side effect, I lost a group of low power stations in my area, but I rarely watched them anyway. The instructions with the amplifier do not have any information on optimizing the gain.Details: I am using an Antennas Direct ClearStream 4Max with a Silicon Dust HD HomeRun digital tuner for distributing the signal through the house on the Emby app. The majority of the stations in my area are southwest of my home, and there is a more distant station south-southeast that has pixelation and dropouts. I have the antenna pointed to favor the south-southeast station, since it will pick up the closer stations more easily. The HD HomeRun displays signal strength for each channel in the scan, and shows a maximum of 4 bars of different color for signal strength. The best signal will be green bars; yellow bars for a good signal; red bars for a weak signal. I was able to roughly tune the amplifier gain and rescan using the HD HomeRun bars as a guide. I got to 4 yellow bars on the most distant station; the closer stations were at 4 green bars. I then fine tuned the gain to minimize pixelation while watching the station. Some televisions show signal strength level for the stations, which could also be used for tuning.Adding an antenna amplifier is not plug-and-play. This was a time-consuming process, but worth it in the end.
User
Good boost...a thorough review of amps in general
I was using an 18dB amp that came with an external antenna, basic plastic thing, that seemed boastful at 18dB, it was pretty weak. Temporarily using this antenna indoors for testing as I set up my new house. Figuring if it can do well inside, it will almost certainly do better when I mount it high up outside. This amp being 6 dB more at 24dB did the trick for FM signal. Cleared up the bits of static in the signal right away and I picked up a couple stations that would not lock on stereo loud and clear. I have it cranked all the way, but when I backed it off a bit, signal was still good.Have not used this one yet for HDTV/Off air channels, but original amp actually handled this frequency segment well enough, it was more the FM Radio signals I was trying to boost. Radio signal can be tricky, radios with built in antennas placed upstairs in one corner of the house are all good, downstairs in the opposite corner...static, weak, won't grab some stations at all. I went around with a battery powered radio outside and inside and found the sweet spot locations, but it's really about the number of walls, etc. between the radio and the tower transmitter out there. I live in a more remote area now and am sort of old school, I like having good old FM radio available for NPR and any radio stations I can pick up. This did the trick. I'm using apps more on smart TV's for some stuff...still wanted good strong FM/TV antenna infrastructure at the ready. I'm considering adding a second amp in line to boost the heck out of the signal, probably don't not need it. Previous owner had satellite TV (shudder, ripped that out immediately), so in house cable distribution is all over the place in virtually every room. Will take advantage of this for TV/Radio now as it's any easy swap/add.Some negative reviews here had me scratching my head, sounded like they might have hooked it up wrong or have a weak antenna/poor placement? Or it could be defective I suppose, but there is not much to fail with this basic amp. This amp does appear to have every bit of the power described. I've tried it with a smaller window mount antenna and a large modular exterior antenna (again temporarily inside), both had good to great results respectively.General rules of thumb:-Place an amp as close to the antenna as possible, this can make a big difference. If you place it way down stream of long meandering wire runs and splitters, might not perform as well.-Some even mount the amp right to the antenna pole outside and run power to it or an amp is integrated in the antenna. If you are within about 20 feet to the amp from antenna, should be all good.-You can stack amps in line, to push that dB power up there, although I doubt most people will need this.-If you are using existing coaxial cable TV infrastructure (and you are using cable TV boxes still over smart TV apps), caution when loading up amps in line with it, generally it's fine to share signals here, but too much can interfere with one signal or the other. Plus if you have cable TV, you probably don't need an off air antenna for HDTV/Local channels anyway.-Survey around the house for best antenna placement.-Invest in a quality antenna, remote steerable ones are really cool for dialing this in.
User
Didn’t work out.
This item ended up being a return. I have 2 TVs and this didn’t work on either one. Maybe it will work for someone else but, it didn’t work for me.
User
Worked great
I'm not big on reading instructions so I hooked up the TV to the in and the antenna to the out and that was backwards, after switching it around all my channels came in really well so I'm happy with this purchase. NOTE: it did not add channels.
User
جيد
جيد
User
Excellent for fringe areas.
Good signal booster- the adjustable gain control is a nice feature but since we are in a fringe area I set it to maximum. You still need a good antenna pointed correctly for best results. It helped our large TV which doesn’t have a very sensitive tuner, but did nothing for our small one that does have a sensitive tuner.
User
Funcionalidad
Me funcionó muy bien
User
Bon produit
Excellent..amplifie signal cable...
User
.
Buen producto, llegó en excelentes condiciones
Trustpilot
1 month ago
2 weeks ago