Quote:
Originally Posted by Chateau_Nomad
Same here. We have an external coax connection point, which terminates at a coax connector in a cabinet above the entrance door, with a short coax cable connected to the TV in the bunk over the cab. There is another coax termination point (connection) in the bedroom.
We also have a small Monoprice HDMI "distribution switch" in the over door cabinet, with HDMI cables connecting the bunk TV and to the bedroom.
It's really not as confusing as it sounds. If connected to campground coax, go to the TV's settings and select "coax" as source.
We use a Firestick for streaming, which is plugged into the Monoprice switch. If we want to watch that, we go to the TV's settings and select HDMI as source.
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I suspect OP may have too, but maybe they ran short on Coax cable for the newer 2022 RVs?
I admit it took me some time to figure it out at first. The part that was confusing to me was the fact that the outside cable TV or Antenna used the exact same coax cable that was prewired to all 3 TVs
Then I learned how to use the little booster switch that came with the King Antenna. That little green LED ON; then the source for coax on TVs is my Antenna on the roof. green LED OFF; it is for what ever is plugged in locally or at the outside compartment.
Bonus:
I have all of my prewired HDMI cables plugged into HDMI 1 on all three TVs. Such that when I watch Michigan beat Ohio State; I can see the exact same thing and exact same audio on all 3 TVs at the same time because my Ultra Roku is connected to the HDMI Switcher. 2 of the TVs (main TV & outside patio TV) have their own Roku box direct connected to the HDMI 2 port on back of the TV.