chess;

Okey here are the pictures of the Booster. If I don't have this plugged in I get noise in the picture. With it turned on I get a nice picture. As good as cable can get. Unfortunately the camera shot of the TV did not do much justice. Theres one CNN take that turned out pretty good. But as you know using a camera to take TV pictures is not a good rendition of what it actually looks like. I actually reset all my settings of the Tv tuner to default to give you an idea of pictures right out of the box. You can adjust hue, color, brightness and contrast to better the picture.

http://www.spacelofts.com/Tv_tuner/

http://www.electrolinequip.com/en/products/drop_amplifiers/index.html

One thing to note is that the tuner has resolutions from 640x480 to 1024x768. You get the best picture matching your end projecting device. If is tuner is different than your imaging source then the picture would not be optimized for that source. Sunch as with this tuner it would look best with a 1024x768 projector. If you have a 1080i HDTV set then the signal coming in would only still be 1024x768 and then the set would probably rescale it as best as possible or not to its native 1920x1080 resolution.

I would only recommend this to projectors, plasmas, LCDs up to 1024.
I actually compared signals of the TV tuner with the Sony CPG400 vs a Viewsonic VX900 (which has only an optimal resolution at 1280x1024) The signal looked better on the Sony than on the Viewsonic LCD since the TV tuner had a max res of 1024x768.