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Setting up Antenna TV
Despite all of the entertainment possibilies of your Roku TV, you may also want to watch broadcast TV. You can watch
broadcast TV in much the same way you watch other entertainment choices. You select a le—the le—
from the screen.
The rst me you select the le, you have to set up the TV tuner. Seng up the TV tuner scans for acve
channels and adds them to your broadcast TV channel list.
Why do I have to set up the TV tuner?
You might be asking, “Why is this step necessary?” Good queson.
Not everyone needs to use the TV tuner. For example, you might have a set top box provided by a cable or satellite com-
pany that receives all of your channels. Most of these set top boxes use an HDMI connecon.
More and more people are watching only streaming TV and do not have a TV antenna or cable/satellite service. If you
don’t need the TV tuner, you can bypass seng it up and instead remove it from the screen as explained in “Re-
move unwanted les” on page 46.
When you set up Antenna TV, the TV scans the signals on its antenna input for channels with a good signal, and adds
those to the channel list, skipping dead channels and channels with a very weak signal.
The TV will, however, let you add two analog channels, even if they have no signal. You might need to add these channels
if you have an older set top box, VCR, or game console that can only output a signal on analog channel 3 or 4. These are
the only channels that can be added regardless of whether they have a good signal. Typically, you’ll only need one of
these channels, but both are provided to make setup simpler. You can hide the one you don’t want as explained in “Edit
broadcast TV channel lineup” on page 45.
How do I set up the TV tuner?
Seng up the TV tuner is easy—your TV does most of the work. You just have to answer a couple of quesons.
1. Make sure your antenna (sold separately) or TV cable is connected to the TV’s input.
2. On the screen, select the le.
3. Read the simple on-screen instrucons and select .