📡 Aerial Installer in California, Falkirk
This one’s up for grabs.
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- Only one Aerial Installer spot in California
- Your business, top of the pile — no ads, no rivals, no noise
- £40/month — cancel anytime
Need a aerial installer?
Nobody’s stepped up in California yet.
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About Aerial Installers
An aerial installer fits, repairs, and upgrades TV aerials, satellite dishes, and signal distribution systems for homes and businesses.
Poor signal, pixelation, and lost channels are often caused by a damaged aerial, corroded cabling, or simply an older installation that no longer meets current broadcast standards.
A good installer will carry out a signal strength survey before recommending equipment, and should leave you with a neat, weatherproofed installation that will last for years.
About California
California is a small village south of Falkirk whose unexpected name is thought to derive from the California Gold Rush era of the 1840s, when the name was applied to various places across Scotland.
The village is primarily residential, with a quiet, suburban character and a small number of houses set along a single main road.
California sits on the higher ground between Falkirk and Slamannan, with open countryside to the south and easy access to Falkirk town centre to the north.
About Falkirk
Falkirk is a council area in the heart of Scotland's central belt, sitting between Edinburgh and Glasgow with the Firth of Forth to the north and the foothills of the Campsie Fells to the west.
The town of Falkirk is the administrative centre and largest settlement, but the area also takes in Grangemouth — Scotland's largest petrochemical complex and one of its busiest ports — along with the historic burgh of Bo'ness on the Forth shoreline and a string of smaller towns and villages.
Falkirk's history runs deep: two of the most significant battles in the Wars of Independence were fought here, and the Antonine Wall — the Roman Empire's north-western frontier — crosses the district and is a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
The area has reinvented itself around modern landmarks: the Falkirk Wheel, the world's only rotating boat lift, and the Kelpies, two 30-metre steel horse-head sculptures at the Helix park, draw visitors from around the world.
Transport links are excellent — the M9 and M876 connect Falkirk to Edinburgh, Glasgow, and Stirling, and two railway lines serve the area — making it one of the most accessible and affordable parts of the central belt.
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