SimpleSimon said:
They may be mediocre specs, but reality intrudes - they work!
I don't read that article the same way. They moved the target band up. It says nothing about down-converting to the low band and then upconverting it to the high band. Considering that there has to be two totally independent front-ends in the unit, it is much easier to simply have the second one not move the band down as far, instead of moving it all the way down and then back up. Think about it.
The TMR calculator shows approx. 6.8/100ft & 22.2/100m. That's linear. And it's right. You are misusing the calculation. I'll trust the FCC-lcensed pros that I've worked with, thank you.
But do DP LNBFs have better specs. than legacy? Apparently not.
They separate The RHP from the LHP and use two different LOs to down convert the different polarizations to two different frequency bands which Echostar calls band stacking. There is not additional up converting. Universal FSS Ku LNFBs also use two LOs to down convert the satellite signal to two different bands (but they don't separate the polarizations before down converting). This is basic electronics. Ask you friends with FCC licenses; they might know.
Regarding linearity of decibels I found this site from a University of California:
http://arts.ucsc.edu/EMS/Music/tech_background/TE-06/teces_06.html
They totally agree with me. In their example they calculate a ratio of 4.7 trillion to 23 and come up with 113db. According to your logic and that of the WEB sites you stick all your faith in, the answer would be 204,347,826,100db !! Here's another link from another University:
http://hyperphysics.phy-astr.gsu.edu/hbase/sound/db.html
In their example they they calculate a ratio of 10,000 to 1 and give an answer of 40db. According to your logic and the two WEB sites you stick all you faith in the answer would have been 10,000db!!
Here's a link from Columbia University:
http://www.columbia.edu/~fuat/cuarc/dB.html
In their example they show two cascaded amplifiers with a total gain of 15,125. They convert that figure to 41.79db. According to your simple logic it shoud be 15,125db!!
Here's a link from Rice University that shows a table comparing power ratios to decibels:
http://cnx.rice.edu/content/m0082/latest/
It clearly shows for anyone with a limited background in mathematics that decibels are not linear. I'll keep my trust with the mathematicians and engineers with graduate degrees Thank You.