I am in northern Colorado, 40.56' latitude, and have been getting Bell for years on standard dishes. When they put up the new sat at 82', my signal went way down, but was usable. When they put up the new sat at 91', I never saw it again. After a re-roofing, I had a local sat guy put up a 1-meter dish with just one LNB and no switch. I was very happy when I got a signal strength of about 93 on my best transponder.
In late December, a bit over a year later, I started having dodgy service and saw that now, my best signal was about 64. I just had the same guy out, as I figured it needed peaking, but he couldn't really get it any higher. We wondered about the LNB, and swapped it out for one of my other thought-to-be-good LNBs, and again got the same results. I'm seeing this on both tuners, which are connected to separate cables from the LNB.
My conclusion is that Bell has shifted its footprint slightly north. It wouldn't take much from here. Has anyone else on the southern fringes of the signal noticed anything to corroborate this? Thanks.
In late December, a bit over a year later, I started having dodgy service and saw that now, my best signal was about 64. I just had the same guy out, as I figured it needed peaking, but he couldn't really get it any higher. We wondered about the LNB, and swapped it out for one of my other thought-to-be-good LNBs, and again got the same results. I'm seeing this on both tuners, which are connected to separate cables from the LNB.
My conclusion is that Bell has shifted its footprint slightly north. It wouldn't take much from here. Has anyone else on the southern fringes of the signal noticed anything to corroborate this? Thanks.