I have two receivers. Each one is on it's own line going to the dish. Had heavy storms last night. After the storms, I had no reception on either receiver. Fine. I'll deal with it in the morning.
This morning I start examining the lines and at one of the outdoor ground blocks, ONE line is corroded. OK. I replace that connector and ground block. Great. I wonder which receiver I now have signal on? I turn on both receivers and now have signals on both. Huh?
I have voltage (19VDC) on both lines at the ground block. There's another groundblock right at the dish, but since that's 20' in the air, I haven't gone up there yet. I was going to do that this afternoon, but there's really no need to now.
TL;DR: why does replacing one connector (and ground block) fix the signal to both of my receivers?
This morning I start examining the lines and at one of the outdoor ground blocks, ONE line is corroded. OK. I replace that connector and ground block. Great. I wonder which receiver I now have signal on? I turn on both receivers and now have signals on both. Huh?
I have voltage (19VDC) on both lines at the ground block. There's another groundblock right at the dish, but since that's 20' in the air, I haven't gone up there yet. I was going to do that this afternoon, but there's really no need to now.
TL;DR: why does replacing one connector (and ground block) fix the signal to both of my receivers?