You might notice decreased signal through attenuation or loss above 1GHz. Swept to 1GHz simply means that it has been certified or rated through a testing process to a maximum (x) amount of loss per (x) amount of distance to a maximum frequency of 1GHz. The cable may continue to perform well up through the typical highest frequency on a Standard type LNBF of 1450 MHz, but remember, often the satellite IF frequencies extend up to 2150MHz on Universal or Wideband type LNBFs. These higher IF frequencies could experience signal attenuation and losses in the cable runs between the dish and receiver.
Wouldn't be overly concerned about the history.... Cable may also be left over from a job, no longer accepted type for the installation contract or the contractor is no longer performing CATV installs.
Thank you for the great explanation, it is understood. I will "never" have a Universal or Wideband-type LNBF in my system so those wouldn't be an issue.
I suppose (cable run) distance is always a factor, but is it a biggee when considering the sweep rating? My dish farm is within about 60' of my house, and it takes another 40-50' to get to my receivers, so I would never have a run of much over 100'.
Was also planning on needing a few hundred feet to put up my SatAv LNBF/DTV Slimlines hybrids for some friends and family, since those will be gratis installs I'm looking for a(nother) deal (your deal on the LNBFs made the whole thing possible)!
Hmmm.....how would that stuff work for OTA antenna downleads?