Had 2 hoppers and a joey installed about 2 months ago, so far no problems with the duo node outside and temps have recently been around zero last few nights with no problems. Hopefully I got a good node and it keeps working. Time will tell I guess.
A new house will fix that, plus make wife happy!I also noticed on the other Hopper it changes channels much much faster now that the duo node is at room temp. Well worth it. I have a super fast system now but I have wires hanging all over the bed room. Wife is not happy, we need a fix to this issue.
This is like your car acts up, you take it to the mechanic and say "replace this part". He does and problem still exists (and you'll still pay for the un-needed part and labor). Let them do the diagnosing.I called to get a replacement they said that was crazy many have it out side and there are no issues. They want to re run wires and charge me to snake them through the wall...
This is like your car acts up, you take it to the mechanic and say "replace this part". He does and problem still exists (and you'll still pay for the un-needed part and labor). Let them do the diagnosing.
The tech is here now and he said the original installer used old cables from a Diretv install I had about 3 years ago and that is what is causeing the issues for me. He is running new cables and said the dish was not grounded either. Hope this fixes it.
So keep it inside. Problem solved.
A Duo Node looks to be available for about $65...
Your idea sounded plausible until that last statement. In order for the copper to contract or expand in length significant enough to cause a loss of connection, the temperature would have to change significantly over a long run of the cable, not just the few inches or foot of cable that a hair dryer would affect. The fact that just warming up the node solves the issue indicates that it must be the node.Your hair dryer would have warmed the copper allowing it to stretch again, which is likely why you saw a resolution.