They may not have the corresponding transponders listed but you can see what content is on the bird: http://www.lyngsat.com/packages/directvusa99.html
Sacramento, and others, are on that bird.
Sacramento, and others, are on that bird.
AntAltMike said:Initially, DirecTV had announced that there would be 48 transponders on each Ku satellite...
HDTVFanAtic said:Lyngsat, like the charts used for this thread, was done months ago.
They have since changed birds and the lyngsat info, like what was posted here - is seriously wrong and outdated.
HDTVFanAtic said:It is still mindboggling that they disabled the transponders in the bios. A major outage of one bird and many at D* will be out of work for making that decision. Just stupid to disable your redundancy as both E* and D* have experienced outages in the past.
AntAltMike said:Your concern is unfounded.
If they ever have a beam failure on the new satellite, which is infrequent but it can happen, they already know what alternate routing they would use (these transponders are a lot more frequency agile than the earlier ones were) and if they actually needed to use a different spot to temporarily cover them during an outage, it could be turned on as needed, probably in a matter of seconds. Believe, me, these people know what they are doing. They know about a thousand times as much about what they are doing regarding this project as all of us together do.
AntAltMike said:As Edward Teller once said, "If you think one way and I think another, it is very tempting for me to conclude that you think differently because you are stupid."
AntAltMike said:DirecTV employs several thousand people with various degrees in broadcast engineering, computer science and business administration to formulate a plan to increase their program capacity. They have also invested billions of dollars in this project, and you think that because you have read your signal test meter a few times, that you have a clue what is going on here?
AntAltMike said:DirecTV moves programming from tranponder to transponder frequently, without the customer detecting as much as a frozen frame. DirecTV reauthorizes entire classes of customers within a zip code the instant a blacked out sporting event ends. You don't know that DirecTV needs a bios or firmware update to back up a failed component in the transmission link. And you don't even know how much of what you see in your self-test or elsewhere represents the limits of what that bios or firmware can do.
DirecTV 4S, according to its press release, carries 6 onboard spare transponders. But there are 192 different uplink-to-downlink transponder permutations (each of the 32 uplink frequencies can get transponded to each of the 6 downlink frequencies). So how do they do this? Do they only back up six of the possible 192 permutations and hope those are the ones that break? What do you think happens if the transponder 18 spot beam to Washington, DC fails? Do you think that the six spares are at six of the CONUS frequencies and that DirecTV is planning to knock off 14 channels of national programming to let me keep my locals?
I think the spot beam transponders on Spaceway 1 and 2 are about 60Mhz wide. I think that is enough bandwidth to carry 6 MPEG4 HDTV channels. Last time I checked, my market only had 4HDTV locals, so even if someone can show me on a spectrum analyzer that one of the other beams that has allegedly been masked out of my bios is still broadcasting an empty carrier here, then if the TWTA of the spotbeam I am receiving the programming from bites the dust, then the output of the transponder supplying that TWTA gets rerouted to healthy TWTA and now that beam all-of-a sudden is at a different frequency, namely, the frequency my receiver is looking for, and the link is reestablished without my receiver even knowing that it isn't getting the signal from the same transmitting antenna.
How do you know which transponders are physically "on" at present? Do you own a spectrum analyzer? Do you have a network of other people in other regions to simultaneously detecting spot beam propagation of all of the beams that aren't targeted at your market?
AntAltMike said:TWTAs and batteries have finite lives that are depleted though usage. DirecTV won't have the infrastructure in place to market HDTV locals into most of the markets for a year. Why should they burn out their batteries and TWTAs for a year between now and then?