Greetings to all. There was an auction on Ebay where the seller stated that the LNB works OK but the picture was not as sharp as it used to be. Do they really age with time to the point where picture quality starts to degrade?
Just fer instance,years ago I bought 2 DMSI BSC321S lnbfs,had used one on different dishes and the other one stayed new in the box.Anyway I was trying to set up an old Directway dish for Cozi and it was giving me fits.Had scanned in the channels from another dish/lnb but could not get a lock on anything with the Dway/BSC,even tho I knew it was pointed right.Finally did a blind scan and got some of the channels but the frequency's were way off,ok the LO had drifted.Put the "new" BSC on and had the same problem!So even "new" in the box after so many years the LO can change.Long story short (too late) I bought a new Geosatpro PLL lnbf and everything is working just fine now.Yes, LNBFs can age. It won't make a picture burry, but the frequency can drift on a DRO type LNB. This would cause the receiver to not lock onto a preprogrammed transponder.
Check out the LNB sticky if you want to learn more about a failing LNB.
have had a QPH-031 quit after about 6 years.Pulled a five year-old and unused QPH-031 out of storage a few months ago and the LO had drifted 4mhz. The unit out in the weather for the past 6 years was 5mhz off. Time takes its toll on man and machine...
Can I tune the LO to resolve this without having laboratory frequency measuring equipment?
Go a fraction of a turn!What do you have to lose if the option is to retire the LNBF?
Remove the plastic case and remove the sealant on the tuning slugs. Use a non metallic tool to tune the slug for centering the frequency. Blind scan to identify which slug changes the frequency on the high band section.
I would document which slug is tuned and the number of turns. Which slug to tune? Experiment and find out... Each LNBF is different.