Answer is in my sig. As someone else stated, I have an R5000 and can capture the transport streams off one of my 211s.
From Lyngsat:
8PSK modulation
21.5 megasymbols per second
2/3 Viterbi forward error correction
188/204 Reed-Solomon error correction
3 * 21.5 * 2/3 * 188/204 = 39.6Mbits/sec
I think DISH is or migrating to "DVB-S2, 8PSK, MPEG-4/HD, NAGRAVISION 3" and DVB-S2 uses BCH outer code instead of Reed-Solomon error correction giving closer to 43 Mbits/sec at 21.5M SR and over 50Mbp/s with 22.5M SR which the 27Mhz wide transponder could handle just fine.
EchoStar 12 @ 61.5° West - frequencies - freq - channels - packages :: TrackSat.com
I still say that the content provided in MPEG4 (hbo, show, max, others?) is just passed through and the content still sourced in mpeg2, has so much headroom that transcoding would only add some loss in quality. I remember VOOM and the mosquito noise was very visable, I dont notice that any more. Think about it, you'll take a 10% hit in quality transcoding and if you down res anothor 10% that's a 20% loss, can anbody say DTV looks 20% better than DISH.
File size does not really relate to bit-rate and quality, Mpeg's, the "I Frames" can be up to 4 times as large in size as the "P Frames" or "B Frames", file size is directly proproptional to the number of scene changes that generate a new "I Frame" and the number of objects and moving objects, in addition by using VBR (Constant Quality) which is in a 'single pass encorder', can give up o 3 x reduction or more in file size then the CBR equivalent at the same bit-rate with no loss of quality. I can imagine, depending how long they buffer the video stream, that the short term average bit-rates would be bouncing all over place with highs and lows which would kind of explain maybe that statistical multiplexing is used to figure out how many null packets to throw in to keep the the through-put constant, I read somewhere that the transponders through put can have 20%-40% null packets, but they would still need to have the bandwidth available for the data peaks to avoid a data bottle neck.
Why 1440 x 1080, HDCAM tapes have been the typical transfer and distribution media for movies for HD television. HDCAM holds the progressive film image telecined to 8 bit 1440x1080i. It uses 3:1:1 color space and about 3x intraframe DCT compression to a 144 Mb/s data rate vs. 90Mb/s used for SD DigiBeta. Under playback, the 1440x1080i recorded signal is stretched out to 1920x1080i/29.97 or inverse telecined and scaled for 1280x720p/59.94 playback. Later HDCAM models can also play progressive 23.976 PsF tapes out to 1080p/23.976, 1080i/29.97 or 720p/59.94.
Read this one to understand what they are up-linking to the satellite for typical TV network produced material. 1440x1080 is the highest resolution any of this is recorded in the field or studio.
HDCAM, XDCAM & DVCPRO HD: Some Questions Answered : HD High-End
The huge difference is these broadcast formats avoid or reduce intraframe compression so that editing is less lossy. Typical bit rates are far higher.
Production formats:
HDCAM 135 Mb/s 1440x1080i or 1280x720p 3:1:1 coding
DVCPro-HD 100 Mb/s 960x1080i or 1280x720p 4:2:2 coding
News/Reality formats:
XDCAM-HD 35Mb/s 1440x1080i or 1280x720p 4:2:0 coding
HDV 25Mb/s 1440x1080i or 1280x720p 4:2:0 coding
After editing, these are distributed from either HDCAM or DVCProHD master formats to playout servers.
DBS and broadcast bitrate transmission to the home is much reduced to between 8 to 19 Mb/s for MPeg2 HD or about 5-15 Mb/s for MPeg4.
There is absolutely no point to upscaling these to 1920x1080i before downlink. It would only decrease quality. The cable/sat tuner makes the conversion to 1920x1080i or 1280x720p in the box for output over HDMI or analog component.
BluRay allows use of 1920x1080p/24 formats at up to 25 Mb/s for added quality. It would be possible to distribute movies over satellite at this bitrate (or ~12Mb/s for MPeg4) but half the amount of channels could be sent over a satellite transponder. Someday this quality may be offered at a premium charge.
ATSC DTV broadcast does upscale to 1920x1080i or 1280x720p for broadcast in anticipation of future enhancement. They are investing in fixed infrastructure intended for decades of life for transmitters and HDTV internal tuners. 1440x1080 was not approved as one of the supported 18 transmission formats. Still the production behind the transmitter is typically recorded at lower resolution. DirectTV and Dish can do what they want because both the downlink and tuner are under their control.