Greetings.
I have 3 HD receivers (VIP-211, VIP-211k, VIP-222) connected to 3 dishes through a DPP 44.
I live in a very wooded area, so I have to find very small slices of open sky to receive the various signals. A single dish won't even come close to doing what I need, as there is no way to see more than 110/119 from the same spot on a very small property (mobile home park).
One dish is a Dish 500 receiving 110/119.
One is a large (26") wing dish with a single Dish 500 LNB for 129. It is aimed to the side of tree growth that I cannot control, and each year has less signal.
The third dish is aimed at 72.7. Great signal there.
I recently aimed the third dish to 72.7 when I found out that many of the same HD channels that are on 129 are there. I have a very clear view of the sky to pick up 72.7, and when I pointed that dish I have good signal.
The problem is that I receive my local stations on 129, and so far, the spotbeam is stronger than many of the transponders, and so it gets through the tree cover reasonably well. The problem is that there are other transponders on 129 that do not come in so well.
The 72.7 satellite seems to have a good signal on all the HD channels that are very weak on the 129 satellite.
The current configuration I am using on the DPP44 switch is as follows for satellite inputs.
connection 1 - 110 LNB
connection 2 - 119 LNB
connection 3 - 72.7 LNB
connection 4 - 129 LNB
I am wondering how I should connect this setup so that the HD channels that are available on both 72.7 and 129 will come FIRST from 72.7, and then if 72.7 doesn't have them, will go to 129. So far, it seems that it wants to get the channel from 129, even if the channel is too weak to be received.
If it weren't for needing 129 for locals, I would just abandon using it in favor of 72.7... unless someone can suggest some sort of laser tree arson!
thanks
Jeff
I have 3 HD receivers (VIP-211, VIP-211k, VIP-222) connected to 3 dishes through a DPP 44.
I live in a very wooded area, so I have to find very small slices of open sky to receive the various signals. A single dish won't even come close to doing what I need, as there is no way to see more than 110/119 from the same spot on a very small property (mobile home park).
One dish is a Dish 500 receiving 110/119.
One is a large (26") wing dish with a single Dish 500 LNB for 129. It is aimed to the side of tree growth that I cannot control, and each year has less signal.
The third dish is aimed at 72.7. Great signal there.
I recently aimed the third dish to 72.7 when I found out that many of the same HD channels that are on 129 are there. I have a very clear view of the sky to pick up 72.7, and when I pointed that dish I have good signal.
The problem is that I receive my local stations on 129, and so far, the spotbeam is stronger than many of the transponders, and so it gets through the tree cover reasonably well. The problem is that there are other transponders on 129 that do not come in so well.
The 72.7 satellite seems to have a good signal on all the HD channels that are very weak on the 129 satellite.
The current configuration I am using on the DPP44 switch is as follows for satellite inputs.
connection 1 - 110 LNB
connection 2 - 119 LNB
connection 3 - 72.7 LNB
connection 4 - 129 LNB
I am wondering how I should connect this setup so that the HD channels that are available on both 72.7 and 129 will come FIRST from 72.7, and then if 72.7 doesn't have them, will go to 129. So far, it seems that it wants to get the channel from 129, even if the channel is too weak to be received.
If it weren't for needing 129 for locals, I would just abandon using it in favor of 72.7... unless someone can suggest some sort of laser tree arson!
thanks
Jeff