What are the differences between the different EA LNB’s. Like the three satellite ones vs the two satellite ones?
Unless your market happens to be one of the slim few where your hd locals are on the 77 satellite it isn't needed, the 3 satellite lnb adds the 77 satellite which is mostly sd duplicates of the HD channels on the other 2 but a few select markets have their locals on it otherwise you don't need it since all your channels would be on 61.5 and the 72 birdsWhat are the differences between the different EA LNB’s. Like the three satellite ones vs the two satellite ones?
3 satellite ones receive signals from 3 satellites, 2 satellite ones receive signals from 2 satellites. 1000.4 satellite dishes are designed for 3 satellites, 1000.2 dishes are designed for 2 satellites.What are the differences between the different EA LNB’s. Like the three satellite ones vs the two satellite ones?
More than likely something was broadcast off 77 that your neighbor subscribed to. DISH changes broadcasts from one satellite to another at will. A local channel from 77 could move to 61.5 if DISH makes room on 61.5.Good to know. I didn’t know the point of the 77 sat. A couple years ago my neighbor had dish with the 3 LNB’s. Apparently that’s all the tech had when it was installed. Does it also work as a fallback when one sats signal is weak?
Good to know. I didn’t know the point of the 77 sat. A couple years ago my neighbor had dish with the 3 LNB’s. Apparently that’s all the tech had when it was installed. Does it also work as a fallback when one sats signal is weak?
Is it possible that this could've just been a Western Arc dish? Western arc always has 3
If that was the case I would be on WA. The tech that installed wouldn’t put the dish where our las One was because he said there wouldn’t be a signal. I apparently only have EA signal even though dish align says I have WA LOS. Other people around here can get WA though. But that’s about 7 miles south of me.
If you can have both arcs, which holds signal better, or are they pretty much equal? Living in Iowa, AT&T (directv) at the moment, I'll lose signal about 10 minutes before a T-Storm hits and usually only out for 15 minutes or so... all dependent on speed of storm.
Eastern arc would be about the same, just losing signal after the storm passes? Better or worse?
Except for the parts of the country the other posters mentioned, it mostly comes down to local channels and spot beams.
So, if your locals are on both arcs, and you are on the edge of a spot beam on one arc, and closer to the middle on the other, go with the one that best covers you. The maps tool on this site is a great resource for finding out
If locals don't matter to you, and your dish is peaked correctly, then EA and WA shouldn't make much difference in Iowa, I wouldn't think. Your area is close enough to mine that I can feel pretty confident saying that.
SatelliteGuys.US_TheList - Dish Network Green Bay, WICan you provide a link to current spot beams. I’m in the Green Bay Wisconsin market which says I can have either arc. Have signal issues on EA for even the lightest storm.
I believe the Triple EA LNBF comes with the DPP 1000.4 dish and the Dual EA LNBF comes with the DPP 1000.2 dish. That makes them not interchangeable.
Nope...The EA setup required an LNB that has one lens cover for the 72.7 and 77 slots. and the singular cap over the lnb that received the 61.5 sigs...I believe the Triple EA LNBF comes with the DPP 1000.4 dish and the Dual EA LNBF comes with the DPP 1000.2 dish. That makes them not interchangeable.
The DPP 1000.4 and the DPP 1000.2 do have an EA LNBF available for each.
Nope...The EA setup required an LNB that has one lens cover for the 72.7 and 77 slots. and the singular cap over the lnb that received the 61.5 sigs...
The WA antenna uses the three individual LNB look ...110/119 and 129