Assuming Voom requires the stb's to be returned, what's the best way or how do I get power to the OTA antenna so I can still use it?
Ilya said:By the way, if you simply disconnect the wires going from the dish to the multiswitch/diplexer, you won't need the power supply.
Yes! The STB supplies power to the OTA antenna via the diplexer (it's actually supplied by the satellite input). So, if you continue using the STB for OTA and keep it connected via the same diplexer, the power would be provided whether the dish is connected or not. Of course if the STB is removed, than you do need a power supply to make any use of the antenna.bookwalk said:Could you elaborate for an electronics-illiterate? Why wouldn't I need a power supply? Is that assuming the VOOM box stays put and plugged in?
Mark Kays said:Will the Voom OTA antenna work if plugged into a directv HD box?
Ilya said:
Thanks Ilya,Ilya said:smodak, I think you are doing it all correctly. It should work. Make sure you are connecting to the correct contact of the power supply (it has two).
The only question is whether this power supply is powerfull enough to power the LNB and the antenna at the same time. I think it should be powerfull enough, but I am not positive. It would be better to disconnect the dish (one or two wires coming from the LNB), if this is possible at all.
I assume you only have one STB. Correct?
This might work, but only if the following two conditions are both true:amarko said:I juse got off the phone with csr and was told that all I had to do to get ota channels was to disconnect my cable from the back of the receiver and reconnect it to the back of my hdtv and I will receive the ota channels.
amrko, if you have the powered sensar II antenna and have diplexer install, it would not work, at least in my case it does not. As the antenna needs power and the sat feed from the diplexer (at the receiver side) provides the power.amarko said:I juse got off the phone with csr and was told that all I had to do to get ota channels was to disconnect my cable from the back of the receiver and reconnect it to the back of my hdtv and I will receive the ota channels.
If you have a tester (voltmeter) you can quickly check if the voltage is actually passed. It should be in 12-18 Volt range.smodak said:Thanks Ilya,
I have one receiver. I am connecting PS to the proper input.Is it time to RMA the PS then?
Unfortunately I don't. I just bought the PS off of internet. Anyway, somehow I think you are correct when you say "The only question is whether this power supply is powerfull enough to power the LNB and the antenna at the same time". So, if I can climb up there on the roof, all I would need to do is disconnect the wires coming out from the LNB to the diplexer, correct? the Diplexer would still be in-place. Or should I just take the diplexer out of the picture?Ilya said:If you have a tester (voltmeter) you can quickly check if the voltage is actually passed. It should be in 12-18 Volt range.