I'm having kind of a weird issue and I'm not sure if the problem is with the LNB's or what. I have more than one C-band dish, each fixed on a specific satellite, and each has a dual LNB. The LNB's are of two different brands. One is an older model, which just so happens to be on my smallest dish, and it performs flawlessly in all weather and has done so for several years. The other type is a newer model. I should note that these are all modern style LNB's that use voltage switching for polarity; none are of the older type with mechanical polarity switching.
The thing I have noticed with the newer ones is that sometimes when it is really cold out (below around 20 degrees F) channels will come in really flaky, in that they have a lot of interference, purple lines or mini breakups in the signal, occasional small gaps in the audio, that sort of thing. You can watch the program but it is not a pleasant experience.
Last night I stumbled across something weird though. As it happened I tuned in a channel on the other side of the LNB, in other words, same satellite but different transponder while it was in the process of recording a program off the same satellite. And when I watched the playback of the recording, I noticed that all the interference cleared up right around the time I had tuned in that second channel and didn't reappear for the rest of the night. Now that could have been sheer coincidence, but it also made me wonder - I would imagine that when one side of the LNB is in use it generates a small amount of heat, but when both sides are in use a lot more heat is generated. Could the circuitry in the LNB have a thermal issue, where it's not happy until it reaches a certain temperature, and causes interference if the temperature is too low?
I only viewed that other transponder for about five minutes but unless it was just coincidence, the mere act of using the other side of that LNB seems to have cleared the interference on the first tuner, and I have not seen this issue occur when it's not several degrees below freezing. I wish I could get some more of those older dual LNBs (the ones sold about five years ago give or take a couple, I don't remember who made them but it was NOT DMS International), they seem to work reliably no matter what but nobody seems to have them anymore. Now I'm trying to determine whether I have a defective LNB, or if this is something common to the newer ones - has anyone else seen this particular problem?
The thing I have noticed with the newer ones is that sometimes when it is really cold out (below around 20 degrees F) channels will come in really flaky, in that they have a lot of interference, purple lines or mini breakups in the signal, occasional small gaps in the audio, that sort of thing. You can watch the program but it is not a pleasant experience.
Last night I stumbled across something weird though. As it happened I tuned in a channel on the other side of the LNB, in other words, same satellite but different transponder while it was in the process of recording a program off the same satellite. And when I watched the playback of the recording, I noticed that all the interference cleared up right around the time I had tuned in that second channel and didn't reappear for the rest of the night. Now that could have been sheer coincidence, but it also made me wonder - I would imagine that when one side of the LNB is in use it generates a small amount of heat, but when both sides are in use a lot more heat is generated. Could the circuitry in the LNB have a thermal issue, where it's not happy until it reaches a certain temperature, and causes interference if the temperature is too low?
I only viewed that other transponder for about five minutes but unless it was just coincidence, the mere act of using the other side of that LNB seems to have cleared the interference on the first tuner, and I have not seen this issue occur when it's not several degrees below freezing. I wish I could get some more of those older dual LNBs (the ones sold about five years ago give or take a couple, I don't remember who made them but it was NOT DMS International), they seem to work reliably no matter what but nobody seems to have them anymore. Now I'm trying to determine whether I have a defective LNB, or if this is something common to the newer ones - has anyone else seen this particular problem?