Spoke to a csr today about when I had directv my picture went out almost always when it rained. He said several technical improvements were made since last year that have greatly resolved the picture loss. Is this true??
Even in FL its annoying but still fairly rare.
If anything the new HD satellites go out faster (KA vs KU band) than before so that CSR is full of poop. Regardless with a proper setup you shouldn't lose signal that often in your location.
Why does Directv use the Ka Ku that they do when they know it's inferior? My parents have Dish and their HD lasts a lot longer than mine, but when they lose HD, SD is gone too. You'd think Directv would WANT the higher quality channels that some people actually pay extra for to come in as long as possible...
If I lose the HD channels, I will often just tune the corresponding SD channel and that will be fine.
Spoke to a csr today about when I had directv my picture went out almost always when it rained. He said several technical improvements were made since last year that have greatly resolved the picture loss. Is this true??
Except that doesn't work for the many groups of local channels (ABC, CBS, etc.) that are ONLY transmitted in MPEG4 Ka...
The frequency spectrum for satellites has become really crowded. You can't transmit two signals on the same frequency without them interfering with each other. there are also a limited number of satellite slots (remember, all satellites have to be directly above the equator). So when DirecTV was looking to launch several satellites to deliver hundreds of new channels, they chose Ka frequencies. Not a problem for most people, most of the time.
They could of course eliminate all the SD channels and use the Ku frequencies for HD, but given the number of DirecTv customers who only have SD, and the millions of SD receivers that would need to be replaced, that isn't going to happen soon.
They should start charging an "inconvenience to HD viewers" fee to all SD receivers. I'd say $12/month. "Lower your monthly bill and upgrade to HD..."
But in fact that does not really help, because of the nature of the storms in Texas/Florida. The satellite communications people have lots of data and classify every area in the world based on the likelihood and duration of interruption in the signals (generally in Ka like the DirecTV HD signal). Florida and Texas are far worse than anywhere else in the U.S.Being in Texas, you have a more direct line to the sats at 95, 99, and 103 than those of us on the coasts. That means less atmosphere to penetrate, so theoretically a more stable picture.
The advance they made that improves signal quality was a simple software feature used during activation. Technicians must achieve a set threshhold to activate the box. Fewer dishes pointed half-assed.
The H20 beeps to show signal strength?