Finally had success with second installer to get Joey to see the Hopper, but there's now a splitter in the line and I wonder if this is the best way to do it. Basically, on the install, the cabling looks like this (using the Dish HD outside dish)......Two cables enter the solo node outside the house, but only one on the output side (one marked "to host") that enters the house is being used (the output side marked "to client" now has a terminator in place; the cable does enter the house and is available, but is not being used). The "host" cable is connected inside the house to a splitter.....on the output side of the splitter, a cable runs to the hopper on the "host" side of the splitter, a second cable runs to the joey (from the "client" side of the splitter).
I should say this that he inserted the splitter initially to isolate the cabling for the DISH TV from other cabling in the control box inside the house (the house has other structured wiring, all coming to a central box.....including cabling that allowed the former owners to view surveillance cameras via an unused satellite tv channel........thus it made sense to me for the installer to simplify the system by isolating the cabling as he did.......of course, the surveillance cameras can't be viewed via an unused satellite channel now, but that's a different issue that I'll address later). He could not get the Joey to see the hopper, even in this isolated configuration, until he terminated the signal from the client side of the solo node outside the house.
My question is, is this the best way to do this? Seems to me the splitter inside the house is not necessary [from what I've read on this forum so far.....and I have a lot more reading to do and things to learn.....the cable from the host side of the solo node should go to the hopper, the cable from the client side of the solo node should connect to the joey......all this should be easy to do, as all cables are available for connection in the central wiring box inside the house]. OTOH, if it's six one way and half a dozen the other, I'll leave it alone for now.
Very happy to have found this forum. Hope what I've asked is clear, and my apologies if this has been answered before. Thanks folks!
I should say this that he inserted the splitter initially to isolate the cabling for the DISH TV from other cabling in the control box inside the house (the house has other structured wiring, all coming to a central box.....including cabling that allowed the former owners to view surveillance cameras via an unused satellite tv channel........thus it made sense to me for the installer to simplify the system by isolating the cabling as he did.......of course, the surveillance cameras can't be viewed via an unused satellite channel now, but that's a different issue that I'll address later). He could not get the Joey to see the hopper, even in this isolated configuration, until he terminated the signal from the client side of the solo node outside the house.
My question is, is this the best way to do this? Seems to me the splitter inside the house is not necessary [from what I've read on this forum so far.....and I have a lot more reading to do and things to learn.....the cable from the host side of the solo node should go to the hopper, the cable from the client side of the solo node should connect to the joey......all this should be easy to do, as all cables are available for connection in the central wiring box inside the house]. OTOH, if it's six one way and half a dozen the other, I'll leave it alone for now.
Very happy to have found this forum. Hope what I've asked is clear, and my apologies if this has been answered before. Thanks folks!