Few days ago I was watching TV and then went downstairs for a few minutes. Out of nowhere a bad storm rolled in and I immediately pulled the plugs and antenna connections on everything downstairs. As I was heading back up, the house lit up with a loud buzz and then the deafening thunder crack followed by strange sounds from my home's alarm system. Thought for sure my rooftop antenna took a hit.
TV was still on upstairs showing the X2's frozen graphic screen with vertical lines going through it. Tried to turn the TV and X2 off with their remotes before pulling the plug but neither responded so I just killed the power.
After the storm passed, I turned everything back on. TV displayed no signal no matter what I selected. By-passed the Mitsu's 3D box and still no good. Turned out my nice Onkyo 5.1 receiver took a hit and would no longer pass HDMI output.
Plugged the X2 into my TV and it seemed to work but no signal. Tried changing satellites and still no signal. Looked outside and the dish was stuck on 125W. When I unplugged the LNB, the SG2100 came back to life!
I pulled the cap off the LNB and it smelled burnt inside. A new LNB arrived today and I'm back up in action...along with a new 1050 watt 7.2 Sony receiver. I'm amazed the $40 X2 Mini survived!
I guess I got lucky as it only took out those two items. I'm usually on it when it comes to storms, I even unplug everything before I go to work if there is any bad weather predicted, but this one blind sided me.
My question is, what can I do to prevent this in the future? I'm assuming this was just a nearby strike which traveled in through my dish. My rooftop antenna has a proper earth ground rod but I never did anything with the 1 meter Ku dish planted in my backyard. The steel pole is deep in the ground so I figured any static build up or lightning hit would take that path.
My coax has a separate external ground...would it be worth attaching that the LNB arm and then attaching it to a separate ground rod driven next to the dish (or a ground in the house)? Or is this a deal where I would need to run a few hundred feet of ground wire to my house's earth ground?
TV was still on upstairs showing the X2's frozen graphic screen with vertical lines going through it. Tried to turn the TV and X2 off with their remotes before pulling the plug but neither responded so I just killed the power.
After the storm passed, I turned everything back on. TV displayed no signal no matter what I selected. By-passed the Mitsu's 3D box and still no good. Turned out my nice Onkyo 5.1 receiver took a hit and would no longer pass HDMI output.
Plugged the X2 into my TV and it seemed to work but no signal. Tried changing satellites and still no signal. Looked outside and the dish was stuck on 125W. When I unplugged the LNB, the SG2100 came back to life!
I pulled the cap off the LNB and it smelled burnt inside. A new LNB arrived today and I'm back up in action...along with a new 1050 watt 7.2 Sony receiver. I'm amazed the $40 X2 Mini survived!
I guess I got lucky as it only took out those two items. I'm usually on it when it comes to storms, I even unplug everything before I go to work if there is any bad weather predicted, but this one blind sided me.
My question is, what can I do to prevent this in the future? I'm assuming this was just a nearby strike which traveled in through my dish. My rooftop antenna has a proper earth ground rod but I never did anything with the 1 meter Ku dish planted in my backyard. The steel pole is deep in the ground so I figured any static build up or lightning hit would take that path.
My coax has a separate external ground...would it be worth attaching that the LNB arm and then attaching it to a separate ground rod driven next to the dish (or a ground in the house)? Or is this a deal where I would need to run a few hundred feet of ground wire to my house's earth ground?