If I were looking to buy a meter today and my budget was $200 - $300, I would shop for a quality used Super Buddy. Sure it isn't future proof against the slow migration towards DVBS2, but the meter is superior to any other meter in that price range.
The tuner is very sensitive and optimizing the signal quality is so much easier than any other meter I have ever tested or owned. Features such as LNB frequency drift and spectrum analyzer make the unit really stand out amount the competition.
Applied Instruments provides regular satellite and accurate transponder updates on their website. Their telephone support and customer service is second to none. Yes it is nice to be able to scan and watch a channel on others meters, but I don't buy meters to watch TV out at the dish.
There is one shortcoming that I wish that Applied Instruments would address in legacy and the new AI Turbo models, DiSEqC 1.2 motor control. The meter controls 22KHz/DiSEqC switches, so the design supports the command set. Seems that it should be an easy addition, but maybe there are hardware or memory constraints?
The tuner is very sensitive and optimizing the signal quality is so much easier than any other meter I have ever tested or owned. Features such as LNB frequency drift and spectrum analyzer make the unit really stand out amount the competition.
Applied Instruments provides regular satellite and accurate transponder updates on their website. Their telephone support and customer service is second to none. Yes it is nice to be able to scan and watch a channel on others meters, but I don't buy meters to watch TV out at the dish.
There is one shortcoming that I wish that Applied Instruments would address in legacy and the new AI Turbo models, DiSEqC 1.2 motor control. The meter controls 22KHz/DiSEqC switches, so the design supports the command set. Seems that it should be an easy addition, but maybe there are hardware or memory constraints?