Dish, LNBf, receiver
I like to manually input my known transponders as the 1st transponder on my lists. That way it shows immediately when scanning for channels. These channels go at the start of my scanning because they are always there, 100% of the time. After I know the satellite dish is receiving "normal" signal and quality levels; then I "do the rest"; which entail's setting up the dish to track and receive as a high a signal and quality level of each satellite available. Now I know the system is working to the best it can; and lower power level TP's are checkered into my tp lists. Blind scan requires the best your dish can provide it; so any 36" dish is better than any 30" dish! This "sizing" lowers the noise the lnbf amplifies (SNR); therefore works as a system better. After all the "tuning"; now blind scan works as a software correctly; but manual entry has been around since 1992 when all this digital signal began; so I then go into this subject of low sr's. It is very important, still, that the dish receives every satellite perfectly; and it is whether it works on low sr channels mostly. And when it gets down to it, reception using C Band signals requires a stable and noiseless environment for a receiver to tune! Same thing, dish size is the embellishing factor, bar none! If using 8 foot; you get 8 foot signal. If using 10 foot; you get 10 foot signal! There is no way around it, dish size is a very large factor. Noisy LNBf, you bet! Especially if you have a smaller dish! And especially today, when you have 20-40 channels on a 30 MHz bandwidth = 20 at 1.3 MHz each or 40 at .667 MHz! Then an lnb that is 1 MHz stable (a norm) is close to or not able to be working! Noise will stop quality! But every satellite receiver is then really the same, because really, DVB-S2 receivers all have the same "tuning" abilities. It is what is input to it that allows it to work or not work. All tuners have a specification; and if the receiver does not receive something within this "specified range"; it will not work!
PID ENTRY has been around since 1992 in receiver designs. It works! Congrats to microHD for including this "great" feature!
A great test is SatMex 5 and 6 C Band satellites for those living in the southern corn belt, san diego to texas/florida area. Many low SR's; lots of them; and great signals!
By the way; I have a 1.4 dB KU linear single LNBf (one of the first made to go on a KU only dish) if you would like to try "arcing" a dish. It still works!