No. You've got to have a coax feed to the satellite for the Hoppers. All of them.
OK, thanks aaronwt6. Good info.
No. You've got to have a coax feed to the satellite for the Hoppers. All of them.
Does everything work and as good compared to a coax to the Joey?
Hi - OP here...
So if I already have an ethernet network set up in my home - with the hopper connected to my router - I only need to connect the Joey to the same router (via a very long cat5 cable)?
And then - at the joey end I could connect a switch before the Joey & plug in the Joey as well as a computer to use in the shop?
This all sounds TOO easy.......
And what exactly do you mean by "switch Hopper links via the setup menus"? My wife doesn't like change or complicated setups, and this is her new exercise room. She would primarily be using the dvr from the main hopper that we are connecting to.
Hi - OP here...
So if I already have an ethernet network set up in my home - with the hopper connected to my router - I only need to connect the Joey to the same router (via a very long cat5 cable)?
And then - at the joey end I could connect a switch before the Joey & plug in the Joey as well as a computer to use in the shop?
This all sounds TOO easy.......
The only difference I have seen is in the DVR listing. In a multi-Hopper system, the Joey's DVR listing has a drop down menu that allows you to select which Hopper's recordings you want to browse. That drop-down option missing for ethernet-only connected Joeys. You can still have access to either hopper, but you have to switch Hopper links via the setup menus.
For our viewing patterns this is a very minor inconvenience. Hopefully it is something Dish will eventually fix, but I would not let it influence which connectivity option to choose unless literally everything else was equal and it was the only tie-breaker left.
Hi - OP here...
So if I already have an ethernet network set up in my home - with the hopper connected to my router - I only need to connect the Joey to the same router (via a very long cat5 cable)?
And then - at the joey end I could connect a switch before the Joey & plug in the Joey as well as a computer to use in the shop?
This all sounds TOO easy.......
And what exactly do you mean by "switch Hopper links via the setup menus"? My wife doesn't like change or complicated setups, and this is her new exercise room. She would primarily be using the dvr from the main hopper that we are connecting to.
As has been previously stated all Hoppers require 3GHz RG-6 to receive the sat signals. That is correct in that you can just connect the Hopper and the Joey to the same Ethernet/WiFi network and they will communicate by this means. However, initial Joey setup does require a coax connection, so you'll need to have a coax connection for the Joey initially. Can always activate the Joey using a tap into a Hopper line, then remove the Joey from the tap and connect to the network.
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Here ya go :-
http://www.satelliteguys.us/threads/287591-installing-a-3rd-Hopper?p=2903300#post2903300
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Don't you have to hook it back up to coax everytime it loses connection though?
Which setup? Several have been presented in this thread.Anyone have a rough schematic or hardware needed for this setup? I'd love to move the Joey to the shop every now and then.