Greetings,
I had a Hopper installed 2 months ago. During the installation, the installer said he prefers to have the single node installed as close to the Hopper as possible. He said that every action done at the Hopper sends a signal back to the single node and then returns back to the Hopper.
Due to the weather, I was not able to reconfigure the cabling to connect 2 cables from the dish to the ground block and then run an additional cable to the inside of the house to be able to move the single node to inside.
Moving the single node to the inside is a doable installation. My question is: Is it worth the time to move the single node to the inside and see a noticeable performance increase, such as changing channels or maneuvering around the EPG?
Below is a diagram to help explain what I am asking about.
TIA
geek
I had a Hopper installed 2 months ago. During the installation, the installer said he prefers to have the single node installed as close to the Hopper as possible. He said that every action done at the Hopper sends a signal back to the single node and then returns back to the Hopper.
Due to the weather, I was not able to reconfigure the cabling to connect 2 cables from the dish to the ground block and then run an additional cable to the inside of the house to be able to move the single node to inside.
Moving the single node to the inside is a doable installation. My question is: Is it worth the time to move the single node to the inside and see a noticeable performance increase, such as changing channels or maneuvering around the EPG?
Below is a diagram to help explain what I am asking about.
TIA
geek