I received my 2 Hopper / 1 Joey combo back in June to replace my VIP receivers and everything has been absolutely great until the last few weeks. I'm experiencing an odd issue where one of the Hoppers (the one by itself) is intermittently losing reception. Here are the facts:
I'm thinking this might be a bad node, or maybe a wiring issue, but I wanted to check and see whether anyone else had seen this problem. I really didn't want to call a tech to my house to have him show up on a nice day and tell him to wait until the temperature cools off to see the issue.
- 1000.2 system run through a duo node. Hopper and Joey going one direction, and the problem Hopper going the other direction with one client output on the duo node unused. A HIC is inserted alongside the problem Hopper. I've attempted a straight connection without the HIC and it makes no difference.
- When I run a check switch, under "node" where it normally says "Duo", it lists as "Not Connected" and the switch is listed as "DP Feed". Of the nine checkmarks that should show, I'm usually getting two. System status fails with two or three red boxes. Since I am getting two checkmarks on check switch, I usually can receive one satellite on one tuner, but try to change channels and it brings up the lost reception box. Signal strength is fine on what I do receive.
- The other side of the house with the Hopper/Joey combo is fine. No obvious issues.
- This only occurs when the temperature outside (where the node is) drops below 45°F. I first observed the behavior a couple of weeks ago. Last week was very warm and I didn't have one problem, but when the big cold front on the east coast moved through yesterday, I've been knocked out (one one Hopper) since.
- When I power down the working Hopper/Joey on the other side, the malfunctioning Hopper detects the node again and regains normal reception and passes the check switch. Turning the other Hopper/Joey back on restarts the problem.
- MoCA still works fine on all systems. Even the troublesome Hopper can access the other Hopper's recordings, or play programs on the home network via DLNA at all times.
- When first installed, the installer ran into a bad node. He left me with a solo node overnight to hold me over and then another installer came the next day and replaced it with a (new?) duo node.
I'm thinking this might be a bad node, or maybe a wiring issue, but I wanted to check and see whether anyone else had seen this problem. I really didn't want to call a tech to my house to have him show up on a nice day and tell him to wait until the temperature cools off to see the issue.