So how is one Hopper and 3 Joeys going to be wired? I was looking the the pictures on this thread and did not see that setup.
Would it actually be a "tap" coming off the Host port that would feed the Hopper and one Joey and then a splitter coming of the Node port going to the other two Joeys?
And is Tap just a different name for a diplexer?
mfoster711 said:And is Tap just a different name for a diplexer?
mfoster711 said:Would it actually be a "tap" coming off the Host port that would feed the Hopper and one Joey and then a splitter coming of the Node port going to the other two Joeys?
Week 3 training pdf has a listing of the following:
- Maximum 200-foot cable length from LNBF to farthest Hopper
- Maximum 200-foot cable length between any Hopper and Joey
pulled from their training site (click weekly uptraining and 2012): https://rweb.dishnetwork.com/departmental_content/TechPortal/content/tech/rtp.shtml
sparc said:Looks like you could even put a three way splitter after the tap on a solo node.
That's a lot of flexibility for wiring.
the advertising makes it sound like the joeys could move around rooms easily, but we don't exactly know how well that works in the real world. Especially the pairing once a joey is disconnected and reconnected to a different client port of the node.Could I have the installer get wires and whats needed to put in the shed and then just get one of my Joeys out of the house and use the tv in the shed as needed???
So I would get 1Hopper 2 Joeys as opposed to getting that extra Joey and fee...
Could I have the installer get wires and whats needed to put in the shed and then just get one of my Joeys out of the house and use the tv in the shed as needed???
So I would get 1Hopper 2 Joeys as opposed to getting that extra Joey and fee...
Ziptied said:There is no technical reason why it wouldn't work. However, I wouldn't expect the installer to run the additional shed cable for free.