Also, if your receiver is connected to a phone line, you might want to check if the receiver is stable without the phone line connected, unless you know how to troubleshoot unusual power flaws in phone systems. I had a customer who's 722 was rebooting constantly. I found that the phone line was causing 52 volts to cross the chassis of the receiver. It was probably screwing with the reference voltage that the receiver needs to operate properly. Outside at the telco entry point, the 52 volts was on the red wire, but it was on the green wire at the outlet.
In regards to phone lines, DirecTV was anal about the polarity being correct due to the receivers' sensitivity to polarity reverse. This is the first Dish receiver, that I've heard of, that was affected. I would definitely pick up a phone line tester and use it. I expect we'll hear more of this in the near future.
A phone line polarity tester is cheap! While most modern phones aren't affected by polarity, it looks like digital receivers are. And, if you've tested many lines, the telephone guys know that newer phones don't care about polarity, and they don't either. It is amazing how many phone lines I've checked and the high percentage of reverse polarity I've found. (It is my understanding that reverse polarity on a phone line will also slow down your computer.)
Here's a link to a testers, meters, supplies, etc. Phone line tester $2.99.
Skywalker Communications: Satellite Sales, Consumer Electronics They are local to me and very helpful with great prices. Get their catalog. They have nearly everything you could need.
And an interesting thread:
How to test phone line polarity w/ multimeter? - Home Discussion Forums
This kind of situation can explain reboots and returned receivers that test fine on the test bench.
One last thing about phone lines.
Be SURE to run them through a surge protector or UNPLUG them during thunderstorms!
Electricity follows the path of least resistance. Phone lines constantly have a "trickle" charge on the line and when the phone rings a much larger voltage is sent down the line. Either way, the path of least resistance is where electricity is already flowing...like your phone line. You can do everything possible to protect your receiver from surges but it won't matter if you neglect the phone line. That's where the lightning damage comes from in the first place.