I received my AZBox Premium + yesterday, just as I was preparing to leave for work. I arrived back home this morning about 4:45 am. I just had to play with this new toy.
The first thing I observed is that my signal quality across the board increased approximately 10% minimum. I checked the quality on several satellites and TPs the other day when it was just a gorgeously clear and calm day using the original Premium model. This morning, it was overcast and spitting light rain with a little breeze and every satellite showed a substantial signal quality improvement.
I did run into a snag with setting up the internet access via the WiFi. The problem was two fold from my own mistakes.
First, I simply set the new Premium + on top of the old Premium box in the entertainment center. When I tried to connect via WiFi, it had a horrible time. Many failures to connect and slow connection speed results. I removed the old box from under the new and that cured that problem.
The second problem was again my error. I couldn't get MaZEdit or Filezilla to connect to the box, even after the box was confirmed to be connected to the net. Silly me, I forgot that I have two routers running and when I rebooted my PC, it connected automatically to the router that I don't have set up for this purpose. Once I switched the router connection, all was fine.
Why two routers you ask? Well, that was a troubleshooting excerise. It's an involved story with my system and Wild Blue. Seems that I am somehow being assigned two IP addresses simultaneously, from time to time and it is screwing with my connection. This ordeal is another story in itself, but that is why I have two routers. Originally, I thought that my first router was failing, so I bought another one, different brand and make to test. The problem is not the router. I suspect something with WildBlue's service, but cannot confirm it as the problem has since gone away. I just happen to have left both routers in service.
Enough of that mumbo jumbo.
Obviously, the very first thing that I wanted to test is the BLIND SCAN capabilities of the Premium Plus. It does work and it seems to function exceptionally well in most cases. When it came to blind scanning 83.0°W for the RTV and TUFF TV TP, it failed as others have claimed. It simply would not find that TP and the channels.
During the scan process, it appeared to hesitate near the TP frequency of 11.735, but it didn't pick it up. I tried all sorts of strategies to make it easier to pick up that TP, but it just wouldn't find it.
I finally gave up trying to BLIND scan this TP and manually entered it. It pulled it in right away then. And with about 83-86% quality. This was also with a much higher quality level than I detected with the original Premium, about 15 or more percent better. I am pleased with this result, but I still cannot explain why it won't pick it up during a BLIND scan.
When it came to BLIND scanning for Approximately 8 to 18 minutesthe FEED channels, it apeared to be excellent and quick. The default search range was between 11.700 and 12.900. I adjusted this to 11.700 - 12.200 and I found all sorts of FEEDS on various satellites.
I will post more of my findings here soon, but I am running short of time for now.
RADAR
The first thing I observed is that my signal quality across the board increased approximately 10% minimum. I checked the quality on several satellites and TPs the other day when it was just a gorgeously clear and calm day using the original Premium model. This morning, it was overcast and spitting light rain with a little breeze and every satellite showed a substantial signal quality improvement.
I did run into a snag with setting up the internet access via the WiFi. The problem was two fold from my own mistakes.
First, I simply set the new Premium + on top of the old Premium box in the entertainment center. When I tried to connect via WiFi, it had a horrible time. Many failures to connect and slow connection speed results. I removed the old box from under the new and that cured that problem.
The second problem was again my error. I couldn't get MaZEdit or Filezilla to connect to the box, even after the box was confirmed to be connected to the net. Silly me, I forgot that I have two routers running and when I rebooted my PC, it connected automatically to the router that I don't have set up for this purpose. Once I switched the router connection, all was fine.
Why two routers you ask? Well, that was a troubleshooting excerise. It's an involved story with my system and Wild Blue. Seems that I am somehow being assigned two IP addresses simultaneously, from time to time and it is screwing with my connection. This ordeal is another story in itself, but that is why I have two routers. Originally, I thought that my first router was failing, so I bought another one, different brand and make to test. The problem is not the router. I suspect something with WildBlue's service, but cannot confirm it as the problem has since gone away. I just happen to have left both routers in service.
Enough of that mumbo jumbo.
Obviously, the very first thing that I wanted to test is the BLIND SCAN capabilities of the Premium Plus. It does work and it seems to function exceptionally well in most cases. When it came to blind scanning 83.0°W for the RTV and TUFF TV TP, it failed as others have claimed. It simply would not find that TP and the channels.
During the scan process, it appeared to hesitate near the TP frequency of 11.735, but it didn't pick it up. I tried all sorts of strategies to make it easier to pick up that TP, but it just wouldn't find it.
I finally gave up trying to BLIND scan this TP and manually entered it. It pulled it in right away then. And with about 83-86% quality. This was also with a much higher quality level than I detected with the original Premium, about 15 or more percent better. I am pleased with this result, but I still cannot explain why it won't pick it up during a BLIND scan.
When it came to BLIND scanning for Approximately 8 to 18 minutesthe FEED channels, it apeared to be excellent and quick. The default search range was between 11.700 and 12.900. I adjusted this to 11.700 - 12.200 and I found all sorts of FEEDS on various satellites.
I will post more of my findings here soon, but I am running short of time for now.
RADAR