I got the DishNOW/YA! system from Radio Shack.
It includes a DP 301 receiver, a Dish 500 satellite dish with a Legacy Twin LNB(No DishPro logo on the front of it, so I assume that it is that), along with mounting supplies.
I found it strange that the LNB was a Legacy LNB(should that matter?), and the receiver is a DP 301(at least it says DP on the front of the receiver). This doesn't mean anything, does it?
A Legacy Twin LNB is just as good as a DP LNB, right?
We are talking only satellites 119, and 110 here. This is the pre-paid, one room service. I know MOST(not all obviously) of the channels are on 119, while 110 carries alot of the locals(plus some other regular channels).
And on the pre-paid service you can't get the locals, or PPV, or HD, so I wouldn't think that 110 is super important, but it does carry some HBO's/Cinemax/Showtime/premium channels on it. Not the main ones, but some that go with a package, plus other scattered channels.
Anyway, I seemed to have read somewhere that using RG59 with a Legacy LNB is actually no big deal. Is this true?
If it is not, no big deal. I will just use RG6.
Also, what is a good signal strength to get?
What I mean is what is an acceptable signal strength while setting up? On a Clear day, obviously, which would be a good indication of the MAX I can get. This is just so I can figure out what I will lose with Rain Fade/Snow/etc...
How low does it get before it begins to look bad?
This will be connected to a Direct View 27" CRT HDTV Monitor through composite at first, but then will switch to S-Video.
Is there a HUGE difference on a TV of this size, plus the fact it is a CRT?
Thanks for all your help in advance.
Any recommendations are greatly appreciated as well.
It includes a DP 301 receiver, a Dish 500 satellite dish with a Legacy Twin LNB(No DishPro logo on the front of it, so I assume that it is that), along with mounting supplies.
I found it strange that the LNB was a Legacy LNB(should that matter?), and the receiver is a DP 301(at least it says DP on the front of the receiver). This doesn't mean anything, does it?
A Legacy Twin LNB is just as good as a DP LNB, right?
We are talking only satellites 119, and 110 here. This is the pre-paid, one room service. I know MOST(not all obviously) of the channels are on 119, while 110 carries alot of the locals(plus some other regular channels).
And on the pre-paid service you can't get the locals, or PPV, or HD, so I wouldn't think that 110 is super important, but it does carry some HBO's/Cinemax/Showtime/premium channels on it. Not the main ones, but some that go with a package, plus other scattered channels.
Anyway, I seemed to have read somewhere that using RG59 with a Legacy LNB is actually no big deal. Is this true?
If it is not, no big deal. I will just use RG6.
Also, what is a good signal strength to get?
What I mean is what is an acceptable signal strength while setting up? On a Clear day, obviously, which would be a good indication of the MAX I can get. This is just so I can figure out what I will lose with Rain Fade/Snow/etc...
How low does it get before it begins to look bad?
This will be connected to a Direct View 27" CRT HDTV Monitor through composite at first, but then will switch to S-Video.
Is there a HUGE difference on a TV of this size, plus the fact it is a CRT?
Thanks for all your help in advance.
Any recommendations are greatly appreciated as well.