In another thread, I posted that while using my Diamond 9000 trying to see Ciel-2, which is low on my horizon through the trees, that it looked like something shorted out. It was during a rainstorm, and it's possible that somehow I got water into either the Invacom lnbf or my 4x1 diseqC switch, but I'm just guessing there, because I immediately connected another receiver, and it was seeing the signal I HAD been looking at.
But anyway, I played around with my Twinhan receiver for a while, and for a while was getting some signals, but not good results, then finally switched to my old Fortec Ultra, which "seemed" to be working. Then I decided to try to switch back to the Diamond, however it wouldn't come up. It would come up on OTA channels, but when I'd try to bring it up on a sat channel, I'd get an error which said something like "LNB FAULT" or something. Disconnected the COAX, and it comes up without the error. Connect the coax to my Ultra, and slave the Diamond through a DC block, and the Diamond works fine, and plays the channels.
So I thought that perhaps the coax to the dish was shorted out enough to cause it to draw too much current, so I started doing some current measurements, however I'm not sure how to interpret them.
C-band LNB from Drake..... didn't even register on mA meter. (this lnb works fine).
Coax to SG2100-->diseqC switch--> 4 different lnbfs over 150 mA (motor not moving)
4 ports of an old partially functional Invacom.... each port in 60-80 mA range.
4 ports on the Invacom I'm using.... 1 port near zero (wasn't using that one), the other ports in 50-100 mA range.
Anyway, I'm not sure how much current these lnbfs, motors and diseqC switches are supposed to draw. Does the 150 mA total seem excessive? Should the motor and DiseqC switches be drawing in the 70-80 mA range when not running.
It seemed strange that my C-band lnbf wouldn't even register, but the Invacom was drawing 50-100 mA. Is that normal? I guess that an LNBF has a bit of extra electronics for switching polarity, whereas the C-band lnb doesn't, but it doesn't seem like it should be that much of a difference.
Actually, my feeling is that none of these currents should be enough to kick the Diamond into the lnb fault error, as I think the motor will draw more than I'm measuring when it's running, so I'm fearing that my Diamond might have become crippled, and no longer be able to control the dish/lnbfs. I guess I'll have to just use it slaved from now on. :-(
I did notice one thing. When testing to see if the Diamond would kick out when connected to my OLD Invacom (not on the dish, and not through the motor/switch), the Diamond didn't kick into fault then, but it was interesting that since I wasn't locking a transponder, the receiver kept trying to send out DiseqC commands to the switch/motor. At the time, I was on a vertical transponder, ie 13V. Each couple seconds, it would switch back to 18V, and send out DiseqC commands, then switch back to 13V, looking for a lock. It never stopped doing this. If I switched into Dish Setting mode, it would stay on whatever polarity/setting I put it on. I think this is normal behavior, as I've seen the continual sending of DiseqC signals before on 2 other receivers, but I never noticed that it switches up to 18V before sending out the DiseqC commands. I guess that makes sense.
Anyway, I'm *HOPING* that if we ever get some dry weather here that maybe the system will dry out and the Diamond will come back to life, but I'm starting to think that I killed it, or at least made it only operational when slaved.
But anyway, I played around with my Twinhan receiver for a while, and for a while was getting some signals, but not good results, then finally switched to my old Fortec Ultra, which "seemed" to be working. Then I decided to try to switch back to the Diamond, however it wouldn't come up. It would come up on OTA channels, but when I'd try to bring it up on a sat channel, I'd get an error which said something like "LNB FAULT" or something. Disconnected the COAX, and it comes up without the error. Connect the coax to my Ultra, and slave the Diamond through a DC block, and the Diamond works fine, and plays the channels.
So I thought that perhaps the coax to the dish was shorted out enough to cause it to draw too much current, so I started doing some current measurements, however I'm not sure how to interpret them.
C-band LNB from Drake..... didn't even register on mA meter. (this lnb works fine).
Coax to SG2100-->diseqC switch--> 4 different lnbfs over 150 mA (motor not moving)
4 ports of an old partially functional Invacom.... each port in 60-80 mA range.
4 ports on the Invacom I'm using.... 1 port near zero (wasn't using that one), the other ports in 50-100 mA range.
Anyway, I'm not sure how much current these lnbfs, motors and diseqC switches are supposed to draw. Does the 150 mA total seem excessive? Should the motor and DiseqC switches be drawing in the 70-80 mA range when not running.
It seemed strange that my C-band lnbf wouldn't even register, but the Invacom was drawing 50-100 mA. Is that normal? I guess that an LNBF has a bit of extra electronics for switching polarity, whereas the C-band lnb doesn't, but it doesn't seem like it should be that much of a difference.
Actually, my feeling is that none of these currents should be enough to kick the Diamond into the lnb fault error, as I think the motor will draw more than I'm measuring when it's running, so I'm fearing that my Diamond might have become crippled, and no longer be able to control the dish/lnbfs. I guess I'll have to just use it slaved from now on. :-(
I did notice one thing. When testing to see if the Diamond would kick out when connected to my OLD Invacom (not on the dish, and not through the motor/switch), the Diamond didn't kick into fault then, but it was interesting that since I wasn't locking a transponder, the receiver kept trying to send out DiseqC commands to the switch/motor. At the time, I was on a vertical transponder, ie 13V. Each couple seconds, it would switch back to 18V, and send out DiseqC commands, then switch back to 13V, looking for a lock. It never stopped doing this. If I switched into Dish Setting mode, it would stay on whatever polarity/setting I put it on. I think this is normal behavior, as I've seen the continual sending of DiseqC signals before on 2 other receivers, but I never noticed that it switches up to 18V before sending out the DiseqC commands. I guess that makes sense.
Anyway, I'm *HOPING* that if we ever get some dry weather here that maybe the system will dry out and the Diamond will come back to life, but I'm starting to think that I killed it, or at least made it only operational when slaved.