Not sure if this question belongs here, but it is somewhat related to receivers. My apologies to the forum members if I put it in the wrong place.
After many years of watching Ku FTA TV I've always wondered why different transponders on the same satellite are received with different % quality. Not talking about a few per cent, sometimes there's a great difference. Is it because certain channels don't need that much output power (wattage) from the satellite, or is it a matter of how much a company is willing to spend to get their signal out? Does location matter? Does it depend on the type of beam (spot, hemispherical, panamerican)? Maybe bandwidth and symbol rate affect the amount of transmit power needed from transponder?
Since satellites are solar powered, I'd imagine that there's only so much power (wattage) to be divvied up among the broadcasters using that satellite.
With all the knowledgeable folks on this forum am sure someone has an answer.
Thanks.
Sponge
After many years of watching Ku FTA TV I've always wondered why different transponders on the same satellite are received with different % quality. Not talking about a few per cent, sometimes there's a great difference. Is it because certain channels don't need that much output power (wattage) from the satellite, or is it a matter of how much a company is willing to spend to get their signal out? Does location matter? Does it depend on the type of beam (spot, hemispherical, panamerican)? Maybe bandwidth and symbol rate affect the amount of transmit power needed from transponder?
Since satellites are solar powered, I'd imagine that there's only so much power (wattage) to be divvied up among the broadcasters using that satellite.
With all the knowledgeable folks on this forum am sure someone has an answer.
Thanks.
Sponge