I'm kind of thinking about dropping my cable tv because it is costly. If I go with an FTA set up will I still be able to pick up normal shows like How I met your mother and American Pickers/ Pawn stars, and will there be normal channels like CBS, NBC and the History Channel?
I keep reading about 8PSK chips and I can't figure out if they have a legal purpose or are just for picking up dish network/ direct tv that should be paid?
I have a small dish network satellite dish on my house already but it has a round LNBF so I guess I'd have to buy a different piece for that to work.
If I get far enough that it does pick up some channels will it only be 5 or so or like 100 channels? My tv has a digital tuner and I can get about 5 channels when I hook up an antenna straight to that. I'm having a hard time noting a difference between those $20 boxes the government gave out for old tv's when they transferred to digital and FTA receiver boxes. I don't want to get several hundred dollars into this and find no real benefit for the work and cost.
If someone could shed some light on some introductory questions I may just take up a new satellite hobby. Thanks ahead!
-Kirk
I keep reading about 8PSK chips and I can't figure out if they have a legal purpose or are just for picking up dish network/ direct tv that should be paid?
I have a small dish network satellite dish on my house already but it has a round LNBF so I guess I'd have to buy a different piece for that to work.
If I get far enough that it does pick up some channels will it only be 5 or so or like 100 channels? My tv has a digital tuner and I can get about 5 channels when I hook up an antenna straight to that. I'm having a hard time noting a difference between those $20 boxes the government gave out for old tv's when they transferred to digital and FTA receiver boxes. I don't want to get several hundred dollars into this and find no real benefit for the work and cost.
If someone could shed some light on some introductory questions I may just take up a new satellite hobby. Thanks ahead!
-Kirk