I just looked the lnb box and it has a low of 5150 and a high of 5750.
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I just looked the lnb box and it has a low of 5150 and a high of 5750.
So I created a second satellite For the horizontal transponders and the channels are all working perfectly. Don’t ask me why 5750 is working with the horizontal transponders. My dad has the same Freesat V8 Super at home. I’ll try the same thing when I get to his house this week.
DC two things. You channel is probably the high voltage and the drop on the 100 foot run is to much and it will not get the high voltage polarity.
On the other thing that you were blowing LNB's was that at Dads or another location? If at another location then maybe the LNB's are getting fried by the STB with the output voltage being to high? Just a thought.
If anything I’m thinking the voltage was too low. The long run and the storms out here seem to be frequent. My buddy lost his bell lnb last year when I lost this lnb. The one with the short run has been great with no blown lnb’s but no horizontal either.
OK.... RG-6 but is it the copper coated steel center conductor or the good stuff with the pure copper center?
Another over looked factor is the shield, the cheap stuff has a higher DC loss the the quad shielded stuff, I would as a test use RG-6 quad with a pure copper center rated out to 3 GHz, just run it on the ground (or however) as a tryout, this to see if the coax may or may not be the problem.
He rg6 from from the local cable company. I used the same cable for both. The dish at my dads is a really short run too. I’m just wondering if these Freesats are not very good receivers. I cut a piece off and it’s copper all the way through. It’s working with the frequency change now. I do some more playing with it. What does everyone here use for receivers. Maybe I need to upgrade them.
So if the voltage is too low you will lose one polarity. The short run is still missing a polarity then it could be crappy coax. You could make a break out cable and test the voltage at the LNB under load (connected). It's possible too that you are only getting the high voltage polarity and the STB is not switching it's voltage low enough. Measurement is the sure way to know.
Anyone know of a device meant to test voltage of a connected load?
The coax for CATV is not rated for satellite work, it stops around 900 MHz, it may look like it works but some of the higher end transponders run up to 2 GHz. (after down/up conversion, LO frequency minus the "C" band transponder frequency) )
Do you have a small magnet?? If so try it on the center conductor of the piece you cut off, if it sticks it's CCS type of coax.
I can't quite wrap my head around why the two different LO frequency's work for different polarity's, something is goofy with that setup.(or LNB)
Not possible for an RF circuit like this, it will seriously up set the signals, you need a special interface to do a DC voltage measurement on an active RF circuit.
If he was getting only a high DC voltage then he would be stuck in the horizontal polarity's only, he gets the horizontal polarity's if he turns the LNB.
Plus 13 volts DC gets you the vertical transponders, plus 18 volts DC gets you the horizontal transponders, these voltages have a plus or minus 1 volt tolerance, if at the end of the run of coax your under 17 volts, the LNB may not switch correctly, if under 13 volts the LNB may stay in the default mode of vertical transponders only.
The average DC voltage drop on copper coated steel type center conductor coax is around 2.6 to 2.8 ohms per 100 feet, the average DC voltage drop on pure copper type center conductor is around .6 to .7 ohms per 100 feet.......What one would you all pick??
the run I have is around 150 feet, I was worried about RG6, so I went with the RG11 more expensive but worth it, could be an option for you dcapper, Amazon has a few sellers that offer it at a pretty good price...
I use RG-11 in some of my long run installs, the only draw back is that the connectors are a bit hard to find, unless you get it with them installed.
Every chinese pos lnb I have tried will only work on one polarity. Their stuff is garbage.
Bringing up the old thread. I'm still running 5150 for v and 5750 for h at the lake and it's still working fine. At my dad's house I took a portable tv and the freesat outside and used a 10' piece of coax and still no h. I'll change the lnb this week. But I know his signal gets weak a lot at the house. The neighbor parked his massive rv by the dish. I'm sure that's not helping matters.