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#1
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At long last, after many, many years of planning and saving, I am,
hopefully, going to have a couple of satellite dishes stuck on the top of the tower block where I live (planning permission expected) and fed down to my apartment. Access to the signals will then be available to others in the block to help me to recover the capital cost of installation. I want to understand as much of this as possible and require some advice/explanations from the good folk here! Firstly, the LNBs fitted to the dishes will not be the conventional ones, but will turn the satellite signal into light, which will be fed down fibre optic cables. I was told that the advantage of this approach is that fibre optic distribution is relatively loss free compared to the conventional co-axial cable used. Globalinvacom are the manufacturers and if you want to look at their stuff, simply Google the company name to see their website. Does anybody have any experience of this approach? I know that the St Pancras Station development in London uses fibre optic cabling. Secondly, would you be so kind as to explain the differences and uses of the following LNB: Universal Single, Universal Twin, Universal Quad and Univeral Quatro. I am particularly puzzled between Quad and Quatro, which almost seem the same, with their linguistic roots both meaning 'four'. Thanks! John Porcella |
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#2
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In article
s.com, John scribeth thus At long last, after many, many years of planning and saving, I am, hopefully, going to have a couple of satellite dishes stuck on the top of the tower block where I live (planning permission expected) and fed down to my apartment. Access to the signals will then be available to others in the block to help me to recover the capital cost of installation. I want to understand as much of this as possible and require some advice/explanations from the good folk here! Firstly, the LNBs fitted to the dishes will not be the conventional ones, but will turn the satellite signal into light, which will be fed down fibre optic cables. Why, are the distances -that- great?.. I was told that the advantage of this approach is that fibre optic distribution is relatively loss free compared to the conventional co-axial cable used. Globalinvacom are the manufacturers and if you want to look at their stuff, simply Google the company name to see their website. Does anybody have any experience of this approach? I know that the St Pancras Station development in London uses fibre optic cabling. Secondly, would you be so kind as to explain the differences and uses of the following LNB: Universal Single, Universal Twin, Universal Quad and Univeral Quatro. I am particularly puzzled between Quad and Quatro, which almost seem the same, with their linguistic roots both meaning 'four'. Depends a bit on how your going to do this either One LNB with a number of separate outputs, fine for small systems up to IIRC 8 TV's or a Four into a distribution switch unit.. Thanks! John Porcella -- Tony Sayer |
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#3
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Firstly, the LNBs fitted to the dishes will not be the conventional ones, but will turn the satellite signal into light, which will be fed down fibre optic cables. * Why, are the distances -that- great? Yes. It is a twenty-one story building, with long corridors. Also, I was told that this method would not be subject to interference, nor would it interfere with the existing communal TV system, even though the cables would run next to each other down the dry risers. Secondly, would you be so kind as to explain the differences and uses of the following LNB: Universal Single, Universal Twin, Universal Quad and Univeral Quatro. I am particularly puzzled between Quad and Quatro, which almost seem the same, with their linguistic roots both meaning 'four'. Depends a bit on how your going to do this either One LNB with a number of separate outputs, fine for small systems up to IIRC 8 TV's or a Four into a distribution switch unit.. The system will have to feed my apartment to start with, with the maximum need to feed up to 115 flats and apartments, some of might want more than one outlet e.g. for a TVs in the living room and bedroom etc. Still wondering what those different types of LNB do! John Thanks! John Porcella -- Tony Sayer |
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#4
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On Wed, 21 Apr 2010 04:36:31 -0700 (PDT), John
wrote: I am particularly puzzled between Quad and Quatro, which almost seem the same, with their linguistic roots both meaning 'four'. They are almost the same. I understand the difference to be: Quad - four outputs, each output is switchable between Horizontal High, Horizontal Low, Vertical High, & Vertical Low - the switching is controlled by the Satellite receiver (almost always a Sky box, however more choice is now available) Quatro - 4 outputs, each one fixed to one of the following - Horizontal High, Horizontal Low, Vertical High, & Vertical Low Hopefully this is correct, but someone will be along in a moment to correct if I'm wrong :-) However, if I am reading the page at http://www.triax.co.uk/Products/Fibr...cal%20LNB.aspx correctly, if you are utilising an optical LNB ( and the associtaed distribution kit) then the question is superfluous - the optical LNB has only one output - the four polarities being carried in the one fibre. More info on optical distribution he http://www.triax.co.uk/Products/Fibr...Solutions.aspx -- Cheers Peter |
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#5
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"John" wrote in message ... Secondly, would you be so kind as to explain the differences and uses of the following LNB: Universal Single, Universal Twin, Universal Quad and Univeral Quatro. Still wondering what those different types of LNB do! You might find the explanation on this page helpful http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Low-noise_block_converter Roger R |
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#6
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On Apr 21, 2:27*pm, "Roger R"
wrote: "John" wrote in message ... Secondly, would you be so kind as to explain the differences and uses of the following LNB: Universal Single, Universal Twin, Universal Quad and Univeral Quatro. Still wondering what those different types of LNB do! You might find the explanation on this page helpful http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Low-noise_block_converter Roger R You are right...an interesting article! John |
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#7
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"John" wrote in message
... Firstly, the LNBs fitted to the dishes will not be the conventional ones, but will turn the satellite signal into light, which will be fed down fibre optic cables. Why, are the distances -that- great? Yes. It is a twenty-one story building, with long corridors. Assuming 10ft per floor and 100 foot corridors, longest distance will be 310 ft from dish, that's nothing Also, I was told that this method would not be subject to interference, nor would it interfere with the existing communal TV system, even though the cables would run next to each other down the dry risers. Use good screened coax it won't be a problem, using fibre is just an excuse to cause expense Steve Terry -- Get a free Three 3pay Sim with £2 bonus after £10 top up http://freeagent.three.co.uk/stand/view/id/5276 |
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#8
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"Roger R" wrote:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Low-noise_block_converter An interesting article which makes a point that I had overlooked, namely that most LNBs are kept powered because this helps to stabilise the temperature and hence the local oscillator frequency. Well, if you're switching between four LNBs as I am, only one LNB receives power at a given time, leaving the others to go cold so to speak. This doesn't matter at all for DVB-S HD and SD signals, but when switching to an LNB for a DVB-S2 HD broadcast, the initial frequency drift manifests as intermittent picture break-up until the system stabilises. The solution, no doubt, is to obtain a suitably specified LNB... |
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#9
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"Steve Terry" wrote in message ... "John" wrote in message ... Firstly, the LNBs fitted to the dishes will not be the conventional ones, but will turn the satellite signal into light, which will be fed down fibre optic cables. Why, are the distances -that- great? Yes. It is a twenty-one story building, with long corridors. Assuming 10ft per floor and 100 foot corridors, longest distance will be 310 ft from dish, that's nothing Also, I was told that this method would not be subject to interference, nor would it interfere with the existing communal TV system, even though the cables would run next to each other down the dry risers. Use good screened coax it won't be a problem, using fibre is just an excuse to cause expense Steve Terry -- Get a free Three 3pay Sim with £2 bonus after £10 top up http://freeagent.three.co.uk/stand/view/id/5276 critcher asked ................. so what is the greatest distance a quad lnb standard sky dish can operate from with a decent signal strength ? |
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#10
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On 21/04/2010 19:13, critcher wrote:
so what is the greatest distance a quad lnb standard sky dish can operate from with a decent signal strength ? Most do 36,000 km -- Adrian C |
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