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#18
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Newps writes:
Morgans wrote: During solstices, or even within a few days, the elevation to the sun and the satelite is nearly the same. As the sun transits across the sky, for a period of time, your reciever, the satelite, and the sun are all nearly in line. The sun; since it appears directly on the other side of the transmitter, overcomes the transmitter signal with white noise (radiation) Directv is unaffected. I have had my system for 7 years now. Not so much as a hiccup excpet when there is a heavy wet snow. The snow sticks to the feedhorn. Brush it off and the picture is back. I have turned the TV on in a heavy downpour and checked signal strength, no change. Always in the high 80's here. DirecTV and Dishnetwork are indeed affected. The affection lasts just a few minutes twice a year. Check it at the next equinox, you will see. The exact time varies with your location, I'm sure there's a web page somewhere that will calculate the service-out time for your lat/lon. -jav |
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