How to connect 2 receivers to a satellite dish - Page 2
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a double head output simply and especially no splitter, as there is a risk of interference between vertical and horizontal signals
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Hello,
We have acquired two TNT decoders connected to a satellite dish with a dual-output LNB. One is for Canal Sat and the other for TNT. We added a splitter to be able to use both TNT decoders at the same time. However, when we turn on both decoders, the images are choppy and we no longer have a strong enough signal for some channels.
What should we do? Buy an amplifier or something else?
Thanks for the info.
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Good evening,
I'm just arriving on this forum and I have a ton of questions that are clouding my mind,
I would like to know:
- how to have a Canal Sat signal for life at home?
- how to connect an Elta Sat "Sat 170" decoder with an Lnbf head of 10.7-12.75GHz input and output 950-2150MHz and a 95cm satellite dish?
- how to obtain a better video signal and what would be the best satellite that broadcasts free channels?
Thank you very much for your response. -
Just attach a twin LNB to the satellite dish and then connect the output to the decoder. Good luck.
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question de TOTOCHE
I have a satellite dish with 1 LNB and 1 output connected to a splitter 1 Input / 6 Outputs
Each output is connected to a wall socket in different locations (6) in the house, but for now we are only using the one in the Living Room. From this one, I go to the antenna input of my Sagem TNTSAT decoder (with Card) which is connected to my TV via a SCART socket. Then I connect the antenna output of this decoder to the Orange TV decoder, which is connected to the TV via the HDMI socket. The purpose of this installation was to be able to record one channel while watching another.
But obviously (given what I've read) it doesn't work, since you cannot have both decoders on at the same time; otherwise the Orange one drops the signal and indicates that the signal is too weak...
If I understood correctly, I need to change my LNB for one with 2 independent outputs that will each go to a decoder?
EXACT !!!
Since I only have satellite at home, my splitter will never be useful, it would be better for me to replace it with a 6-output LNB?
EVEN MORE PRO !!!! -
I just got Canal Sat and I used a dish with 2 outputs, and now I've connected the
decoder from Orange. It works very well, but I had to buy some powerline adapters to connect to the Livebox because it was in another room. -
Weird because at Free, for example, the powerline adapters are provided from the start and are free
Anyway, congratulations -
What decoder? What reception mode? What type of subscription? TV brands and models?
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Hello, I'll try to keep it simple. Plus, I haven't read the entire topic, so... here it is, I'm about to set up Orange TV via satellite. I already have a single LNB dish for Canal+, and I wanted to know if it's possible to add a second LNB to receive Orange TV. Thank you for any information if you've already implemented this setup. Have a good evening.
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The UNIQUE ROUNDED parabolic technique has already shown its limitations
It doesn't work every time
On the other hand, there's no issue with an OBLONG TRISAT (with the added pointing software provided) -
To have a second decoder, I need to change the antenna head of the satellite dish. Do you have any idea what that might cost?
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Quality equipment? Look here: https://www.2galli.fr/
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Hello
With Fransat, you can connect multiple decoders to the same satellite dish with just one LNB and, importantly, one single cable, allowing you to watch different programs on each TV. This is impossible with TNT SAT, which broadcasts on both polarities.
I have installed 4 FRANSAT decoders in place of 4 analog ones on an 80 cm dish that has been installed for a few years, and everything works.
Best regards-
BIS-C / BIS-S
You're almost right, but your technical explanations are partially incorrect, because it's not the polarity, Vertical, identical on all TNTsat and Canal + and Canalsat channels that causes conflicts, but the different tone 0 kHz in the low band and 22 kHz in the high band, and this in Satellite-Intermediate Band Commutated (B.I.S-C) with any universal LNB head if a distributor is installed in N directions.
The principle diagram is clear:
https://www.sedea.fr/
On the other hand, and still in so-called collective antenna, if we limit ourselves to the standardized distribution technique identified as BIS-Simplified used on Atlantic Bird 3, for only the channels of Fransat or Bis TV or Orange, all vertical and low, yes, the distributor is widely used in mono-cable mode.
For collective installations in Bis-S, installers more willingly use a special head called quattro, output 0 kHz/V only on a dish with orientation on AB 3. ( https://forums.commentcamarche.net/forum/s/tete+quattro )
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I understood everything well, 2 decoders = 2 heads, etc. but in my case, I can only have one down cable. I have a Philips DSR 7121 decoder with 2 tuners and two inputs.
If I receive the same channel on both tuners (one to the TV, the other to the hard drive), will there be conflicts in the case of a splitter?
Thank you for your answers. -
x th Reminder :
With a splitter (Bis Commuted), conflicts only arise when the channels selected on the decoders do not share a common frequency band and the same polarization
If it is the same channel, the question does not even arise since it necessarily has the same parameters!!
If it's a channel from the 3 bouquets, Fransat, Bis TV and TV Orange on Atlantic Bird 3, it is in the same band and polarization. (Bis Simplified) -
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Pour alimenter deux récepteurs TNT avec un LNB à une seule sortie, vous pouvez utiliser un répartiteur. Connectez la sortie du LNB au répartiteur, puis reliez chaque sortie du répartiteur à un récepteur TNT. Assurez-vous que le LNB est compatible avec la réception de deux récepteurs simultanément.
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Hi, you need to know that to supply two, three, or four TVs you should use
a universal LNB, for example (quad LNB head UST 2-3-4) with independent outputs
so a cable that goes from the LNB to your TV. I have 4 TVs, they all work
together without distortion
if you want an example, take a watering hose to which you connect two other
hoses, and you will lose flow. However, if you connect several hoses to your
main supply, you will have the same pressure on all your hoses. -
Hi,
I'm adding a question:
Same thing, a satellite dish but 2 decoders (1 for Canal and 1 for Strong):
Lazy person's solution: can we simply change the cable from decoder no. 1 to no. 2 and vice versa as needed (for example: we are watching Canal, I want to switch to TNT, I unplug the cable from the Canal decoder and put it on the TNT satellite decoder)?
Is that possible? (besides the inconvenience of access)
Thanks -
Keep the LNB and the dish oriented at Atlantic Bird 3 at 5 degrees West (diameter may be a bit small)
you will have Fransat (card valid for life and much better sound and more free channels than TNTsat locked CanalSat)
but above all FranSat works in simplified BIS so a splitter is enough and you can keep the already wired installation
get Fransat terminals like the Wisi in SD or the mixed HD Aston FranSat HD terminal
I have both because the Aston demodulates 3 satellites on a single Disecq cable -
It seems you haven't read what has already been said on this thread or haven't understood the explanations.....
It's simpler, just take a look at this satellite antenna installation diagram for 2 outlets
http://images.imagehotel.net/krgpu3frgt.jpg
(be careful of bad advice, like splitters and "T") -
With the canalsat decoder, it's not complicated; on this decoder, there is a satellite input for the decoder, and then a satellite output for the next decoder. That's it, problem solved.
My problem is that I don't have this output on my decoder, so I don't know how to connect my two decoders. If you have a solution, please let me know...
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