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Sky Digital BSkyB, Freesat & Saorsat support forum
Sky & Freesat fringe reception
Bad weather signal drop
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<blockquote data-quote="Robert Mallett" data-source="post: 874185" data-attributes="member: 401946"><p>Some advice.</p><p></p><p>I'm in Southern France 15kms from the Med nr St.Tropez and I'm trying to establish what size dish to recommend to expats in this area so they can restore their Freesat TV. It's clear that 80cm dishes are now too small for Freesat channels but I have a 90cm dish with an MTI LNB, good alignment and all channels are OK in good weather - some pixilation on ch.5 last night but I lost most when it was cloudy and raining which is was until yesterday. Many opinions can be found but the general feeling is that a 1.2M dish will be best for all weather performance.</p><p>It's an important question because anything over 90cm mounted on a roof in this area where the mistral can knock you over is not going to be possible.</p><p>Where I'm not clear is the drop in signal in bad weather. Is the signal drop the same on the UK spot beam as it was for say channels previously on 1N? It seems to me that there is a sharper drop as I have had reports from people with 1.2m dishes who had lost BBC channels when it was raining on Monday. Bad weather is when you most want to watch some TV and it seems to me that whilst 90cm or 1M is OK in clear conditions 1.2 may not be enough when it rains.</p><p>Thanks in advance for any information.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Robert Mallett, post: 874185, member: 401946"] Some advice. I'm in Southern France 15kms from the Med nr St.Tropez and I'm trying to establish what size dish to recommend to expats in this area so they can restore their Freesat TV. It's clear that 80cm dishes are now too small for Freesat channels but I have a 90cm dish with an MTI LNB, good alignment and all channels are OK in good weather - some pixilation on ch.5 last night but I lost most when it was cloudy and raining which is was until yesterday. Many opinions can be found but the general feeling is that a 1.2M dish will be best for all weather performance. It's an important question because anything over 90cm mounted on a roof in this area where the mistral can knock you over is not going to be possible. Where I'm not clear is the drop in signal in bad weather. Is the signal drop the same on the UK spot beam as it was for say channels previously on 1N? It seems to me that there is a sharper drop as I have had reports from people with 1.2m dishes who had lost BBC channels when it was raining on Monday. Bad weather is when you most want to watch some TV and it seems to me that whilst 90cm or 1M is OK in clear conditions 1.2 may not be enough when it rains. Thanks in advance for any information. [/QUOTE]
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Sky Digital BSkyB, Freesat & Saorsat support forum
Sky & Freesat fringe reception
Bad weather signal drop
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