From what I've read, Orby seems to have the least amount of rain fade...but that severely limits your programming choices...
So its not related at allIt's pretty simple. If you choose a provider based strictly on minimal rain fade you also limit your choice of programming. Do you understand now?
Well, one obvious issue is, the Eastern arc is pointing EAST, the majority of your weather comes from the West.I've been with dish since black Friday 2020. I was with directv for nearly 20 years. since I've been with dish i have experienced snow storms, ice, & torrential rains. none have knocked out my signal or disrupted my tv in any way. is that typical with an eastern arc hybrid setup? i know without a doubt my directv would have lost signal. even though my directv system was peaked and getting 98-100 signal strength it still lost signal with the slightest moderate rain or snow. always.
I have a few minor issues with my H3 but as far as rain fade goes, I'm very impressed so far. about a half hour ago we just had a very heavy rain storm. while watching my local nbc station i checked the signal levels, it was at 12 but never once went out, froze or pixelated. this same storm would have killed my directv easily.
does dish transmit with a different type of signal that affects its ability to not lose signal so easily?
Just to be clear, the eastern arc is not pointing east. It is pointing south. Depending on your actual geographical location those satellites may be a little to the left, center, or right of your location but they are generally south. It is only when that weather gets between your actual dish location and the satellite beam that you get an issue. I know you knew that!Well, one obvious issue is, the Eastern arc is pointing EAST, the majority of your weather comes from the West.
If I had Cable and my drop goes out due to the storm, I'm done for 3 or more days waiting for them to repair
Not exactly..lets just keep the discussion to rain fade pleaseJuan being Juan
I didn't know the Eastern Arc didn't point to the east ... it would be a neat trick ....Just to be clear, the eastern arc is not pointing east. It is pointing south. Depending on your actual geographical location those satellites may be a little to the left, center, or right of your location but they are generally south. It is only when that weather gets between your actual dish location and the satellite beam that you get an issue. I know you knew that!
I happen to live in a western arc area. Does my dish point west? No, it points south. The satellites, both east and west, are located at 61.5°, 72.7°, 77°, 110°, 119°, and 129°. They are all in the southern sky. The first three are eastern arc and the second are western arc. They are called eastern and western because of their relative location in the southern sky.I didn't know the Eastern Arc didn't point to the east ... it would be a neat trick ....
Why don't they call it what it is then ... the Southern Arc
The rest, yes, I knew ...
It's not just the azimuth, but also the elevation. My elevation here just south of DC is 45 degrees. When I had a dish on 110/119, the elevation angle was so low my slant range was terrible with lots of potential clouds in the way. I suppose my old address in southern CA would have an even higher elevation angle. Having two arcs to use is just better than one.Just to be clear, the eastern arc is not pointing east. It is pointing south. Depending on your actual geographical location those satellites may be a little to the left, center, or right of your location but they are generally south.
As far as how far east WA is installed, note that the Miami, FL and Roanoke, VA locals are western arc only.20 years ago I had a dual dish setup, the western arc and 61.5 for the HD. The western dish would have some rain interruptions. You could tell ahead of time when a monster thunderstorm was about to arrive. The 61.5 dish never went out. At our longitude it points south east. I imagine if you're directly on the eat coast it would point dead south. Still much better than west where the weather typically originates. Not sure how far east they are installing to the western arc nowadays with 72 available but our western dish was pointed way west. Definitely more outages with that setup for me. Almost none with the eastern birds. The handful of times it has gone out was after the storms passed which makes sense.
Jct21; where are you located in Kentucky? I am in Georgetown, and moderate rain causes my Dish (with Hopper3) to lose signal! I learned to live with it. It usually lasts 15-20 minutes and it is OK.
Curious.As far as how far east WA is installed, note that the Miami, FL and Roanoke, VA locals are western arc only.
IIRC, Roanoke is in pretty mountainous terrain. Is there a mountain in the way of EA?I'm in a WA market adjacent to Roanoke.
There's mountains all over the place that could potentially block either arc. Western NC which is very mountainous also is an EA market. It's a million dollar question as to the logic behind who is EA or WA in this region.Curious.
IIRC, Roanoke is in pretty mountainous terrain. Is there a mountain in the way of EA?