Hold the phone.
We have a 622 and a 722 going to the same TV, just for tuner redundancy. We primarily use the 622, only occasionally going to the 722 if all the tuners on the 622 are occupied.
Well, lately, the 622 has been having hard drive issues, so we've been making the 722 our primary receiver. (I've got a Hopper install on the way, so both these units will be gone next week).
I realized my spreadsheet data has been coming from the 622. I was essentially assessing the dish itself, not the tuners.
You probably see where this is going...
I just checked the strengths on the 622 and they are where they've always been. I re-checked the 722 and they are still poor. I checked both tuners on each receiver, and the end result is, I have my typical signal strengths on the 622 and poor strengths on the 722. Since I was only occasionally using the 722, who knows how long this has been going on.
My setup is a 1000.4 that's 130' from the receivers. Dual coax (the orange kind that can be buried) is buried and run to the house and connects to a ground block on the outside of the house immediately behind the receivers. From the ground block, 2 coax's go through the wall to each receiver (with a separator on the end of each one to occupy each tuner.)
Is it safe to say, at this point, that my issue occurs somewhere at or after the ground block? I would imagine if there was an issue at the 1000.4 or the buried coax, my signal strength issues wouldn't be isolated to just one receiver, right?
The reason this is now an issue, even though both receivers are going to be gone next week, I want to ensure my Hopper has appropriate signal strength coming to it. I assume the installer will just replace the ground block with the Solo Node and then use one of my existing coax's going into the house (I'm not getting a Joey). If it's a coax issue, I want to make sure he doesn't try to use that one.