Actually, it does mean that. If you've not had problems, you're lucky, but you're not a tech, so you don't know how many times I've had to go out and replace the cable from the Dish to the Hopper because people were having signal and/or tuner issues with less than the required cable specs, and I don't meant to sound harsh, but as a seasoned tech who has poured himself into being the best he can be at his job, which includes learning as much about the technology and nuances t hat go into every aspect I can expose myself to, I take it personally when a customer that only has to deal with his singular system dismisses and refutes the information I put out.
The 150 foot cable was underground inside a garden hose. 25 feet were routed through
crawlspace under the house. It had been there since 1990. I wasn't about to tear up
almost 30 years of landscaping and bury a new cable so I could watch TV. I asked the tech
to hook it up to the H3 and it worked just fine and did so for more than two years.
It DID NOT fail because it wasn't rated for 3 ghz. It failed because it stopped passing a
signal. I imagine water finally found it 's way through. It usually does.
You said I'm not a tech and that is correct in the sense I'm not a seasoned DISH tech
like you. I was trained by the US Navy in component level troubleshooting and repair
of search radar, comm and navigation, and aircraft carrier final approach radar systems.
Hundreds of hours of intense classroom training. In the civilian world I migrated to high
end computer graphics and printing systems.
It seems I insulted you and apologize for that. It wasn't my intent.