yes it will save them under the tp list and you can then manually scan them in.
Yes, this is correct. You can EXIT the BLIND SCAN process once the process has finished seeking and logging all the TPs Then move on to individually scanning each TP or scanning "sets" of TPs as you desire. The TPs that were found during the blind scan process will be recorded or logged into the receiver's memory. I would wait for it to just begin trying to scan the channels before exiting, though. From then on, you can exit at any time.
I personally don't do it quite this way. I generally blind scan with the setting to scan for H or V TPs only (one or the other) and let it go completely to the finish. Then restart the blind scan process for the alternate polarity and let it go to its finish. Then, if I desire, I go to the TP scan mode and scan the TPs that I am most interested in or those TPs that I don't think that it picked up all the channels from.
After all this, if there is a TP logged in that doesn't scan any channels and I know that it should have, then I start playing around a little with the TP frequency and the symbol rate manually to coax it. This is not anything unique from other FTA IRDs that I have used. Many do "lock and log" a TP with a little offset frequency or a slightly offset symbol rate. This is due to at least four main things. Starting at the dish, the accuracy of the alignment can affect this if it is not optimum. If the signal is borderline in strength and quality, it will affect the performance of the downstream components. The LNBF local oscillator's frquency can drift with temperature or simply just the quality of the LNBF itself. The tuner's sensitivity and accuracy can play a role here, too, but normally that is not a temperature related affect if you always keep it at the same temperature (I leave mine running 24/7 so it should always be at the same temperature). Then, how the processor handles it all afterwards can play a role, too.
That's just some information for you to chew on.
RADAR