Hello,
I am the handyman at a 4-story, 7-unit Condo building near Boston and I am looking into getting Dish Network setup for some of the residents, including myself, there are 4 units interested in this. I have had Dish Network before about 4 years ago and I installed it myself. I had one DishPro 500 / DP34 switch and I used a 30” Wineguard to get a nice strong 61.5 signal. We control the condo association so there is no problem there, the main thing is we all agree that setting up one set of dishes that we can all use is much better than putting 8-10 dishes up and down the side of our building, and our neighbors will probably appreciate that too. We have a flat roof and no obstructions so no problem there.
So basically I am looking for some recommendations. I have been trying to read up on the new dish equipment such as the 1000.4 and new Mpeg4 equipment, looks like all good stuff. The parts I have to figure out are how to feed the signals to the number of receivers I will need. I see that I can chain up to six DP44 switches together to feed up to 24 dual-tuner receivers. So, here are some of my questions as concerns:
* All the units are pre-wired from the utility room on the first floor with just one cable that has one Cat5e network and one quad-shielded RG6, so unfortunately I may have a problem for anyone (like myself) who wants a receiver in more than one room. Also, considering cable distance limits, it probably does not make sense to run as many as 24 cables down the side of the building to the utility room only to go back up the building again through the in-wall feeds. So it looks like I will have to run some separate wires down the side of the building in that case, does anyone know of a way around this? Is there any way to run multiple (possibly two-tuner) receivers using a single RG6 line to each unit? I don’t see any unit having more than three receivers, three tops, but they would likely all be HD.
* What do people think about using several single 30” dishes (an array of 4 of them for 4 sat locations) instead of these multi-satellite dishes? When you use a multi-sat dish you are sacrificing a small amount of signal to be able to do that. I found that 30” dishes give you a big advantage “powering through” even the worst snowstorm with more than max signal strength. I am considering this because once installed I don’t want to be going up on the roof to fiddle with them, and I certainly don’t wall everyone to lose their signal or experience drop-outs in heavy rain or snow. Thoughts?
* I am in a good location for OTA signal, so I want to include an antenna and distribute that signal around. All of my stations are located in a 180-degree arc from my location. Anyone have any experience with some of these omni-directional antennas? I don’t think having a moving directional antenna would be practical for this case. I am going to try and avoid using diplexers as I have heard that you can lose a huge amount of your signal strength with them. So likely I will run separate cables for that.
If anyone can recommend a particular online place that would both sell equipment and offer installation design advice for a case like this, I would appreciate it. I see the sponsors of this site and I will check through those, but if people know of one in particular that would be helpful in this case, that would be great.
Thanks
-JCL333
I am the handyman at a 4-story, 7-unit Condo building near Boston and I am looking into getting Dish Network setup for some of the residents, including myself, there are 4 units interested in this. I have had Dish Network before about 4 years ago and I installed it myself. I had one DishPro 500 / DP34 switch and I used a 30” Wineguard to get a nice strong 61.5 signal. We control the condo association so there is no problem there, the main thing is we all agree that setting up one set of dishes that we can all use is much better than putting 8-10 dishes up and down the side of our building, and our neighbors will probably appreciate that too. We have a flat roof and no obstructions so no problem there.
So basically I am looking for some recommendations. I have been trying to read up on the new dish equipment such as the 1000.4 and new Mpeg4 equipment, looks like all good stuff. The parts I have to figure out are how to feed the signals to the number of receivers I will need. I see that I can chain up to six DP44 switches together to feed up to 24 dual-tuner receivers. So, here are some of my questions as concerns:
* All the units are pre-wired from the utility room on the first floor with just one cable that has one Cat5e network and one quad-shielded RG6, so unfortunately I may have a problem for anyone (like myself) who wants a receiver in more than one room. Also, considering cable distance limits, it probably does not make sense to run as many as 24 cables down the side of the building to the utility room only to go back up the building again through the in-wall feeds. So it looks like I will have to run some separate wires down the side of the building in that case, does anyone know of a way around this? Is there any way to run multiple (possibly two-tuner) receivers using a single RG6 line to each unit? I don’t see any unit having more than three receivers, three tops, but they would likely all be HD.
* What do people think about using several single 30” dishes (an array of 4 of them for 4 sat locations) instead of these multi-satellite dishes? When you use a multi-sat dish you are sacrificing a small amount of signal to be able to do that. I found that 30” dishes give you a big advantage “powering through” even the worst snowstorm with more than max signal strength. I am considering this because once installed I don’t want to be going up on the roof to fiddle with them, and I certainly don’t wall everyone to lose their signal or experience drop-outs in heavy rain or snow. Thoughts?
* I am in a good location for OTA signal, so I want to include an antenna and distribute that signal around. All of my stations are located in a 180-degree arc from my location. Anyone have any experience with some of these omni-directional antennas? I don’t think having a moving directional antenna would be practical for this case. I am going to try and avoid using diplexers as I have heard that you can lose a huge amount of your signal strength with them. So likely I will run separate cables for that.
If anyone can recommend a particular online place that would both sell equipment and offer installation design advice for a case like this, I would appreciate it. I see the sponsors of this site and I will check through those, but if people know of one in particular that would be helpful in this case, that would be great.
Thanks
-JCL333