The question is, "how is it possible to receive SiriusXM radio S-band geosynchronous satellite signal without dish and LNB"? Apparently, SiriusXM receivers utilize short wire omnidirectional antenna, and it seems S-band signal strength would be inadequate.
The SiriusXM marketing info says their receivers combine three separate signals, two identical S-band signals from neighboring satellites but with one delayed by 4 seconds from the other, and a third signal from terrestrial repeaters that are fed by a separate Ku-band satellite (AMC-6), received by Ku-band dishes, and rebroadcast locally across N America.
The Wikipedia "Sirius Satellite Radio" article, perhaps written by SiriusXM marketing, mentions a complex chip set of up to six ASICs.
My suspicion is this is largely BS, and all the SiriusXM receivers are only receiving the terrestrial repeater broadcast.
The SiriusXM marketing info says their receivers combine three separate signals, two identical S-band signals from neighboring satellites but with one delayed by 4 seconds from the other, and a third signal from terrestrial repeaters that are fed by a separate Ku-band satellite (AMC-6), received by Ku-band dishes, and rebroadcast locally across N America.
The Wikipedia "Sirius Satellite Radio" article, perhaps written by SiriusXM marketing, mentions a complex chip set of up to six ASICs.
My suspicion is this is largely BS, and all the SiriusXM receivers are only receiving the terrestrial repeater broadcast.