I think you might have a misunderstanding or two with universal LNB/LNBF usage. Universals contain 2 L.O.'s, 9750 and 10600. 22k tone switches between them and changes what frequency range you receive. For North American True FTA FSS birds we only use 11700-12200 frequency range. A standard L.O. 10750 LNBF gets these fine. Universals get above and below this. A circular DBS LNBF typically uses a L.O. of 11250 and only works for circular DBS like Dish, DirecTV or Bell TV.
Frequencies below 11700 use universal low band on a universal LNBF. These are mostly used....well everywhere but NA. If you have line of sight you can start to use this range east of about 58W on some satellites that send a beam our way. Same with a few above 12200. The other thing you can occasionally do with a universal is receive an occasional Dish/Bell TP between 12224-12750. Naturally it has to be one of the rare times they run something in the clear. It also has to be super strong and results depend on your location and the particular TP. You'll only see a few DBS TP's with a universal and often they are weak.
Basically get a universal if you want to explore the atlantic/eu birds you might be able to receive from your location. I am sure I am bias but I recommend and run Amiko L203 twin PLL myself. It has top notch performance and a long neck allowing you to get it right in the focal sweet spot for your dish, which means even higher signal. I use the twin over the single myself because I am constantly tweaking and plugging in a satellite meter. No need to unplug the feed to the STB this way, I just hook into the unused second port.