I can not get cw 700 to get 119 at all. I bought 3 boxes. I set one up at my moms
I can get no 119
I set another one at my house
I can get no 119
and then I took another box at my buddies house with another box and still no 119
I have a viewsat at home that I have been using for years and when I look on the antanna setup 119 does not show up
3 different boxes and same problem
I doubled checked my setting from my viewsat and cloned the settings to my cw 700 and it still does not show 119
I have been installing these for a year for friends and family. So I am really good at the settings. I even changed lnb, cable and so on. Still nothing.
I can not get it to lock in to 119 on tp freq 12239. The quality is at 0
So I go over to a friends this morning, because this is driving me crazy.
I know that his dish has not moved,no storms, he getting 110 fine etc
He has a viewsat and a cw600p . He went into his setup menu and his quality is at 0 as well on both receivers. There is something going on.
joeturn is right, don't give your right position but the state can do. I have to reaimed my dish and see if this Tp will back, if you get it from your position, I must get it.
Plymouth joeturn is right about spot beam or swine flu?
Joeturn was right about both but misspelled SWINE FLU>>
The Spot Beam Farse was started to give pirates the illusion that there was a specific area that certain transponders could transmit to! This DMA was supposed to stop viewers from watching the forbiden zone!!
It was later proven it was only a packet command that needed to be changed in the files!! It had to do with guide byte and zip code!!
Same as N3 just change the files to allow the FTA recievers to combine both sets of keys will do away with the dreaded N3 problem!!
A spot beam, in telecommunications parlance, is a satellite signal that is specially concentrated in power (i.e. sent by a high-gain antenna) so that it will cover only a limited geographic area on Earth. Spot beams are used so that only earth stations in a particular intended reception area can properly receive the satellite signal.
One notable example of the use of spot beams is on direct broadcast satellite systems such as DirecTV and Dish Network that deliver local broadcast television via satellite only to viewers in the part of North America from which those terrestrial broadcast stations originate.
Spot beams allow satellites to transmit different data signals using the same frequency. Because satellites have a limited-number of frequencies to use, the ability to re-use a frequency for different geographical locations (without different data interfering with each other at the receiver) allows for more simplified receiver designs.
But with FTA receiver and a bigger dish you can get many spot beam not in your area.
Plymouth you cant see its all technobabble? Plymouth just go read the spot beam farse thread it was posted in 02 and all you had to do was change the guide bite and locals market to 00 and everything came back into view!!
Chumhey is right if you believe that bull S then you cant see anything out of your Designated Market Area!!!
or maybe you error again and are receiving North east TP channels