Antenna is about 12” x 20”. Comes with a short 4 legged stand. Needs a view of the north sky. To test I screwed or to my side deck to Kermit from blowing over. Connected the cable from the antenna to the router. Plugged the router to power.
It starts automatically, acquires satellites. And in about 20 min we were set to connect.
The antenna moves to track the satellites. Has a heater to melt snow off. Crazy simple.
Speeds are fantastic compared to Hughesnet. We can stream pretty much anything with no glitches. We’ve had heavy snow with no noticeable degradation of service.
It can be roof or pole mounted. I’m going to keep it on the deck until I need to move it.
We had a big snow storm, snow on the antenna for awhile till it meted with the built in heater, thick clouds, etc. no noticible issues. No problem with clouds.
Antenna is about 12” x 20”. Comes with a short 4 legged stand. Needs a view of the north sky. To test I screwed or to my side deck to Kermit from blowing over. Connected the cable from the antenna to the router. Plugged the router to power.
It starts automatically, acquires satellites. And in about 20 min we were set to connect.
The antenna moves to track the satellites. Has a heater to melt snow off. Crazy simple.
Speeds are fantastic compared to Hughesnet. We can stream pretty much anything with no glitches. We’ve had heavy snow with no noticeable degradation of service.
It can be roof or pole mounted. I’m going to keep it on the deck until I need to move it.
wow thank you so much! Sounds way easier than I envisioned!
I was surprised how slick it was. I’ve installed satellite TV antennas. Needing to move the antenna but by bit to get full power reception.
No aiming needed with this, simply place the antenna with a clear north view, plug it in and it starts automatically.
What about cloudy days, rain storms...how is reception?
We had a big snow storm, snow on the antenna for awhile till it meted with the built in heater, thick clouds, etc. no noticible issues. No problem with clouds.