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Learn More About the HughesNet Dish

The Different Channels on a HughesNet Dish

Determining the different channels on a HughesNet Dish means determining what frequencies arrive in the IRD (integrated receiver/decoder). The HughesNet Dish itself is made up of a Satellite Dish, either oval or round and one, two or three LNB's (low noise block converter). A HughesNet Dish single LNB is one that receives satellite transmissions from only one orbiting satellite. The HughesNet Dish double LNB is able to intercept signals from two different satellites. The most advanced antenna at the moment is the HughesNet Dish triple LNB that intercepts signals from up to three different satellites at once.

HughesNet Dish Single LNB

  HughesNet dish  

When we look up at the Satellite Dish antenna on the roof pointing up into the sky we notice that the pointer is not facing the sky, but rather, the HughesNet Dish itself. Why is this?

Actually, the concept revolves around advanced optics. Beams. Satellite transmission and reception is all about beams. To think about it easily, think of a laser beam that starts out small, but as it picks up distance it spreads out like a giant ice cream cone (the waffle kind). The more distance, the larger the area of the circle beam will be. In essence, a beam will travel only so far, until finally, the signal looses power. In space a signal should keep traveling theoretically, and that is why we have interference in the atmosphere (beams bounce around). Sunlight is a big cause of this kind of interference. But what is important to remember is that beams bounce. The

  HughesNet Dish with one single LNB is designed so that when a satellite beams a signal in the direction of the HughesNet Satellite Dish it will bounce back to that pointing device called an LNB.

HughesNet Dish Double LNB

The LNB's used in all HughesNet Dish antennas do the job of catching a signal that bounces off the dish, from any area that those beams from a satellite might hit the dish. As long as the HughesNet Dish finds itself inside that satellite's broadcasting beam area (remember the ice cream cone) and pointed in the correct direction, the beam signal will bounce correctly and hit the LNB. But satellites stay up in the sky over the equator in an orbit called geosynchronous orbit, and point year round at one area over the earth's surface. In the case of the HughesNet Dish double LNB, there are two LNB's so that if there are two satellites pointing at an area from different angles (still in the general cone area of the HughesNet Satellite Dish), the HughesNet Dish will catch both satellite beams. But this means pointing "between" the two orbiting satellites in geosynchronous orbit above the equator, one next to the other.

HughesNet Dish Triple LNB

Why would you need to get transmissions from two different satellites? Doesn't one satellite send all the channels in one beam? Not always. A single beam can capture digitally, up to some 12 to 32 different channels. The more powerful a beam the more channels it can send, but in the case of someone with 250 HughesNet Channels, they need to reach other satellites with different transmissions. Thus a HughesNet Dish triple LNB catches three different satellite beams from three different positions. In this case, each HughesNet Satellite is next to the other and your HughesNet Dish will point to the middle Satellite.

Depending on how many channels you want and how many channels are available in a given satellite beam, one, two or three different LNB's might offer more options for satellite transmissions. But it really does depend on your HughesNet service and how much you pay monthly. The technician will install your HughesNet Dish for free, and depending on the service you buy, will give you the proper HughesNet Dish for free as well and even point it in the proper direction

 
"Buying a HughesNet Dish means buying a unique service package that only comes with a service that cares about you the consumer."

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