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Free to Air TV channels in Kenya
Rankaz13
#101 Posted : Tuesday, June 17, 2014 8:39:23 AM
Rank: Elder


Joined: 5/21/2013
Posts: 2,841
Location: Here
kysse wrote:
Rankaz13 wrote:
Caramba wrote:
Rankaz13 wrote:
kysse wrote:
This rankaz is quite a hustler. From Mats to TVs to Medicine. Heee! what next


smile smile


Enyewe, hats off to Rankaz. Can see pia huko Jamii forum unawika. Shukran bro.Applause


smile smile Most welcome. My interest in FTA satellite stuff was piqued when I worked in a remote part of coast province in the early years of the last decade. Whenever I saw those satellite dishes on the rooftops, I'd always wonder how rich those guys were to be able to afford dstv subs. macho yalifunguka the day I found out it was not dstv but fta sat tv. I then set out acquiring as much knowledge as I could on the same and now, I freely share that info that I've accumulated over time. smile


ok,try politics now.You could just be the leader all kenyans have been waiting for all these years.
By the way I gave up on tv long ago.Even forgot how to operate it.


@Kysse eh, no can do. Mimi hapana mwanasiasa. There're many ways of serving one's country.
Life is like playing a violin solo in public and learning the instrument as one goes on.
Rankaz13
#102 Posted : Tuesday, June 17, 2014 8:43:48 AM
Rank: Elder


Joined: 5/21/2013
Posts: 2,841
Location: Here
thisguy0 wrote:
Very informative piece indeed...So if i may ask,can I use a Gotv decorder to pata FTA satellite tv.?
If yes how?


No. GoTv and Startimes are DVB-T2 (terrestrial based) while FTA Satellite tv is DVB S/S2 (satellite based). The two technologies are not interchangeable mblo.
Life is like playing a violin solo in public and learning the instrument as one goes on.
Prime
#103 Posted : Tuesday, June 17, 2014 1:14:09 PM
Rank: Member


Joined: 2/27/2011
Posts: 518
kysse wrote:
This rankaz is quite a hustler. From Mats to TVs to Medicine. Heee! what next



hehehe... Trust me... very good at all the above... Very good. When he talks people stop and listen...Applause Applause Applause
Rankaz13
#104 Posted : Thursday, June 19, 2014 11:01:49 AM
Rank: Elder


Joined: 5/21/2013
Posts: 2,841
Location: Here
Prime wrote:
kysse wrote:
This rankaz is quite a hustler. From Mats to TVs to Medicine. Heee! what next



hehehe... Trust me... very good at all the above... Very good. When he talks people stop and listen...Applause Applause Applause



smile smile
Life is like playing a violin solo in public and learning the instrument as one goes on.
AlphDoti
#105 Posted : Friday, June 20, 2014 6:23:46 PM
Rank: Elder


Joined: 6/20/2008
Posts: 6,275
Location: Kenya
@rankaz I can see you're our consultant on this. And I guess I must open my heart now smile

At last, I've given in to pressure from my family to install these dish stuff in my upcountry home. We've been missing the game when we're in mashinani.

Please tell me which is the best cost efficient to achieve the below:
1. Get local stations
2. Watch world-up
3. Get a couple of Internaitonal channels e.g. Peace TV
4. Minimum or zero monthly fee

NOTE: Ignore my ignorance, I'm not guru in these TV stuff.
nakujua
#106 Posted : Friday, June 20, 2014 7:17:49 PM
Rank: Elder


Joined: 12/17/2009
Posts: 3,583
Location: Kenya
AlphDoti wrote:
@rankaz I can see you're our consultant on this. And I guess I must open my heart now smile

At last, I've given in to pressure from my family to install these dish stuff in my upcountry home. We've been missing the game when we're in mashinani.

Please tell me which is the best cost efficient to achieve the below:
1. Get local stations
2. Watch world-up
3. Get a couple of Internaitonal channels e.g. Peace TV
4. Minimum or zero monthly fee

NOTE: Ignore my ignorance, I'm not guru in these TV stuff.

@rankaz also guided me in the same, I am sure he will want to know where your mashinani is, this might have an effect on the dish size you will need.
number 1 is a bit of a mixed up issue, this is because our local stations do not beam their signals from a satelite so it becomes a matter of tracking multiple, which can be dis--heartening especially for a beginner.

hizo zingine are very doable, currently watching the games via muvi-tv, which has a decent picture quality.

peace TV I have come across when browsing through the chanels, laini I have never had an interest in that, but I think its an easy one to track.

apart from the initial cost, its free to air.
AlphDoti
#107 Posted : Friday, June 20, 2014 7:47:17 PM
Rank: Elder


Joined: 6/20/2008
Posts: 6,275
Location: Kenya
nakujua wrote:
AlphDoti wrote:
@rankaz I can see you're our consultant on this. And I guess I must open my heart now smile

At last, I've given in to pressure from my family to install these dish stuff in my upcountry home. We've been missing the game when we're in mashinani.

Please tell me which is the best cost efficient to achieve the below:
1. Get local stations
2. Watch world-up
3. Get a couple of Internaitonal channels e.g. Peace TV
4. Minimum or zero monthly fee

NOTE: Ignore my ignorance, I'm not guru in these TV stuff.

@rankaz also guided me in the same, I am sure he will want to know where your mashinani is, this might have an effect on the dish size you will need.
number 1 is a bit of a mixed up issue, this is because our local stations do not beam their signals from a satelite so it becomes a matter of tracking multiple, which can be dis--heartening especially for a beginner.

hizo zingine are very doable, currently watching the games via muvi-tv, which has a decent picture quality.

peace TV I have come across when browsing through the chanels, laini I have never had an interest in that, but I think its an easy one to track.

apart from the initial cost, its free to air.

My mashinani is 25km from one of these towns in Kenya (Mombasa, Nakuru, Eldoret, Ruiru, Machakos, Meru, or Narok).

What do you say about these offers:
1. Startime decoder
2. GoTV
3. DVB-T2 standard
4. Which other will give me free-to-air

Would muvi-tv work around those towns above? What are all the equipment needed to make muvi-tv run?
nakujua
#108 Posted : Friday, June 20, 2014 7:54:54 PM
Rank: Elder


Joined: 12/17/2009
Posts: 3,583
Location: Kenya
AlphDoti wrote:
nakujua wrote:
AlphDoti wrote:
@rankaz I can see you're our consultant on this. And I guess I must open my heart now smile

At last, I've given in to pressure from my family to install these dish stuff in my upcountry home. We've been missing the game when we're in mashinani.

Please tell me which is the best cost efficient to achieve the below:
1. Get local stations
2. Watch world-up
3. Get a couple of Internaitonal channels e.g. Peace TV
4. Minimum or zero monthly fee

NOTE: Ignore my ignorance, I'm not guru in these TV stuff.

@rankaz also guided me in the same, I am sure he will want to know where your mashinani is, this might have an effect on the dish size you will need.
number 1 is a bit of a mixed up issue, this is because our local stations do not beam their signals from a satelite so it becomes a matter of tracking multiple, which can be dis--heartening especially for a beginner.

hizo zingine are very doable, currently watching the games via muvi-tv, which has a decent picture quality.

peace TV I have come across when browsing through the chanels, laini I have never had an interest in that, but I think its an easy one to track.

apart from the initial cost, its free to air.

My mashinani is 25km from one of these towns in Kenya (Mombasa, Nakuru, Eldoret, Ruiru, Machakos, Meru, or Narok).

What do you say about these offers:
1. Startime decoder
2. GoTV
3. DVB-T2 standard
4. Which other will give me free-to-air

Would muvi-tv work around those towns above? What are all the equipment needed to make muvi-tv run?

sorry, thought you wanted to install a satelite dish, then your location would have mattered - lakini ka set top box, I had bought the startimes decoder a couple of years back, but its the monthly pay one, I don't use nowadays.

lakini if you want the international channels, the free to air set-top boxes available around do not provide that, and you would need the monthly pay option.
Rankaz13
#109 Posted : Friday, June 20, 2014 9:59:15 PM
Rank: Elder


Joined: 5/21/2013
Posts: 2,841
Location: Here
AlphDoti wrote:
@rankaz I can see you're our consultant on this. And I guess I must open my heart now smile

At last, I've given in to pressure from my family to install these dish stuff in my upcountry home. We've been missing the game when we're in mashinani.

Please tell me which is the best cost efficient to achieve the below:
1. Get local stations
2. Watch world-up
3. Get a couple of Internaitonal channels e.g. Peace TV
4. Minimum or zero monthly fee

NOTE: Ignore my ignorance, I'm not guru in these TV stuff.


Good evening @Alph. Here I am, finally. Pole kwa kuchelewa. To your queries:

1. Local stations are difficult to nab on one satellite unfortunately. This is because they beam their signals on many different satellites and this would necessitate using more than one dish to nab them on FTA satellite tv, as opposed to say our Tz brothers who have all of theirs on Intelsat 906 and thus only one dish/LNB suffices.

Here's a link to the different satellites on which to find Kenyan channels.


2. World Cup is available on many different channels on FTA satellite tv, including but not limited to: Tv Oromiyaa (Amos 5 @17E, C-band), Muvi Tv (IS-20 @68E, Ku-band and Eutelsat 7A @7E, Ku-band, UBC, etc incl. some in foreign languages such as French and Arabic).

3. A while back, I used to receive Peace Tv on IS-20, Ku-band and I believe the transmission is still there though I do not for the moment have a Ku-band LNB at this position. This is actually one of the very easily receivable satellites.

as for other international channels, the possibilities are endless mblo. Every single satellite you aim at is full of int'l channels and the only limitation will be the language of broadcast and/or whether the beam is receivable in your area.

Check here for a list of satellites receivable at your location as well as the appropriate dish sizes for the same.

4. FTA Satellite tv is exactly that, free. It is devoid of any payments, the only cost you incur is equipment purchase and installation.


In so far as gotv and startimes are concerned, they obviously aren't free. Moreover, these two, along with signet, are terrestrial based (DVB-T2) and not satellite based (DVB-S2) and as such, do not require a satellite dish to receive but rather only the usual UHF aerial. Anything that requires a dish to watch is satellite based.

Hope that's comprehensive and easy enough. Still, queries are welcome. Worry not about ignorance, I'm ready to answer any queries you may have on this. It's a very rare human being who knows everything about everything, if at all.

Life is like playing a violin solo in public and learning the instrument as one goes on.
AlphDoti
#110 Posted : Saturday, June 21, 2014 8:35:33 PM
Rank: Elder


Joined: 6/20/2008
Posts: 6,275
Location: Kenya
@Rankaz13 thank you for that piece. Now, if I want to deploy a satellite based one, zero subscription, can you give me the specification of each item I need. What would you recommend, each item and its specs.
Rankaz13
#111 Posted : Monday, June 23, 2014 8:32:34 PM
Rank: Elder


Joined: 5/21/2013
Posts: 2,841
Location: Here
AlphDoti wrote:
@Rankaz13 thank you for that piece. Now, if I want to deploy a satellite based one, zero subscription, can you give me the specification of each item I need. What would you recommend, each item and its specs.


Okay pal, I'm assuming you want something that will give you a mix of news, family and entertainment channels (e.g a mix of Nilesat 201, Eutelsat 7 West A, Eutelsat 8 West A and Eutelsat 7 A). Based on that, i'd say you require:

i. a FTA satellite decoder. Many varieties and brands of this exist, including Strong, Openbox, Technosat, Skybox, etc. Locally, we mainly use the Strong brand coz of ease of getting software updatea as well as affordability. personally, I'd recommend SRT-4922HD. See the specs here.

ii. a satellite dish of minimum size 180cm primefocus or 120-130cm offset. This will provide you with appropriate signal stability for a wide variety of satellites. Specifically for Eutelsat 7A, a 160cm offset would be most appropriate to nab the goodies on Europe-B beam but seeing as this is elusive locally (unless you talk to Posta to sell you their redundant ones) then you may consider what we euphemistically call a BUD (Big Ugly Dish) or DKK (Dish Kubwa Kuruka) which is a 240cm primefocus dish. this is a huge one.

iii. an appropriate LNB, dependent on dish type and type of signal you wanna receive. for Ku offset, we have Samson Twin, Eurostar ESKD QP4 Gold and Inverto Black Ultra Quad. For Ku primefocus, we have Fuji Stargold mono or quad output. For C-band, we have Eurostar ESCDT-700 Twin, Supermax 777 Plus, Eurostar ES-51 and ES-21.

iv. an appropriate good quality cable of at least RG-6 quality. A common brand is Astel. RG-56 is cheaper but lower quality. We recommend RG-6 coz we are dealing with fringe reception here and would like to minimize signal loss. For the same reason, cable run should not exceed 30m/100' from lnb to receiver.

v. smaller consumables such as F-connectors, DiSEqC switches, etc.

vi. depending on complexity of your set-up, budget at least 4-6k installation costs.

Next question I know you're gonna ask is the costs of these items. Well, I do not have those with me but will give you a few shops where you can check them up, just a bit of window shopping to get an idea as you budget.

In Nairobi, check Mwalimu Communications, Riwara Electronics, Spikes Spares and Electronics, Alfa Sounds, etc all in or around Luthuli Avenue. Someone had once mentioned a shop in Eastleigh but unfortunately I seem to have misplaced the name.

In Msa, check Space Electronics and Abasheikh Electronics around the Mwembe Tayari area.

Finally, in your free time, have a look at this forum and see what fellow Kenyans (and other Africans too) are up to in matters FTA Satellite Tv. Feel free to sign-up and share your experiences and queries as well.
Life is like playing a violin solo in public and learning the instrument as one goes on.
Museveni
#112 Posted : Tuesday, June 24, 2014 4:07:17 PM
Rank: Member


Joined: 8/16/2012
Posts: 660
@Rankaz be kind enough to elaborate on C-Band & Ku-Band frequencies in relation to the dish sizes and the impact on channels/satellite channels that can be accessed.

This info am sure will be of help to those will go on a shopping spree on their own armed only with info gleaned from wazua.
Live and learn; and don’t forget, nothing ventured, nothing gained.
Rankaz13
#113 Posted : Tuesday, June 24, 2014 10:26:02 PM
Rank: Elder


Joined: 5/21/2013
Posts: 2,841
Location: Here
Museveni wrote:
@Rankaz be kind enough to elaborate on C-Band & Ku-Band frequencies in relation to the dish sizes and the impact on channels/satellite channels that can be accessed.

This info am sure will be of help to those will go on a shopping spree on their own armed only with info gleaned from wazua.


See how in normal radio transmission we have FM, MW and SW bands? In satellite too we have C-band and Ku-band transmission. In days gone by, primefocus dishes were referred to as C-band dishes but not anymore, nowadays even offset dishes can be adapted for C-band reception. The only difference is that while in primefocus we have a 'flat' scalar ring, on offset the scalar ring is conical. In short, both offset and primefocus dishes can receive both C-band and Ku-band with the right equipment.

Conical scalar ring:



Flat scalar ring:



Ordinarily, the C-band frequencies are four figures while those for Ku-band are five figures. For instance, on this page , the frequency (or transponder) 4064H (with AlJazeera English, CCTV & EWTN) is C-band while the frequency (or tp) 11050H (with dstv south africa) is Ku-band.
Life is like playing a violin solo in public and learning the instrument as one goes on.
nahdy
#114 Posted : Wednesday, June 25, 2014 9:33:56 AM
Rank: Member


Joined: 6/29/2006
Posts: 184
Rankaz13 wrote:
Museveni wrote:
@Rankaz be kind enough to elaborate on C-Band & Ku-Band frequencies in relation to the dish sizes and the impact on channels/satellite channels that can be accessed.

This info am sure will be of help to those will go on a shopping spree on their own armed only with info gleaned from wazua.


See how in normal radio transmission we have FM, MW and SW bands? In satellite too we have C-band and Ku-band transmission. In days gone by, primefocus dishes were referred to as C-band dishes but not anymore, nowadays even offset dishes can be adapted for C-band reception. The only difference is that while in primefocus we have a 'flat' scalar ring, on offset the scalar ring is conical. In short, both offset and primefocus dishes can receive both C-band and Ku-band with the right equipment.

Conical scalar ring:



Flat scalar ring:



Ordinarily, the C-band frequencies are four figures while those for Ku-band are five figures. For instance, on this page , the frequency (or transponder) 4064H (with AlJazeera English, CCTV & EWTN) is C-band while the frequency (or tp) 11050H (with dstv south africa) is Ku-band.


rankaz13 - u r making this look soooo easy!!!!.
very good explanation. thanks a lot.

I have been practicing with our office dish but so far only manage to get 194 channels which are just repetition of arab channels. I think my life will be easier if I acquire a dish finder.
Rankaz13
#115 Posted : Wednesday, June 25, 2014 9:06:39 PM
Rank: Elder


Joined: 5/21/2013
Posts: 2,841
Location: Here
nahdy wrote:
Rankaz13 wrote:
Museveni wrote:
@Rankaz be kind enough to elaborate on C-Band & Ku-Band frequencies in relation to the dish sizes and the impact on channels/satellite channels that can be accessed.

This info am sure will be of help to those will go on a shopping spree on their own armed only with info gleaned from wazua.


See how in normal radio transmission we have FM, MW and SW bands? In satellite too we have C-band and Ku-band transmission. In days gone by, primefocus dishes were referred to as C-band dishes but not anymore, nowadays even offset dishes can be adapted for C-band reception. The only difference is that while in primefocus we have a 'flat' scalar ring, on offset the scalar ring is conical. In short, both offset and primefocus dishes can receive both C-band and Ku-band with the right equipment.

Conical scalar ring:



Flat scalar ring:



Ordinarily, the C-band frequencies are four figures while those for Ku-band are five figures. For instance, on this page , the frequency (or transponder) 4064H (with AlJazeera English, CCTV & EWTN) is C-band while the frequency (or tp) 11050H (with dstv south africa) is Ku-band.


rankaz13 - u r making this look soooo easy!!!!.
very good explanation. thanks a lot.

I have been practicing with our office dish but so far only manage to get 194 channels which are just repetition of arab channels. I think my life will be easier if I acquire a dish finder.


That's only because it is easy. Before you get your satellite meter, consider installing any of the following apps in your smart phone and using the same: Dishpointer Augmented Reality apps, Sat Alignment, Dish Align, Eutelsat Finder, SatDir. Also consider installing a 'spirit-level' app such as iLevelmeter for iOS to assist in ensuring the surface on which the dish is mounted is both horizontally and vertically true.

When you eventually decide to get the meter, please ensure it's a DVB-S2 meter capable of decoding up to 32-PSK or even 64-PSK signals. In short, it should have specs either similar to, or superior to those of the decoder. which reminds me of this post where one of the shops I'd mentioned, AbaSheikh in Msa, was mentioned as having some of those digital satellite meters. You may check them out.

And finally, congrats on your experiments with that office dish. If nothing else, it tells me that you have your azimuth right. Without changing that, play around with elevation only and see what other channels you'll nab. You may just surprise yourself. As we say in the FTA world, the possibilities are endless. More grease to your elbow. Careful you don't contract ASAS though. smile
Life is like playing a violin solo in public and learning the instrument as one goes on.
kysse
#116 Posted : Wednesday, June 25, 2014 9:24:45 PM
Rank: Elder


Joined: 1/17/2013
Posts: 4,693
Location: Earth
I'd rather stay with vok, if I have to read and apply all of the above.
#just passing to see images#
AlphDoti
#117 Posted : Thursday, July 03, 2014 5:57:24 PM
Rank: Elder


Joined: 6/20/2008
Posts: 6,275
Location: Kenya
kysse wrote:
I'd rather stay with vok, if I have to read and apply all of the above.
#just passing to see images#

@kysse you're not alone. I was comfortable with my KBC stuff. But I guess I've given in to family pressure to provide digital. What to do!
nahdy
#118 Posted : Monday, July 21, 2014 8:19:54 AM
Rank: Member


Joined: 6/29/2006
Posts: 184
Rankaz13 wrote:
nahdy wrote:
Rankaz13 wrote:
Museveni wrote:
@Rankaz be kind enough to elaborate on C-Band & Ku-Band frequencies in relation to the dish sizes and the impact on channels/satellite channels that can be accessed.

This info am sure will be of help to those will go on a shopping spree on their own armed only with info gleaned from wazua.


See how in normal radio transmission we have FM, MW and SW bands? In satellite too we have C-band and Ku-band transmission. In days gone by, primefocus dishes were referred to as C-band dishes but not anymore, nowadays even offset dishes can be adapted for C-band reception. The only difference is that while in primefocus we have a 'flat' scalar ring, on offset the scalar ring is conical. In short, both offset and primefocus dishes can receive both C-band and Ku-band with the right equipment.


Ordinarily, the C-band frequencies are four figures while those for Ku-band are five figures. For instance, on this page , the frequency (or transponder) 4064H (with AlJazeera English, CCTV & EWTN) is C-band while the frequency (or tp) 11050H (with dstv south africa) is Ku-band.


rankaz13 - u r making this look soooo easy!!!!.
very good explanation. thanks a lot.

I have been practicing with our office dish but so far only manage to get 194 channels which are just repetition of arab channels. I think my life will be easier if I acquire a dish finder.


That's only because it is easy. Before you get your satellite meter, consider installing any of the following apps in your smart phone and using the same: Dishpointer Augmented Reality apps, Sat Alignment, Dish Align, Eutelsat Finder, SatDir. Also consider installing a 'spirit-level' app such as iLevelmeter for iOS to assist in ensuring the surface on which the dish is mounted is both horizontally and vertically true.

When you eventually decide to get the meter, please ensure it's a DVB-S2 meter capable of decoding up to 32-PSK or even 64-PSK signals. In short, it should have specs either similar to, or superior to those of the decoder. which reminds me of this post where one of the shops I'd mentioned, AbaSheikh in Msa, was mentioned as having some of those digital satellite meters. You may check them out.

And finally, congrats on your experiments with that office dish. If nothing else, it tells me that you have your azimuth right. Without changing that, play around with elevation only and see what other channels you'll nab. You may just surprise yourself. As we say in the FTA world, the possibilities are endless. More grease to your elbow. Careful you don't contract ASAS though. smile


rankaz .. have been trying & trying but couldn't manage anything more.. then I realized it could be the receiver astrovox 295 hence bot srt 4922 & vollaaaaa they started streaming in nilesat etc etc. y.day I tried using a usb to upgrade the sw but got an error invalid stb file.... this is the file name.. SRT4920_4922_4922A_160p_140627.stb 4.7mb. could there be something wrong am doing kindly assist.
Rankaz13
#119 Posted : Monday, July 21, 2014 9:58:17 PM
Rank: Elder


Joined: 5/21/2013
Posts: 2,841
Location: Here
nahdy wrote:
Rankaz13 wrote:
nahdy wrote:
Rankaz13 wrote:
Museveni wrote:
@Rankaz be kind enough to elaborate on C-Band & Ku-Band frequencies in relation to the dish sizes and the impact on channels/satellite channels that can be accessed.

This info am sure will be of help to those will go on a shopping spree on their own armed only with info gleaned from wazua.


See how in normal radio transmission we have FM, MW and SW bands? In satellite too we have C-band and Ku-band transmission. In days gone by, primefocus dishes were referred to as C-band dishes but not anymore, nowadays even offset dishes can be adapted for C-band reception. The only difference is that while in primefocus we have a 'flat' scalar ring, on offset the scalar ring is conical. In short, both offset and primefocus dishes can receive both C-band and Ku-band with the right equipment.


Ordinarily, the C-band frequencies are four figures while those for Ku-band are five figures. For instance, on this page , the frequency (or transponder) 4064H (with AlJazeera English, CCTV & EWTN) is C-band while the frequency (or tp) 11050H (with dstv south africa) is Ku-band.


rankaz13 - u r making this look soooo easy!!!!.
very good explanation. thanks a lot.

I have been practicing with our office dish but so far only manage to get 194 channels which are just repetition of arab channels. I think my life will be easier if I acquire a dish finder.


That's only because it is easy. Before you get your satellite meter, consider installing any of the following apps in your smart phone and using the same: Dishpointer Augmented Reality apps, Sat Alignment, Dish Align, Eutelsat Finder, SatDir. Also consider installing a 'spirit-level' app such as iLevelmeter for iOS to assist in ensuring the surface on which the dish is mounted is both horizontally and vertically true.

When you eventually decide to get the meter, please ensure it's a DVB-S2 meter capable of decoding up to 32-PSK or even 64-PSK signals. In short, it should have specs either similar to, or superior to those of the decoder. which reminds me of this post where one of the shops I'd mentioned, AbaSheikh in Msa, was mentioned as having some of those digital satellite meters. You may check them out.

And finally, congrats on your experiments with that office dish. If nothing else, it tells me that you have your azimuth right. Without changing that, play around with elevation only and see what other channels you'll nab. You may just surprise yourself. As we say in the FTA world, the possibilities are endless. More grease to your elbow. Careful you don't contract ASAS though. smile


rankaz .. have been trying & trying but couldn't manage anything more.. then I realized it could be the receiver astrovox 295 hence bot srt 4922 & vollaaaaa they started streaming in nilesat etc etc. y.day I tried using a usb to upgrade the sw but got an error invalid stb file.... this is the file name.. SRT4920_4922_4922A_160p_140627.stb 4.7mb. could there be something wrong am doing kindly assist.


Congrats on your successful trials. Th reason you were initially failing is that the Astrovox 290 FTA Plus is DVB-S while most of the transmissions on Nilesat are DVB-S2. Since it cannot decode DVB-S2 signals, you cannot watch.

I hope you got your software either from the stron website or from crosat.us as these are the only sources of genuine software for that STB. The file you download is usually zipped and you must first extract using winzip or winRAR software on the comp. After extracting, save the .stb file in your flash disc, load to the machine.

Confirm that the software you're loading is more recent, i.e. newer than that already preinstalled in the decoder.
Life is like playing a violin solo in public and learning the instrument as one goes on.
nahdy
#120 Posted : Tuesday, July 22, 2014 9:15:38 AM
Rank: Member


Joined: 6/29/2006
Posts: 184
Rankaz13 wrote:
nahdy wrote:
Rankaz13 wrote:
nahdy wrote:
Rankaz13 wrote:
Museveni wrote:
@Rankaz be kind enough to elaborate on C-Band & Ku-Band frequencies in relation to the dish sizes and the impact on channels/satellite channels that can be accessed.

This info am sure will be of help to those will go on a shopping spree on their own armed only with info gleaned from wazua.


See how in normal radio transmission we have FM, MW and SW bands? In satellite too we have C-band and Ku-band transmission. In days gone by, primefocus dishes were referred to as C-band dishes but not anymore, nowadays even offset dishes can be adapted for C-band reception. The only difference is that while in primefocus we have a 'flat' scalar ring, on offset the scalar ring is conical. In short, both offset and primefocus dishes can receive both C-band and Ku-band with the right equipment.


Ordinarily, the C-band frequencies are four figures while those for Ku-band are five figures. For instance, on this page , the frequency (or transponder) 4064H (with AlJazeera English, CCTV & EWTN) is C-band while the frequency (or tp) 11050H (with dstv south africa) is Ku-band.


rankaz13 - u r making this look soooo easy!!!!.
very good explanation. thanks a lot.

I have been practicing with our office dish but so far only manage to get 194 channels which are just repetition of arab channels. I think my life will be easier if I acquire a dish finder.


That's only because it is easy. Before you get your satellite meter, consider installing any of the following apps in your smart phone and using the same: Dishpointer Augmented Reality apps, Sat Alignment, Dish Align, Eutelsat Finder, SatDir. Also consider installing a 'spirit-level' app such as iLevelmeter for iOS to assist in ensuring the surface on which the dish is mounted is both horizontally and vertically true.

When you eventually decide to get the meter, please ensure it's a DVB-S2 meter capable of decoding up to 32-PSK or even 64-PSK signals. In short, it should have specs either similar to, or superior to those of the decoder. which reminds me of this post where one of the shops I'd mentioned, AbaSheikh in Msa, was mentioned as having some of those digital satellite meters. You may check them out.

And finally, congrats on your experiments with that office dish. If nothing else, it tells me that you have your azimuth right. Without changing that, play around with elevation only and see what other channels you'll nab. You may just surprise yourself. As we say in the FTA world, the possibilities are endless. More grease to your elbow. Careful you don't contract ASAS though. smile


rankaz .. have been trying & trying but couldn't manage anything more.. then I realized it could be the receiver astrovox 295 hence bot srt 4922 & vollaaaaa they started streaming in nilesat etc etc. y.day I tried using a usb to upgrade the sw but got an error invalid stb file.... this is the file name.. SRT4920_4922_4922A_160p_140627.stb 4.7mb. could there be something wrong am doing kindly assist.


Congrats on your successful trials. Th reason you were initially failing is that the Astrovox 290 FTA Plus is DVB-S while most of the transmissions on Nilesat are DVB-S2. Since it cannot decode DVB-S2 signals, you cannot watch.

I hope you got your software either from the stron website or from crosat.us as these are the only sources of genuine software for that STB. The file you download is usually zipped and you must first extract using winzip or winRAR software on the comp. After extracting, save the .stb file in your flash disc, load to the machine.

Confirm that the software you're loading is more recent, i.e. newer than that already preinstalled in the decoder.


thanks
i'l try installing the file from strong although it show ver 134 and the one I downloaded was ver 160.

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