Post 1 made on Tuesday August 30, 2005 at 18:55 |
Munson Long Time Member |
Joined: Posts: | January 2003 499 |
|
|
,
Last edited by Munson
on December 29, 2006 09:27.
|
|
Post 2 made on Tuesday August 30, 2005 at 23:04 |
Ernie Bornn-Gilman Yes, That Ernie! |
Joined: Posts: | December 2001 30,104 |
|
|
That description of LNB A's behavior sounds like the behavior of LNB C.
The receiver is only looking for signal on a few transponders of LNB C, so if you hook up A to it, you might only see the transponders that are live on C, and never know that A is hooked up as C. This does not explain LNB A odd being good, but something is screwy and I bet it is your cable ID.
I would go back and verify with connections direct from the dish to a receiver just which two wires come from A. Label them immediately, and then deal with which wire is just B and which wire is B and C mixed together.
|
A good answer is easier with a clear question giving the make and model of everything. "The biggest problem in communication is the illusion that it has taken place." -- G. “Bernie” Shaw |
|
Please read the following: Unsolicited commercial advertisements are absolutely not permitted on this forum. Other private buy & sell messages should be posted to our
Marketplace. For information on how to advertise your service or product
click here. Remote Central reserves the right to remove or modify any post that is deemed inappropriate.