Free Satellite Television



             


Friday, January 30, 2009

DISH Network Free Satellite TV Installation Guide

DISH Network Satellite TV Installation

Before you begin the satellite TV installation you need to determine where the best place is to mount the satellite dish. You need to have an unobstructed view of the southern sky, and the dish can be mounted on your roof, on the side of your home, on a porch, or even in your yard.

Note: If you live in an apartment or condo, or you have a strict home owner's association, you may need permission to mount your satellite dish on the outside of your home.

Once the dish is mounted the next step is routing the cable from the dish to the locations in your home where the satellite TV receivers will be placed. If your home is large, or the space between the walls is filled, this may take some time.

After the cable has been installed it is attached to the receivers and the receivers are then connected to your TVs.

Last, but not least, the dish is aimed toward the DISH Network satellite in order to get the correct azimuth (direction), skew (rotation), and elevation (angle). This is done using the elevation indicator on the dish, a compass, and the signal strength meter from the DISH Network on-screen menu to fine tune the dish for maximum reception.


DISH Network Satellite TV System

A DISH Network satellite TV systems consists of the following:

* Satellite TV dish - captures the signal beamed down from a DISH Network satellite.

* LNB (low noise block) converter - amplifies and converts the satellite TV signal and sends it to a receiver.

* Satellite TV receiver - processes the satellite TV signal and sends it to a TV.

When you order satellite TV service from DISH Network all the equipment you need for satellite TV viewing is free. Installation of the systems in up to four rooms of your home is also free. The installer will even show you how to operate your system and answer any questions you may have.

In addition to the free receivers you receive, you have the option of ordering a free HD (high definition) receiver for high definition viewing or a free DVR (digital video recorder) receiver so you can digitally record your favorite programs. For an additional $199 you can order a combination HD/DVR receiver.


DISH Network Satellite TV Programming

DISH Network has 350 channels of satellite TV programming including movie channels, sports packages, Sirius satellite radio channels, news channels, weather channels, game channels, and pay-per-view movies and special events.

They currently offers four satellite TV packages starting at $19.99 for the 40-channel Dish Family Pak, and going up to $74.99 for the 350-channel America's "Everything" Pak.

Visit http://www.thesatellitetvguide.com for more information on DISH Network installation. Click on the following link for more DISH Network information including ordering information and the latest special offers from DISH Network.

The author, Brian Stevens, is the senior editor for TheSatelliteTVGuide.com and has written extensively on DISH Network Free Satellite TV Installation.

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Monday, January 26, 2009

Download Free PC Satellite TV


Download Free PC Satellite TV with amazing 2006 version of software. Eliminate cable TV and Dish TV and download free PC satellite tv. Software allows you to view over 3000 channels from all over the world with no bill EVER! Why spend over 90.00 a month for services that you dont even need just download free pc satellite tv and eliminate a monthly bill. I know...I know... this sounds too good to be true but it is not. For a small onetime fee you can watch sports, movies, news from all over the world. I have this software myself and was blown away. Its is perfectly legal and works on any windows based PC anywhere in the world. I have a tried a couple other versions of this software and was dissappointed. This is the best quality deal to download free pc satellite tv. Hey don't take my word for it CLICK HERE FOR REVIEWED SOFTWARE.

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Tuesday, January 13, 2009

Free To Air (FTA) Satellite TV


This type of programming is satellite signals that are broadcast around the world that requires no subscription fee from the broadcasters to bring in the channels that operate in this manner. The channels are supported by advertising and/or donations, and government bodies to keep them free. Some of the new channels may be planning to charge subscription fees in the future but they are free now. These channels are not encrypted so they can be received with no need for unscrambling.

This type of programming is most often MPEG-2 which means Motion Picture Experts Group-2. This is a standard in which the signal is compressed to aid in the transmission. HDTV and DVD uses this same compression and is a very high quality.

Most often these transmissions are in the Ku Band frequency range. The Ku band operates between 12 Ghz (Gigahertz) and 14 GHz which permits todays smaller dishes from 18 inches to 31 inches in diameter. Before the Ku band the C band was the first developed for satellite television which operated between 3.4 Ghz and 7 Ghz. The first dishes required to pick up these early signals were 20-30 feet wide.

The equipment required for this is a dish and receiver that is dedicated only to picking up the free to air signals. If there are other paid programming channels desired a separate dish and receiver is utilized to pick up paid programming such as Direct TV or Dish Network. A computer can also be modified with a PCI card to pick up the FTA signals turning it into the receiver. A PCI card available requires the computer to be a Pentium 500 and have Windows 98SE or higher installed. The reason you cannot use Direct TV or Dish Network dishes and receivers to pick up FTA channels at the same time on the same system is, FTA channels are weaker and require a minimum of a 30" dish and they use a different LNB or LNBF device in the dish itself. Paid channel dishes are usually 18 inches to 20 inches. The receivers are also different and paid channel receivers cannot pick up the FTA channels. An LNBF is a LNB (Low Noise Block) with an integrated feedhorn. After the signal is bounced off the dish it goes into the LNBF which amplifies the signal. Dual LNBF is for two television sets. For the FTA setup you must decide if you want a stationary dish or a motorized one. The motorized one will allow you to pick up several satellites giving maximum amount of channels.

The channels available will come from all over the world. Sometimes they come and go or turn into paid channels and scramble or become encoded. New free channels come up all the time and others stop or switch their programming on the fly. There are hundreds of channels in many languages with all different types of programming.

Satellites are held in the sky by velocity and gravity. This is very similar to a rock tied to a string and swinging it around. The pull of the string acts similar to gravity pulling the satellite and the velocity is the swinging force. Most television and other communication satellites are put into high orbit (Geosynchronous-22,300 miles/ 35,900 Kilometers) as opposed to medium orbit (12,400 miles/20,000 Kilometers), polar orbit (Sun-synchronous-438 miles/735 Kilometers), or low orbit 380 miles/610 Kilometers.

Currently about one fourth of the U.S. Television market has given way to satellite. In the United Kingdom about half the population use satellite.

The term DBS or Direct Broadcasting Satellite is because the satellite dish owner receives their signal directly from the sky satellite and not routed on land by a provider.

The first voice transmission was in 1958 from a satellite which was named Score. The first high orbit satellite was Syncom2 in 1963. The first communications satellite was operational in 1965 and was called Early Bird.

For more Satellite Information please visit: http://www.amazing-adventure.com/satellite/Satellite_Info.htm>

If you are interested in an online mall visit:http://www.incredible-items.com/ClickB.htm Glenn Heitkoetter is a part time writer.

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