  Anonymous Premium join:2004-06-01 IA | reply to Flibbetigibbet Re: Now this...
My cable service is not affected by storms. So what's your point? |
|
  Flibbetigibbet
@lmco.com
| My satellite service isn't affected by storms, either--the only exceptions were a tropical storm and a hurricane, in both cases the power went out about a minute after the dish lost signal.
If you have a properly aligned dish, rain fade is a very rare occurrence. If you've never lost cable service in bad weather, you're an exceptionally lucky (and rare) cable subscriber. Good for you. |
|
  user00001
@qwest.net | reply to Anonymous Our old Comcast connection was frequently affected by rain storms. Unless the dish is not aligned for cap, it take quite a storm to knock out sat TV. And there is no rain fade either. |
|
 fiberguy My views are my own. Premium join:2005-05-20
| reply to Flibbetigibbet Great for you, however YOUR experience does not set the status quo for the technology itself, but nice try.
It's a known fact that cable is not typically affected by rain or heavy cloud covers. It IS a known fact that Satellite is.
Now, you're coming in here and saying "If you've never lost cable service in bad weather, you're an exceptionally lucky (and rare) cable subscriber." which is completely different. If you want to talk about "bad weather" now, that opens up the definition broadly to include tornadoes and hurricanes. Point your finger to Florida or anywhere in the Tornado alley and I'll show you where "BAD WEATHER" will take down cable.. oh, and phone, and power, and... but, if you want to get back on topic and talk about heavy rain and snow, then we'll all be on the same page again.
But, if you think that bad weather takes down cable and you're "exceptionally lucky (and rare)" then you are totally misguided, or simply trolling.
You've obviously not worked for any dish company like some of us or are simply cheer-leading for your cause. Either way, you're not even close to correct with your post. |
|
 BlakePaulson
join:2008-08-06 Alexandria, MN
·AT&T Wireless Broa..
·Charter Pipeline
| reply to Anonymous Mine goes out when it's sunny out? What's your point? Aside from heavy storms direcTV rarely goes out... how often do fiber cuts, equipment malfunctions, employee errors, and infrastructure problems cause issues for cable users? I bet it's a lot more often than "heavy storms."
I love cable internet but when it come to TV... I say hell no. Charter/Mediacom/Comcast are all unreliable. I should know because I've had all three and can't wait until directv installs my dish on June 2nd (my dad has DirecTV as well and loves it and I've seen the quality...) |
|
  mmainprize
join:2001-12-06 Houghton Lake, MI
| The problem is worst the more north you dish is located. In the south your dish point a 45 dgrees but up north it is like 20 and must cut through many more clouds and stroms.
IF you are in canada and getting sat form americia then you know this all to well.
Just like calbe, if you live in an area with bad weather then you have a higher chance of cable outage. |
|
  Flibbetigibbet
@lmco.com
| reply to fiberguy I'm happy to talk about heavy rain (not snow, haven't been there or done that), and "bad weather" does not include tornadoes or hurricanes (I suspect I've seen plenty more of both than you have). It's just plain bad weather--rain, thunder, lightning. In the years when I had cable (several different companies in different cities), it went out all the time in generic old bad weather. Not destructive weather--bad weather, and it stayed out for well after the storms passed.
Judging by the other responses in this thread, I was hardly the only one. So drop the self-righteousness. It's a bore. |
|
  Doctor Olds I Need A Remedy For What's Ailing Me. Premium,VIP join:2001-04-19 1970 442 W30 clubs:
| reply to Anonymous said by Anonymous :My cable service is not affected by storms. So what's your point? Well my Charter Cable TV is affected by Weather changes and Storms just cleanly knock it off the air/off the cable completely. Rain slightly and it goes snowy, cold and it has huge issues with the dreaded green blocks and frozen images/dropped audio on the Digital Channels that all returns when it gets too windy (hot or cold). In fact Charters been out here over 30 times in the last 5 Years after the "Digital Downgrade" and cannot fix it, blaming the wiring, so they charge to replace it, doesn't fix it, blaming the drop from the pole and charging to replace it, doesn't fix it, blaming their amp/splitter on the pole, replace it and it still doesn't fix it. Then they blame it on the aerial lines in the immediate neighborhood and that they were due to upgrading. After waiting 18 months, they finally finish my area (that was 3 Years ago), and it still didn't fix it. Then they have come out and said the prior tech didn't ground the system and they charge to fix that and it is still not fixed. Next time they blamed the last tech for not making the cable end properly? (too short of a center wire) and they charge to cut each cable in the house, replace the cables in the basement and replace all the ends all the way out side up to the box on the telephone pole (we only have 2 TVs with one Digital STB by Motorolla - replaced 5 times, 2 Way Splitter in the basement, no Internet from them) and that still does not fix it. On 4 occasions they have blamed the problems on corrosion at the connector where the drop wire comes from and at no time has their working on the pole have they ever fixed it.
The only thing Charter delivers reliably is their $%@!g bill. Your bill, delivered, not Your World, delivered, but you TV signal now digitized with green block artifacts, broken audio/dropped out audio and frozen black/green screens 60% to 80% of the time.
I hope Charter bites the big Chapter 7 with no reorganization by them, but the needed Fire Sale on everything they have. -- Whats the point of owning a supercar if you cant scare yourself stupid from time to time? |
|