Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
#1
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Did you install it yourself? If so, how difficult was it? If not, who did you use for installation?
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#2
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i/m watching this thread closely, as i'd like to have it too. when i called about it, a rep said it's not available here yet. my nephew up north has it & loves it.
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#3
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It absolutely is available here and the whole state of FL. Their website shows the coverage map.
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#4
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Install is simple. Basic grunt work.
Plant a pole where there is a clear view of the sky to the north. Bolt on antenna panel. Run cable (the hardest part, getting cable into house). Power up. Connect to your home network. Antenna does not move to track satellites. That happens electronically. No need to put on the roof because that extra 15ft height is trivial to a signal hundreds of miles away. Only reason would be to overcome trees blocking view of the sky. You do need to buy antenna ($500 I think). Subscribe ($100/month last I checked). Link speed is a couple hundred mbps. Cost wise, it is easily beat by the CATV or fiber physical service where available. Would likely perform better than cellular phone network based internet. There is a version for motor homes. Similar install onto top of vehicle roof. Costs are higher. |
#5
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#6
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For running the cable, take a look at where your low voltage box is in the garage, if your house is like mine, you will find multiple coax cables and I was able to feed the new cable out the TOP of the box, and then go outside and remove a piece of soffit and route to an antenna (in my case). If you have a newer home, I understand they no longer install the coax, so I will let others provide info on a suitable location and wiring method.
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Pennsylvania, for 60+ years, most recently, Allentown, now TV. ![]() |
#7
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With Xfinity we are paying $79 a month with average speed of 800mbps. What am I missing here? |
#8
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Starlink was never intended to replace the standard cable providers. Starlink (Tesla) offers faster speeds and lower latency in remote areas where satellite and cellular internet are the only options. For those areas without a cable provider (islands, Ukraine!, remote cabins, ships, RVs, etc) then the $120 per month for Starlink is a viable option. I believe Royal Caribbean Cruise Lines uses Starlink for their ships. |
#9
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We have it at our northern summer home (rural lake area). I installed it myself. Basically you use the phone app which helps you find a suitable location. Otherwise, it's a self pointing dish when it comes to fine tuning. As long as you're comfortable mounting something on your home using a ladder and a drill, the installation should not be a big issue.
You will have to plan how you run the cable into the house from the outside to the Starlink provided modem/wifi router. I drilled a hole in the house and used spray foam to reseal the hole. Performance wise it's just as fast as normal city cable or DSL internet. |
#10
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The price of a longer cable would really be like less than 1% of the total cost if you include operating it for at least one year. |
#11
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Starlink is ONLY the Internet (data pipe) service. If you want TV, you need to add another service such as YouTube, HULU, Sling etc. Same for telephone service too, although telephone service is in their plans for later this year. For most, the value of Starlink is providing data streaming access to remote places that have no other options; deserts, oceans, under-developed towns and countries, etc. Yes, much more expensive than the quoted Xfinity ... unless there's no Xfinity (Comcast, Spectrum, etc.) service available. More reliable too. When that winter ice storm, erm hurricane, knocks down the electricity and cable goes dead, Starlink is still working. As for speed, it is more marketing than reality. That is, 800 sounds better than 200 in the sales literature, but an extreme minority of customers actually use more than 200. You can stream video to 2-3 TVs and 3-5 computers, and 3-4 phones with 200mbps. You don't really know, nor can you easily measure accurately, how much of that 800mbps service you're really consuming. Additionally, Starlink's 200mbps service is likely a short term capability. Knowing how Musk's businesses advance, after there's a globe covering cloud of Starlink coverage, they'll probably start cranking up the bandwidth.
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Gratitude! The daily practice of finding at least 3 things to be grateful about makes for a happier life. |
#12
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What is starling?
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#13
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StarLink is an internet access service delivered via satellite. They are launching more sats often, and are the majority of rocket launch events from KSC
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#14
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One consideration for anyone in the Villages using Starlink, but has access to Fiber or even cable based internet. Starlink is very robust in weather overall compared to older DirectTV etc. That said, it can be effected by heavy rain, hard to get passed the laws of physics. In most cases, I've seen data rates slow, but in very heavy rain you can have complete outages for a brief period. For anyone that has cruised recently, most major cruise lines have or are in process of switching to Starlink. Very impressive service, but you may have noted you lost internet (or it slowed way down) or TV during very heavy storms...... and the cruise ship antennas are far more robust than the home version.
Starlink is a GREAT service, but was not meant to replace fiber/coax where available in the near term. Fiber is the best solution if available. As indicated above, Starlink for remote areas, cruise liners, airplanes, RVs etc it is a God send. |
#15
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We have Starlink in our motorhome when we travel from April to November. When we return to TV, we turn it off and use Spectrum. It works well for us, averaging speeds of around 120Mbps. I would not recommend it for a home in TV as there are much better options such as Spectrum 400Mbps for $49.95. If you go with Starlink, you would need ARC approval and I am assuming they would view it the same as they do an outdoor antenna.
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Closed Thread |
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