Forum Discussion
- EsoxLuciusExplorer
Aridon wrote:
CA Traveler wrote:
Yes you can take the receiver with you as long as it's not a Genie Client which is NOT a receiver. However once you travel several hundred miles you will leave the local spot beam and no longer get the national channels. If you call and get the local channels for the rig then the home receiver will no longer get its local channels.
If someone were to fall under this one option is to "move" to NYC or LA area. Pick a fake address, apartment or condo and add a number or letter to it. This will net you the CONUS locals and you'd have access to at least all your network programming, minus your local news naturally as that would be NYC.
This is absolutely false. If you use NYC or LA as your service address, as soon as you are out of the spot beam you will lose the local channels. The only way to get the network channels without changing service addresses is to purchase Distant Network Service for $10. This, depending on your billing address, will get you either the New York City OR the Los Angeles network channels. If you want actual local network channels you need to change your service address every time you leave the spot beam area of the previously selected service address. - CavemanCharlieExplorer IIIOr, you could just leave the Sat TV at home, get a antenna, get some local channels from that, and then go outside and enjoy nature.
Then rent a few movies on rainy days.
But, I know that everyone is different and you may not enjoy doing that.
Have a nice Day - AridonExplorer
CA Traveler wrote:
Yes you can take the receiver with you as long as it's not a Genie Client which is NOT a receiver. However once you travel several hundred miles you will leave the local spot beam and no longer get the national channels. If you call and get the local channels for the rig then the home receiver will no longer get its local channels.
If someone were to fall under this one option is to "move" to NYC or LA area. Pick a fake address, apartment or condo and add a number or letter to it. This will net you the CONUS locals and you'd have access to at least all your network programming, minus your local news naturally as that would be NYC. - CA_TravelerExplorer IIIYes you can take the receiver with you as long as it's not a Genie Client which is NOT a receiver. However once you travel several hundred miles you will leave the local spot beam and no longer get the national channels. If you call and get the local channels for the rig then the home receiver will no longer get its local channels.
- Big_KatunaExplorer II
EsoxLucius wrote:
Rbertalotto wrote:
I've been fulltiming for three years and LTE networks, WiFi and OTA are not reliable for consistent television viewing.
I predict that within month, the sight of satellite dishes on RVs will go the way of the dinosaur. I can not see the need, expense and deployment making any sense as the cost for unlimited services continue to crash and the network gets better and better....
I agree. Years away. Even in FLorida, we often dont have cell service much less decent wifi. - EsoxLuciusExplorer
Rbertalotto wrote:
I've been fulltiming for three years and LTE networks, WiFi and OTA are not reliable for consistent television viewing.
I predict that within month, the sight of satellite dishes on RVs will go the way of the dinosaur. I can not see the need, expense and deployment making any sense as the cost for unlimited services continue to crash and the network gets better and better.... - holstein13ExplorerYes, the key is to call the RV an extra bedroom. You'll pay about $15.00 per month for the bedroom receiver but you can use it anywhere you'd like.
If you travel a lot, apply for the Distant Network Services so you can get the national broadcasters wherever you are. Either NY or LA based on your billing zip code. - ol_Bombero-JCExplorerIMO - this has gotten way off the question the OP asked.
A bit more info would have gone a looong way.
OP: *If* you are now using a DirecTV receiver (the 'box') at home, just take it with you. You need a sat dish (free or cheap) to set up - and find (align with) the sat where you are camping.
Lots of "how to" help & info for "finding the bird" - including (on) YouTube AND the *Technology Corner* forum (here, on RV Net).
Your active receiver already has a/the "card" in it. Nothing to do or change.
There are more bells and whistles (Gee Whiz stuff) for TV reception, but you didn't ask that.
Hope you got/get the picture!
~ - Big_KatunaExplorer IIYou need one card per receiver. The card and receiver are married; if you take a card out and put it in a different box, it won't work unless you call and have them "re-marry" them.
- tdsxt51Explorer
enblethen wrote:
You must have two cards that are active through DirectTV.
I don't believe that is true. I take our bedroom receiver camping with us, and we mostly go local; don't know if that matters or not. Anyway, sometimes I need to run home for something, and being the TV nut that I am, I usually turn it on as soon as I walk through the door. Works for us at the same time in both places.
EDIT: Maybe I misunderstood. Both of our receivers have a card in them, but I thought they all did.
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