Forum Discussion

southernsierra's avatar
7 years ago

Plagued With Problems -- Just Ordered Viasat To Complement Hughesnet (Am I Nuts?)

Hi all,

 

I have had a host of problems since becoming a hughesnet customer 1 year ago. I live in an extremely remote area of the county in the Sierra Nevada mountains in California at a high altitude (7000 FT). Weather is suprisingly calm for that high of elevation -- very little precipitation. There is no gas station within 1 hour of the area. Infact, there is only about 200 private parcels within a 1 hour drive -- the rest of the area is national/federal land and raw wilderness. There is no cell phone service within 1 hour of the area.

 

Considering my remote place, I didn't exactly expect smooth sailing with internet. However, my dish alignment has been an issue 4 times now over the last year. This is a vacation home, so I can only visit on weekends and OVER half of the time that a tech is dispatched, the tech does not actually show up at all which has wasted 4 of my weekends in total over the last year. The tech that DOES come has been great -- driving 4 hours one way each time to fix my dish. Techs have even called me day of and stated "Oh you live up there? Oh, no. I can't come that's too far" after having a confirmed appointment. The last time the reliable tech visited, a couple months ago,  he moved the dish to a new location and replaced the entire dish to see if that would fix the issue. It worked for 3 months until now and tech support is saying it appears to be another alignment issue so he needs to come back out.

 

I reached out to the CEO of hughesnet via linkedin a couple months back after a tech failed to show up for 2 consecutive weekends despite me having an appointment and was connected to a nice woman, Nancy who tried to help out and get a tech back out to me. I notified her of this new issue (4th issue) and she has basically told me that living in such an area may be prone to such issues and she wishes me luck. Great. This is not acceptable to me. There has to be SOME way to secure the satellite so that it works longer than 3 months.


So while I have an appointment set up the following weekend for the tech to come out (in which the tech MAY or MAY NOT actually show up), I have gone ahead and ordered Viasat Internet to complement the Hughesnet. I figure even if Viasat is spotty and alignment is an issue at least ONE of the dishes will be working at all times.. hopefully.

 

I figure Hughesnet will keep breaking every 2-3 months and then I can toggle between it and Viasat as needed. Sucks to have to order TWO satellite internet plans just to have reliable internet but I have no other options. DSL, even with multiple loop extenders, does not even make it out to my place which the phone company has been working to fix for over a year.

 

Just some thoughts on life.

 

Andy

  • Brooke's avatar
    Brooke
    7 years ago

    Southernsierra, I took a look into your account to see how the tech visit went (you could say I was a bit eager to see how everything went). Looks like they got out there and moved the dish onto a pole mount for you and quite a few other things taken care of!

     

    This makes me really happy!

    Let me know how everything's running. 

    -Brooke

  • GabeU's avatar
    GabeU
    Distinguished Professor IV

    southernsierra

     

    When they moved the satellite to its new location, did they use concrete to set the pole?  Do you know if they used a "key" in the pole to keep it from turning in the concrete?  

     

    It shouldn't be moving like that.  A properly installed satellite dish shouldn't move for years, lest there is a very strong wind storm or flood, and I highly doubt you're having floods at 7000ft.  If you are, OTOH, you've got other problems.  :p   

     

    We get some pretty nasty wind storms here once in a while, with winds of 60+MPH.  My original installation, with a huge fiberglass dish, lasted from Dec 2004 to Feb 2016, and the new Gen4/5 dish was installed on the same pole, still in the same place.  It just doesn't move.  

    • southernsierra's avatar
      southernsierra
      Sophomore

      Thanks for writing in Gabe. They did not use a pole mount. I requested a pole mount last time from Nancy (apparently she ranks above the moderators here) and she told me that I will need to work it out with the technician but she can mention it to them. Needless to say, a pole mount did not go down and the technician did not seem prepared to do it. He moved the dish from the roof (where he initially installed it) to the side of the house. The winds can indeed get pretty gnarly this high up. Good to hear you are having success with your setup from 2004 all the way to 2016 and then success with the new dish.

       

      I'm 100% willing to install anything to get it wroking, there is tons of space in and around the cabin for any type of mount hughesnet needs to install.

      • Amanda's avatar
        Amanda
        Moderator

        Hi all, just wanted to jump in and clarify some things! Also Installer, is there a particular reason you are posting on this account and not with 'gokartergo' ?

         

        1. The HughesNet system is grounded:

        2. Deck installations are perfectly fine as long as they adhere to our policy. The installation is in violation, but the signal loss was between 8/7-8/8 and occurred suddenly. Per March 16, 2018 Revision E of Consumer Antenna Site Preparation and Mount Installation Guide, page 81:

         

         

         

        Shoot me a PM if there are any questions. Southernsierra, you are in good hands with Brooke, we'll make sure everything fixed up for you. 

         

        Amanda