Good Day... This post exceeds the word limit of this forum and upon initial look-see, at this time this limit cannot be modified. So this very long post has to be split into sections. Please add you questions and comments.
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(Part One of Two)
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The Scoop On Starlink
Recently there has been some misleading information about using Starlink as a nomad. Let me help clear this up by relaying my experience over the last 7 months.
This time last year SL was still in Beta. You could pay $99 and get in line and pay homage to whatever deity you follow that you got your Kit in less than a year. When you were informed that your Kit was ready to ship you had three days to decide to have it shipped, and pay the balance of the Kit’s cost, or have your $99 refunded.
I paid my $99 last summer and was told that I could expect my Kit sometime late in the year. Then in Nov it shot out to mid-22, and then, on Dec 3, I got the word my Kit was ready to ship to me. I paid the $480 remaining balance and it showed up a few days later. My house was in the trees, but because the leaves were off for the winter, I was able to stick the antenna on a pole and got usable signal, but I did experience a lot of drops due to bad sight line to the north. This was not unexpected. I was getting into SL for being a nomad, not for this home that was soon to sell.
In late Jan 2022, the house does sell and I pack it all up in uHaul and head west. I got to Quartzsite by the end of the month and as anticipated, when I tried to “change my address” in the automated system that SL offers up, I would get “No Cell” or “No Room” messages. To explain, initially you could only use SL from a fixed location that was the address you had your SL Kit shipped to. SL created virtual cells all over the globe that were used to limit the number of people in any one area allowed to join the network. This was/is purely to limit users so they would not overload the ability and capacity of the satellite network. There was/is also some restrictions due to ground station systems abilities to receive signals from the satellites. Late in 2021 SL started deploying Sats that have laser communication systems that allow them to pass data to other Sats that have better connections to ground stations. So, back on subject…. I was in Q with my non-functioning SL setup. It made sense. Q is overrun with people in the winter and thus likely packed with SL users as well.
Since last fall, SL has launched several hundred more Sats. When I turned on back in Maine, there were around 1500 operational, and when I checked on this today there are just shy of 2000. When I was able to activate in late February by entering a valid address in Blyth(cough cough), there were around 1550 in operation. These numbers are important because despite an announcement last fall, that the network was out of Beta, it wasn’t. The grid was and is far from complete. As a result, holes in coverage do develop, and the farther south you are the larger those holes get do to the earth having a large diameter as you go south. How do I know all this? This web site. https://satellitemap.space/ In this site you are able to see near-real-time data on the position and status of all of the SL satellites and the service history of each. What this all means is that there will be momentary drops in service on occasion. It also means that as more Sats are put up there, these holes will become smaller and it will not be long before it is a non-issue.
( image below from the web app mentioned above)
(Con't next message in thread)
********************************
(Part One of Two)
********************************
The Scoop On Starlink
Recently there has been some misleading information about using Starlink as a nomad. Let me help clear this up by relaying my experience over the last 7 months.
This time last year SL was still in Beta. You could pay $99 and get in line and pay homage to whatever deity you follow that you got your Kit in less than a year. When you were informed that your Kit was ready to ship you had three days to decide to have it shipped, and pay the balance of the Kit’s cost, or have your $99 refunded.
I paid my $99 last summer and was told that I could expect my Kit sometime late in the year. Then in Nov it shot out to mid-22, and then, on Dec 3, I got the word my Kit was ready to ship to me. I paid the $480 remaining balance and it showed up a few days later. My house was in the trees, but because the leaves were off for the winter, I was able to stick the antenna on a pole and got usable signal, but I did experience a lot of drops due to bad sight line to the north. This was not unexpected. I was getting into SL for being a nomad, not for this home that was soon to sell.
In late Jan 2022, the house does sell and I pack it all up in uHaul and head west. I got to Quartzsite by the end of the month and as anticipated, when I tried to “change my address” in the automated system that SL offers up, I would get “No Cell” or “No Room” messages. To explain, initially you could only use SL from a fixed location that was the address you had your SL Kit shipped to. SL created virtual cells all over the globe that were used to limit the number of people in any one area allowed to join the network. This was/is purely to limit users so they would not overload the ability and capacity of the satellite network. There was/is also some restrictions due to ground station systems abilities to receive signals from the satellites. Late in 2021 SL started deploying Sats that have laser communication systems that allow them to pass data to other Sats that have better connections to ground stations. So, back on subject…. I was in Q with my non-functioning SL setup. It made sense. Q is overrun with people in the winter and thus likely packed with SL users as well.
Since last fall, SL has launched several hundred more Sats. When I turned on back in Maine, there were around 1500 operational, and when I checked on this today there are just shy of 2000. When I was able to activate in late February by entering a valid address in Blyth(cough cough), there were around 1550 in operation. These numbers are important because despite an announcement last fall, that the network was out of Beta, it wasn’t. The grid was and is far from complete. As a result, holes in coverage do develop, and the farther south you are the larger those holes get do to the earth having a large diameter as you go south. How do I know all this? This web site. https://satellitemap.space/ In this site you are able to see near-real-time data on the position and status of all of the SL satellites and the service history of each. What this all means is that there will be momentary drops in service on occasion. It also means that as more Sats are put up there, these holes will become smaller and it will not be long before it is a non-issue.
( image below from the web app mentioned above)
(Con't next message in thread)