Satellite TV and internet service

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Joined
Sep 30, 2013
Messages
12
Location
USA
Vessel Name
Saltwater's Dream
Vessel Make
44' Gulf star Trawler
Hi All:
It has been ages since I posted on the forum. Good to be back. Last time I posted we were looking for insurance for our 44ft gulfstar. Months have passed insurance purchased thanks for all you help to those who gave us guidance on that issue.
Now that we are living aboard our Gulfstar Saltwater's Dream whcih took place the first of June. We are in Virginia at Severn Marina. The have WiFi but very weak to nil. I have a small business I run from the boat and internet service is imperative. Also we contacted Dish TV and they will not have anything to do with putting a satellite on board so we are stuck with about three channels on the TV. Ho-hum.........Upon doing some light research my husband Paul found a couple of ways to get Tv but it would be thousands of dollars. That isn't going to fly. Any help greatly appreciated.
Thank you
 
I just bought a Track-It-Tv system from another TF member. It's a reasonably priced solution to have Dish or Directv while moving. I've been using a winegard dome that I set on the bow, it automatically finds the satellite but won't follow them if your moving.
 
It's not too difficult as long as you're close to land. For the television Direct TV is readily available with a moderately priced system. Internet is slightly more challenging and depends on cruising area. For your local marina you might try a signal booster and see if that strengthens the WIFI enough. Hughes, in various forms, is a satellite option. And as phone carriers are upping speed, wireless is an option depending on location.

It's offshore that the solutions become very costly.
 
Internet is easily solved using the cellular system.

Satellite tv can be had using a system like the ones KVH makes.
 
Satellite tv is available on a boat. There are two different types of systems. Both use a normal household receiver but the antenna setup is different. For satellite tv to work the antenna must be focused at a particular spot in the sky and be fixed on that spot when the boat moves.

The first type involves a complicated antenna in a dome which fixes on the satellite signal and moves the antenna up and down and from side to side to keep the lock on the signal. In the eastern half of North American with an 18" antenna these systems are good as far south as the Abacos and as far north as just before Bra d'Or in Nova Scotia. These systems are fully automated. Expect to pay $4,000 US or more. KVH and Track TV are well known brands.

The second type has a compass system which keeps a normal household antenna pointing in the same direction as the boat moves from place to place. If the boat moves more than 50/100 miles or so the elevation of the antenna must be manually adjusted. Thus the fix of the antenna on the satellite system is based on the compass direction and the manual adjustment of the elevation. This system works in a marina and generally at anchor but is not reliable underway. Expect to pay less than $2,000. One brand of these systems is now known as Track-It TV, used to be Follow Me TV.

Getting the receiver is a interesting issue. Boats are not favored under current US law although nothing stops you from putting a receiver and an antenna on a boat. The problem is getting the national broadcast channels, ABC, CBS NBC etc. Here you have three options:

Give the satellite company a physical address of your home marina or anywhere you will be staying for a while as the service location and get the local broadcast channel (and the cable channels). When you move locations outside of the local area you will need to call the satellite company and change the service address to the new location to get the local channels.

Give the satellite company the physical address of a marina in the New York City area and receive the local NYC channels with the national broadcast channels. These are called national feeds and can be received (when authorized) throughout the US and Canada. You may be in Charleston but will be getting the NYC channels. You can do the same for Los Angeles if you choose a physical address there.

The third option is to obtain title to an RV, doesn't matter what type. I used a salvaged camper trailer. By act of Congress (no political comment) RVs are entitled to the national feeds so that with RV ownership you are able to get subscriptions to the NYC channels. Of course as soon as these are authorized you can dump your RV and just put the receiver on the boat.

Whatever you do in talking to the satellite company avoid the word "boat". You just want service at a address you give them and you will take care of your own installation.
If you already have service at home, get another receiver and add it to your monthly bill. In that case however you will be stuck with your local channels and won't be able to get the national feeds unless you call the cable company and tell them you have moved the service location for the period you will be on your boat. This works as there are subscribers with two homes that are able to do this regularly.
 
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Dish or Direct TV can be set up with a land based system if your marina will allow the dish to be attached to a piling or dock. They can be lag bolted into wooden pilings or strapped on if preferred or metal/concrete pilings...we have quite a few here at this marina.

Usually the installer will NOT do the actual install without a note from the marina (or if there's other's already up" just won't or can't attach it to marina property....that's where you handle the lag bolts (or straps). Sometimes you also have to speak to a supervisor...I have seen that happen a few times as the installers are leery of "unusual" installs.

As far as weak internet...there's been a couple threads lately on boosters and Active Captain has ongoing "advice" in their newsletters if you go to their site (sign up and they come to you).
 
A cheap TV solution is an antenna from Walmart if broadcast stations are nearby. A better solution is an amplified multidirectional boat antenna.
A possible Internet solution is a Rouge Wave antenna signal booster. I called them yesterday, very helpful, $350.
I have a MIFI that works well but can be expensive if you use a lot of bandwidth.
 
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You should be able to increase your WiFi coverage and quality by purchasing one of the numerous external antennas and bridge units available to the boat and RV crowd.
In addition I would suggest supplementing a cellular plan with an external antenna and USB/ router similar to the Cradlepoint units with a Samsung cellular USB stick (one example). For TV there are numerous Direct TV options look for a used KVH M1 or M3. As long as your within the US coastal or loop areas all of these should increase your quality of TV viewing and internet use. Use WiFi when and if you can use your cellular data when no WiFi is available.
Bill
 
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So many marinas have good wi-fi and cable TV any other nearby you might move to?
 
When you see what a sharp picture you'll get from a HD Antenna that they sell at Costco (comes with an extra cable for more channels) of Home Depot or Lowes for $30.00 your going to be pissed at the cable companies for what they call HD! It allows you to pick up channels that used to be free (remember pre-digital days?) FOR free.
No subscriptions, nothing but a antenna that picks up the networks It's paper thin and you just use Scotch tape to place it.
Also recommend using your cell phone to tether wireless to your computers. I have T-Mobile with a true unlimited data plan, and it's faster than Comcast high speed ever thought about. I bought a house outside area where cable company will install,(also under Oaks) and was thwarted until my son said "dad, just download the free tether app from the playstore" Genius! I'm now uploading photos way faster than when on Cable in Miami. T-Mobile mailed me a signal amplified and a booster for free solely because I mentioned "Verizon".
Other son downloads shows (like HBO and movies)s to a laptop which we then hook up to the big screen while waiting for Direct TV to come around.
Oh, and the Magic Jack is the bomb for long distance, especially in hotels.
 
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PHK, you and I suffer with the same cheap bastard gene. The very thought of dropping 4 grand to pick up the signal of a service I pay a monthly fee for makes me vomit.

Digital tv(anything bought in the last ten years) and an antenna is all I use. Hook the laptop to the big screen and watch Netflix, darewall, or any of the major networks online.
 
hang or just place a regular dish on something solid and ot moving...pay the basic cable fee for whatever you want...take the whole rig with you when you cruise.

No local channels unless you jump through hoops...

Not sure how far you can travel before it's an issue...but then it's the dumb RV versus boat issue that can be worked round.

Usually everything is free except the monthly service...just dicker.
 
PHK, you and I suffer with the same cheap bastard gene. The very thought of dropping 4 grand to pick up the signal of a service I pay a monthly fee for makes me vomit.

Well, yeah, I've been "cruising" via motorhomes, boats, and now Priceline since I was 15 and hitch hiked off to California.. I could write a book. In fact as I travel now and see places where I used to "anchor" for months at a time with signs now posted forbidding it, I have to say "gee, I hope I didn't cause that". I mean I saw Elvis do it in several movies, why not me was my philosophy. :whistling: and of course Netflix via tablet is the way to go.
 
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My vote goes for KVH, we're currently in the exumas and recently installed and M-5 while no cheap feat it's great. We tracked the tropical depression that's now a hurricane from the safety of our salon.:D
 
Thank you everyone. You have been so helpful. While paul has researched some of the features talked about here. Their are others we will be researching more. We are currently waiting to hear if satellite dish will be allowed on pier or piling..
Thank you again.
 
If it's not allowed consider a used Track-Me dish mount they work well while at anchor and at the dock.
Also Active Captain has a good newsletter about alternatives I suggest possibly signing up and reading Jeff;s comments. There are many options for TV but all internet TV options require a decent WiFi connection.
Also look on boat site classifieds and E-Bay for KVH products you will find they sell for about 30 to 40% of their original asking price. I bought my last KVH M3ST here on this board from a member. I paid about 40% of the cost of a new unit. It works well...
Bill
 
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the KVH m1 set alight system is closer to 2000 dollars it works very well. I am based in Fort Lauderdale and have satellite TV all the way to Nassau. After now so successful I dropped out. I was told it would only work in us so I was happy with that. Shop ebay or amazon for the best prices, I've seen new systems go for less than 2000
 
The KVH M1 TracVision also works quite well in all but heavy rain. It can be purchased for Dish networks or DIRECT TV but not both. If you choose DIRECT you are limited to DTV not HDTV. I still think DTV looks pretty good for my old eyes.
I'm a Direct TV fan and am using a KVH M3ST that I purchased for around $1500 used. It was in perfect condition and still is!
Bill
 
When you see what a sharp picture you'll get from a HD Antenna that they sell at Costco (comes with an extra cable for more channels) of Home Depot or Lowes for $30.00 your going to be pissed at the cable companies for what they call HD! It allows you to pick up channels that used to be free (remember pre-digital days?) FOR free.

No subscriptions, nothing but a antenna that picks up the networks It's paper thin and you just use Scotch tape to place it.


Yeah, the source material has to be HD. Some HD broadcast is 720p, some is 1080i... usually new-ish programming, sports and so forth.... but then some is also still 480i (as I have Quigley Down Under on broadcast in the background from broadcast, as we speak, @480i).

I guess the cable guys only provide the better quality if you subscribe to their HD service. Otherwise, they're delivering 480i. Our service simply adds HD channels to the originals, so we have both... and have to remember which channel to tune to for best quality.

Here in the marina, several neighbors have Dish and DirectTV dishes attached to piles. A couple boats share one feed. Two liveaboard couples also temporarily move their dishes to their wintertime slips every year, too. None of them are inclined to watch much TV while underway, and anyway they also have the fairly-standard amplified VHF/UHF TV antennas anyway for local network shows, like sports and so forth.

-Chris
 
If you look closely in the center of the picture, this is what we do in Wrangell. None of the typical KVH or Intellian antennas will work in the land of big dishes as they are too small. I am surprised the antenna on the float maintains good alignment with the large tide swings and tidal movement in the harbor.

Tom
 

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If you look closely in the center of the picture, this is what we do in Wrangell. None of the typical KVH or Intellian antennas will work in the land of big dishes as they are too small. I am surprised the antenna on the float maintains good alignment with the large tide swings and tidal movement in the harbor.

Tom

Tom has hinted at an issue not discussed so far. In North America the typical satellite dish is 18" a little under a half meter. Once north of British Columbia to the west, east of Bra D'Or to the north east and south of the Abacos in the Bahamas to the south east you need a 24" dish. Thus the less expensive KVH units which are 18" dishes will not work in these areas.
 
Antenna size is proportional to antenna gain and in this case an expanded footprint. The larger sized dishes require better stabilization to stay on the satellite.
Then again I remember the TVRO days where C band dishes between 3 and 4 meters were found on many rural houses. Then again the programming was free as well.
Bill
 
My vote goes for KVH, we're currently in the exumas and recently installed and M-5 while no cheap feat it's great. We tracked the tropical depression that's now a hurricane from the safety of our salon.:D

I'm a KVH fan as well.

This morning I ran my business from my boat while underway. I had clear telephone and data connectivity allowing us to be on the boat instead of stuck at the office.

Right now we're underway and will stop for some Ling Cod fishing in 4.43nm
 
I'm a KVH fan as well.

This morning I ran my business from my boat while underway. I had clear telephone and data connectivity allowing us to be on the boat instead of stuck at the office.

Right now we're underway and will stop for some Ling Cod fishing in 4.43nm
I'm a KVH fan as well, I'm curious what service do you use for telephone and Internet when WiFi or Cellular isn't available? I used to use a Skipper 150 on Fleet Broadband before the monthly rates went through the roof. I'm actually thinking of using the new Globalstar hotspot smartphone VOIP interface unit. I had unreliable service when I installed a Wavecall on Globalstar years ago. It's still not clear to me if they have really launched their new satellites? Perhaps the Iridium RedPort instead? I'm undecided and currently I have no need for sat based phone service unless there is a natural event and we retreat to the boat until the local services and networks come back on-line.
Bill
 
I'm a KVH fan as well, I'm curious what service do you use for telephone and Internet when WiFi or Cellular isn't available? I used to use a Skipper 150 on Fleet Broadband before the monthly rates went through the roof. I'm actually thinking of using the new Globalstar hotspot smartphone VOIP interface unit. I had unreliable service when I installed a Wavecall on Globalstar years ago. It's still not clear to me if they have really launched their new satellites? Perhaps the Iridium RedPort instead? I'm undecided and currently I have no need for sat based phone service unless there is a natural event and we retreat to the boat until the local services and networks come back on-line.
Bill

We use KVH Mini VSAT service. Download of 2mbps at .99/mb and voice which is VOIP at .49 per minute.

I discussed using my CISCO call manager phone but their engineers said it would be a PITA to get the QOS set up. They have their own VOIP gateway with a POTS interface.

My network on the boat is based on a Cradlepoint mbr1200 which has two USB ports for cellular modems. It switches over to the satellite service automatically if I can't ping googls DNS server from the cellular modem.
 
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That's the service I like other than the initial costs. If I would have known that the Fleet Broadband service was going to cost as much as it did I would have waited for the MiNi VSAT unit to come out. I really only need 100% reliable phone service for data I work around my Outlook using Google Mail services. I use a SIP box through either WiFi or LTE cellular data for reliable phone service for now.
Bill
 
That's the service I like other than the initial costs. If I would have known that the Fleet Broadband service was going to cost as much as it did I would have waited for the MiNi VSAT unit to come out. I really only need 100% reliable phone service for data I work around my Outlook using Google Mail services. I use a SIP box through either WiFi or LTE cellular data for reliable phone service for now.
Bill

I can get my CISCO phone tied to my call manager to work reliably on the cellular system as well, and that's what I generally use while in port.

Haven't fooled around with other SIP gear very much. I feel like a traitor using the cradlepoint but it works great and is less expensive than a 2900 router.
 
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