Changes

Free to Air Satellite Receivers

5,656 bytes added, 20:36, 23 October 2007
The following lines were added (+) and removed (-):
== Dish Network Satellite Fleet ==<blockquote>'''Orbital Locations Vary'''<br>Since EchoStar frequently moves satellites among its many orbiting slots this list is not immediately accurate.<br>Refer to [http://www.lyngsat.com/ Lyngsat.com] for detailed satellite information.</blockquote><table class="wikitable">  <tr>    <th>Satellite</th>    <th>Orbital Location</th>    <th>Launch Date</th>    <th>Satellite Manufacturer/Type</th>    <th>Notes</th>  </tr>  <tr>    <td>[http://www.dishnetwork.com/content/about_us/our_satellites/echo_I/index.shtml EchoStar I]</td>    <td>148°&nbsp;W</td>    <td>[[28 December]] [[1995]]</td>    <td>[[Lockheed Martin]] Astro Space Series 7000 ([[AS-7000]])</td>    <td></td>  </tr>  <tr>    <td>[http://www.dishnetwork.com/content/about_us/our_satellites/echo_II/index.shtml EchoStar II]</td>    <td>148°&nbsp;W</td>    <td>[[10 September]] [[1996]]</td>    <td>[[Lockheed Martin]] Astro Space Series 7000 (AS-7000)</td>    <td></td>  </tr>  <tr>    <td>[http://www.dishnetwork.com/content/about_us/our_satellites/echo_III/index.shtml EchoStar III]</td>    <td>61.50°&nbsp;W</td>    <td>[[5 October]] [[1997]]</td>    <td>[[Lockheed Martin]] Missiles and Space [[A2100AX]]</td>    <td></td>  </tr>  <tr>    <td>[http://www.dishnetwork.com/content/about_us/our_satellites/echo_IV/index.shtml EchoStar IV]</td>    <td>77°&nbsp;W (incline)</td>    <td>[[8 May]] [[1998]]</td>    <td>[[Lockheed Martin]] Missiles and Space [[A2100AX]]</td>    <td>Note (1)</td>  </tr>  <tr>    <td>[http://www.dishnetwork.com/content/about_us/our_satellites/echo_V/index.shtml EchoStar V]</td>    <td>129°&nbsp;W</td>    <td>[[23 September]] [[1999]]</td>    <td>[[Space Systems/Loral]] [[LS-1300|FS-1300]]</td>    <td></td>  </tr>  <tr>    <td>[http://www.dishnetwork.com/content/about_us/our_satellites/echo_VI/index.shtml EchoStar VI]</td>    <td>110°&nbsp;W</td>    <td>[[14 July]] [[2000]]</td>    <td>[[Space Systems/Loral]] FS-1300</td>    <td></td>  </tr>  <tr>    <td>[http://www.dishnetwork.com/content/about_us/our_satellites/echo_VII/index.shtml EchoStar VII]</td>    <td>119°&nbsp;W</td>    <td>[[21 February]] [[2002]]</td>    <td>[[Lockheed Martin]] Missiles and Space [[A2100AX]]</td>    <td></td>  </tr>  <tr>    <td>[http://www.dishnetwork.com/content/about_us/our_satellites/echo_VIII/index.shtml EchoStar VIII]</td>    <td>110°&nbsp;W</td>    <td>[[21 August]] [[2002]]</td>    <td>[[Space Systems/Loral]] FS-1300</td>    <td></td>  </tr>  <tr>    <td>[http://www.dishnetwork.com/content/about_us/our_satellites/echo_IX/index.shtml EchoStar IX/Galaxy 23]</td>    <td>121°&nbsp;W</td>    <td>[[7 August]] [[2003]]</td>    <td>[[Space Systems/Loral]] FS-1300</td>    <td>Note (2)<br>Non-DBS</td>  </tr>  <tr>    <td>[http://www.dishnetwork.com/content/about_us/our_satellites/echo_X/index.shtml EchoStar X]</td>    <td>110°&nbsp;W</td>    <td>[[15 February]] [[2006]]</td>    <td>[[Lockheed Martin]] Missiles and Space [[A2100AX]]</td>    <td></td>  </tr>  <tr>    <td>Echostar XII/Rainbow 1</td>    <td>61.5°&nbsp;W</td>    <td>[[17 July]] [[2003]]</td>    <td>[[Lockheed-Martin]] [[AS-2100]]</td>    <td>Note (3)</td>  </tr>  <tr>    <td>AMC-15</td>    <td>105&nbsp;°W</td>    <td>[[14 October]] [[2004]]</td>    <td>[[Lockheed-Martin]] [[AS-2100]]</td>    <td>Note (4)<br>Non-DBS</td>  </tr>  <tr>    <td>[[Anik F3]]<ref>http://www.satnews.com/stories2007/4281/ Satnews.com launch of Anik F3</ref></td>    <td>118.75°&nbsp;W</td>    <td>[[12 April]] [[2007]]</td>    <td>[[Astrium Eurostar]] 3000</td>    <td>Note (5)<br>Non-DBS, Circular Polarity in FSS band</td>  </tr>  <tr>    <td>EchoStar XI</td>    <td>TBD</td>    <td>TDB 2007</td>    <td>[[Space Systems/Loral]] FS-1300</td>    <td>Announced<br>[[9 May]] [[2006]]</td>  </tr></table>Notes:<blockquote>(1) EchoStar IV at 77°&nbsp;W is not licensed to serve customers in the United States. EchoStar has placed the satellite in this Mexican controlled orbital slot to serve future DBS customers in Mexico.</blockquote><blockquote>(2) Customers use [[SuperDish|SuperDISH 121]] to receive this non-DBS, medium-powered signal.  Satellite is jointly owned by EchoStar and [[Intelsat]]. The [[Ku band|K<sub>u</sub> band]] is owned by EchoStar. [[Ka band|K<sub>a</sub> band]] payload owned by EchoStar and not currently in use. [[C band]] payload owned by Intelsat and is known as [[Galaxy 23]].</blockquote><blockquote>(3) Rainbow 1 was launched by Cablevision/Rainbow DBS and used for the Voom DBS service at 61.5°&nbsp;W until the satellite and transponder licenses were sold to EchoStar in 2005. March 2006 saw DISH Network rename it to EchoStar 12.  It is co-located with EchoStar III at 61.5°&nbsp;W.</blockquote><blockquote>(4) Customers use [[SuperDish|SuperDISH 105]] to receive this signal.  Non-DBS, medium-power AMC-15 is owned by SES Americom and replaced AMC-2 at the 105°&nbsp;W orbital location. EchoStar leases the entire bandwidth of the AMC-15 satellite.  </blockquote><blockquote>(5) Customers use the 26-centimeter DISH 500+ or DISH 1000+ to receive this non-DBS, medium-powered signal.  Anik F3 is leased by EchoStar from [[Telesat Canada]] to serve [[CONUS]] customers.  It broadcasts on non-DBS FSS frequencies using circular polarity (the only satellite serving the United States in this mode).  It permanently replaces AMC-16 which was temporarily placed at 118.75°&nbsp;W due to delays in Anik F3 production.  AMC-16 moved back to 85°&nbsp;W when Anik F3 was fully operational.</blockquote>
Bureaucrat, administrator
16,192
edits