[Starlink] Starlink power use & satellite tracking
Nathan Owens
nathan at nathan.io
Thu Feb 16 18:14:07 EST 2023
I should add, I can actually run the HP dish w/o the router using the same
setup, but when it's obstructed it spikes to ~190W AC, which if it lasts
more than 60s does trip my car E-Fuse. I'll be adding a small battery as a
buffer, which should be able to pull 150W DC from my car, and handle the HP
dish continuous draw of 65-95W.
On Thu, Feb 16, 2023 at 3:12 PM Nathan Owens <nathan at nathan.io> wrote:
> I ran a Round Dishy in my car for a long time, along with the router,
> using a 300W inverter. My car is rated for 12A continuous, 16A peak. Per my
> Kill-A-Watt, it drew on the order of 30-50W, sometimes spiking to 80-90W
> when obstructed/booting. My inverter is 90% efficient, and never tripped my
> car 12v E-fuse. The V3 dish is more efficient, and uses less power.
>
> On Thu, Feb 16, 2023 at 3:08 PM Ulrich Speidel via Starlink <
> starlink at lists.bufferbloat.net> wrote:
>
>> In the aftermath of our cyclone here, I got dragged out for a bit of
>> media comment and, downstream, a few questions came up on dishy power use.
>> Here's what I know and can glean - comments welcome:
>>
>> - Starlink's own specs say 50-75 W "Average Power Usage":
>> https://www.starlink.com/specifications. But that's average, not
>> peak, and peak is what matters when people start recommending that Starlink
>> could be run out of a small inverter and a car battery in a disaster.
>> - Small inverters usually come with cigarette lighter cables, and
>> cigarette lighter sockets are typically fused with 8 or 10 A fuses. That
>> puts maximum safe power outputs in the 96W to 130-something W range
>> depending on battery voltage.
>> - Our lab's "RV" subscription rectangular dishy & router regularly
>> clocks in at around 80-100 W, and I've seen it go as high as 108 W on one
>> occasion. I've also seen it go as low as 30 W for the first time last night.
>> - I have a user report from an older round dishy owner having seen up
>> to 200 W on occasion.
>> - Assuming conservatively 90% inverter efficiency, that could mean up
>> to ~120W and maybe more for the rectangular version and over 220 W for the
>> circular one.
>> - If dishy goes over cigarette lighter fuse capacity, people may lose
>> their ability to charge phones from their car - also a critical capability
>> in a disaster.
>> - Not everyone takes kindly to the suggestion that advising
>> inverter + car battery use could potentially be counterproductive.
>> - So, what's the peak power use you have seen on your version of
>> dishy?
>> - It appears that the current mode of operation here is that dishy
>> uses several satellites in parallel if these can all see a gateway and have
>> capacity to carry traffic.
>> - So for us in urban Auckland with few Starlink users in the cell and
>> three gateways in the vicinity, our dishy is spoiled for choice and usually
>> gets to use maybe three or more satellites at once. That takes a
>> corresponding amount of power but also means great data rates a lot of the
>> time.
>> - For a rural user with more Starlink users in the cell and
>> further away from gateways, the satellites that the cell can see and that
>> can also see a gateway may be fewer in number. This means dishy only gets
>> to talk to maybe one or two birds at a time and so uses a lot less power,
>> and you get more average data rates there.
>> - If this is so, then it begs a question:
>> - If Starlink could cap the number of satellites dishy can use in
>> an emergency area, they would be able to keep your fuse intact. Should they
>> aim for that, even if it means that you might see lower data rates in a
>> situation when many people depend on one unit?
>>
>> Starlink is currently being touted as THE comms solution for emergencies
>> as large swathes of NZ's northern and eastern North Island remain without
>> terrestrial or mobile Internet coverage after cyclone Gabrielle. This is
>> the outage map of one of the larger mobile phone providers just for these
>> areas:
>>
>> Most of these are due to power outages to sites, but there are quite a
>> few backhaul cable issues as well.
>>
>> One of the biggest problems is that electronic payment systems don't work
>> without Internet. In our largely cashless society, this is leading to
>> situations where emergency services can't refuel their vehicles because
>> their fuel cards won't work, supermarkets and other stores can't sell
>> anything because customers have no means of paying, and the air force is
>> flying in hard cash in order to help the locals buy food.
>>
>> --
>> ****************************************************************
>> Dr. Ulrich Speidel
>>
>> School of Computer Science
>>
>> Room 303S.594 (City Campus)
>>
>> The University of Aucklandu.speidel at auckland.ac.nz http://www.cs.auckland.ac.nz/~ulrich/
>> ****************************************************************
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> _______________________________________________
>> Starlink mailing list
>> Starlink at lists.bufferbloat.net
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>>
>
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