Here are the chips in the dish:
https://twitter.com/VirtuallyNathan/status/1331709138276024320
There's a bunch of the black ones, some sort of RF chip, and one of the heat-spreader capped ones. Parts seem to be custom, nothing I could find online.

The Dish acts as the modem, so any router can be used. How were you testing? With their router? Without?



On Tue, May 18, 2021 at 8:23 AM Nathan Owens <nathan@nathan.io> wrote:
Here ya go: https://fcc.report/FCC-ID/2AWHPR201/4805890
There's at least one teardown video, but the FCC pics are better.

Qualcomm IPQ4018, can run OpenWrt 19.07.7, or the latest 21.02.1 RC branch.

--Nathan

On Tue, May 18, 2021 at 8:20 AM Dave Taht <dave.taht@gmail.com> wrote:
I would really like someone to disassemble, and take photographs of
the chipset and design of the starlink provided "router",
which is proving to be such a disaster, and put those up somewhere.
Youtube videos seem to be popular... we could do a
 kvetchy one of those?

I have really goofed in that my visit to the starlink site I'd assumed
the dishy was all there was! At one level I'm deliriously happy
that that router can be junked, and with a decent OS, ipv6 etc can be
enabled, as well as many other interesting local
networking services. At another level I'm grumpy as to have to throw
out all the bufferbloat related testing to date.

In my dream world, the dishy would do ethernet flow control at a
"single transmit upstream buffer" granularity, below 4ms, and
emit pause frames that an fq_codel upstream could deal with, but that
still is not enough, accurate parsing of the dishy's actual link rates
up and down would allow for controlling the sch_cake queues tighter.

--
Latest Podcast:
https://www.linkedin.com/feed/update/urn:li:activity:6791014284936785920/

Dave Täht CTO, TekLibre, LLC
_______________________________________________
Starlink mailing list
Starlink@lists.bufferbloat.net
https://lists.bufferbloat.net/listinfo/starlink