I’m near a bunch of gateways in Eastern Washington state, and also a closed cell for new subscribers. Not sure how much bearing the gateway has on the dish power use, especially with ISLs now. On Thu, Feb 16, 2023 at 9:27 PM Ulrich Speidel via Starlink < starlink@lists.bufferbloat.net> wrote: > Thanks all - really helpful and interesting information. > > Also... could you please comment on: > > - How far your observations were from the closest gateway(s) > - Whether you consider your cell Starlink virgin territory or close to > subscriber saturation (https://www.starlink.com/map might help > determine that - if it's light blue, it's likely the former, if it's > "waitlist" blue but surrounded by light blue areas, or rural and close to a > "waitlist blue" area, it's likely to be the latter. > > On 17/02/2023 2:24 pm, Bruce Perens wrote: > > > > On Thu, Feb 16, 2023 at 3:08 PM Ulrich Speidel via Starlink < > starlink@lists.bufferbloat.net> wrote: > >> >> - 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. >> >> When a larger inverter failed upon installation, I ran Starlink with the > router and rectangular dish for about 2 months, unattended, on a Harbor > Freight 250W inverter and 8 GC2 batteries. > > Unfortunately this sort of crashed and burned after the first snow. The > battery bank was 8 GC2 in series, and there was a 48V-12V converter before > the Harbor Freight inverter. I had 4 solar panels flat on top of a freight > container, simply so that they would not be visiblle and the site would be > low profile. These got covered by snow, and I will tilt them up before the > next snow season. The batteries then got to a low voltage, and the lovely > Victron battery protector failed because I wired it backwards. Then I had a > heart attack and could not visit the site for 3 months. The battery bank > discharged entirely. I finally arrived to find ice at the top of 4 cells in > the battery bank. Fortunately it was only at the top, and I was able to > recover all of the batteries, rewire the protector, and put the site back > on the air. > > At that point, I switched to DishyPowa, connected via a hacked Starlink > Ethernet Adapter. This allows you to delete the inverter and the Starlink > router, and run the dish directly off of 48-52V DC. You still need a > router, because Starliink only provides one IPV4 DHCP address to the Dishy, > and you need to do the usual NAT thing on your local net. But routers that > run on 12V directly are easy to find. > > Thanks > > Bruce > > -- > **************************************************************** > Dr. Ulrich Speidel > > School of Computer Science > > Room 303S.594 (City Campus) > > The University of Aucklandu.speidel@auckland.ac.nz http://www.cs.auckland.ac.nz/~ulrich/ > **************************************************************** > > > > > _______________________________________________ > Starlink mailing list > Starlink@lists.bufferbloat.net > https://lists.bufferbloat.net/listinfo/starlink >