User Panel
Posted: 4/5/2021 5:44:14 PM EDT
I submitted my pre-order on 2/18, more than a week after they opened up general pre-orders,
with a delivery date expected to be late in 2021. I just got a note from Starlink that they're shipping mine in the next 72 hours, so less than 7 weeks after ordering. This may be connected to my living in BFE, but I'm pretty far south of their current service area and there's nothing that should give me priority handling outside of being in an obvious no-internet zone. |
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You're south of me. I haven't seen an email yet, buy maybe soon.
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I'm impressed. I watched their guys hand-assemble each antenna and individually test each unit. They must have scaled up a lot.
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Quoted: You lucky SOB!!!! I'm so jealous. What is your latitude? View Quote 34.5N. I'm in the mountain forest area south of Prescott, there's only two cell towers with line-of-sight and they're 7 miles away, I'm doing OK with my hacked together LTE setup but this should be a big improvement. |
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I'm typing this on mine. Just got it setup today. So far it works very well
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Cool! I'm at 39.5N. I've heard nothing yet but maybe not much longer.
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Quoted: 34.5N. I'm in the mountain forest area south of Prescott, there's only two cell towers with line-of-sight and they're 7 miles away, I'm doing OK with my hacked together LTE setup but this should be a big improvement. View Quote Let us know how it works for you. According to the Starlink satellite coverage map that area is only at around 75% coverage during the day. |
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Quoted: Let us know how it works for you. According to the Starlink satellite coverage map that area is only at around 75% coverage during the day. View Quote That's one reason why I was so surprised it was shipping. I suspect I will be setting up my linux-based router box to switch between starlink and LTE connections for a while. |
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I need an rv plan. Currently they don't allow travel more than 10ish miles from service address I need to be able to go anywhere in the conus
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Quoted: I'm 34.7N and have heard nothing. Signed up 2/20 View Quote 34.8N here. Now I’ve got my hopes up for an early delivery! ETA: Estimated Starlink Coverage Map I’m at 77.4% coverage using 35 degrees. If I drop to 25 degrees (which is clear with a roof mount) coverage goes up to 99.5% |
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Quoted: 34.8N here. Now I’ve got my hopes up for an early delivery! ETA: Estimated Starlink Coverage Map I’m at 77.4% coverage using 35 degrees. If I drop to 25 degrees (which is clear with a roof mount) coverage goes up to 99.5% View Quote I was checking out the starlink subreddit, and it does look like a number of lower-latitude folks in AZ all got pinged today, lowest latitude looks like 33.7N. A bunch of 34.X people reported in. |
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What's the advantage to Starlink? Just a quick search of their website shows that it's 150Mbps for $100/month. Assume it's only for rural areas?
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Quoted: What's the advantage to Starlink? Just a quick search of their website shows that it's 150Mbps for $100/month. Assume it's only for rural areas? View Quote The advantage is for folks that have not much else. What I have now in rural NV is DSL with about 6Mbps down and .5-.6 Mbps up. Starlink would be awesome. If I had fiber or cable available I would not consider Starlink. |
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Quoted: What's the advantage to Starlink? Just a quick search of their website shows that it's 150Mbps for $100/month. Assume it's only for rural areas? View Quote Performance competitive with all but the fastest fiber ISPs in big cities in the middle of nowhere. Where I'm at, my choice is the other satellite providers (Viasat and Hughes) which provide really shitty service, have low data caps and slow speeds, the local telco's DSL -- currently delivering 256Kbps (yes, barely faster than a dial-up modem), and data over cellular (LTE, thank god.) I pay $200/mo for two 100GB data plans on LTE, and have two long-distance yagi antennas to hit a tower 7 miles away; I switch routers every two weeks to balance. I'm not complaining because it works, has been reliable (once I got with the right provider), and is pretty fast (currently 29Mbps down, 10Mbps up.) We can watch one streaming movie a night and will come close but not go over the caps. For $100, Starlink will offer (for now) no data cap, 300Mbps (literally 10X faster than LTE, 20X faster than Hughesnet, and more than 1000X faster than the local DSL.) The 100/150Mbps reports were the initial constellation, Starlink just boosted the performance by shrinking the cell sizes earlier this year. More importantly they can do this almost anywhere in the US. If you're doing any kind of telework that's internet dependent, Starlink has opened up where you can live to just about anywhere. I don't think people have realized yet how much Starlink is going to change things -- we'll probably see more people moving to rural areas just due to this alone. |
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Quoted: Performance competitive with all but the fastest fiber ISPs in big cities in the middle of nowhere. Where I'm at, my choice is the other satellite providers (Viasat and Hughes) which provide really shitty service, have low data caps and slow speeds, the local telco's DSL -- currently delivering 256Kbps (yes, barely faster than a dial-up modem), and data over cellular (LTE, thank god.) I pay $200/mo for two 100GB data plans on LTE, and have two long-distance yagi antennas to hit a tower 7 miles away; I switch routers every two weeks to balance. I'm not complaining because it works, has been reliable (once I got with the right provider), and is pretty fast (currently 29Mbps down, 10Mbps up.) We can watch one streaming movie a night and will come close but not go over the caps. For $100, Starlink will offer (for now) no data cap, 300Mbps (literally 10X faster than LTE, 20X faster than Hughesnet, and more than 1000X faster than the local DSL.) The 100/150Mbps reports were the initial constellation, Starlink just boosted the performance by shrinking the cell sizes earlier this year. More importantly they can do this almost anywhere in the US. If you're doing any kind of telework that's internet dependent, Starlink has opened up where you can live to just about anywhere. I don't think people have realized yet how much Starlink is going to change things -- we'll probably see more people moving to rural areas just due to this alone. View Quote This guy get it! The only issues I see so far is assigning a static IP to your starlink hub for personal website hosting needs. |
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Quoted: This guy get it! The only issues I see so far is assigning a static IP to your starlink hub for personal website hosting needs. View Quote Apparently that is (or will be) an option with IPV6, but I already had to deal with this with the WISP at my old place, and with LTE now. My workaround was to set up a VPS for $5/mo and do a reverse-ssh tunnel to it; it's all set up automatically with scripts on my linux based router. I have multiple small servers at family properties scattered across the state that upload security pics, power status and the like and they're all doing the same thing over LTE (which I'll probably stick with for them since the bandwidth/cost/power demand is so low.) This has been reliable for many years and bypasses any cellular ISP port blocking or issues with dynamic DNS. |
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I pre-ordered starlink earlier this year before I knew I had to move this summer.
I will be moving nw. Starlink said shipping would be this summer. Just great. Besides updating my address, what else can I go to make sure they do not ship it to my old house? |
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Quoted: I pre-ordered starlink earlier this year before I knew I had to move this summer. I will be moving nw. Starlink said shipping would be this summer. Just great. Besides updating my address, what else can I go to make sure they do not ship it to my old house? View Quote When they're ready to convert a pre-order to a real order they send you an email where you have to confirm, and the link takes you to the order page, I'm pretty sure you'll be able to confirm the info before they send it. OT, but funny you mention that, because Amazon's wish list address is not connected/updated to your amazon main account. Discovered that last week when Amazon shipped something to a place I haven't lived for six months -- and I'd deleted that address from my account entirely six months ago as well. |
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I joined list on 2/19 and paid deposit.
I got an email 4/5 saying it was ready and I paid balance and should be arriving tomorrow 4/9. I am at 33.7 N about 20 mins N of Phoenix |
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Looks like you'll be beating my delivery, after confirming my payment they also said higher shipping volumes
are delaying shipments, and the account page is now showing shipment in 2-3 weeks. Hopefully that's another under-promise over-deliver like the pre-order timing was. |
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Starlink sent up 70 sats in Jan, 120 in Feb and 240 in March with 1378 currently in orbit.. That should let them expand their coverage pretty good once they start getting online. True or not, I read on Redit that it takes toughly 4 months to reach desired height and become operational. If that's true, there should be a BIG jump in coverage about July.
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US citizen but work in Iraq. I live in an apartment complex without roof access and window access to the East, a patio to the West. All the ISPs here throttle. I don't really care about ping. Is skylink a realistic alternative for me?
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Quoted: US citizen but work in Iraq. I live in an apartment complex without roof access and window access to the East, a patio to the West. All the ISPs here throttle. I don't really care about ping. Is skylink a realistic alternative for me? View Quote Probably not, the system really needs a full view of the sky to work. Starlink has an app you can use that will tell you. Here's a link to the Starlink FAQ, if you look at the field of view question there's links to the smartphone apps. |
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I also preordered 02/18. I am at 32.7 so I do not expect my order to be fulfilled for several weeks, maybe not until Summer.
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Quoted: Apparently that is (or will be) an option with IPV6, but I already had to deal with this with the WISP at my old place, and with LTE now. My workaround was to set up a VPS for $5/mo and do a reverse-ssh tunnel to it; it's all set up automatically with scripts on my linux based router. I have multiple small servers at family properties scattered across the state that upload security pics, power status and the like and they're all doing the same thing over LTE (which I'll probably stick with for them since the bandwidth/cost/power demand is so low.) This has been reliable for many years and bypasses any cellular ISP port blocking or issues with dynamic DNS. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: This guy get it! The only issues I see so far is assigning a static IP to your starlink hub for personal website hosting needs. Apparently that is (or will be) an option with IPV6, but I already had to deal with this with the WISP at my old place, and with LTE now. My workaround was to set up a VPS for $5/mo and do a reverse-ssh tunnel to it; it's all set up automatically with scripts on my linux based router. I have multiple small servers at family properties scattered across the state that upload security pics, power status and the like and they're all doing the same thing over LTE (which I'll probably stick with for them since the bandwidth/cost/power demand is so low.) This has been reliable for many years and bypasses any cellular ISP port blocking or issues with dynamic DNS. There is also this: https://portmap.io/ |
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Just got the official shipping notice, the unit should be here Thursday.
May take me a while to install it given where it has to go and the lack of warning. |
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This is interesting. I've been looking for a solution for an office of mine that only has LOS wireless from the local tribe in the area. Tuba City area. 36N
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Picked up the starlink box at the place I get my deliveries this afternoon. (I'm in the boonies so I have to drive into town to get packages.)
I'm posting this via starlink. Setup is stupid easy. I mean really stupid easy. Literally just pull it out of the box and stick it in a tripod. Even the wires are already plugged in. ETA: The dish is in a terrible location (I'm in a forest so I have to raise it much much higher) so the view is blocked about 270 degrees (snipped wrong info) I'll see if I can get the real install done this weekend to give more detail, but out of the box it's already rocking. I'd have killed for this a year ago. ETA #2: Bwhahaha.. So my wifi was the limit factor. Did a hardwire connection to the router. 247.99 Mbps down. Attached File |
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Has anyone in Nevada seen theirs yet? Specifically northern NV?
I signed up on 02-08 and paid the $99 deposit. Nothing yet and we are further north than a lot of areas now getting Starlink. |
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Quoted: what is this 25deg vs 35deg user angle thing?? View Quote How far up from the horizon you have to look for a satellite to connect to. This basically determines how well it will work. The lower/closer to the horizon you can look, the more satellites your dish can see. If the dish has a clear shot at the horizon a satellite will usually be in view, if it doesn't and the satellites have to pass higher overhead, there may be times when the dish can't see a satellite so there's no internet. Basically if the dish is on the ground and surrounded by trees/buildings it can't see as many satellites and won't work as well. |
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