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About Ku Band Universal LNB

2025-12-23

Het laatste nieuws van het bedrijf over About Ku Band Universal LNB
Core Function of a Ku-band LNB

First, a quick reminder: An LNB is mounted at the focus of a satellite dish. Its jobs are:

  1. Amplify the weak signal reflected from the dish.

  2. Convert the high Ku-band frequency (10.7-12.75 GHz) down to a lower Intermediate Frequency (IF) range (950-2150 MHz) that can travel through coaxial cable to your receiver.

  3. Switch between polarizations (Horizontal and Vertical) and frequency bands (Low and High) based on commands (13/18V and 22 kHz tone) from the receiver.

The "Universal" Part

A Universal LNB is the standard for Europe and many regions. It covers the full Ku-band range:

  • Low Band: 10.7 - 11.7 GHz

  • High Band: 11.7 - 12.75 GHz
    It uses the standard switching voltages (13V/18V) and the 22 kHz tone to switch between bands and polarities. This is what you'll encounter 95% of the time.


Types by Number of Outputs
1. Single LNB
  • Outputs: 1

  • Purpose: Feeds one satellite receiver (one tuner). It's the most basic and cheapest type.

  • Use Case: A single TV in one room. If your receiver has a twin tuner for recording (like Sky+ or Freesat+), a Single LNB will not work for recording one channel while watching another—you'll need at least a Twin.

  • Diagram: Dish -> Single LNB -> 1 Cable -> 1 Receiver

2. Twin LNB
  • Outputs: 2

  • Purpose: Feeds two separate satellite tuners. Each output operates completely independently.

  • Use Case:

    • A single receiver with a twin tuner (for watch+record) in one room. (1 receiver uses 2 cables).

    • Two separate receivers in two different rooms (e.g., living room and bedroom).

  • Diagram: Dish -> Twin LNB -> Cable 1 -> Receiver 1 (Tuner A)
    .........................-> Cable 2 -> Receiver 1 (Tuner B) **OR** Receiver 2

3. Quad LNB
  • Outputs: 4

  • Purpose: Feeds up to four separate tuners. The most common upgrade from a Twin.

  • Use Case:

    • A multi-room setup: e.g., a main receiver (2 cables for record+watch) + two other rooms with basic receivers.

    • Future-proofing for adding more boxes.

  • Diagram: Dish -> Quad LNB -> 4 Cables -> Can feed up to 4 separate tuners in any combination.

4. Octo LNB
  • Outputs: 8

  • Purpose: Feeds up to eight separate tuners.

  • Use Case:

    • Larger homes or apartments with many TVs (e.g., 4 rooms each with a twin-tuner receiver).

    • Small-scale communal installations (like a small apartment block sharing one dish).

  • Diagram: Dish -> Octo LNB -> 8 Cables -> A complex multi-receiver setup.


Key Considerations and Terminology
  • Tuner vs. Receiver: This is crucial. A modern receiver (set-top box) often contains two or more tuners (for recording, multi-view, etc.). Each tuner requires its own dedicated cable from the LNB.

    • Example: A Freesat 4K recorder needs 2 cables from a Twin/Quad/Octo LNB to function fully. An Octo LNB could therefore support four such recorders.

  • dSCR / dCSS / "Unicable" LNBs: This is a modern, clever alternative to the bulky Quad/Octo LNBs.

    • Problem: A Quad/Octo LNB needs one cable per tuner. Running 8 cables from a dish is messy.

    • Solution: A Unicable LNB has a built-in multiswitch. It sends multiple channels/tuners down a single coaxial cable using different frequency slots. At the receiver end, a "Unicable" compatible receiver or a simple "JESS" splitter separates the signals.

    • Use Case: Essential for modern installations, especially in apartments with pre-existing single-cable runs. A Single Output Unicable LNB can often replace an Octo LNB in complexity.

  • Monoblock LNB: A special type with two LNBs in one housing, designed to receive two satellites close together (e.g., Astra 19.2°E and Hotbird 13°E in Europe) on a single dish. These often come in Twin or Quad output configurations.

How to Choose the Right One?
  1. Count your tuners, not just receivers. How many separate channels need to be watched/recorded at the exact same time?

  2. For a standard home:

    • 1 TV, no recording: Single LNB.

    • 1 TV with a PVR (record+watch): Twin LNB (2 feeds).

    • Main PVR + 1-2 other TVs: Quad LNB.

    • Multiple PVRs in several rooms: Octo LNB or, better yet, a Unicable LNB.

  3. For new installations or cable management: Strongly consider Unicable (dSCR) technology. It's more future-proof and cleaner.

  4. Check receiver compatibility: Ensure your receivers support the LNB type (most support Universal, but Unicable needs specific support).

In summary: The number (Single, Twin, Quad, Octo) is all about simultaneous, independent connections. The move towards Unicable technology is solving the cable clutter problem of traditional multi-output LNBs for complex setups.

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