African Satellite World and Sat Gear

Wacha mdomo long live fta kwanza reduce your subscription to 500 ndio tutabonga.
 
Shape Up or Ship out.
 
Hello brothers, I have a question please.

How effective is it when you put a Ku band LNB on a 6ft c band dish? In tracking FTAs.

Is the performance the same as using a 90cm Ku band dish?

Any experience please.

NB: I have a 6ft dish that I dont use and I am thinking of using it to track Ku band satellites. Now I am wondering if I can use it and save some cash instead of buying another dish.

Thank you

 

Far more effective than a 90cm
 
Star Sato 2k brothers, let's meet at our tent for our delayed monthly allowances. Nothing much as I don't see the usual increments as promised by the employers.
 
FTA first! If you can't offer it cheaply, crooks will do their work. Shame to greedy capitalist
 
Work well! Go ahead
 

Way better than on a 90, you can make it even wow by using a Ku LNB for a prime focus dish!
 
multichoicekenya We never bother with you get off our backs

Like essao said let's ignore this spammer.. if his little war on piracy Will be won by spamming discussion boards well and good for him.

But the clown has nothing of technical benefit to anyone not multichoice, not us, not himself. Doesn't even understand how piracy works in the modern world.

Crafty multichoice won't employ such a clown..
 

Nairobi CBD is invaded by dstv with tents begging for subscribers.


NAIROBI, Kenya, Aug 21- Digital Satellite Television (DStv) is set to revise its monthly subscription downwards, a move seen to counter competition especially from streaming service providers.

The price revision comes at a time when its mother company, MultiChoice, is complaining to South Africa’s communication’s watchdog, the Independent Communications Authority of South Africa, about the competition it faces from ‘unregulated’ streaming services such as Netflix and their impact on its revenue.

Earlier this year, MultiChoice CEO Calvo Mawela blamed Netflix for the loss of more than 100,000 subscribers in the last financial year, and an additional 40,000 in the new financial year in South Africa.
 
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