Adrian Walker Posted February 5 Posted February 5 1 hour ago, -rick- said: Cost wise, Starlink is already profitable so any 5G add on service doesn't have to worry about paying for that.. It is operationally profitable. It's interesting that it has to launch over 2,000+ satellites every year.
-rick- Posted February 5 Posted February 5 4 minutes ago, Adrian Walker said: It is operationally profitable. It's interesting that it has to launch over 2,000+ satellites every year. I thought it was profitable including the satellite launches but could have misunderstood. They are raking in billions a year and thair launch costs are extremely low because of rocket reuse.
Kelvin Posted February 5 Posted February 5 5 hours ago, -rick- said: I thought the full fibre products fed back the fibre direct to the local exchange (which should have at least some degree of backup power and be prioritised to restoration in event of an outage). Not sure if they have generators or not (I would guess they do in places with frequent outages). So maybe outages isn't such a worry? Not around us. If there’s a power cut the fibre goes off line.
Alan Ambrose Posted February 17 Posted February 17 It shouldn't do - are you sure it's not just your own router or OR's ONT going dead?
Nickfromwales Posted February 17 Posted February 17 1 hour ago, Alan Ambrose said: It shouldn't do - are you sure it's not just your own router or OR's ONT going dead? Don't they still have / utilise 'exchanges' for fibre? Surely it's not direct from source?
Iceverge Posted February 17 Posted February 17 Our 5g supplier has decided to pull their service. We have a fixed antenna on the wall outside with a Cat6 to the router. Would this cable do for starlink or is it a special one?
Post and beam Posted February 18 Author Posted February 18 11 hours ago, Iceverge said: Would this cable do for starlink or is it a special one? The Starlink cable is proprietry and a standard ethernet cable will not work. The ends of the Starlink are slightly different. They also claim that because their antenna is quite high power that ethernet cable cannot cope. 1
-rick- Posted February 18 Posted February 18 1 hour ago, Post and beam said: The Starlink cable is proprietry and a standard ethernet cable will not work. The ends of the Starlink are slightly different. They also claim that because their antenna is quite high power that ethernet cable cannot cope. Certainly true of the original dishes, but I thought some of the newer ones had other options. I've seen plenty of people use normal ethernet cables (possibly with adapters) online.
Redoctober Posted February 18 Posted February 18 (edited) Just an update to this thread since I asked about others experiences etc. I have now installed a Starlink system myself - I purchsaed the Standard Kit / Set up for £75 - it arrived within 10 days from the USA. Due to the high winds we experience here, I just felt the wall mounted brackets they provide, didn't seem strong enough - to few points of contact for my liking. So I purchased a more robust one for £65 and fitted it to the chimney. All set up and working and a much improved experience from the system which I had before - which was a SIM card relying on a mobile network coverage. Using their App, the system is performing very well with 100 mbs being recorded - whatever that means😁 Edited February 18 by Redoctober typo 1
Iceverge Posted February 18 Posted February 18 Nice. There's a residential and residential lite. Is the upgrade worth it for an extra €15/month?
Redoctober Posted February 18 Posted February 18 @Iceverge not sure if this is a question to me specifically, but all I can say is - I was paying £18 per month for our internet via a mobile network - Although it worked, we found it to be sluggiish and very tempermental at best. These frustrations led me to research Starlink. I now pay £35 p m with Starlink and the performance is so much better. 1
Alan Ambrose Posted February 18 Posted February 18 >>> Don't they still have / utilise 'exchanges' for fibre? Surely it's not direct from source? As I understand it a direct fibre from exchange to you. In a bundled cable with other fibres of course - except for the last drop to you. Cables joined every few km I believe. >>> Although it worked, we found it to be sluggiish and very tempermental at best. The speed of mobile connection, of course, depends on where the local cell towers are and whether you have good sight of then, which networks they carry, whether they have 5G or not, whether you're using an antenna and how good it is, how well it's positioned, and also how clever your router is. I was surprised to see I had 60 Mbps download yesterday, and we're quite rural. 1
-rick- Posted February 18 Posted February 18 1 hour ago, Alan Ambrose said: >>> Don't they still have / utilise 'exchanges' for fibre? Surely it's not direct from source? As I understand it a direct fibre from exchange to you. In a bundled cable with other fibres of course - except for the last drop to you. Cables joined every few km I believe. AFAIK it's a GPON network: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GPON So a single strand of fibre is shared between groups of houses with splitters in splice boxes as houses split off. The bandwidth you get is shared between the other people on the same fibre but you are very unlikely to notice any issues because the links are very fast. The laser transcievers can go at least 2km, 10km is easily available so there is no need for any active (powered) electronics between you and the exchange. There may be some very rural places where the exchange is more than 10km away, in which case BT might have chosen to use a powered green box as an aggregation point rather than deploy more specialised transceivers.
Post and beam Posted February 19 Author Posted February 19 19 hours ago, Redoctober said: I purchsaed the Standard Kit / Set up for £75 16 hours ago, Redoctober said: I now pay £35 p m with Starlink I wonder what hardware and service level this is. My antenna cost £275 in November and i pay £75 month. sometimes get up to 300Meg download.
Omnibuswoman Posted Monday at 10:18 Posted Monday at 10:18 On 18/02/2026 at 13:38, Redoctober said: ue to the high winds we experience here, I just felt the wall mounted brackets they provide, didn't seem strong enough - to few points of contact for my liking. So I purchased a more robust one for £65 and fitted it to the chimney. I set up our new starlink at the weekend, just resting on a workbench in the garden at the moment. I’m now mulling on how to fix it permanently. Can I ask what brackets you bought for attaching it to your house?
Redoctober Posted Monday at 14:57 Posted Monday at 14:57 4 hours ago, Omnibuswoman said: Can I ask what brackets you bought for attaching it to your house? Here you go - Starlink Gen 3 Mount, Ybervont Starlink Mounting Kit Gen 3, Heavy Duty Starlink Long Wall Mount for Starlink Internet Kit Satellite, Starlink Pole Mount with Starlink Gen 3 Pipe Adapter. Copy and paste the above into Google and it will show up in AMAZON for just under £70. 👍 1
Iceverge Posted Monday at 20:51 Posted Monday at 20:51 Literally did the exact same today. Antenna is sitting on a mound in the garden as we speak. This turned up today. Pretty happy with the quality. https://www.reichelt.com/ie/en/shop/product/satellite_wall_bracket_wh_60_a_double_pipe_aluminium-332349 I got this to go on top. It's cast aluminum and seems pretty robust too. https://starnetlink.uk/2024/05/17/unlock-ultimate-starlink-performance-discover-the-best-pole-mounting-adaptor-in-the-uk/?amp=1 I was suspicious of any of the Amazon offerings regarding corrosion and sturdiness. Hopefully this will work ok. I don't want it blowing off the roof. 1
Post and beam Posted Thursday at 09:07 Author Posted Thursday at 09:07 On 09/03/2026 at 10:18, Omnibuswoman said: Can I ask what brackets you bought for attaching it to your house? https://starlink.com/public-files/accessories_guide_standard.pdf I bought this, its the standard wall mount. Solid as a rock
Redoctober Posted Thursday at 10:37 Posted Thursday at 10:37 1 hour ago, Post and beam said: I bought this, its the standard wall mount. Solid as a rock That's good to hear - sadly I didn't have the faith at the time, so opted for an alternative which although works very well, isn't as aesthetically pleasing on the eye😁
Post and beam Posted Thursday at 13:10 Author Posted Thursday at 13:10 To date my experience of Starlink has been excellent. The product and everything in the box is top quality and well presented. It works very well and is dead easy to set up. 1 1
Iceverge Posted 6 hours ago Posted 6 hours ago Up and working. The mount I linked above is good as was the bracket. I had to notch and taper the top of the aluminum 50mm bracket to fit into the tapered cast alloy mount for the antenna. So far the service is proving rock solid. I opted for the €35/month 100mbps. It's dropped to €29 since. Sitting in my kitchen that's what I'm getting now. 1 1
Temp Posted 2 hours ago Posted 2 hours ago How important is the amount of sky you can see? Do wet trees cause an issue like they do for satilite TV?
Nestor Posted 2 hours ago Posted 2 hours ago @Iceverge I did not realise they did cheaper residential packages. Tempting now. Maximum available here is 15.88 Mb/s Download, 1.94 Mb/s Upload.
Redoctober Posted 2 hours ago Posted 2 hours ago @Temp I believe trees aren't an issue provided you are not in a woodland environment. The dish itself can be rotated and the installation can be assisted by the use of the App. It actually shows you where to swivel the dish accordingly, to get the correct alignement. We have a large Oak tree 10 metres from the house and the location of the dish. Although a section of this appears to fall within the "obstructions" picked up by the App there is no real impact on performance. I think the main thing to avoid is solid structures.
Redoctober Posted 2 hours ago Posted 2 hours ago 5 minutes ago, Nestor said: @Iceverge I did not realise they did cheaper residential packages. Tempting now. Maximum available here is 15.88 Mb/s Download, 1.94 Mb/s Upload. Here is an image of a screen shot that I have just ran, using the app -
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