What I find puzzling is that (so far) we haven't run into anyone using our
mount and cable for their Starlink dish.  Nothing really keeping them from
doing that.

 

Probably you need to use a premade cable with a proprietary connector for
the Starlink dish?  I also assume the preterminated cable needs a bigger
hole in the wall than you would need for an unterminated Cat5 cable.

 

I was talking to my next door neighbor who has a 5G Home Internet box and
doesn't want fiber because there would be an ugly cable and a hole in his
new arctic white Hardie Plank  siding.  People have all sorts of criteria
for Internet - speed, price, aesthetics.  Isn't it wonderful we have so many
choices these days. People agonize over buying a phone but Internet is a
commodity and it's like buying gas or potato chips.

 

From: AF <[email protected]> On Behalf Of [email protected]
Sent: Saturday, April 18, 2026 11:22 AM
To: 'AnimalFarm Microwave Users Group' <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] Starlink question

 

When picking up your dish, toss a starlink jammer in their gutter.  

 

 

  _____  

From: AF <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> > on
behalf of Ken Hohhof <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> >
Sent: Saturday, April 18, 2026 9:08 AM
To: 'AnimalFarm Microwave Users Group' <[email protected]
<mailto:[email protected]> >
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] Starlink question 

 

My original post was based on my frustration with people canceling our
service for the $40 or $50 Starlink, but then balking at shipping us back
their leased router and wanting us to send a tech to pick it up.  And
expecting us to take down our dish from their house.

 

Those are not unreasonable expectations, except they don't apply the same
expectations to the service they are switching to.

 

It feels like Calvin & Hobbes when Calvin was seceding from the family and
moving to the Yukon but wanted his mom to make him sandwiches for the trip.

 

From: AF <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> > On
Behalf Of Jan-GAMs
Sent: Friday, April 17, 2026 7:48 AM
To: [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> 
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] Starlink question

 

That might be a business to get into.  I just put one up and it was a
serious PITA.  #1 The antenna shipped was designed for sitting on a flat
surface, not mounting to, sitting on.  #2 the dufus AI in charge of
answering questions, directed me into ordering all the wrong mounting
hardware and all the wrong mounting instructions.  #3 You will really want
to kill something before the day gets older.  Once you learn StarLink likes
to lie to you and you been through the injuries before the install job gets
easy.  Log into the antenna controller/router setup and choose "bypass" mode
to turn off the wifi and make the StarLink behave more like a modem and get
along with an existing network.  StarLink does not play-well with other
brands of WiFi devices.

The new StarLink antenna has a folding leg for a stand that clips on.  When
ordering the antenna kit, the original antenna is what is shown in the
order, it's a complete mis-direction and is incompatible with a StarLink
short-wall-mount kit $50.  If you want to mount the new antenna to a
vertical surface, the wall mount kit doesn't have all the pieces needed to
mount in the kit but are shown in the directions as being in the box.  

Solution: Use a Ubiquiti J-mount, $7?.  Order the Pipe mount adapter for the
new StarLink antenna, it clips on where the legs do.  The pipe adapter is
made for upto a 2.5" pipe and employs a crushing bolt to grip onto a pipe.
This will crush a normal pipe and then your StarLink will follow gravity
towards a nasty end with only a short LAN cable to break the fall.  I bolted
a solid Aluminum rod into the j-mount  so now the j-mount won't crush and
tightened the cinching bolt to that.  The metal fab shop had some rod $10
that was a perfect fit into the J-mount.  

Monthly StarLink service fee for 100MB feed is $50/mo.  Spectrum raised
their fee to $90/mo, I returned their modem and told them to pound sand.  If
I change my mind and quit StarLink, I owe them 1 year's worth of service
fees minus what has been paid so far.

On 4/10/26 09:40, Ken Hohhof wrote:

If someone gets Starlink with installation (0, $49 or $99) and subsequently
switches to fiber when it becomes available.

 

Would I be correct to assume they will have to take it down themselves or
pay someone, and then pay to ship the dish and router back?  That seems
obvious to me, but lots of things seem obvious to me but not to others.

 

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