It's amazing the number of starlinks I've seen just laying in peoples
yards, sitting on the trunk deck of their car, laying on their roof . . .


On Wed, Apr 22, 2026 at 3:46 PM Steve Jones <[email protected]>
wrote:

> this is probably why starlink is providing free professional installations
> now, they dont want people who dont know the product out there causing
> headaches. cheaper to pay for a professional install then risk a marketing
> hit, plus it locks non pro install member wisps out of the last revenue
> bump before conversion
>
>
> On Fri, Apr 17, 2026 at 7:49 AM Jan-GAMs <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>> 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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