We use Dish at home and in our Montana (We op[ted no not include a TV kin our 1964 Fireball camper). We started with the manually directed antenna, but transitioned to a new, “auto) antenna. Couldn’t get and hold a signal without CONSTANT realigning/resetting the receiver. Went from V11 receiver to Wally with WiFi adapter. Switched out every component, but still a failure. Turned out the problem wasn’t the receivers, antennas, cables, etc. Problem was Keystone. They put a di-plexer into them wiring which everyone understands won’t work with satellite antenna-TV hookups (sometimes will connect, but loses signal continually). Splitters (or di-plexers and tri-plexers) to hook up antenna, cable, and satellite signals reduce costs for Keystone, but will make you pull out your hair. Our 2018 HC 310re has two satellite inputs for the three TV (who needs 3 TVs? Get a life.) setup has the standard wall plugs in the entertainment centers. For dependable satellite (any brand) you need a dedicated cable from outside input to wall terminal. You cannot provide signals without splitters; you must bypass the Keystone system by running interior cable from each outside terminal directly to the wall outlet behind your TV. Camping world (my local dealer) ran all new cables to two TVs from my two exterior inputs, dumping the di-plexers. We didn’t bother with the belly TV setup, because we don’t travel/camp to watch TV. Dish antennas will downlink both the East and West satellites. Understand Direct doesn’t...but I have no experience with Direct TV. If you want TV in 2 rooms, get an antenna with two outlets to your camper. Otherwise, you will have at least one splitter in the mix...and then it gets ugly. Some folks use rooftop antennas (I wouldn’t advise that if you ever camp under trees) our the big boogers on tripods that receive power from an electrical outlet with fewer or no problems: again, no experience there. But too big, too much work anchoring, etc. We use the newer (carefree??? Or such name...it’s locked up in the belly right now) with 2 outlets for 2v TVs (although we typically don’t watch TV in bed...better entertainment option). Now that the cables go directly to each TV, no problemo. I also use the Weingard device that aligns the antenna although supposedly not needed in auto antennas. There is dispute at Weingard Outdoors whether you aim the antenna with the handle or the outlets pointing South...the tester relieves any hassle. Tells you signal strength on the TV (in addition the annoying squeak) and helps if you can’t get all 3 satellites from the antenna position (we use the collapsable tripod with a milk jug filled with water to anchor in high winds). Good luck.
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