Starlink Broadband

Author
Discussion

Northernboy

Original Poster:

12,642 posts

258 months

Monday 15th February 2021
quotequote all
Has anyone else signed up for Starlink Broadband?

I placed an order for it yesterday, as I want a backup for when my wired connection isn’t working well. They estimate delivery round the middle of the year.

randlemarcus

13,526 posts

232 months

Monday 15th February 2021
quotequote all
Registered for the Beta, no updates from them yet. It's a bloody expensive backup, when compared to 4G/5G cellular though. I would have thought it made sense to make it primary.

Northernboy

Original Poster:

12,642 posts

258 months

Monday 15th February 2021
quotequote all
We don’t have 5G here, unfortunately, and the 4G signal is iffy.

I’m tempted to buy one of the booster boxes with an external antenna but I’m hesitant as they all seem to be sold by iffy companies with poor websites.

I get a very steady 250Mb/s at my flat in Amsterdam, and a quite unsteady 14Mb in London suburbia, which drives us mad, as both the wife and I remote in to the company’s machines from home, and between zoom meetings and trying to use Excel with a one second lag it’s doing our heads in.

RizzoTheRat

25,183 posts

193 months

Monday 15th February 2021
quotequote all
Some discussion on the SpaceX thread a few weeks back about it from someone who has one

https://www.pistonheads.com/gassing/topic.asp?h=0&...

Heres Johnny

7,232 posts

125 months

Monday 15th February 2021
quotequote all
Northernboy said:
We don’t have 5G here, unfortunately, and the 4G signal is iffy.
n.
I'd suggest investing in some alternate network sims first - where we live only one network is reliable but its rock solid on 4g (its rural and 5G hasn't reached us). Not all mobile networks are equal.

320d is all you need

2,114 posts

44 months

Monday 15th February 2021
quotequote all
Linus Tech Tips on Youtube has a really good video on STARLINK.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Fh1a2K9ZgNA

Looks genuinely impressive from what their testing shows.

clarkey

1,365 posts

285 months

Monday 15th February 2021
quotequote all
I've registered for beta and will certainly buy it. Fixed broadband barely works here, and we currently use an external 4G receiver and router for the house (max 35mb down, 2mb up) which is OK but unstable, especially upload.
Starlink will be expensive but a game changer for people living in rural locations but working at home.

Northernboy

Original Poster:

12,642 posts

258 months

Monday 15th February 2021
quotequote all
clarkey said:
I've registered for beta and will certainly buy it. Fixed broadband barely works here, and we currently use an external 4G receiver and router for the house (max 35mb down, 2mb up) which is OK but unstable, especially upload.
Starlink will be expensive but a game changer for people living in rural locations but working at home.
It pisses me off that I need it here inside the M25, but I can’t put up with my existing service indefinitely.

eharding

13,733 posts

285 months

Monday 15th February 2021
quotequote all
This post is brought to you by Starlink....

Have had it since early January down here in Devon. Still in Beta, with only about 10% of the intended number of satellites aloft at the moment. Speeds vary, but generally in the 120-170 Mbps range, but have seen 200 Mbps briefly. Currently the system is locked down so you can't configure the supplied router, but almost all of the processing is done in the dish (you can dispense with the router if you wish, and connect directly to the dish). Latency 30-40ms, which I gather isn't great for hardcore online gamers, but then they do have the option of getting a life instead.

As per Starlink's Beta blurb, the system is liable to brief dropouts - the dish supplies a statistics page showing current performance and a summary of outages over the past 24 hours, either by Obstruction (it thinks a satellite should be visible but can't see it) or Beta Downtime (something broke so they rebooted it) - mine currently showing a total of 4 minutes Beta downtime over the past 24 hours, and no Obstructed time. Beta downtime seems more frequent during the week - as they're probably actively working on it - and I've seen up to 40 minutes per 24 hours on a few occasions. Dropouts last typically 30 seconds or so, but they're enough to bugger up a Teams/Zoom/Skype call so I swap back to the current wired connection if I'm planning some of those. Dish is currently out in the middle of the lawn, and I bought the optional adapter to mount it on a 1 metre stainless steel pole to get it away from the ground, and planning on laying some conduit for the cable under the grass.

Still a risk that Starlink might go tits up commercially, and you'd be stuck with a £500 dish with no service, but technically the thing is a work of art and if they become a rarity could become a geek collectors' item one day - teardowns show they're probably costing SpaceX a lot more than £500 to produce, and Musk has been reported as saying getting the cost of the dish down is one of the largest technical challenges.

All in all, it's shiny, expensive and I don't really need it, even though it is substantially faster than the current BT wired link, but if you were really out in the sticks with genuinely rubbish broadband I'd say already a viable alternative. Plus shiny, if I didn't mention it.

Edited by eharding on Monday 15th February 12:12

Northernboy

Original Poster:

12,642 posts

258 months

Monday 15th February 2021
quotequote all
Thanks.

I like the idea of the new technology, and of talking to satellites, so it does have that in its favour.

eharding

13,733 posts

285 months

Monday 15th February 2021
quotequote all
Northernboy said:
Thanks.

I like the idea of the new technology, and of talking to satellites, so it does have that in its favour.
I like the idea of having something in the garden, the innards of which look like they came off the front of an F-15, using a large phased array to track and communicate with multiple targets doing 17,000 mph up to 300 miles away. It really is very clever stuff. Plus if my £90 a month gets Musk & co to Mars a very tiny bit quicker, so much the better.

Gman20

8,914 posts

147 months

Monday 15th February 2021
quotequote all
I suspect they are heavily vetting beta testers by looking at people's social media and other digital foot print, particularly early on.
You tweeted your isp's modem was a piece of st in 2009? sorry you're on the st list, you're not getting an invite till its well out of beta.

Northernboy

Original Poster:

12,642 posts

258 months

Monday 15th February 2021
quotequote all
Gman20 said:
I suspect they are heavily vetting beta testers by looking at people's social media and other digital foot print, particularly early on.
You tweeted your isp's modem was a piece of st in 2009? sorry you're on the st list, you're not getting an invite till its well out of beta.
There wasn’t any mention of beta testing when I signed up, it looked to be just a normal order for the equipment and the service.

eharding

13,733 posts

285 months

Monday 15th February 2021
quotequote all
Northernboy said:
Gman20 said:
I suspect they are heavily vetting beta testers by looking at people's social media and other digital foot print, particularly early on.
You tweeted your isp's modem was a piece of st in 2009? sorry you're on the st list, you're not getting an invite till its well out of beta.
There wasn’t any mention of beta testing when I signed up, it looked to be just a normal order for the equipment and the service.
I'd guess the Beta status finishes when they start shipping general availability back-orders (i.e. yours), although I'd also guess that areas that have no availability at the present may be offered as a Beta programme when local coverage starts to become available initially.

It might be worth downloading the Starlink app to check for obstructions to the overhead satellite view - it overlays the required area onto your phone's camera view - might be necessary to consider a roof mount (they were offering two types, a simple pedestal that you can attach to roof slopes of up to 40 degrees, and an hinged apex mount designed to be weighted down with blocks - the latter has disappeared from the order options on the Skylink portal, possibly because shipping to the UK was too expensive).

As for checking social media to vet beta customers, not sure about that. I did tell them to take my money so SpaceX can get to Mars faster in the beta signup comments section, which might have helped...

Gman20

8,914 posts

147 months

Monday 15th February 2021
quotequote all
Looks like it went general availability last week.

AJB88

12,448 posts

172 months

Tuesday 16th February 2021
quotequote all
£89 a month no thanks.

megaphone

10,734 posts

252 months

Tuesday 16th February 2021
quotequote all
AJB88 said:
£89 a month no thanks.
Yes it is expensive, over £1000 a year plus £500 for the kit. I suppose if you need decent internet and you're stuck in the middle of nowhere, then it could still be good value. The market will dictate pricing, if they don't get enough subs then the price will need to come down. Time will tell.

Other downside is the dish, it's big, needs line of sight so may end up on roofs, not ideal. Once there are more sats up there the size may come down, may be able to use a fixed dish that is less expensive.

AJB88

12,448 posts

172 months

Tuesday 16th February 2021
quotequote all
Suppose over time it will come down, I worked in NZ for a company offering satellite internet to farmers, this was in 2008.

I'm lucky we have Vodafone Gigafast where I live.

anonymous-user

55 months

Tuesday 16th February 2021
quotequote all

When looking to move to the country, BB speed often makes it a non-starter in the modern world of home working etc.
This could be a game-changer smile

megaphone

10,734 posts

252 months

Tuesday 16th February 2021
quotequote all
Performance may be a factor in pricing, £89/m may be better value for higher speeds say 1 gig up and down, may be they will introduce some tiering.