Foxtel in the van

Mike7

Member
Nov 10, 2011
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Hi everyone,

I've just ordered a foldable 75cm dish from satplus.com.au (John at the shop was fantastic to deal with, very patient with my questions, cant recommend them enough, no affiliation with shop just happy customer).

Im going to use my foxtel box in the van and as it has a 12v IN I am planning to running it thru a 12v power supply. My problem is the 12v IN on the box seems to be a proprietary plug. I know guys here have used their foxtel boxes on the road so was hoping someone could point me in the right direction of where to get the plug.

Ive checked Jaycar etc but no luck.

Cheers
Mike
 
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AndrewC

Active Member
Mar 20, 2013
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Murrumba Downs, Brisbane
What about asking foxtel? They won't care that your taking your box with you!


Actually they do care. I know everyone does it but when my father mentioned it to them when ordering another box for the house and telling them what it was really for, they cracked the sads.He quickly retracted his comment. Apparently its something to do with the licensing of the box or something and not able to be used a s a mobile device blah, blah,blah.

Anyway, don't tell them your intentions!
 
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macca

(aka maccayak)
Mar 20, 2012
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Victoria
I could be wrong but I think it is safer to run it through an inverter and use the 240 plug that comes with it.
 

john hayward

Member
Dec 31, 2012
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I agree with both - don't tell foxtel and use inverter.
Also recommend John @ Satplus Maroochydore who is great to deal with and any problems he will fix.
 

Mike7

Member
Nov 10, 2011
144
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Thanks guys, will keep it incognito and see what I can come up with.

Cheers
Mike
 

macca

(aka maccayak)
Mar 20, 2012
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I will be interesting to see how you go Mike. Have thought about doing that myself. Is it an expensive exercise?
 

Mike7

Member
Nov 10, 2011
144
18
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@maccayak, You can actually do this very cheaply if you want, you need nothing more expensive that a $60 dish, $20 cables and a $35 LNB and have all that connected to your foxtel box and it works fine. I use a free augmented reality app on the iphone to find the Optus satellite.

I spent almost $500 getting a snowflake antenna and a sensar pro panel so I could easily tune in free to air TV but its still painful and not too reliable in my experience, around major centres the snowflake works ok.

I always figured that satellite TV would be too exey or fiddly but it takes way less time to tune in the dish than it does tuning the snowflake antenna. Im getting lazy in my old age mate:D

Now having said all that I have opted for a fibreglass folding in half dish so it is easier to store but is more expensive, comes with all the gear you need to set it up including an adjustable tripod. However mine is gonna go on the drawbar in a jockey wheel clamp. I don't do much TV watching to be honest so am really doing all this for the technical challenge, oh and for the kids.

Hope this helps

Cheers
Mike