
SpaceX’s popular Starlink service, which harnesses a mega constellation of compact satellites in Low Earth Orbit (LEO) to deliver low latency ultrafast broadband speeds to homes, has been given approval to test up to 200 models of its “next-generation phased array antennas” (i.e. the dish that goes on your home) to improve connectivity.
Customers in the UK typically pay from £75 per month, plus £460 for the regular home kit (standard dish, router etc.) and £40 for shipping on the ‘Standard‘ Starlink package, which gets you unlimited usage, fast latency times of 25-50ms, advertised downloads of c. 50-200Mbps and uploads of c.5-15Mbps (speeds may change as the network grows).
The terminal (dish) that you receive with their standard package is a rectangular 303mm x 513mm one (rising to 511m x 575mm for the ‘High Performance’ plan), although early adopters of the service received a circular unit that has since been discontinued. But according to PC Mag and this FCC document, “new user-terminal hardware” may be on the horizon.
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Starlink plans on testing up to 200 models, which will be a little bit larger than the standard dish at up to 385mm x 586mm and all will be designed to receive downloads and uploads over the 10.7GHz to 12.7GHZ and 14GHz radio spectrum bands. The testing itself has been approved to take place in 5 locations, including Los Angeles, Mountain View (California), Redmond (Washington), Riverton (Wyoming) and Cape Canaveral (Florida).
A larger dish could help to improve connection reliability and performance, although we can’t help but wonder what impact it might have on hardware costs. Starlink’s goal has generally been to bring down the cost of their hardware, so hopefully they’ve found a good compromise that enables them to improve the kit without raising setup costs.
Mark, you mention about the extra cost to the hardware, but looking at the trial locations, it looks like they might be targeting small communities, that way the cost per home will be lower.
I have the RV kit it was £460 and £95 a month and I can pause it month to month if I wish. I like this “buy the hardware come and go as you please” approach.
The dish does well on the Motorway
That’s interesting. I thought the RV dish was only meant to be used when the vehicle is stationary?
I think it is only meant to be used stationary, but that came down to an FCC requirement rather than a technical reason, though I’m not confident in that. I’ve read a lot of US users removed the motor mechanism from their ‘dishy’ for in motion use.
No It’s able to be used on the move they started to update the firmware for that in November. It’s flat and sits in between my Air con and my solar. I’ve only had mine about a month and a half.
https://www.starlinkhardware.com/starlink-launches-flat-high-performance-rv-dish-for-in-motion-use/
Big dish there Mark (511m) may get one of those 🙂
can get in my area but the start up fee’s are just not appropriate at the moment, in a year or so were have virgin fttp and /or OR FTTP, just stick with my 20mb for now :S
It’s because there are no contracts – you always pay for the kit outright and rightly so