Single vs Twin vs Quad vs Octo LNB: Which One to Use
The difference between Single, Twin, Quad and Octo LNBs is simply the number of independent outputs: a Single has 1, a Twin has 2, a Quad has 4 and an Octo has 8. Each independent output feeds one satellite tuner and can select any polarization and band on its own, so you choose based on how many tuners you need to connect directly โ no external switch required.
As a rule: Single for one receiver, Twin for a PVR or two rooms, Quad for up to four tuners, and Octo for up to eight. For larger buildings you move to a Quattro LNB plus a multiswitch, or a Unicable LNB โ both covered below and in related guides.
How Independent Outputs Work
A Universal Ku LNB must deliver one of four sub-bands to each tuner: vertical-low, vertical-high, horizontal-low and horizontal-high. It selects these using the receiver's 13/18V (polarization) and 22 kHz tone (band) commands.
In a Single, Twin, Quad or Octo LNB, every output has its own independent switching, so each connected tuner can watch or record any channel regardless of what the others are doing. That independence is what lets a Quad feed four receivers with no conflicts and no external switching.
- Each output selects polarity via 13/18V and band via 22 kHz tone
- Outputs are fully independent โ one tuner's choice never blocks another's
- One output = one tuner
Matching Output Count to Your Installation
Count the tuners, not the rooms or TVs. A single-tuner set-top box needs one output. A PVR that records one channel while showing another needs two. A modern multi-tuner receiver may need three or four outputs by itself.
Map the total tuner count to the LNB: 1 โ Single, 2 โ Twin, up to 4 โ Quad, up to 8 โ Octo. If you need more than eight outputs, or want to future-proof a building, use a Quattro LNB with a multiswitch or a Unicable/dCSS LNB.
| LNB type | Independent outputs | Typical use |
|---|---|---|
| Single | 1 | One single-tuner receiver |
| Twin | 2 | PVR or two rooms |
| Quad | 4 | Up to four tuners, no switch |
| Octo | 8 | Up to eight tuners / small multi-room |
Quad vs Quattro โ Don't Confuse Them
This is the most common mistake in the field. A Quad LNB has four independent outputs and connects directly to up to four receivers. A Quattro LNB also has four outputs, but they are not independent โ each output carries one fixed sub-band (vertical-low, vertical-high, horizontal-low, horizontal-high).
A Quattro is designed to feed a multiswitch, which then distributes signal to many receivers. Connecting a receiver directly to a Quattro output gives you only one quarter of the spectrum and missing channels. Use Quad for direct connection; use Quattro only with a multiswitch.
- Quad = 4 independent outputs โ connect directly to receivers
- Quattro = 4 fixed band/polarity outputs โ connect only to a multiswitch
- Never wire a receiver straight to a Quattro output
When to Move Beyond Octo
Once you exceed eight tuners โ apartment blocks, hotels, larger multi-dwelling units โ direct-output LNBs stop scaling and you switch architecture.
Two options dominate. A Quattro LNB feeding a multiswitch distributes all four sub-bands to dozens of outlets over dedicated cabling. A Unicable (EN50494) or dCSS/JESS (EN50607) LNB lets many receivers share a single coax by assigning each tuner its own user band, dramatically simplifying cabling in existing risers.
- 9+ tuners: use a Quattro + multiswitch or a Unicable/dCSS LNB
- Multiswitch: star wiring, one cable per outlet
- Unicable/dCSS: many tuners share a single cable
Key Takeaways
- Single/Twin/Quad/Octo = 1/2/4/8 independent outputs, one per tuner.
- Count tuners, not TVs โ a PVR needs two outputs.
- Quad connects directly to receivers; Quattro only feeds a multiswitch.
- Each independent output can select any polarity and band on its own.
- Beyond eight tuners, use a Quattro + multiswitch or a Unicable/dCSS LNB.
Related FAQs
A Quad has four independent outputs that connect directly to up to four receivers. A Quattro has four fixed outputs (one per band/polarity) that must feed a multiswitch. They look similar but are not interchangeable.
An Octo LNB supports up to eight independent tuners directly. The number of TVs depends on tuners per device โ eight single-tuner receivers, or fewer multi-tuner receivers that consume more than one output each.
No, not with a simple coax splitter. Each receiver sends its own 13/18V and 22 kHz commands, which would conflict. Use an LNB with enough independent outputs, or a multiswitch/Unicable solution instead.
