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Technical

What does a 5G filter LNB protect against?

Answer

A 5G filter LNB protects satellite reception from interference caused by nearby 5G mobile networks operating in the C-band spectrum, particularly the 3.4-3.8 GHz range now allocated to 5G in many countries. It uses a built-in bandpass/high-pass filter to reject these out-of-band mobile transmissions before they can overload the LNB's amplifier. This prevents signal degradation, pixelation, and complete loss of satellite TV or data reception.

As telecom regulators reassigned parts of the 3.4-3.8 GHz band from satellite to 5G mobile use, strong ground-based 5G base station signals began interfering with satellite dishes-especially C-band systems and even some Ku installations near cell towers. Without filtering, a nearby 5G transmitter can saturate the LNB front end, causing loss of picture across all channels rather than just one frequency.

A 5G filter LNB integrates the rejection filter directly into the LNB feed, which is more effective than an inline filter because it stops interference before amplification. This is increasingly essential for C-band installations in urban and suburban areas where 5G deployment overlaps historic satellite spectrum.

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