I've just placed my order for Starlink after reviewing my options with BT and Virgin. The housing estate I live on is five years old and not yet adopted by the local authorities so Virgin won't be cabling my street any time soon, I've checked BT's full fibre roll out and my town isn't even on the list and I'm getting fed up of paying £65 a month for 25Mbps. I'll happily pay another £25 for 100+ Mbps.
£99 Starlink offer ends tomorrow 2nd June.Starlink Discounts Broadband Kit to £99 for UK Rural areas
SpaceX's popular Starlink ISP, which harnesses thousands of compact satellites in Low Earth Orbit (LEO) to deliver ultrafast broadband speeds and fast latencywww.ispreview.co.uk
That does look impressively fast. Is it reliable/stable? Is there any lag issues?@rangor gubbins
I use Starlink and a Teltonika TRB500 in the van, they both work well.
Starlink had an offer on in June for the full kit for £99, very good deal but its still expensive compared to the cost of mobile use.
Starlink speed test from Yesterday.
Anyone using star link?
We currently use 4G via EE, with a teltonika router. We usually get between 20 and 40 Mbps down and up, but it's seems to be getting more like 15 —20 Mbps recently.
Looking at star link, but is it worth the substantial extra cost?
That does look impressively fast. Is it reliable/stable? Is there any lag issues?
It's expensive without the discount deal. >£400 for the hardware I think, plus something like £70 per month?
The new kit now comes with a 50ft cable(used to be 75ft)The other thing is how where to put it. Ideally I'd put it on the antenna pole attached to the chimney to give it a nice unobstructed sky view. But running the power and data cables up there could be tricky. Do you know if it's possible to buy long extension cables for it?
Nice work you did there.The new kit now comes with a 50ft cable(used to be 75ft)
you can buy 75ft or 150ft cables plus mounting brackets/poles etc from Starlink.
Have modified mine to fit flat mounted on the roof of the van.
Is a good 4G setup capable of competing with Starlink in rural locations?
It's somewhat anecdotal but I've done a fair amount of wild camping and also a few work trips to the highlands and have been surprised with the coverage I get on EE on my phone. Just as an example, we drove down the A897 and I had strong 4G all the way despite there being pretty much nothing...forums.overclockers.co.uk
We use starlink maritime for offshore vessels. Complete godsend tbh, i used to be lucky to get say 5mbp now we have 60ish roughly. Definitely better for if your on the move ie boat or van, i doubt this product lineup would be good value compared to fttc/fttp or 4g/5g setups.
I think in your situation i could stomach £75 a month as you work from home but the £450 install is a lot upfront for no idea what you would get day in day out for actual speeds.That's good to know. Thanks.
That's my conundrum, is star link worth the considerable extra money compared to 4G. We are currently using 4G (no sign of 5G coming to our area any time soon) and generally it works well enough. Usually more than 20mbps but sometimes 40mbps, both up and down (important as we work from home a lot, so lots of file transfers both ways) and it costs us £35 /month unlimited data.
I don't mind paying more if the service is really reliable and significantly faster. I'm not certain if star link is worth it for us.