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What is a sun outage?
- Sun Outages or Solar interference occurs every February/March and September/October of each year, and results in the degradation or loss of satellite signal for short periods of time each day for about 2 weeks.
- Solar interference is an inherent part of satellite operations. The effects will be seen on most channels and will occur during various times of the day.
- Interruptions can last from just a few minutes to up to 15 minutes a day and can range from mild to severe.
- Sun Outage takes place when the orbital positions of the satellite and the sun are in one line. The earth station receives signals from both, but the more powerful sun rays subdue the desired signal, causing a loss of service.
- Since Charter Communications receive our signals from a variety of satellites, the Solar Outages can occur at different times on different channels

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What to expect during a sun outage:
You may see sparkles in the first days of the sun outage timeframe. It may gradually deteriorate to the point of total outage.
Some channels will experience blocks or freeze frames in the picture before and after the peak times.
- These are the channels we receive digitally from the satellite.
- Once it reaches peak, the interference gradually decreases and becomes less noticeable each day after the peak.
- Unfortunately, there is technically nothing that can be done to prevent the sun outage effects.
What you should know about sun outages:
- Sun outages are a short–term problem
- Sun outages are not cable outages
- If any group of channels is affected for much more than 15 minutes or if all channels are affected at one time, the technical department should be notified. There may be a problem that is unrelated to sun outages or the customer may need a service call.
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