Every director of engineering knows the number, even if it never appears on one
line of the budget: a six-hour satellite remote costs somewhere between $6,000 and
$9,500 once you add up the truck day, the operator, fuel, parking, and $300–$600
an hour of Ku-band space segment. Multiply by forty remotes a year and you’re
spending a quarter of a million dollars annually to do something a flight case can
now do better.
That’s not a rhetorical flourish. Let’s do the math like engineers.
What the truck actually buys you
Strip away the nostalgia and an SNG truck buys exactly one thing: a guaranteed
uplink from a place with no infrastructure. It buys it expensively — a new HD SNG
build runs $450,000 to $750,000, amortized over 10–15 years during which the
technology inside becomes a museum piece — and it buys it slowly. Truck
positioning, dish acquisition, and line-up typically eat 60 to 120 minutes before
you’re on the bird.
For decades that trade was worth it, because the alternative was nothing.
What changed
Three things, all in the last few years.
First, 5G got real. A single modern carrier connection routinely delivers 30–75
Mbps of uplink. An HEVC 1080p contribution feed needs 8–12. Even 4K needs only
25–35.
Second, Starlink arrived. A flat high-performance Enterprise terminal delivers
150–250 Mbps down and 20–40 up from any parking lot in the country, and — this is
the part broadcasters care about — it does not care how many phones are in the
stadium.
Third, and most important: bonding matured. The reason “cellular” earned its bad
reputation in broadcast is that a single carrier is a single point of failure, and
single points of failure produce dead air. Peplink SpeedFusion changes the
architecture. A quad-modem unit like the HD4 MBX
puts your stream on four carriers simultaneously, plus Starlink, plus the venue
circuit if one exists. Hot failover happens at the packet level: when a path
degrades, traffic is already flowing on the others, so nothing reconnects and
nothing freezes. WAN smoothing duplicates critical packets across paths to erase
jitter. The stream doesn’t know a carrier died. Neither does your audience.
The math, side by side
Take our regional broadcaster with 40 remotes a year:
- Old way: 40 × $6,500 = $260,000/year, plus $45k–$75k/year of truck
amortization. - New way: an HD4 MBX at ~$15,000 one-time, a Starlink Enterprise Kit at
~$3,000 plus service, SpeedFusion Connect at ~$1,500/year, and data at roughly
$250 per remote (an 18 GB shoot on pooled enterprise SIMs). Year one: about
$34,000. Every year after: under $18,000.
Payback arrives in three to four truck days. Not months. Days.
The 5% where the truck still wins
Honesty matters more than a clean pitch. Keep a truck (or book one) when you’re
genuinely beyond all coverage and can’t see the sky — deep parking structures,
some canyon terrain — or when a rights-holder contractually mandates satellite
backhaul. That’s a small and shrinking list. Everything else — pressers, high
school and college sports, election nights, weather remotes, festivals — is a
bonded-kit job now.
What to do next
Count your remotes. Multiply by your real all-in truck cost. If the number makes
you wince, talk to West Networks
and we’ll design your kit with the same math laid bare — or go straight to the
hardware and shop the HD4 MBX.
(~800 words)
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