
The D11-500


Main board without access card.

Back-panel connections.

Main board with tuner daughterboard flipped over.

Interchangeable cosmetic front panel.

Front of unit with front panel removed, showing IR receiver (right) and light pipe (left).
My wife and I are currently enjoying two concurrent six-month free
subscriptions to DirecTV, including hardware, the outcome of a "spam
fax" class action lawsuit
filed against the company several years ago (and a reflection of the
two fax lines at my residence that got spammed). A DirecTV D11-500
satellite receiver currently sits on our living room's home-theater
cabinet, but I've dissected its predecessor, a
, for your voyeuristic enjoyment. What's inside the svelte, silver, satellite-satiated case?

The multimedia processing heart of the D11-100, whose system-board topside I've snapped in both


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An integrated RF tuner, supporting 950- to 2150-MHz inputs
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An all-digital 15- to 20-Mbaud variable-rate receiver with integrated 7-bit ADCs and a FEC (forward error correction) decoder
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A DirecTV- and MPEG-compliant data-transport processor with DirecTV A/V security capabilities
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MPEG-ATSC compliant audio/video decoders, supporting MPEG Layer 1 and 2, Dolby AC-3 and compressed PCM audio, and MP@ML (main profile at main level) MPEG-2 video.
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A 2-D graphics engine that supports multiple rendering layers, also handles video scaling, and includes a PAL/NTSC/SECAM encoder, and
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Coordinating the whole show, a 266-MHz MIPS32 CPU core capable of running MIPS16e Application-Specific Extension compressed code and including MMU and EJTAG support.
Note that since the D11-100 is a standard-definition satellite receiver, it offers no MPEG-4-decoding capabilities.
The memory subsystem includes both volatile and nonvolatile flavors; a Hynix 2.5V, 150 MHz 256 Mbit DDR SDRAM (16-bit data interface, TSOP packaging) and a cryptically-marked, BGA-packaged device with a "FW603" firmware code and handwritten "FT" ("firmware tested"?) initials on its topside. A "MT" logo in one corner suggests that this latter device may come from Micron Technology and, because DirecTV set-top boxes are over-the-air reprogrammable, I presume this device is at a minimum a single-die flash memory. Without tearing the BGA package apart, I don't know for sure, but I suspect it may include dual flash memory die (one for the current firmware image, the other for the upgrade image, with redundancy to ensure a failsafe upgrade methodology). Complementary SRAM and flash-memory die are another possibility.
Other notable ICs inside the D11-100 include a Broadcom BCM3430 CMOS tuner, the source of the transport streams that the BCM7312 subsequently decodes, and an STMicroelectronics LNBH21 LNB (low-noise-blocker) power supply and control chip.
The memory subsystem includes both volatile and nonvolatile flavors; a Hynix 2.5V, 150 MHz 256 Mbit DDR SDRAM (16-bit data interface, TSOP packaging) and a cryptically-marked, BGA-packaged device with a "FW603" firmware code and handwritten "FT" ("firmware tested"?) initials on its topside. A "MT" logo in one corner suggests that this latter device may come from Micron Technology and, because DirecTV set-top boxes are over-the-air reprogrammable, I presume this device is at a minimum a single-die flash memory. Without tearing the BGA package apart, I don't know for sure, but I suspect it may include dual flash memory die (one for the current firmware image, the other for the upgrade image, with redundancy to ensure a failsafe upgrade methodology). Complementary SRAM and flash-memory die are another possibility.
Other notable ICs inside the D11-100 include a Broadcom BCM3430 CMOS tuner, the source of the transport streams that the BCM7312 subsequently decodes, and an STMicroelectronics LNBH21 LNB (low-noise-blocker) power supply and control chip.
As is typical with systems intended for
high-volume, consumer-electronics applications, the digital portions of
the design consume a notably small percentage of the overall board area,
thanks to Moore's Law. Discrete transistors and regulators; passive
capacitors, inductors, and resistors (some quite large in size);
transformers; and other analog and power components are scattered across
the board, so numerous in part because the D11-100 handles AC-to-DC
conversion within the enclosure versus in a "wall wart" or other
external converter.
The access-card connector is another
significant inhabitant on the system board, whose backside (not shown)
is predominantly consumed by traces and through-hole solder points,
although a few small passive components are also present.
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The D11-100 also offers the ability to tune in
an OTA (over-the-air) NTSC broadcast or other UHF-or-VHF-packaged analog
video source. A Samsung RMVC10005AE "can" tuner (also stamped BEC1403B)
handles this function, along with the broadcast of outgoing RF video on
user-selectable VHF channel 3 or 4. The Samsung device is on a

Also on a separate daughtercard is the
analog-modem hardware, which probably interacts with soft-modem
functionality built into the BCM7312. The analog modem is the means by
which the D11-100 periodically "dials home" to download program guide
information, firmware, and other updates. That these data streams still
come in over POTS is a quaint antiquity in an increasingly broadband-connected LAN and WAN world.
Other back-panel connections include the 27W AC
input and a USB port, the latter intended for various remote-control
functions. Recent firmware updates have bedeviled traditional COM-to-USB port adapters and their companion software, but clever accessories resurrect other devices' abilities to switch the D11-100 on and change its channel.
Turning your attention to the front of the
unit, you'll encounter modularity here as well, likely intended to allow
a common base hardware design to serve multiple markets'



that routes the "power on" illumination from an LED on the system board to the front panel.
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