plowhog
Elite Member
- Joined
- Dec 8, 2015
- Messages
- 3,394
- Location
- North. NV, North. CA
- Tractor
- Massey 1710 / 1758, Ventrac 4500Y / TD9
Did some additional checking and found a couple of things:
- according to one user, Starlink *does* use carrier grade NAT (ugh),
- "Idle ssh connections drop after 10 minutes, but put even modest traffic on them and they last hours."
Carrier grade NAT is great for the ISP, not so great for the user.
Unless someone advises otherwise, I presume a remote connection (from an off-site location) to a Starlink site will be difficult, with the obstacle of keeping it alive once established. (10 minute expiration.)
I solved that with HughesNet by having both sites (local and remote) remain connected to a middle layer product. But I presume that an internet addressable static IP with Starlink is a "no", and having a dynamic dns product work is also a "no." The good news is my same HughesNet/kluge setup will work much faster!
nelsonslog.wordpress.com
- according to one user, Starlink *does* use carrier grade NAT (ugh),
- "Idle ssh connections drop after 10 minutes, but put even modest traffic on them and they last hours."
Carrier grade NAT is great for the ISP, not so great for the user.
Unless someone advises otherwise, I presume a remote connection (from an off-site location) to a Starlink site will be difficult, with the obstacle of keeping it alive once established. (10 minute expiration.)
I solved that with HughesNet by having both sites (local and remote) remain connected to a middle layer product. But I presume that an internet addressable static IP with Starlink is a "no", and having a dynamic dns product work is also a "no." The good news is my same HughesNet/kluge setup will work much faster!

Starlink for real, LAN notes
March 9 is the first day I use Starlink for real for a whole day from my desktop computer. I’m writing this blog post VIA SPACE. I mounted Dishy on a J-mount that was already installed at my …