In reference to Satellite Installations, what max voltage is considered for low voltage classification and if that is for operating voltage or just exposed cable voltage. Where would this be found in the NEC book to reference too?
All low voltage telecom type circuits are chapter 7.
Read the introduction in NEC carefully. Chapters 1-3 apply generally. Chapter 4 is special equipment and 5 and 6 are special locations. These 3 chapters apply modifications to chapters 1-3.
Unlike those chapter 7 ignores chapter 1-3 unless it specifically calls for it. For instance in the past simply laying coax or CAT5 across a drop ceiling was acceptable (no reference to chapters 1-3). In recent years now it must now be in a raceway, same as general wiring.
It’s not so much a voltage consideration (even up 120 V is allowed in some cases) but it’s a matter of being power limited that sets chapter 7 apart. Generally up to 48 VDC with a few watts is a common telecom voltage. You can run 120 V circuits in the same raceway under limited circumstances for instance.
Satellite LNAs and LNBs today use generally proprietary systems where they inject 12-48 VDC onto the RG-6 to carry power to the LNB. The old K band stuff used an inline power supply but most receivers have it built in and just use a brand specific LNB these days. Some of it originally ran 120 V out to the dish. This is also used for steering motors with K/Ka band or say polar or geosynchronous orbits. The actual RF signals are under 1 V. The low noise amplifier just mildly amplifies and filters the signal to avoid noise from the cabling.