Now that the trees are fully filled with leaves, this is the time of year my 129 satellite signal drops. During the winter and spring, my signal for 110 and 119 are in the mid 60's and some transponders on 110 are in the 70's, and in the winter 129 is around 52-55. As the trees fill in, 110 and 119 are the same signal strength as the winter, but right now 129 is down into the 20's and any little bit of drizzle or wind cause signal loss on 129.
I know these are trees that degrading the signal because on some clear windier days I will turn on the "point dish" portion of the receiver and just watch the signal jump all over the place.
Is there any way to figure out which tree is causing the signal blockage? The west side of my property is lined with a mixture of pin oak trees (lots of thick leaves) as well as walnut trees. So these aren't small trees where I can just move branches and see when the signal jumps up. I have tried some of the iPhone apps where you can use your camera and the app super-imposes the satellite locations on the photo, but I have found those to be very inaccurate when I used them to point the dish.
Today it is beautiful, no wind, no rain and my signal is right at 22-25, so it isn't impacting my Dish viewing at all. But I really want my signal to be stronger and remove the issue that even with the slightest wind I lose signal.
Is there any way to know what tree is causing the blockage? Do Dish technicians have more advanced hardware that can tell that type of information? I did the install myself back in 2009 and the trees are quite a bit different than they were back then! (I thought about getting an EA dish and pointing it at 61.5 and 72 but I see I don't have a line of site to hit those satellites)
I know these are trees that degrading the signal because on some clear windier days I will turn on the "point dish" portion of the receiver and just watch the signal jump all over the place.
Is there any way to figure out which tree is causing the signal blockage? The west side of my property is lined with a mixture of pin oak trees (lots of thick leaves) as well as walnut trees. So these aren't small trees where I can just move branches and see when the signal jumps up. I have tried some of the iPhone apps where you can use your camera and the app super-imposes the satellite locations on the photo, but I have found those to be very inaccurate when I used them to point the dish.
Today it is beautiful, no wind, no rain and my signal is right at 22-25, so it isn't impacting my Dish viewing at all. But I really want my signal to be stronger and remove the issue that even with the slightest wind I lose signal.
Is there any way to know what tree is causing the blockage? Do Dish technicians have more advanced hardware that can tell that type of information? I did the install myself back in 2009 and the trees are quite a bit different than they were back then! (I thought about getting an EA dish and pointing it at 61.5 and 72 but I see I don't have a line of site to hit those satellites)