well i'm not understanding what it takes to make the mover, move at smaller incraments is it a different sensoror longer arm or would i need to go to the H2H to get the best tuning. are the clicks from the 4dtv (dsr-920) measured is there a way to make it move a 1/4 click....
Hey George,
I am no expert, but from my understanding of it, the movement per click is at least partially determined by two things.
1. The number of threads per inch on the actuator arm. Again with Harold's explanation, the amount of movement would change depending on how long the bar is the actuator attaches to. Short bar, lots of movement. Long bar, slower movement.
2. The number of pulses sent back which is determined by the magnetic wheel in the sensor.
The more pulses sent allows a more accurate point of stopping and starting. A set number of pulses for a set number of threads moved. More threads equals slower movement, but more accuracy. More pulses allows for a more accurate place to stop.
Many of the older analog receivers, and the 4DTV sends a large surge of voltage when the button on the remote is pushed sometimes pushing the actuator further than you wanted it to go. (two or three pulses at once) Sometimes a very quick push and release of the button will just nudge it.
That's part of the reason I like the VBox II. The button on the remote for it will allow a single pulse movement when fine tuning. Even then, all depends on the pulses and threads per inch.
As Harold said, when the dish is being pushed across the arc, everything remains pretty stable, but when the dish starts "falling" down the other side the pulses per degree starts becoming erratic.
With the Birdview, and AJAK H-H mounts and other gear driven positioners, the pulses per degree of the arc stays the same from one end to the other.
On the AJAK which I recently tuned in, 21 pulses will put you at the next bird if it is two degrees away. So 10 or eleven pulses per degree all the way across the arc.
Real life example: My old 10 foot Winegard had a 24" actuator on it. The attaching point on it was right at the base ring. I used it from 135W to 55.5 W with no problems. When I took that dish down and put up the 7.5' Perfect 10 which had a long bar hanging down from the base ring. The first time I used it, I ran the actuator all the way to the hard limit, and was only about half-way up the Western part of the arc going East from the Western limit. It took it down and measured the travel distance and discovered the previous owner had set the 24" actuator to only come out about 14". Thats all it took to move the Winegard as described above. To move the 7.5 footer the same distance takes about 20" of actuator sticking out.
Edit: Also remember that the Winegard was a center mounted dish, and the Perfect 10 is off-center mounted dish. That also makes a difference.
Hope that helps.
Fred