. . . Or the roof of your porch.?You can't mount the dish on top of the shed?
Hispasat is definitely worth the fixed dish. Good luck!
Well, there is no shed now (the old is dismantled, and new one waits for base: gravel and 25 patio stones). Another thing, I personally dislike installing dishes on roofs, running cables from roof and under soil or under patio stones, which are around my house.You can't mount the dish on top of the shed?
Like I said to Primestar, I do not like dishes on roofs. Too prominent, dangerous to install and difficult to service. Not solid, unless one finds the joists, all the messing with silicon... running the cable over the gutter... I prefer to investigate, measure, observe heavenly bodies - squeeze the last inch of "tunnel" to Hispasat - instead of hard work. Other members, like Chapelrun and Dan Rose also like to conceal dishes.. . . Or the roof of your porch.?
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You seem to have gone to a lot of trouble to avoid the obvious.
Kudos for the effort, but sometimes the simple solution is just fine.
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...and it looks like you are trying to use CAT5, again...?
No excuse in the world for that.
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During the summer I have to be creative to get 30W here because of the openings in the trees to the east. I have tested out several dishes when I had the experimental test setup and found on a clear weather day I could even get away with a small Dish500 converted with a universal LNBF. I first pointed with on old Primestar dish and had a signal immediately.
jorgek, a dish 500 dish is 20"X22".
Undersized dishes will receive many channels, however there is no substitute for a proper dish when there are storm clouds or adjacent duplicate transponders.
Very practical, to find secondary usage for mast, which was already there. At 9 degree, roof height took care of possible obstacles (trees).Other thing, younger guys are much safer on the roof, than older folks...when I had the house I had to mount the dish on the mast of the tv aerial to get Hispasat (9 degree elevation here in MN) which was on the roof