Hi there everyone! I just signed up to this forum because you all seem like a knowledgable bunch and I had an idea that I needed some perspective on.
I'm a high school math teacher in Los Angeles and I was thinking about a project for my Pre-Calculus class. They are studying conic sections soon, and parabolas are a part of that. I wanted to give them some hands-on experience with what a parabola can do, with the idea of a focus, etc, and I thought it would be neat to have them build a satellite dish that could receive some FTA signals. Now, these are likely to be fairly crude dishes, and I'm not expecting quality signal, just something that can be pointed at a satellite and receive *some* signal, for that "Wow!" factor.
I have some schematics for some dishes, but basically I was wondering if there was a particular focal length that was necessary, or a particular dish depth, or if basically any dish will do that is big enough. I'm thinking between 80-160 centimeters, and I'm not sure if the Ku or C band would be a better choice, or which one would be more "forgiving." For example, would tin foil be fine as the reflector?
I was also going to purchase a few things for the project, so all the students had to make was the dish and to place a pole at the focal point that I could attach the LNB. These were what I was going to get, and again, any advice here would be most appreciated.
This KU band LNB: Orbital Tracker Universal LNB Single KU-Band .2 MPEG 4
and/or This C Band LNB: NEXspark C-Band LNB LNBF DMS BSC421 Single Digital Satellite HDTV FTA 13K 65db | eBay
This simple receiver: Smart Digital Satellite TV Receiver DVB-T2+DVB-S2 FTA 1080P Decoder Tuner MPEG4 691110811008 | eBay
And maybe this signal meter to test and to have as a backup incase the signal doesn't actually make TV happen so they can see *something* is happening: satellite-signal-meter-and-finder
So, do you think this would be a possible project? Or am I misjudging the challenges here? I have a while to put this project together, so there's time to test stuff out, but any advice would be greatly appreciated. Thank you!
I'm a high school math teacher in Los Angeles and I was thinking about a project for my Pre-Calculus class. They are studying conic sections soon, and parabolas are a part of that. I wanted to give them some hands-on experience with what a parabola can do, with the idea of a focus, etc, and I thought it would be neat to have them build a satellite dish that could receive some FTA signals. Now, these are likely to be fairly crude dishes, and I'm not expecting quality signal, just something that can be pointed at a satellite and receive *some* signal, for that "Wow!" factor.
I have some schematics for some dishes, but basically I was wondering if there was a particular focal length that was necessary, or a particular dish depth, or if basically any dish will do that is big enough. I'm thinking between 80-160 centimeters, and I'm not sure if the Ku or C band would be a better choice, or which one would be more "forgiving." For example, would tin foil be fine as the reflector?
I was also going to purchase a few things for the project, so all the students had to make was the dish and to place a pole at the focal point that I could attach the LNB. These were what I was going to get, and again, any advice here would be most appreciated.
This KU band LNB: Orbital Tracker Universal LNB Single KU-Band .2 MPEG 4
and/or This C Band LNB: NEXspark C-Band LNB LNBF DMS BSC421 Single Digital Satellite HDTV FTA 13K 65db | eBay
This simple receiver: Smart Digital Satellite TV Receiver DVB-T2+DVB-S2 FTA 1080P Decoder Tuner MPEG4 691110811008 | eBay
And maybe this signal meter to test and to have as a backup incase the signal doesn't actually make TV happen so they can see *something* is happening: satellite-signal-meter-and-finder
So, do you think this would be a possible project? Or am I misjudging the challenges here? I have a while to put this project together, so there's time to test stuff out, but any advice would be greatly appreciated. Thank you!