Hi guys, I'm new to the forum (but not FTA), and wanted to start by thanking all the contributors whose posts I read to get me going in the right direction!
I now know that a 20" Dish Network setup will not get 82W reliably (at all?) down here (in NYC), but a 30" dish should work, so I ordered the Winegard DS2077 plus a DishPro Plus LNBF from Solid Signal. I probably just turned some heads with the idea of mounting the DPP on a 30" dish I guess I should have done more reading about LNB separation vs. focal length, but I think it's still worth a shot. if you're interested in discussing the math with me, I'm all ears.
This post is long, sorry. If you have any feedback on any portion, I'd love to hear from you. I have separated two aspects that I'm interested in: LNB spacing, and aiming.
LNB SPACING:
I started with reading the post by MJFlash: "Offset LNBs: Theory & Practice", and thought, "oh no, the LNB spacing is going to be wrong". After scratching my head some more, and reading up on spherical coordinates and how to calculate the angular separation of two points with known lat,long or az,elev coordinates, I think there is reason for hope. Here's what I've got:
DS2077 dish: d=760mm, F=448mm (F/d = 0.59 from spec sheet)
DPP LNBF: center-center spacing of two throats = 68mm
angular separation = atan (68/448) = 8.6 degrees
Now the less obvious question: what angle separates 91W and 82W from my location? My first knee-jerk answer was "9 degrees" but then I realized that's only from the earth's center (or another location 42164 km from the satellites). I am somewhat closer (many "look angle" calculators report distance to sat), and the angle ends up being 10.1 degrees. This number doesn't agree with the formulas in MJFlash's post, where he uses the difference between elevations to each sat for the vertical offset angle (I agree), and the difference in azimuths for the horizontal angle (I'm suggesting this is a problem). The problem I see with this is that azimuth lines get closer together as you increase elevation, so a 10 degree change in azimuth represents an angle smaller than 10 degrees if you're looking anywhere above the horizon. If anyone follows this argument, please let's chat!
So, assuming that 10.1 degrees is correct (again, I'd love to discuss this with any interested members), I've got a small error of 1.5 degrees between 8.6 and 10.1. What is the effect of this error? There are no satellites that close to either 91 or 82 with circular polarization, so I won't be getting interference, but I will have off-peak gain. According to a formula on Wikipedia, the half-power beamwidth of a "typical" parabolic dish is about 70*24mm/760mm = 2.2 degrees, so I will lose about 1dB of signal if I split the difference (0.75 degrees off-center for each sat). I know this isn't the best I can get, but given that I have a DPP LNBF in my hands, it seems to be the logical first step. I will end up buying a pair of single LNBs if this setup doesn't work.
AIMING:
The next issue is how to aim a DS-2077 with a dual LNB (no way to adjust offset) when the dish mount doesn't have a skew adjustment. I thought about big pliers and twisting the support arm, but then I remembered the polar mounted dish I used to have at my last place. If the dish is polar mounted, the skew takes care of itself as the dish is swept through the arc of satellites (i.e. satellites are always on a line that is parallel to the horizontal axis of the dish). So instead of mounting the dish on a vertical pole, I mount it on a pole that's tilted north at (90-my lat) degrees from vertical.
But the dish needs to be set for "-5 degrees" elevation for this to work, and the range is only 20-70 degrees. More poking around got me to think about mounting the dish upside down (with the LNB arm above the dish) to get the correct elevation. It looks pretty funny in the living room, but the math says it should work. I can post a pic if anyone wants to see it.
It's pretty cold right now, so I'm not exactly rushing to the roof to try this out this week, but I'm interested in hearing from others if they've tried a similar setup, and if it worked or not.
I'm a displaced Canadian who's pining for some curling on TV and the local news from home, and I'm a bit of an antenna geek, so this seems like a perfect project!
Thanks all,
Dave
I now know that a 20" Dish Network setup will not get 82W reliably (at all?) down here (in NYC), but a 30" dish should work, so I ordered the Winegard DS2077 plus a DishPro Plus LNBF from Solid Signal. I probably just turned some heads with the idea of mounting the DPP on a 30" dish I guess I should have done more reading about LNB separation vs. focal length, but I think it's still worth a shot. if you're interested in discussing the math with me, I'm all ears.
This post is long, sorry. If you have any feedback on any portion, I'd love to hear from you. I have separated two aspects that I'm interested in: LNB spacing, and aiming.
LNB SPACING:
I started with reading the post by MJFlash: "Offset LNBs: Theory & Practice", and thought, "oh no, the LNB spacing is going to be wrong". After scratching my head some more, and reading up on spherical coordinates and how to calculate the angular separation of two points with known lat,long or az,elev coordinates, I think there is reason for hope. Here's what I've got:
DS2077 dish: d=760mm, F=448mm (F/d = 0.59 from spec sheet)
DPP LNBF: center-center spacing of two throats = 68mm
angular separation = atan (68/448) = 8.6 degrees
Now the less obvious question: what angle separates 91W and 82W from my location? My first knee-jerk answer was "9 degrees" but then I realized that's only from the earth's center (or another location 42164 km from the satellites). I am somewhat closer (many "look angle" calculators report distance to sat), and the angle ends up being 10.1 degrees. This number doesn't agree with the formulas in MJFlash's post, where he uses the difference between elevations to each sat for the vertical offset angle (I agree), and the difference in azimuths for the horizontal angle (I'm suggesting this is a problem). The problem I see with this is that azimuth lines get closer together as you increase elevation, so a 10 degree change in azimuth represents an angle smaller than 10 degrees if you're looking anywhere above the horizon. If anyone follows this argument, please let's chat!
So, assuming that 10.1 degrees is correct (again, I'd love to discuss this with any interested members), I've got a small error of 1.5 degrees between 8.6 and 10.1. What is the effect of this error? There are no satellites that close to either 91 or 82 with circular polarization, so I won't be getting interference, but I will have off-peak gain. According to a formula on Wikipedia, the half-power beamwidth of a "typical" parabolic dish is about 70*24mm/760mm = 2.2 degrees, so I will lose about 1dB of signal if I split the difference (0.75 degrees off-center for each sat). I know this isn't the best I can get, but given that I have a DPP LNBF in my hands, it seems to be the logical first step. I will end up buying a pair of single LNBs if this setup doesn't work.
AIMING:
The next issue is how to aim a DS-2077 with a dual LNB (no way to adjust offset) when the dish mount doesn't have a skew adjustment. I thought about big pliers and twisting the support arm, but then I remembered the polar mounted dish I used to have at my last place. If the dish is polar mounted, the skew takes care of itself as the dish is swept through the arc of satellites (i.e. satellites are always on a line that is parallel to the horizontal axis of the dish). So instead of mounting the dish on a vertical pole, I mount it on a pole that's tilted north at (90-my lat) degrees from vertical.
But the dish needs to be set for "-5 degrees" elevation for this to work, and the range is only 20-70 degrees. More poking around got me to think about mounting the dish upside down (with the LNB arm above the dish) to get the correct elevation. It looks pretty funny in the living room, but the math says it should work. I can post a pic if anyone wants to see it.
It's pretty cold right now, so I'm not exactly rushing to the roof to try this out this week, but I'm interested in hearing from others if they've tried a similar setup, and if it worked or not.
I'm a displaced Canadian who's pining for some curling on TV and the local news from home, and I'm a bit of an antenna geek, so this seems like a perfect project!
Thanks all,
Dave