I'd say 75 pounds...I did mine with two guys. Two guys can do the motor too, but they have to be beefy guys, its heavy. I'd take three total to be safe.
IMO how I would do it is mark the elevation, then loosen all the elevation bolts and tilt it where the dish is pointing upwards as much as possible, then tighten the elevation bolts down again.
THEN take the dish-to-mount bolts out, I'd put a guy on each side of the hub while you remove the bolts, then slowly lift if off the mount,(the dish will be over your head here, at the end of your arms straight above you, so don't take guys with short arms....LOL) then walk it to open area, then slowly work the dish until you both can grab the rim, then you can go anywhere you want with it.
Then you can take the motor off the pole...be careful here it is VERY top heavy.
Hope some of that helped.
Yes it did and that's kind of what I was thinking too. I have a couple guys I can recruit and the wife too. Just didn't know what the total weight might be. 75lbs should not be a problem
And, don't forget to save the unique 6" tubing they use for the pole.
edit: oops, Stogie beat me to it!
I noticed that what original installer did, is that he got some (probably schedule 40) pipe that had an ID the same as the OD of the BirdView pipe. The bigger pipe is cemented in flush at ground level. Then they slid the BV pipe in to it and tacked it around the top of the bigger pipe. I think I can take my grinder over and carefully grind the weld off without hitting the BV pipe