Using SV 8000 HD, SG2100 motor and 30" dish I am unable to lock on any satellite but Echostar 7 at 119 W. I am at longitude 84 W and latitude 34 N. I need help badly since I am almost bald from pulling my hair.
are you using a dish network lnb or is it a standard or universal ku lnb? the dish network lnb's won't work for some of the other sats. Again what lnb are you using?
I can get Echostar 7 with USALS "go to sat position" from any other position and I stepped through the accessible (no obstacle) horizon but find no other Q signal.Could your tracking have gotten off? Could it have gotten rotated on the pole a bit?
In addition to the previous posts just know that the different sats have different elevations, so you need to adjust the elevation on your dish depending on which one you're aiming it to.
...Is there a sat I could get European stations?
P.S. I believe my alignment is ok.
What was unexpected for me, a Newbie, that Echostar(s) gave me Q=100 whereas these other sats are barely noticeable. Only a blind scan into what looked like nothing revealed ultimately something but not great. It looks to me Echostar signals are many times stronger than other sats?
Okay, I managed to find a few more sats: Galaxy 3, 4 and 12, AMC1, Echostar 7 & 8, and AM5. What was unexpected for me, a Newbie, that Echostar(s) gave me Q=100 whereas these other sats are barely noticeable. Only a blind scan into what looked like nothing revealed ultimately something but not great. It looks to me Echostar signals are many times stronger than other sats? My best find was AM5 with 250 channels but mostly non English.
Is there a sat I could get European stations? Intelsat 9 at 58 W could be one of them but that would require cutting a forest at my location.
Thanks for all the replies!
P.S. I believe my alignment is ok.
... If you found 250 none English channels then I think you may be on G-17 at 97W.
If this is the case you either have the wrong Lat/Long entered into the receiver or your alignment is way off.
...
Absolutely. As I suggested above, since he never found his true south sat, and is apparently just randomly trying to find satellites blindly, I think there is no doubt that he is WAY off alignment. I know that when you first see a signal, that it's hard for people not to abandon following the recommended alignment procedure, but it's really a waste of time to do that. I'd recommend that he wipes the receiver's memory clean and start from scratch and get the thing aligned properly, and THEN worry about channels. All this current discussion is going to produce is people telling him to put in known freqs that he's not going to find since he's not aimed at the right sats, and more confusion.
In addition to what Lak said, you don't say whether you are using a switch to switch between DBS (circular 11250 LO) sats on the "C" port of the lnbf, and regular (linear 10750 LO) sats on the "L" ports of the LNB. If you are, then you need to set up the diseqC or 22KHz settings for each sat to give the appropriate switch position.
However, since you said that you're only seeing one sat and also because you haven't seen any sat but 119, I'm guessing that you are WAY off on your alignment, and you've never said what procedure you used to align the dish. Since your location is listed as "Georgia", I assume that you're longitude is somewhere around 83 deg plus or minus a couple degrees.
To align your dish, you need to first find your due south satellite. Since you haven't found that sat, then it's a pretty good bet that you're not aligned.
I would go to AMC9 on your receiver. Tell the dish to go there via USALS. Go to the transponder scan section of your receiver (I'm not familiar with that receiver), and pull up the 11.775 H / 4232 transponder. If that transponder isn't listed, then there is probably a transponder edit page where you can create that transponder. When on that transponder in the transponder scan section, look for quality readings.
I assume that you have set the LATITUDE scale on your motor to your latitude PLUS 0.6 degrees (your instructions probably say just to use your latitude). Make sure that this is set on the LATITUDE scale not the ELEVATION scale. The elevation scale should be 90 deg minus the setting on the LATITUDE side.
Your dish should be aiming pretty close to true south, not magnetic south. There are magnetic deviation calculators around that can tell you the difference between true south and magnetic south at your location, or there are charts that can tell you what time of day the sun will be at true south. If it's not aimed south, correct this by rotating the whole mount on the pole.
Now, while watching for S/Q raise and lower the dish via the dish elevation until you see a signal. Adjust for the peak signal with the dish elevation like this, and also by rotating the whole mount on the pole very slightly.
Until you have done the above, don't bother trying to find other sats such as the Echo-7 you were looking for. Once you've done the above, go to extreme western sats, find a signal, and adjust for peak reading by very slightly rotating the whole mount on the pole. This is the same as you just did, but is a more accurate adjustment. At this point, you should be done. Do NOT try to change motor or dish elevation while aimed at anything but your south satellite.
The circular polarized pay satellites, such as the Echostars, are much more powerful than the fixed service Ku-Band linear satellites such as AMC-5. That allows smaller subscriber dishes, and fewer complaints from customers about dish size. Echo 7, in particular, is an extremely powerful satellite. You probably still have to tweak dish aim a bit using a weaker, linear satellite.
Hi BJ, I was simply trying to get the OP to verify he was on 97W by checking the TP I listed above. It is the TP that has RT and Al Jazeera on it.
Sorry if it added confusion.
Later, DC
Technically it's Echo14, as Echo7 is currently sitting idle.