Theoretically, yes, but, in my opinion, not worth bothering, since arm "deviation" is so easily visible just by eyeballing or using a straight piece of wood and carpenter's square. Dishes are symmetrical in horizontal plane. There is no symmetry in vertical plane and here the small mirrors can help in finding the least "coma" in focal point. Cheers, polgyverGreat trick, thank you for sharing. Can the same technique be applied to check if the arm is off center horizontally?
Sorry, gents, somehow I failed to take pictures of TV before-after.
The paraboloid of rotation is such a beautiful surface, that it will reflect rays from ALL of its points to one point, the focal spot - providing the rays are parallel to the axis of rotation forming the paraboloid. So, any place on the dish is good for glueing the small mirror.How did you determined where to specifically place the mirrows on the dish to obtain the proper readings or reflection on the LNBF face...Nice doing.
Yes, since the reflection spots are seen on LNBF face. And they move, because Sun "moves". FaT Air calculated it right...did the dish have to be pointed directly at the sun? how long before it drifts off target?
You are right regarding lack of signal measurements. But mirror placement can be random, the only accuracy needed is to make sure the reflective area of a mirror is tight (snug) to dish, to represent this area for light beam. I used to glue small mirrors to small disc magnets, but found out that these magnets do not have really parallel surfaces, so I switched to thin two-sided tape.Polgyver,
I'm sorry, but your experiment lacks very basic scientific facts such as before and after signal measurements.
Satellite dishes focus more of a cloud to the LNB rather than a precise spot beam you are doing with light and I would question the placement accuracy of your mirrors, let alone the accuracy of your pointing at the sun at a given time. Signal, not light beams are the important factor and you don't even offer that data.
That's the speed; small circle of light, brought to the centre of LNB by turning the dish, drifts to the edge in half minute...The perpendicular of the dish face will be design offset degrees below the sun, or satellite, or anything else you want to aim at. This is assuming the dish is mounted 'normally'. Think a street lamp a block away would suffice. (for those that like playing in the dark)
Betcha the reflections would travel across the LNBF face from one side to the other in about 1 minute.
24x60/360 So 1 minute = 4 degrees.
Did I do that right?