the big eye 118/119 is not a SuperDish:
Thanks, Anole.
I just checked it and it is a SuperDish, but the lnbf's are DPP and so I assume they are more recent. I don't see any FSS sticker, but that may have been long gone. Even an lnbf that says DPP might be an FSS ?
The reason I asked originally is that someone on another site said that you could open the "eye" and remove a dielectric plate which would allow it to do linear. The "eye" is a huge dual lnbf for 118/119. I know that, but figured maybe it was a linear that was somehow converted to circular by this dielectric plate.
Your comments are in conflict with what I've absorbed over the years.
I may be mistaken somehow, but here's what I believe:
- there were four kinds of actual SuperDishes deployed
- there were stamped steel and molded thermoplastic dishes made
- there were LNB heads designed for the 105 market and for the 121 market
- see pictures in the other article I linked above to identify which you have
- the 118/119 dishes are NOT SuperDishes, they're called
Dish 500 Plus or
Dish 1000 Plus
(see links to Sadoun site showing both, above)
Now, having established that you want to talk about converting the 118° LNB from circular to linear . . .
- yes, it uses a 10750 Local Oscillator frequency, so you're on the right track
- other Dish circular LNBFs I've seen, use a stepped cast-in device in the feedhorn, or a flattened feed tube, to get circular.
- if the 118/119 head uses a teflon insert, that's news to me, but I haven't done the research.
(possible, but I'm not betting the farm) -
- I'd considered trying to find out if there was a use for the 118/119 head, but gave up when I realized it was circular for both.
Should do some more research, before possibly destroying the darned thing.
Because, if it can be made to work, it'd be an interesting alternative to the QPH-031 . . .
. . . if it'll get either circular or linear, and bandstacked to boot! - :up -