Found the old C Band equipment in my house.

saboken

Well-Known SatelliteGuys Member
Original poster
Dec 17, 2021
27
13
Dunmor KY
I was hoping to use this but it's too old I was told not to.dispose of it, maybe the positioning box still works?? If I can figure out how to connect and use it? Is the reciver worth anything people tell me its like finding a original Mac In a box? I would probably sell it or put it on a shelf as a museum piece.
 

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That does look very old indeed. Older than most receivers i've seen. I'd say the positionner might still be useable as stand-alone if it's using pulses rather than a potentiometer as a position sensor. Do you still have the outdoor parts too? If you have the actuator it would be easy to see what it uses. Then a bit of investigation should be able to figure out the wiring of that white platic connector on the back of the control box - that probably has the motor and sensor wires

The receiver is definitely obsolete, but might interest someone as a museum piece

I found this information from 1985:
Luxor The model 9534 remote -controlled antenna actuator is available for $699. It features wireless remote operation, microprocessor control, 30- satellite memo- ry; battery backed -up memory, 175 -feet of cable, and automatic polarity switching. The unit can be manually controlled for programming setup and override. An LED satellite readout and position read - out is included. The 9536 infrared remote control sensor is available for $99.
 
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Hey, that last picture was my first receiver, a Luxor 9850 installed in 1984. C-Band with an LNA and block noise downconverter if memory serves me correctly. That’s 35 year old technology. I didn’t have the positioner but was sold an MTI 2800A which I still use to position and peak my fixed dishes. More voltage than a 12 volt battery.
 
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Why some dishes were made as concentrical rings?

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