A recent thread (http://www.satelliteguys.us/fta-shack/264491-new-coordinates-fssn-fighting-sioux-sports.html) inspired me to tweak a dish to boost my reception of 87W. The experience reinforced the reasons I really like FTA - a combination of working with the gadgetry and then getting some good programming. I had an lnb aimed at 87W but haven't typically watched that satellite a lot so it wasn't well aligned. I was able to go from no signal, to a pixelated image, and then to a solid lock while the University of North Dakota hockey team was playing Air Force in Grand Forks last week. Since I grew up in the upper Midwest, I enjoyed seeing programming from that area. The advertisements on the boards around the ice included some for Old Dutch potato chips, which we always bought when I was a kid, and Bobcat (the small skid-steer loaders made in North Dakota). It is also nice to hear an occasional North Dakota/Northern Minnesota accent in the commercials. I was especially happy on the gadgetry side of things that I got such a good signal on 87W with a DTV AT-9 dish (~24x29") that has a boresight aim toward 97W. While watching the game, I recalled when I put up my first dish (a discarded DN 20") and then got the thrill of seeing NASA tv for the first time. Similarly, when I set up my first real FTA dish and got 97W and all of its channels it was pretty exciting. I came to FTA as a shortwave listener, and I consider FTA to be a 21st century version of that hobby (although shortwave is still good as well). It seems like there are still plenty of opportunities, even with Ku only, to try for a new signal and get the satisfaction of success. For me, it's a matter of finding enough time to do it all.