PSB said:The LNB seems to have dropped slightly I would pack it so that its exactly square to the dish and the scalar ring. Should bring you slightly more signal quality.
Yes , good observation / eyes .
Wyr
PSB said:The LNB seems to have dropped slightly I would pack it so that its exactly square to the dish and the scalar ring. Should bring you slightly more signal quality.
correct. The skew difference is probbaly 2 but its just weird that when I work across the arc it flips good polarity (G4 V is good, T5 H is good, G3 V is good, etc)7720driver said:T5 and G4 are adjacent to one another. The difference in the skew (on a stationary type mount such as yours) between those two adjacent sats is not enough to matter (in my opinion).
it is an option. The issue is I have to manually skew it and that does hinder the signalIf I were you, I'd just use the DMSI and, when installing it, experiment to find the orientation that gives you the strongest quality DVB signal.
LNB to Pansat 1500. Toshiba is slaved using the loop out. When I use the LNB with the polorotor, the Toshiba controls polarity. When I use the DMSI the Pansat controls it. Same resultAre you slaving the receivers, or hooking them up one at a time? If you are slaving them, then I suggest you let the FTA receiver control the DMSI's polarity (if you use the DMSI).
thats what I figured (dammit). The kicker is getting it setup on a table (which might be another issue with the HOA).Yeah, to me it looks like the signal is definitely blocked from reaching the lower one third of your dish. If you could mount the base up at the height of your railing, then that would solve that problem...but create another one in that that would make it hard for you to work on your LNB. It wouldn't be a problem for me...because I'm six foot six. But I doubt you're that tall.
thats a no go...no way I could put this ont he roof. I got a better chance of putting outside my garageStefan said:but a good long term solution would be a non-penetrating roof mount of some sort.
no DC blocks....LNB to Pansat. Toshiba slaved via the loop out. I get Vertical fine on G4...its H that doesnt work. If I use the polorotor, the Toshiba has the wires hooked up.As for your polarity issue, I'd think it's either an issue of the feedhorns not oreinted properly, or the receviers not propely controlling the polarity. If the recievers are slaved how are they slaved? Are you using a DC block on the reciever that doesn't control polarity? What about the LNB voltage? You do know that some LNBs that are made for use with feedhorns on C band dishes (and therefore generally use a polar servo to control polarity) are not rated to operate at 13V right? They're generally rated for 15- 24v. That might mean that if you had your FTA reciever connected to them and the reciever was still trying to switch polarity by switching the LNB voltage you might have issues when switching to vertical polarity or 13v. That shouldn't be the case for the LNBF since it's made for 13/18v polarity switching but could be so if your using a polar rotor feedhorn with an LNB.
so true especially "Up North" where our TS is 38 degrees. I have a 70# sand bag on the back end of it to keep from leaning forwardmikekohl said:The 6 as well as the 8 foot fixed mount antenna leave a lot to be desired for stability, in their tubular frame mount, which is very top heavy.
7720driver said:Berg, you said you didn't like having to manually adjust the DMSI's skew. Well, you only have to adjust it whenever you move to a different satellite. I doubt that you'll be moving that dish from sat to sat a lot. I mean, that dish doesn't have a polar mount. So moving it from sat to sat takes a lot of time to get the azimuth and elevation right.
So, if you really want to move it from sat to sat, why don't you make a polar mount for it. With polar mounts, moving from one sat to another requires only one adjustment, not three (azimuth, elevation and skew). If you made yourself a polar mount then you wouldn't have to worry about skew. Skew, would in essence be automatic.....thus you could use the DMSI and the skew would always be correct.
Now, making a polar mount for that dish would not be easy, but I'm confident you could do it. I would not put a motorized dish postioner on it (although you could). I'd prefer to just use a hand crank.
Hey, maybe the manufacturer makes a polar mount "kit" for that dish?
Iceberg said:Bryan
So the fact the lower portion of my dish has a LOS issue is the reason why I get one polarity (and they flip as I move across the arc)?
I'm going to try tonight to see if I can get the NBC stuff on AMC4. They are Horizontal so using my theory, I should get it but not any of the V stuff