So I was close to getting my motor installed, but need to cut some metal or custom-make a mount. Since I was able to find G26 (93W) before I tried, I figured I'd go for G25 (97W) when I put the dish back on my pole. Well...I missed and got G16 (99W) instead. Figuring I was "oh-so close" I made the 2 degree skew change and moved it to the east (just a bit). Now, I am using my SF-95 and the basement window, so I am sure I'd have a little better luck taking a small TV outside with the receiver, but after I moved it (IMO) a hair to the east I now have G3C (95W). Elevation isn't even a half degree change between the three satellites. In fact, after I made the skew change I noticed G16 (99W) came in a little better. So it would seem skewing will improve the signal (ie. going from 46% to 79%) but isn't preventing me from finding a satellite. It would appear Azimuth is the biggest factor. Is this a safe assumption, or does it really depend on the dish and LNBF you are using for one of the "three" (elevation, skew & azimuth) to impact your results more than the other "two"?
Side-note: The DW6000 dish weighs 27.5 pounds (with the RF transmitter removed).
Side-note: The DW6000 dish weighs 27.5 pounds (with the RF transmitter removed).