Dave nye said:
rcdallas
This is the way I teach our new guys to use the suunto clinometer.
First off your sats are going to be about 9* apart. So if you know where the sats should be, you know you need a window atleast that wide to get the dish in. I would not put a dish in a window that small though, would like to have atleast a couple degrees of area on each side to work with. If you have an area that is just to samll for the dish 500, or just barely wide enough, switch to a 2 dish solution if the customer is ok with it.
Also the suunto clinometer can be pulled off. So if you are working with a small window you want to make sure that there is nothing pulling that thing off. To do this go to the area where the obstuction is then look at the spot where you want to put the dish. You should see 2 numbers, the big one on the bottom is the direction you are looking, the small one on the top is 180*. This way you can make sure your reading is true.
Elivation is pretty simple you just need to know where the sat is in the sky. Just remeber that the sat does not really stay in one place unmoving. It does move a small bit in a figure 8 motion. So if your elivation is say 31* and you have a tree just below 31 you may have a situation where the dish will work when you put it in. Then in a week as the sat moves you may lose signal.
Okay, I'm getting an even better understanding now, but I still have some further questions:
Like in my area (assuming your is very similar since your really not that far away as the crow flies)
110 only example. According to the reciever in Dish 300 mode for my area 110 is 222 azimuth, 34 elevation, skew obviously 90.
I could really have a hole say 5' x 5', to the left I could be at 219, to the right 224, elevation within that hole could be 32 degrees to the bottom, 36 degrees to the top.
Bottomline, as long as I give it say at least a 2-3 degree window for movement of the bird, it should threoreticly be ok, you think all transponder would be coming in ok as from the post prior referencing all transponders are slightly apart from each other?
Now for the 110/119 on a Dish 500, this is where I'm not totally clear on as to why I originally ask how wide the beam is.
I know the wavelength is about 1", that to me as being only a technician class ham tells me from front to back the wavelength is 1", but how wide is it or frankly how fat is it?
if doing a single dish for 110 is as said az 222, elev 34, single dish for 119 az 232 elev 31 -- to pickup both on a 500 in this area is az 227 elev 33 skew 119, I ask how "fat" is the microwave coming in is I'm pointed in the middle of the 110/119 or is it with the reflector the signal is actually reflecting off the outer edges of the dish that is making this possible?
With that in mind if I wanted to shoot through a limited area for LOS on a single dish 500, I would need to make sure I'm clear at least..
220 to the left - 234 to the right
30 bottom 36 to the top
...and if I had to, I could use two dishes
110 - 220 left - 224 to the right
32 bottom 36 to the top
Sorry if my post has become kind of cumbersome to understand my mind is brainstorming about a 1000 different things at once - but I believe I'm getting an even better understanding for this.
The figure 8 you mention does make complete sense, as I notice on some days with the 129 doing a dish 1000 I've tuned in at just about 90 points, 110 about the same -- other days I'm fighting if I turn it to the left I get 110, just a fraction of a hair to the right I only get 129 and the signal is about 73 points.
Anyone know if there is a referenced link that can explain into detail about all the focul points, bore sites, etc... with picking up multiple birds?
Thanks!