I have a 1000.4 EA dish and wish to have

SteveRiz

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Original poster
Sep 8, 2010
11
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new york
the capabilities to receive the western arc when we RV, as many time my line of site for the eastern arc is blocked.

I know I need a new LNB for this to happen, but does the ARM need to be replaced too?

Thank you
 
I know I need a new LNB for this to happen, but does the ARM need to be replaced too?
No, I RV with a 1000.4 EA & WA too. However, I've found it's better and easier to swap out the arm & LNB (2 bolts into metal) instead of swapping LNBs (4 screws into plastic) . . .

dish_setup_09_ea_and_wa_lnbs_closed.jpg
 
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I only remove the two screws that connect the LNB to the plastic arm adapter to change from EA to WA and back. It only takes a minute or two using a small pocket screwdriver.
 
I only remove the two screws that connect the LNB to the plastic arm adapter to change from EA to WA and back. It only takes a minute or two using a small pocket screwdriver.
I'm betting that the metal will last longer than the plastic, Dutch.
 
OK, thanks. A few years ago, I purchased the Accutrac 3 plus, which I recently dug out of my closet. I'm a bit rusty on the usage. As I remember, I connected the coax to the middle port of the LNB, and tune/fine tune until all three satellites are peaked? Then I take the Accutrac out of the line and run a check switch on my 211k?

I remember the batteries didn't last, so I didn't use them.

I'm rusty because I kept the 1000.4 dish in the garage and we recently restarted our RV trips.

Thank you


No, I RV with a 1000.4 EA & WA too. However, I've found it's better and easier to swap out the arm & LNB (2 bolts into metal) instead of swapping LNBs (4 screws into plastic) . . .
 
A few years ago, I purchased the Accutrac 3 plus, which I recently dug out of my closet. I'm a bit rusty on the usage. As I remember, I connected the coax to the middle port of the LNB, and tune/fine tune until all three satellites are peaked? Then I take the Accutrac out of the line and run a check switch on my 211k?

I remember the batteries didn't last, so I didn't use them.
Yeah, the Accutrac III+ the meter I love to hate. Very buggy.

I think with this meter, the sat strengths (below) always appear in this order (from to to bottom):
  • 119, 110, 129
  • 77, 72.7, 61.5
Yes, running on batteries not a good idea with this meter.

dish_setup_00_acutraciii_meter_small.jpg


For the Western Arc, you're supposed to peak on 119:

dish_setup_11_wa_lnb_open_small.jpg


For the Eastern Arc, you peak on 72.7:

dish_setup_10_ea_lnb_open_text_smalljpg.jpg
 
I'm betting that the metal will last longer than the plastic, Dutch.
I would guestimate I've done well over a hundred LNB swaps so far, with no signs of anything wearing out. The key is to not over tighten the screws. I figured if the plastic threaded holes in the adapter do wear out, I can just drill on through and use longer screws with wing nuts. That would make the swap completely tools free, just like the rest of my tripod and dish setup. I also have an extra adapter on hand that came with one of my LNB's.
 
Buggy, in what sense?
My favorite bug was when the display powered up as a mirror image of itself.

Other bugs: Display would just flash on and off on power up. Unit would not power up with a fresh set of batteries.


Also, do you have to change the voltage on the Accutrac to 18 volts or something when aiming?
I just powered the meter up and ran it in default mode. However, I stopped using the Accutrac.
 

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