Today I began a mini-project to try to receive Intelsat 18 at 180.0E. This is the satellite with content from French Polynesia but with a footprint that covers the western portion of North America with a signal strong enough that it should be receivable with a 60 to 75 cm Ku dish.
For my location, dish elevation is about 13 degrees, azimuth is 243 degrees (true) and skew is a little more than 34 degrees positive. I adjusted a Shaw Direct 60e dish for these settings. Fortunately my dish is quite new so the scales are still calibrated with readable markings. I am using the original Shaw linear LNB supplied with this dish. I know it works since I recently used it for receiving pay TV. I've been taught by Keith Brannen that this is a dual LNB that contains two local oscillators: 10750 MHz for the standard Ku satellite band and 10075 MHz for the xKu lower band. I will need to use the second LO which is selected with the 22 kHz Tone OFF. My Edision Mio+ allows this LO frequency to be manually configured and will then scan from 11025 to 12200 MHz. This will permit me to receive Tahiti Nui TV on 11155 V 30000.
My first attempt today resulted in not finding any transponders. I tried blind scanning but no results. I think the reason is due to discrepancy in different tools I am using. One app disagrees with another app as to the direction to point the dish. I've since compared both tools against my accurately pointed main dish so I now know which app to trust. I will need to relocate my dish and equipment to a different area of my yard and try again tomorrow.
Summary of past links on this subject:
Sept 2021
April 2018
May 2013
December 2009
For my location, dish elevation is about 13 degrees, azimuth is 243 degrees (true) and skew is a little more than 34 degrees positive. I adjusted a Shaw Direct 60e dish for these settings. Fortunately my dish is quite new so the scales are still calibrated with readable markings. I am using the original Shaw linear LNB supplied with this dish. I know it works since I recently used it for receiving pay TV. I've been taught by Keith Brannen that this is a dual LNB that contains two local oscillators: 10750 MHz for the standard Ku satellite band and 10075 MHz for the xKu lower band. I will need to use the second LO which is selected with the 22 kHz Tone OFF. My Edision Mio+ allows this LO frequency to be manually configured and will then scan from 11025 to 12200 MHz. This will permit me to receive Tahiti Nui TV on 11155 V 30000.
My first attempt today resulted in not finding any transponders. I tried blind scanning but no results. I think the reason is due to discrepancy in different tools I am using. One app disagrees with another app as to the direction to point the dish. I've since compared both tools against my accurately pointed main dish so I now know which app to trust. I will need to relocate my dish and equipment to a different area of my yard and try again tomorrow.
Summary of past links on this subject:
Sept 2021
April 2018
May 2013
December 2009