Anole was probably referencing me about the elevation adjustment.
I added a screw adjustment for elevation to give me finer control over elevation as I peaked the dish/stab hh120 motor combo onto the sat arc.
I also put in guy-wire support for the LNBF support arm ...
I wanted a quality LNBF and the invacom was heavy enough to move the LNB support arm out of the focal point...
It was awesome watching the S/Q's on my signal meter increase as I turned the turnbuckle and the invacom LNBF moved into the focal cloud.
Ahhhh, turnbuckles on the LNBF, now that does bring back memories! - :up
But, I was thinking more about a discussion with JsatTV and his 1.0m FortecStar.
He had trouble setting fine elevation, and I suggested a bracket & screw modification.
Due to his motor entering the dish from below, I suggested putting the bracket and screw on the top side of the mount.
Well, much to my surprise, he built the darned thing, and apparently it turned out okay!
(links below)
But, there were a lot of creative ideas floating around, guy wires, turn buckles, and of course, light weight brackets to mount the bigger commercial Ku dishes on too-small motors.
I got lucky and was able to find an Andrew 1.2m very close to me. I still have some fine tuning ahead of me, but for the most part, it's ready! I used Ziploc's plans to make the mount. The motor doesn't seem to have any trouble driving the dish from east to west.
Outstanding! - :up
I don't recognize Ziploc (some of those great mod-threads were five years ago)
Do you have some pictures, links, or description of his suggestions?
edit: zoomed in on your picture. Yes, I recall that bracket idea. Think it was one of the first to promote the light weight designs
Also, which motor did you go with?
JsatTV and his trouble with elevation adjustment on Fortec dish:
http://www.satelliteguys.us/free-ai...-fortec-star-dish-elevation-2.html#post889050
http://www.satelliteguys.us/free-ai...-re-fine-tuning-1-meter-fortec-star-dish.html
http://www.satelliteguys.us/free-ai...h-stab-hh-120-motor-tips-lessons-learned.html