Reading this thread I realized I'm not sure what elevation really means in a pratical sense. Is zero elevation a perfectly horizontal dish?
My understanding is that the sat signal comes in at about a 30 degree angle or more for a due south pointing dish. Dish elevation is what we set the dish at to get the correct reflection from back of dish to the LNB on the arm. So if I am at 5 degree elevation, is the sat signal actually coming in at a higher incidence angle? This mean you can be pointed at an obstruction like trees but receive the feed that still comes over the top.
Seems like the farther east or west you go the incidence angle and elevation get closer and at dead east or dead west it would be the same. However as we are tracking the Clarke belt with a motor we will never be dead east or west unless we are bang on the equator.
So long story short, if I need an indicated 5 - 10 degrees of elevation to get a sat, do I actually physically have say 20 or more degrees of sat signal angle to clear a tree? I've trees at or just above dish height where I would need to go for 15W to 60W so may end up skewing right at them but I'm hoping not an issue at all. Other than lyngsat saying a specfic sat is below the horizon, I can find lots of elevation references but little for how far above the horizon a sat is and the link between that and elevation. So to modify the OP question, how far above the horizon does the SAT need to be in order to have a chance to receive it?
My understanding is that the sat signal comes in at about a 30 degree angle or more for a due south pointing dish. Dish elevation is what we set the dish at to get the correct reflection from back of dish to the LNB on the arm. So if I am at 5 degree elevation, is the sat signal actually coming in at a higher incidence angle? This mean you can be pointed at an obstruction like trees but receive the feed that still comes over the top.
Seems like the farther east or west you go the incidence angle and elevation get closer and at dead east or dead west it would be the same. However as we are tracking the Clarke belt with a motor we will never be dead east or west unless we are bang on the equator.
So long story short, if I need an indicated 5 - 10 degrees of elevation to get a sat, do I actually physically have say 20 or more degrees of sat signal angle to clear a tree? I've trees at or just above dish height where I would need to go for 15W to 60W so may end up skewing right at them but I'm hoping not an issue at all. Other than lyngsat saying a specfic sat is below the horizon, I can find lots of elevation references but little for how far above the horizon a sat is and the link between that and elevation. So to modify the OP question, how far above the horizon does the SAT need to be in order to have a chance to receive it?