few thoughts:
Also, Linuxman has a current thread about mounting a bunch of LNBs on a six foot offset dish.
It's a lot of reading, but if you'll look through just the pictures, there are many things to learn.
First, if you aim the dish to your true south satellite, then the path of the LNBs forms a fairly straight line, across the dish.
That's for birds quite near to each other; for birds further out, the line of LNBs forms a "U" shape, looking from the front of the dish.
HOWEVER, if you aim the dish OFF your true south satellite, then the line of LNBs forms a diagonal line across the face of the dish.
This is all brought out in words, drawings, and photos in Linuxman's thread.
Second, to get satellites quite close to each other, you need a bunch of factors in your favor:
- choose birds near your true south, not off toward the horizon
- be located closer to the equator than to the pole
- select a dish with a large F/D ratio, offset are best, (long focal length)
- use LNBs with small or narrow horns.
(Iceberg used some bandstacked with tall oval horn, and WescoPC
ground down some GeosatPro SL1 LNBFs)
Third, I've assumed you are not looking for DBS satellites.
As Iceberg said, they are very easy on something like an 84e dish.
I believe TheNetBuilder published pictures of an 84e doing 110°-148°.
Can't recall, but I think 123° was in the middle.
edit:
Here's
the thread where Linuxman did the six foot dish.
Toward the end of the thread, he added Primestar 84e dishes, so make sure you look through that section, too.
For birds on an 84e, if it is aimed far from your TS satellite, you should probably skew the dish.
He's got info on a boat-seat swivel to do that, too.