Just my opinion, but I'd think both your Prodelin and ChannelMaster 1.2m dishes were about the same quality.
At least so far as you could tell, for receive use.
So, if you wanted to choose which one to motorize, I'd weigh 'em without mount.
You can build something light to hook the dish to your motor.
The original mounts are just too big, and heavy. ...IMO...
For LNBF support arms (if you're missing 'em) I can think of three sources:
- recycled aluminum TV antenna bits (smaller tubing)
- new anodized aluminum tubing from the hardware store (a little expensive, but many sizes)
- someone suggested small steel tubing for brake lines on a car (automotive repair or store?)
If there is no fancy bending, only flattening on the end and bending with a vice, any of the above should be easy.
I'd consider the lighter of the two dishes, and...
- work hard to get the LNB at the focus
- use a matching or proper feedhorn
- select a high quality LNB
Thank you, these are all some very good ideas.
As for motorizing one of the 1.2's, I was actually considering taking the WSI 6' C band dish off of it's mounts and adapting the white 1.2 to it somehow. The bolt holes on the back of it are spread much further apart than the other dish (and the other 1.2 is already up and in use now.
)
I think that with the bolts spread further apart like it is that it would be a better candidate to adapt to the WSI polar mount ring.
It would be far stronger than using an HH motor and there's already a good strong motor on it now.
I would think that I could buy a proper ku lnb that would be centered over the dish rather than offset since I would have to start from total scratch anyway, as all I have is the dish alone with no other parts for it.
I looked at the arms for the .9m dishes and they are just metal tubes with the ends mashed, bent a little and holes drilled in them. I can do that! I have a hammer, a saw and a drill. I suppose I could use a vise too, dad has one but it's big, nasty, heavy and 6 miles away, 12 round trip. I'm going to ask him to pick me up a small one at Harbor Freight next time he makes a trip there to pay homage to the tool god. He's usually there at least once a week. I'll they know him on a first name basis!
I'm going to see if I can talk him out of that electric pole saw he has, that thing is wicked! It cut right through those 3" poles like hot butter.
It would have taken me hours with a hand saw..
Besides, I could use one for my wind chimes hobby.