I have follow up question on db signal meters?
Here is a link to shooping for instensity meters. They range from $10-40 to 50 bucks plus. Are they in-line meters?
www.google.com
So my question is, are any of the ones say around $20 or so worth anything?
Any recommendations as we pursue tweaking and peaking our dish. I think we found all the satellites we are going to get, just need to get max signals.
Thanks
jjs10foot
yes those go inline, between lnb and receiver.
If you are considering it in order to fine tune your setup, don't waste your money, it would be useless at that.
However, I have one, it was one of the first accessories I bought, and I love it! But it's important to understand what it does and what it does not do.
It's the simple one, with analog display and just the round knob. It has a backlight - that tells you instantly if the LNB is powered or not.
I call it a "signal finder" rather than "signal meter"
Basicaly it reacts to signal strength, the amount of energy that's at RF level coming from the LNB. I'm not sure if it accurately filters out the out-of-band frequencies but at least it does not react to DC or 22 kHz, so that's good.
However it does not demodulate anything, it's dumb. Think of it like a basic photo cell will tell you mow much light it receives, but it won't take a photo
. Well, this "meter" won't give you signal quality, it won't differentiate between FTA satellites, and Dish, DirecTV, or even thermal RF noise coming from obstacles like trees and hills. Just wave your hand in front of the feed and the thing will give you a high pitch like it just found the greatest satellite
However as a basic satellite finder, it's very useful. you can aim a dish roughly until you hear the higher pitch. You'll never be sure of what satellite you're pointing at, but you'll know there's something there. At that point you just do a blind scan and let the receiver break the good or bad news
Just don't think of it as a meter or measuring tool.