I just upgraded the dish on my Bell 9242 system from a Dish 500 dish with a Dish Pro Plus LNB to a 40" Channel Master 84E dish with the same type LNB to get better gain since I am on the edge of the 82 deg W footprint (Was getting just 50 - 60% signal on the 82 deg W transponders & 80-95% on the 91 deg W transponders with my Dish 500)
I know though that soon 91 deg will have a footprint which matches 82 deg W.
Figured a dish twice the size should get me back up to 90-100% on all transponders and give me less rain fade.
After poking around for a while I briefly had 91W with 100% signal and 82W with 75% while I was peaking the dish but while adjusting the skew I lost everything. Seems though that a couple years ago Bell made it so that the receivers don't show any signal on their meters unless you have at least 50% strength and the meter doesn't show anything unless you been locked on for at least 10 seconds. Makes the built in meter almost worthless for finding and peaking on two sats. You really need a good professional signal meter for proper peaking of a system viewing two orbital slots.
The good meters I've seen for peaking two birds are $500. I hate to spend that kind of money for a dish that's not moving anytime soon.
After briefly having the sats but not quite peaked I fiddled for several hours then gave up. I even tried a cheap SF-95 satellite meter but I wasn't getting anything. Not sure if its only good for peaking on single orbital slot systems or if mine is broken?
If anyone could recommend a good installer in Chicago with the right satellite finder tools I'd appreciate it. Should take no time for a professional with the right tools to peak my new dish. I'm busy and I hate too waste too much time trying to peak without the right tools.
Any suggestions on a local expert I can hire or how I can efficiently and affordably get repeaked and up an running are appreciated!
I know though that soon 91 deg will have a footprint which matches 82 deg W.
Figured a dish twice the size should get me back up to 90-100% on all transponders and give me less rain fade.
After poking around for a while I briefly had 91W with 100% signal and 82W with 75% while I was peaking the dish but while adjusting the skew I lost everything. Seems though that a couple years ago Bell made it so that the receivers don't show any signal on their meters unless you have at least 50% strength and the meter doesn't show anything unless you been locked on for at least 10 seconds. Makes the built in meter almost worthless for finding and peaking on two sats. You really need a good professional signal meter for proper peaking of a system viewing two orbital slots.
The good meters I've seen for peaking two birds are $500. I hate to spend that kind of money for a dish that's not moving anytime soon.
After briefly having the sats but not quite peaked I fiddled for several hours then gave up. I even tried a cheap SF-95 satellite meter but I wasn't getting anything. Not sure if its only good for peaking on single orbital slot systems or if mine is broken?
If anyone could recommend a good installer in Chicago with the right satellite finder tools I'd appreciate it. Should take no time for a professional with the right tools to peak my new dish. I'm busy and I hate too waste too much time trying to peak without the right tools.
Any suggestions on a local expert I can hire or how I can efficiently and affordably get repeaked and up an running are appreciated!