It doesn't take much...
Only after laying them on a flat wooden floor I could see that the reflectors were a quarter inch twisted. That quarter inch was enough to throw more than half of the gathered signal somewhere else- NOT AT THE LNB- effectively halving the dish.
Unfortunately, if your dish reflector is a composite-fiberglass, it's trash.
If it's a metal reflector, it can be improved but not fixed.
Thankfully you got some more dishes you can try now!
Both of my metal dishes that were bent (Geosatpro 90cm and 24" Dish Network wing dish, both round) looked like they were perfect.It is not visibly bent. It looks the same as it did before. I barely pulled on it when I did that, and before I removed it, I was aimed at 97W. I marked the position on the bracket and mast so I could line it back up. I put it back up there in the exact same location and the Q for a strong TP on 97W went from 10-15 to 65-70. Before, I couldn't get anything at all (Q=0) on 123W and afterwards I found it quickly. Visibly, nothing on the dish looks bent, dented, or anything like that. I did just get another Hughesnet dish of the same size, but has a different feedhorn. Would it work if I just swapped the brackets and feedhorns on the two dishes?
Only after laying them on a flat wooden floor I could see that the reflectors were a quarter inch twisted. That quarter inch was enough to throw more than half of the gathered signal somewhere else- NOT AT THE LNB- effectively halving the dish.
Unfortunately, if your dish reflector is a composite-fiberglass, it's trash.
If it's a metal reflector, it can be improved but not fixed.
Thankfully you got some more dishes you can try now!