Double check your latitude and the resulting elevation. Stillwater is about 36N, so the elevation would be about 54 degrees. I don't know how or why you are using 48. Your azimuth to 97w should be right at 180 true south, too.
At "zero" skew, the connections are near 7 / 8 o'clock, just like his Pics.What angle or position on the clock does the cable port come out of this LNBF's housing when the LNBF is set to zero degrees of rotation?
Not in this case. I had that exact setup - "Bob Jones University"The skew is suspicious - probably the cable should go straight down, like 6 o'clock.
For the OP.... does your receiver have a "blind scan" feature? It would be interesting to see if you're getting any signal at all right now from any satellite...
Those parts are all you - mechanical alignment - direction Dish is pointing, and how high the dish is pointing.If I got a new one is the problem of Azimuth and Elevation will be solve?
Thanks for the photos! I would say the first important step is to get that dish mounted -somehow- so that it is stable and plumb. If you can't do a pole in the yard, try mounting it to a pallet. When I first got into the hobby, I tried swinging the dish this way and that by propping it up against things, but never got a signal. The problem is, you have several variables that are involved in a good satellite signal. The compass direction (azimuth), the angle that your dish is looking (elevation), and even the amount of twist on an lnb (skew). A good stable mount will allow you to make the necessary small movements to get a signal (it can take several seconds for the signal to register). Even if your mount is temporary -- mount it