Something else about the 12 footers...there's a good chance that they are on az/el mounts, and would be a lot of work to adapt to motorize to track the arc.
Yea, but who needs a fixed dish that size?The large one with the ribs on the back looks like a Channel Master. Nice!
I'd be tempted to forget about the 8 footer and go for the big boys ...
Best to learn how to walk before running.I just don't want to set him up for failure with too big a mission
The superjack is the actuator. You put a v box in the coax between the receiver and LNB(F) or switches. The receiver 'talks' to the v box using diseqc commands. The v box then will then send 24-36v to the actuator (on separate wiring) to move the dish. Course, you have to program the v box where to stop.I'm not sure about "actuator" and "linear actuator" and the relationship they have to the motor control box (V-box)
As for finding a 10 ft. mesh dish. . . I see unused mesh dishes all over the place--I've been scoping them out for a long time, but to my untrained eye they all look the same--like the one on the hill that's 7.5-8 ft. If I decide to go that route, I guess I'll just have to start knocking on a lot of doors to find out what size they are. But they all look the same to me. Thanks again for your help.
We have people here who can often estimate dish size, identify desirable motors, and things like ortho feeds.Show us pictures:
- distant shot front & back
- pix of the mount, both sides
- pix of motor to see condition
- pix of scalar/feedhorn/LNB from various angles
The more we know, the better advice you get.