I moved into a new house and we have a HUGE 12 foot satellight dish in the backyard. My roomate wants to scrap it, i want to use it.
Beautiful, post some pictures. Will work great for C Band FTA. May also be good at Ku.
Where can i go locally and talk to people to learn about these.
I think you're there. I.E. right here. There are some members in the western states also, maybe they'll stop in.(the thread)
Where can i BUY a Free to Air Reciever?
ebay sometimes has some decent used equipment for sale. SatelliteAV is a sponsor of the forum. Link on the top of the pages.
How can i broadcast signals?
Get licensed by the FCC. Either commercial or amateur.
I got a newer, smaller Direct TV satellight, is this better then the 12 foot behemoth in the back yard?
Most DISH or DIRECT dishes perform marginally on Ku FTA. Not at all on C band. Those services use much higher power satellites.
Can i use the 2 dishes to send a signal, bounce it off the moon, and recieve it on the other satellight?
Yes and No. With the proper license you can send a signal to the moon, but you will receive it direct from the moon, not a satellite. Search google for 'amatuer eme'.
I feel like this think has potential, and this is why i came here
Lots of potential.
FTA.
Free Television Appreciation or Free To Air, FTA, is more a hobby, than a source of scheduled programming. You won't get the premium subscription channels you are used to via cable or the satellite providers, but there is a lot that they will get. If you're interested in watching news channels from across the globe, get many of the sub-channels carried on some local tv stations along with some channels aimed at countries to our south and more. Maybe even run across an interesting itinerant feed. Get a HD DVB-S2 receiver, LNBF and mover, and use that BUD (Big Useful Dish).
GEOSATPRO microHD will be released soon. From all indications, it's going to be NICE. US support and warranty alone make it worth the purchase price.
I should add, there is a subscription service for the big dishes still available. Skyvision.com has the lowdown on the packages and the basic 4DTV receiver for it.