More revelations:
Yea! The light finally came on… I realized that the elevation numbers published in all the satellite listings are for pole mounted dishes (single satellite). So I made adjustments to my numbers to account for the fact that I am using a motor driven mount. Voila I now can see more than one satellite with my GTMedia V8 Finder 2.
Please forgive my ignorance but I’ve only been doing this for the past 2-3 weeks. A lot of this stuff is new to me and not as clear as the 10 ft. BAD setup I had back in the 80s. Plus I was 38 years younger then.
However, I still have another problem to solve. I tried using USALS to align the dish with a satellite’s azimuth. Once the alignment was close I fine tuned the dish for the strongest signal using DiSEqC. When I switch back to USALS the dish moves off the satellite and I lose signal. At the moment I’m not sure how to solve that problem as I’d like to use USALS to track the satellites. I believe the problem is due to not having the motor aligned to true south (in my case 188 deg). But I’ve tried to be as accurate as possible.
Just another gripe… I agree with Robbie Strike that there should be some type of standard when it comes to naming the satellites. He just uses the satellite location (like 99.2W) as the name. As an example I’ve noticed that in one listing the satellite at 113 degrees is named “Eutelsat 113 West A” and on another listing it is named “SatMex 6”. The same phenomenon happens with my GtMedia finder meter. Some of the satellite names in it are different from the listings on the internet. I'm hoping a firmware update will fix that.
Maybe someone can point me in the right direction now that I’ve had this revelation.
Yea! The light finally came on… I realized that the elevation numbers published in all the satellite listings are for pole mounted dishes (single satellite). So I made adjustments to my numbers to account for the fact that I am using a motor driven mount. Voila I now can see more than one satellite with my GTMedia V8 Finder 2.
Please forgive my ignorance but I’ve only been doing this for the past 2-3 weeks. A lot of this stuff is new to me and not as clear as the 10 ft. BAD setup I had back in the 80s. Plus I was 38 years younger then.
However, I still have another problem to solve. I tried using USALS to align the dish with a satellite’s azimuth. Once the alignment was close I fine tuned the dish for the strongest signal using DiSEqC. When I switch back to USALS the dish moves off the satellite and I lose signal. At the moment I’m not sure how to solve that problem as I’d like to use USALS to track the satellites. I believe the problem is due to not having the motor aligned to true south (in my case 188 deg). But I’ve tried to be as accurate as possible.
Just another gripe… I agree with Robbie Strike that there should be some type of standard when it comes to naming the satellites. He just uses the satellite location (like 99.2W) as the name. As an example I’ve noticed that in one listing the satellite at 113 degrees is named “Eutelsat 113 West A” and on another listing it is named “SatMex 6”. The same phenomenon happens with my GtMedia finder meter. Some of the satellite names in it are different from the listings on the internet. I'm hoping a firmware update will fix that.
Maybe someone can point me in the right direction now that I’ve had this revelation.