Hey guys, I've been lurking here for a while now, I figured that it was time to join up and say hello!
I've been tinkering with FTA for a couple years, ku and Cband stuff. I really appreciate the advice and the good work you guys do.
I've come across something of an odd duck. It's an old Winegard 6' aluminum mesh dish. When I picked it up, it even had an old hand crank mover on it.
Anyway, I got it mounted and plumbed up, put a linear actuator on it that I control with a Diseqc box, and I swapped out the old lnb with a new Titanium Sat C/KU setup.
When I fit the new lnb, I tried to keep the positioning the same as the one I removed.
After several hours of blindscanning on my Linkbox 8000hd, I was able to find a few transponders, but no channels.
I then saw a post here where someone made a scalar from an old aluminum worklight reflector. I duplicated the design and was immediately able to pick up the Lesea feeds with 98s and 66q.
At this point I decided to calculate my f/d and see if my lnb placement was off.
My dish is 72" in diameter.
If I run a straightedge across it, it measures 16" deep from the center.
So, if I did this right, F= (72 ×72) / (16 × 16) or 20.25"
If F/d is really F / d or 20.25/72 I get .28125, did I do that correctly?
When I measured my current lnb placement, it was at 25" from the center of the dish.
I've tried moving the lnb closer to the center and I lost all channels. If I remove the worklight scalar, I lose all channels.
I've played with a conical and a flat scalar, but was not able to lock anything. As soon as I put the worklight scalar back on, boom! There's Lesea again.
I was really hoping to catch the Ion channels with this setup, is a 6' dish just too small?
Thanks guys,
Shane
I've been tinkering with FTA for a couple years, ku and Cband stuff. I really appreciate the advice and the good work you guys do.
I've come across something of an odd duck. It's an old Winegard 6' aluminum mesh dish. When I picked it up, it even had an old hand crank mover on it.
Anyway, I got it mounted and plumbed up, put a linear actuator on it that I control with a Diseqc box, and I swapped out the old lnb with a new Titanium Sat C/KU setup.
When I fit the new lnb, I tried to keep the positioning the same as the one I removed.
After several hours of blindscanning on my Linkbox 8000hd, I was able to find a few transponders, but no channels.
I then saw a post here where someone made a scalar from an old aluminum worklight reflector. I duplicated the design and was immediately able to pick up the Lesea feeds with 98s and 66q.
At this point I decided to calculate my f/d and see if my lnb placement was off.
My dish is 72" in diameter.
If I run a straightedge across it, it measures 16" deep from the center.
So, if I did this right, F= (72 ×72) / (16 × 16) or 20.25"
If F/d is really F / d or 20.25/72 I get .28125, did I do that correctly?
When I measured my current lnb placement, it was at 25" from the center of the dish.
I've tried moving the lnb closer to the center and I lost all channels. If I remove the worklight scalar, I lose all channels.
I've played with a conical and a flat scalar, but was not able to lock anything. As soon as I put the worklight scalar back on, boom! There's Lesea again.
I was really hoping to catch the Ion channels with this setup, is a 6' dish just too small?
Thanks guys,
Shane