A friend of mine went dish hunting and came home with an 8' mesh BUD! One of the panels is a bit bent about a foot from the outer edge, but I think it can be bent back into shape. What's really nice about his find is that the dish has a nearly new Chapparal C/Ku feedhorn. Mounted to it is a modern 25 degree C-band LNB and a .6 Eagle Aspen Ku LNB. Polarity is controlled by a polarotor.
He has the dish laying out in his yard, so I took the Pansat 2700 over and figured to play around a bit With the dish propped up on cinder blocks (and NO compass or angle finder with me), I was only able to find Echostar 7. I tried for it since I knew polarity on a circular bird would not make a difference (I'd have to roll the dish around to find proper polarity with a linear bird, and that on top of not knowing my elevation would have taken days). Of course, being a Ku LNB and not a DBS one, I was limited to a few of the lower frequency transponders and half the quality I would normally expect to have. Unfortunately, everything was scrambled on the transponders we picked up.
Tomorrow or the next day I am going over to help him cement the pole and mount the dish I will bring the angle finder with me this time. I kept stressing how important very, very small movements of the dish were, and how a little movement could make the difference between signal and no signal. I found this ESPECIALLY true on a BUD. Aim is EXTREMELY critical, even on 119w which I figured would be a cinch to pick up quickly. It also didn't help that there was no small TV to work outside with, and that it was very late and time was limited.
I'll update in this thread on the progress
He has the dish laying out in his yard, so I took the Pansat 2700 over and figured to play around a bit With the dish propped up on cinder blocks (and NO compass or angle finder with me), I was only able to find Echostar 7. I tried for it since I knew polarity on a circular bird would not make a difference (I'd have to roll the dish around to find proper polarity with a linear bird, and that on top of not knowing my elevation would have taken days). Of course, being a Ku LNB and not a DBS one, I was limited to a few of the lower frequency transponders and half the quality I would normally expect to have. Unfortunately, everything was scrambled on the transponders we picked up.
Tomorrow or the next day I am going over to help him cement the pole and mount the dish I will bring the angle finder with me this time. I kept stressing how important very, very small movements of the dish were, and how a little movement could make the difference between signal and no signal. I found this ESPECIALLY true on a BUD. Aim is EXTREMELY critical, even on 119w which I figured would be a cinch to pick up quickly. It also didn't help that there was no small TV to work outside with, and that it was very late and time was limited.
I'll update in this thread on the progress
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