That got me to thinking, maybe I could use some of this to screen over the mesh that is there. Would this work? If I left the mesh on the dish, with this new screening being the top layer, would the satellite signal now be more affected by this top layer, or would it still be affected by the underlying mesh with the dents and stuff? My dish is 7.5', and I was also wondering if there was a way, or at least an easy way to expand the size of my dish, by making it 8.5' in diameter? It would apparently need to remain round all the way around the parameter. Not sure how to accomplish that tho. Then of course I would need to readjust the feed. Has anyone ever taken on a similar project with good results? Any tips anyone can offer, assuming this project is doable?
Aluminum screen can be very difficult to work with. If you are giving thought to overlaying a mesh panel, how would you attach the screen? It is so flexible and can be distorted so easily, I would think you might actually degrade your signal reception.
If you can currently receive what you wish to receive then there is no reason to worry about hail dents. Having said that, I have not seen your dish, and if it is really bad, then you might not be getting all of the signal that you wish to get.
One time I did overlay mesh on a paraclypse dish with mesh from another dish. The holes of the overlay mesh were much smaller, and I thought it might increase the signal quality on my dish. It had no effect. My ku signal was the same before I overlayed with that newer mesh. However that overlay mesh was much stiffer than window screen. I attached it with thin wire pulling it tight against the existing mesh then twisted the wire to ensure conformance with the original mesh parabola. If you used that method, you would severely distort the screen mesh and might degrade your signal. Not to mention get sore fingers.
About enlarging your dish:
(Here i go again with paraclypse stuff). I have a fourteen foot paraclypse dish. If one looks at paraclypse dish information, it says that they never manufacturered a fourteen foot dish, only a 14.5 dish. This dish looks exactly like a paraclypse dish but instead of having a one piece truss which would measure about seven feet long, it has a six foot truss with a "bolt-on" extension.
The extensions did not change the focal point as I had though they would. When the dish was laying on the ground I measured the dish depth which had increased as a result of the extensions, and then used the correct formula for figuring the new focal point and F/D ratio. When it was adjusted to the newly figured measurements, I received nothing. So I went back to the measurements for the twelve foot dish (ie. the original configuration for diameter and depth), and set the dish accordingly. Bingo signals received, and all is fine. I do think that maybe some ground noise is reduced, but cannot prove it. Lesson I learned is that not all focal points will move by adding length to the struts in odrer to increase that a particular dish.
A quick search of parabolic curves, shows that some parabolas retain a given focal point no matter how long the legs (radius)