BFG said:It looks like only 1 set of local channel numbers? I guess they only map dwon the HD channels and not the SD locals since it's an HD box?
Interesting anyways and banners and epg look purty
minorthr said:Looks like no matter how much proof you get the guys at the tivocommunity forum don't believe it
http://www.tivocommunity.com/tivo-vb/showthread.php?t=267820
Scott Greczkowski said:Whats funny is they dont even believe their own fearless leader Ken who saw it with his own eyes and reported it.
I guess it just goes to show that no one believes Ken anymore.
charper1 said:I also agree those numbers should be stronger. I am assuming a dish with more surface area should have a higher gain figure that what we have now so I would expect numbers to at least equal what I get now and those look low to me.
What the heck did you just say?? There is no 30ft “staadard militray fixed station dish antennas”, the sizes are all over the place depending on the band and use.lovswr said:You are correct. It is called "realized or apparent gain". The staadard militray fixed station dish is about 30 ft in diameter. that dish alone provids 30dB of "apparent gain" at the feed horn. This is with 100db of attenuation from the geosychronous bird. Having said that, there are other parameters as well. I don't think these litte DBS dishes use waveguide, (fixed or flexible) so we don't have to worry about the 'cut', but the new dish is not even in its rate of curvature nor is ot round. That is to say, if we plotted signals coming from different parts of that dish, we would find dramitic (say up to 9db off the top of my head) differences in apparent gain as meausured at the feed. Those readings may be the norm of the future, but I suspect (& hope) that it was just inexperience in dialing that new monster in.
buist said:Has anyone confirmed whether or not WB20 is included in the HD Locals right now (Pistons HDTV)?
When you say “ the gain of a parabolic antenna is not constant over it's entire surface”, if you mean the feed usually under illuminates the reflector at the outer edges of the dish on most designs, I will agree (trying to be nice) as this helps reduce spillover on a prime focus antenna. Otherwise the “gain” of any given “section” of a parabolic reflector will be the same for any other “section” if they have the same surface area and you are measuring at the reflector focal point.lovswr said:The OE-222 Parabloic antenna, used by the AN/FSC-52 & the AN/FSC-78/39 (in the 39 configuration...the 79 means that you got the big dish which is not quite 100 feet in diameter) are standard DSCS dishes. This is fixed station. Places like Landstuhl, k-16, ECTC, Ft Meade, ROC, LOC, Sunnyvale, Ft. Belvoir & of course the school at Ft. Gordon. You may be referrering/used to the little tactical vans like the 85/93 (army) 86/100 (air force) which use the the quick setup/tear down dishes or heck even MILSTAR.
All of the fixed stations above use non flexible wave guide. They are literally "cut" (actually if you run your hand along the inside it just feels like smooth waves to your fingers) so that they attenuate certain, unwanted fequencies & let the ones that you want ( 7.9Ghz to 8.4Ghz up & 7.2GHz to 7.5GHz down) pass through with the least amount of attenuation.
Yes I'm talking about the approx. 200dB of attenuation for a ground station, bird, ground station trip.
Bob, the gain of a parabolic antenna is not constant over it's entire surface, even at the same frequency. At any certain point, if you could isolate your signal, you will find that as you move away from that point in any direction, your gain will change.