Going through some things I still haven't put up since we moved (18 months ago) I came across the book I bought when we got the BUD in 1983. It's titled: The World Of Satellite Televison- Buying, Installing and Maintaining Your Home Earth Station. Home earth station, I haven't heard that term in years. Talk about a trip down memory lane. I have to say it was better and a lot more fun back then.
This what we had, east to west:
Westar 2, 79w
Satcon F4, 83w*-The Playboy Channel
Comstar 3, 87w
Westar 3, 91w*
Comstar 1, 95w
Westar 4, 99w* -PBS
Anik D1, 104w*-CBC (3 time zones), Hockey Night in Canada
Anik B, 109w
Satcom F2 119w
Westar 5, 123w*-WOR, Disney, The Nashville Network[/]
Comstar 4, 127w
Satcom F3R, 134w*[/B]-Nickelodeon, ARTS, PTL, WGN, Movie Channel, WTBS, ESPN, CBN, USA, Showtime E & W, MTV, HBO, CNN & Headline News, Cinamax E & W
Galaxy 1, 134w*
Satcom F1R, 139
Satcom F5, 143w
All of these satellites had feeds but these *were the big boys that had all of the scheduled programing on them. The channel list went on for ever, or so it seemed. F4 had the Playboy channel in the clear, that was something else. I had an MTI dish mover that had a keyboard with all of the satellite names on it and numbers 1 thru 8. When you found the satellite you wanted to store you pressed and held the name and number until it blinked. When you wanted to go to that location you just pressed the name and number. A KLM receiver that had a dail with numbers 1 thru 24 and a big knob that was turned like an old time radio dial and a toggle switch to change polarities. Real scientific.