For all but a few, the term "due south satellite" is wrong. Most of us are off that exact longitude by a number and fraction of degrees. When I hinally realized that, I discovered why I couldn't hit the satellites at the far east and west. The system I use now is fast and works.
You start out by taking note of how many "clicks" or counts your dish mover has per degree of travel. So you see what it is at 97 and then at 99 - the number of counts in between.
Divide by 2 and you have the number of counts per degree. Then you note your exact longitude. Let's say it's 98.2 west at your house.
So you are .8 degrees (eight tenths) to the east of 99 west. Then you multiply the number of counts per degree times .8.
Then you get the dish at zenith - meaning where it's square with the mount and it's where it should be at due south. I use a big framing square, but different dishes will use different ways to get zenith. Then, once you get it there, in the example I gave, you move the dish west the number of clicks that most closely equals .8 degrees. You move the dish on the pole and you do elevation to get the strongest signal, never using the dish mover. With your meter then you do skew, but except for some few satellites, the best adjustment will be as above stated
You start out by taking note of how many "clicks" or counts your dish mover has per degree of travel. So you see what it is at 97 and then at 99 - the number of counts in between.
Divide by 2 and you have the number of counts per degree. Then you note your exact longitude. Let's say it's 98.2 west at your house.
So you are .8 degrees (eight tenths) to the east of 99 west. Then you multiply the number of counts per degree times .8.
Then you get the dish at zenith - meaning where it's square with the mount and it's where it should be at due south. I use a big framing square, but different dishes will use different ways to get zenith. Then, once you get it there, in the example I gave, you move the dish west the number of clicks that most closely equals .8 degrees. You move the dish on the pole and you do elevation to get the strongest signal, never using the dish mover. With your meter then you do skew, but except for some few satellites, the best adjustment will be as above stated