General Location: Nashville, TN
Hardware:
Dish 500 with DishPro TwinLNB (actually, I have TWO of these combos)
Dish 301 receiver(s)
Hello! I just recently built a house back in a clearing in the woods (completely surrounded by trees) and am NOT having much luck trying to "sight" my dish. I've read just about every newsgroup posting, tip, trick, etc., and still have no success. And for the record, I've tried both LNBs (both previously worked fine) just to make sure that I don't have bad hardware. I can practically hold the dish in my hands (without the mast!) and lock in on the 110 bird, but can't get a sniff of 119. It appears to me (at least with my handy compass and protractor) that I *do* have enough tree clearing around the house to be able to point from one end of the yard (opposite where the birds are in the sky) and be aiming slightly above the trees. Here are my questions:
1) For "sighting" purposes, I'm connecting to the 119 port on the DP Twin LNB, and selecting 119 (Transponder 11 or 13 -- although I've tried "1" also) on the "Point Dish" menu. Should I simply be able to rotate the dish (assuming my mast is plumb all around and skew/elevation is set correctly) and see a signal from the 119 bird? Is it that simple?
2) If the answer to #1 is "YES -- It's that simple", then I must not be high enough to clear the trees (although I can easily see 110 from 4 ft. above ground level). Would it be crazy to try and mount my dish on a telescopic antenna mast (i.e. Channel Master 30' telescopic antenna mast)? Most newsgroup postings say this is one of the sturdiest masts out there, but wasn't sure if it would work for a Dish 500 (I could certainly use guy wires to minimize the wind sway). Obviously, I'd have to have the ability to rotate the mast from the ground (assuming that skew and elevation could be set correctly before mounting) to find the birds. I would try the roof of the house, but it's much closer to the tree line (and from the edge of the yard where I'm considering the in-ground tower/mast, it's actually on a 5-ft. raised bank, which should help even more).
ANY SUGGESTIONS ON WHAT I'M ATTEMPTING TO DO? Is there some other trick for finding the 119 bird that I haven't tried?
Any help would be greatly appreciated. I *KNOW* my wife would appreciate it -- I've been fooling with this goofy thing for several weeks now!!
Thanks!
KT
Hardware:
Dish 500 with DishPro TwinLNB (actually, I have TWO of these combos)
Dish 301 receiver(s)
Hello! I just recently built a house back in a clearing in the woods (completely surrounded by trees) and am NOT having much luck trying to "sight" my dish. I've read just about every newsgroup posting, tip, trick, etc., and still have no success. And for the record, I've tried both LNBs (both previously worked fine) just to make sure that I don't have bad hardware. I can practically hold the dish in my hands (without the mast!) and lock in on the 110 bird, but can't get a sniff of 119. It appears to me (at least with my handy compass and protractor) that I *do* have enough tree clearing around the house to be able to point from one end of the yard (opposite where the birds are in the sky) and be aiming slightly above the trees. Here are my questions:
1) For "sighting" purposes, I'm connecting to the 119 port on the DP Twin LNB, and selecting 119 (Transponder 11 or 13 -- although I've tried "1" also) on the "Point Dish" menu. Should I simply be able to rotate the dish (assuming my mast is plumb all around and skew/elevation is set correctly) and see a signal from the 119 bird? Is it that simple?
2) If the answer to #1 is "YES -- It's that simple", then I must not be high enough to clear the trees (although I can easily see 110 from 4 ft. above ground level). Would it be crazy to try and mount my dish on a telescopic antenna mast (i.e. Channel Master 30' telescopic antenna mast)? Most newsgroup postings say this is one of the sturdiest masts out there, but wasn't sure if it would work for a Dish 500 (I could certainly use guy wires to minimize the wind sway). Obviously, I'd have to have the ability to rotate the mast from the ground (assuming that skew and elevation could be set correctly before mounting) to find the birds. I would try the roof of the house, but it's much closer to the tree line (and from the edge of the yard where I'm considering the in-ground tower/mast, it's actually on a 5-ft. raised bank, which should help even more).
ANY SUGGESTIONS ON WHAT I'M ATTEMPTING TO DO? Is there some other trick for finding the 119 bird that I haven't tried?
Any help would be greatly appreciated. I *KNOW* my wife would appreciate it -- I've been fooling with this goofy thing for several weeks now!!
Thanks!
KT