It's a slow night, so I thought I would share my newest toy at my satellite station.
This is my 7.5-foot Perfect prime focus dish which I retrieved from rural Nova Scotia in 2012. I've never installed it until now. For the last few days, I've been manually pushing it between 139W through 87W to check out the arc and see that it functions as it should. It's working very well and receives almost all transponders from these satellites with good C/N levels even though it's only 7.5 feet. I think the Titanium C1-PLL LNBF is an important part of it working well. You will notice the post is a little unconventional but I'm satisfied the installation is very stable and will withstand the winter weather at this location. It's view is actually from about 150W through 82W but there are no satellites west of 139W and east of 87W to the start of the forest trees at about 75W.
I installed the unpowered Von Wiese jack that came with the dish only to hold the dish fixed during testing so I could manually change the azimuth. Now, it would be nice to move forward and actually try using the Von Wiese to push the dish. For this, I need to source 100+ feet of power/pulse cable plus a mover like the VBox. I'm not sure where I would source these from.
In the meantime, it is thrilling to experience C-band with more than a 4-foot dish as I've done over the past 5 years. When I see the powerful transponders on satellites at 105W and 97W, for example, I understand why I was able to receive them even on a small 4-foot offset.



View to due south from the dish's point of view:

This is my 7.5-foot Perfect prime focus dish which I retrieved from rural Nova Scotia in 2012. I've never installed it until now. For the last few days, I've been manually pushing it between 139W through 87W to check out the arc and see that it functions as it should. It's working very well and receives almost all transponders from these satellites with good C/N levels even though it's only 7.5 feet. I think the Titanium C1-PLL LNBF is an important part of it working well. You will notice the post is a little unconventional but I'm satisfied the installation is very stable and will withstand the winter weather at this location. It's view is actually from about 150W through 82W but there are no satellites west of 139W and east of 87W to the start of the forest trees at about 75W.
I installed the unpowered Von Wiese jack that came with the dish only to hold the dish fixed during testing so I could manually change the azimuth. Now, it would be nice to move forward and actually try using the Von Wiese to push the dish. For this, I need to source 100+ feet of power/pulse cable plus a mover like the VBox. I'm not sure where I would source these from.
In the meantime, it is thrilling to experience C-band with more than a 4-foot dish as I've done over the past 5 years. When I see the powerful transponders on satellites at 105W and 97W, for example, I understand why I was able to receive them even on a small 4-foot offset.



View to due south from the dish's point of view:
