Re: dual lnb
No, only that if you have a duo LNB with the heads separated at 6 degrees, that decides the birds you can combine.
If you use a bracket like on the picture posted by yselim you can get satellites as far apart as your dish and bracket allows, but generally speaking 30 degrees would be the maximum, as the 'virtual size' of the dish has, by then, been reduced by a factor 2.
I think I explained it all in my reply to steddie2.5 in my first post in this thread. There is no general answer to this matter, all depends on where you are and what you want to get. The only 'universal' solution is a motorized dish.
@Conax, the effect you describe is caused by the fact that the extra LNBs are not used in the prime focus of the dish. On bigger dishes the angular positioning is of more importance than on smaller, where sometimes you might get a better response if you are slightly out of focus. However, if you put both LNBs out of the main focus, the angular distance should be independant of the dish size and only depend on the distance between de satellites and you geographical position.
All in all the difficulty of properly aligning a dish is proportional to the power of the number of LNBs mounted on the dish. If you have difficulty pointing a single bird, you should be aware that you will need to double your effort to get 2 birds from the same dish, and quadruple it to get 3.
No, only that if you have a duo LNB with the heads separated at 6 degrees, that decides the birds you can combine.
If you use a bracket like on the picture posted by yselim you can get satellites as far apart as your dish and bracket allows, but generally speaking 30 degrees would be the maximum, as the 'virtual size' of the dish has, by then, been reduced by a factor 2.
I think I explained it all in my reply to steddie2.5 in my first post in this thread. There is no general answer to this matter, all depends on where you are and what you want to get. The only 'universal' solution is a motorized dish.
@Conax, the effect you describe is caused by the fact that the extra LNBs are not used in the prime focus of the dish. On bigger dishes the angular positioning is of more importance than on smaller, where sometimes you might get a better response if you are slightly out of focus. However, if you put both LNBs out of the main focus, the angular distance should be independant of the dish size and only depend on the distance between de satellites and you geographical position.
All in all the difficulty of properly aligning a dish is proportional to the power of the number of LNBs mounted on the dish. If you have difficulty pointing a single bird, you should be aware that you will need to double your effort to get 2 birds from the same dish, and quadruple it to get 3.
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