Exactly adjust the dish by yourself
Modern DTH satellites transmit high power signals so that they can be received with small 60cm dishes or even with flat dishes and if there are reception problems, they normally don‘t occur because of the small dish size but because of poor alignment. In the old analogue days the mounting systems didn‘t have to be very precise, but nowadays it‘s necessary to correctly adjust the dish up to one degree.
The antenna mount
sometimes makes it
very hard to adjust
the dish correctly
To easily adjust the elevation of your dish, most manufacturers add a scale to the mounting,
but very often these scales are too small, unreadable or you simply can‘t see them during the adjustment process. The situation becomes even worse when you try to adjust the azimuth angle, there‘s no scale available and you have to move the dish until you finally find the correct signal.Of course you can only move the dish when the brackets are open and if the manufacturer used just one pair of brackets
instead of two, the dish‘s elevation angle will change while fix ating the brackets again.Furthermore you‘ll soon experience, that the dish not only changes its elevation angle, but it will also start to slide down the mounting pole. In this situation it‘s hardly possible to adjust the dish by yourself, especially if you‘re trying to mount it on a roof and the receiver is far away in your living room.
If you want to try it anyway, here are a few clues that will help you to successfully complete
your work
First step:
Good preparation
is half the job
* You should only buy an antenna with a clearly visible elevation scale. Also check that the dish uses two pairs of mounting brackets.
* Work together and install a communication
line between the person operating the receiver and the other one installing the dish.
* Find the South direction (in Southern hemisphere you would look for the North) by
Just with a simple digital receiver it‘s not very easy to correctly adjust a satellite antenna. First you have to slowly move the dish to the correct position and if the signal is finally available,
as soon as bad weather conditions appear, you may lose the picture, or at least it could be distorted because of the not very accurate mountings most manufacturers use. Fortunately there are a few clues how to correctly adjust the dish with minimal effort, which I will tell you in this article.using a compass, GPS device or construction plans of your house or just wait until noon, at that time the sun will be directly in your south direction (North in Southern hemisphere).
* Find your local geographic data by using software like ****** Earth, or if available a GPS device. You can also use the data of a bigger city nearby, adding or reducing as a rule of thumb 1° for every 100km that you are away from that place.
* Use these coordinates to calculate your local elevation by using tools like www.TELE-satellite.com/fxpos.exe and setup that value on the elevation scale of your dish.
Second step:
Find the signal
by slowly moving
your antenna
Now take care, that the mounting pole is installed absolutely perpendicular and if its position is ok, install your dish on the mounting
pole and adjust it at firsttothesouth(north). Now you need an extra pair of brackets
and install it under the antenna mounting, so that the dish can‘t slide down the mounting pole. Of course you can remove them after the installation is complete. The second person should now start the receiver and tune to a valid channel on the desired satellite. Slowly move the dish to the east or west until you‘ve reached the position, which FXPOS calculated
Exactly adjust your
satellite dish by yourself!
Heinz Koppitz
Dish Installation
Poorly readable
elevation scale
One pair and two pairs of
mounting brackets
for your azimuth angle. Now the receiver should already show a signal, if it does not, just move the dish a little bit further. If you can‘t find avalid signal,you relevation angle is probably not correctly adjusted, so move the dish back to the south, adjust the elevation by 1,2 or even 3 degree and repeat the whole procedure again until you finally get a signal.
Third step:
Fine tuning for your dish
to optimize the
reception results
The last step to perfect signal reception is the fine tuning of your antenna.It‘s necessaryto perform it very accurately so that your dish will also work in bad weather conditions and show you all available transponders.
* Nearly every digital receiver shows a quality indicator bar or even a numeric value (normally by pressing the info button), so it‘s again up to your aid to tell you these values while you fine tune the antenna.
* If no one’s available to help you can also use one of those cheap satellite seekers, which you have to install between your antenna and the receiver by using F plugs, so that it gets power from your receiver. Its sensitivity is not as high as the one of a professional gauge, but it‘s ok to determine the best position for an already found satellite.
* If you want to change your dishes adjustment
frequently to different satellites, you should consider buying a DiSEqC motor. These motors work very accurately in 1/10° steps and you can easily receive all available satellites with just one single LNB. Furthermore they always use two pairs of mounting brackets.
An extra pair of mounting brackets to stabilize the dish while adjusting it
Sat Seeker
Expert opinion
Unfortunately only very few manufacturers
support the adjustment of their dishes with simple tools. If only the manufacturers wanted, they could offer much easier mounting systems. An antenna mounting that comes very close to our ideas, is the dish from Max Communication presented in this issue of TELE-satellite.
Modern DTH satellites transmit high power signals so that they can be received with small 60cm dishes or even with flat dishes and if there are reception problems, they normally don‘t occur because of the small dish size but because of poor alignment. In the old analogue days the mounting systems didn‘t have to be very precise, but nowadays it‘s necessary to correctly adjust the dish up to one degree.
The antenna mount
sometimes makes it
very hard to adjust
the dish correctly
To easily adjust the elevation of your dish, most manufacturers add a scale to the mounting,
but very often these scales are too small, unreadable or you simply can‘t see them during the adjustment process. The situation becomes even worse when you try to adjust the azimuth angle, there‘s no scale available and you have to move the dish until you finally find the correct signal.Of course you can only move the dish when the brackets are open and if the manufacturer used just one pair of brackets
instead of two, the dish‘s elevation angle will change while fix ating the brackets again.Furthermore you‘ll soon experience, that the dish not only changes its elevation angle, but it will also start to slide down the mounting pole. In this situation it‘s hardly possible to adjust the dish by yourself, especially if you‘re trying to mount it on a roof and the receiver is far away in your living room.
If you want to try it anyway, here are a few clues that will help you to successfully complete
your work
First step:
Good preparation
is half the job
* You should only buy an antenna with a clearly visible elevation scale. Also check that the dish uses two pairs of mounting brackets.
* Work together and install a communication
line between the person operating the receiver and the other one installing the dish.
* Find the South direction (in Southern hemisphere you would look for the North) by
Just with a simple digital receiver it‘s not very easy to correctly adjust a satellite antenna. First you have to slowly move the dish to the correct position and if the signal is finally available,
as soon as bad weather conditions appear, you may lose the picture, or at least it could be distorted because of the not very accurate mountings most manufacturers use. Fortunately there are a few clues how to correctly adjust the dish with minimal effort, which I will tell you in this article.using a compass, GPS device or construction plans of your house or just wait until noon, at that time the sun will be directly in your south direction (North in Southern hemisphere).
* Find your local geographic data by using software like ****** Earth, or if available a GPS device. You can also use the data of a bigger city nearby, adding or reducing as a rule of thumb 1° for every 100km that you are away from that place.
* Use these coordinates to calculate your local elevation by using tools like www.TELE-satellite.com/fxpos.exe and setup that value on the elevation scale of your dish.
Second step:
Find the signal
by slowly moving
your antenna
Now take care, that the mounting pole is installed absolutely perpendicular and if its position is ok, install your dish on the mounting
pole and adjust it at firsttothesouth(north). Now you need an extra pair of brackets
and install it under the antenna mounting, so that the dish can‘t slide down the mounting pole. Of course you can remove them after the installation is complete. The second person should now start the receiver and tune to a valid channel on the desired satellite. Slowly move the dish to the east or west until you‘ve reached the position, which FXPOS calculated
Exactly adjust your
satellite dish by yourself!
Heinz Koppitz
Dish Installation
Poorly readable
elevation scale
One pair and two pairs of
mounting brackets
for your azimuth angle. Now the receiver should already show a signal, if it does not, just move the dish a little bit further. If you can‘t find avalid signal,you relevation angle is probably not correctly adjusted, so move the dish back to the south, adjust the elevation by 1,2 or even 3 degree and repeat the whole procedure again until you finally get a signal.
Third step:
Fine tuning for your dish
to optimize the
reception results
The last step to perfect signal reception is the fine tuning of your antenna.It‘s necessaryto perform it very accurately so that your dish will also work in bad weather conditions and show you all available transponders.
* Nearly every digital receiver shows a quality indicator bar or even a numeric value (normally by pressing the info button), so it‘s again up to your aid to tell you these values while you fine tune the antenna.
* If no one’s available to help you can also use one of those cheap satellite seekers, which you have to install between your antenna and the receiver by using F plugs, so that it gets power from your receiver. Its sensitivity is not as high as the one of a professional gauge, but it‘s ok to determine the best position for an already found satellite.
* If you want to change your dishes adjustment
frequently to different satellites, you should consider buying a DiSEqC motor. These motors work very accurately in 1/10° steps and you can easily receive all available satellites with just one single LNB. Furthermore they always use two pairs of mounting brackets.
An extra pair of mounting brackets to stabilize the dish while adjusting it
Sat Seeker
Expert opinion
Unfortunately only very few manufacturers
support the adjustment of their dishes with simple tools. If only the manufacturers wanted, they could offer much easier mounting systems. An antenna mounting that comes very close to our ideas, is the dish from Max Communication presented in this issue of TELE-satellite.
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