Dish:
The larger the dish, the stronger
is the signal you could receive, that is, the less intermittent
is the picture. However, the risk of wind disturbance, cost, and
space is proportionally higher. There are two bands of microwave
signal normally used for TV. C band is the older generation; it
requires a huge dish. Ku band is the modern generation, requires
a smaller dish. Many pay TV provide you strong signal by aiming
at a smaller coverage area, such that a smaller fixed position
dish is good enough. For FTA signal, because of broadcaster is
aiming at larger coverage area, so you must use a bigger dish
than those pay TV. You might found that not all stations on the
same satellite are equal. Different transponder on same
satellite can give different signal quality. It is very
depending on how much power that transponder is transmitting and
which coverage area it is pointing to. Satellite is using solar
energy. Power is precious in space.
Depending on how far you are away
from the equator. We recommend KU-Band or C-Band (not Excess
1.8meter) dishes. This is the biggest dish size, which can be
driven by a standard sized rotor. For northern or southern
territory, you might need even bigger dish.
The actual size of the dish is
very often exaggerated. Many dishes are oval shaped. The
dimension given is based on the longest measurement. A round
dish with same size rating of oval shape dish has more area.
Some manufacturers use the curvature as measurement. The size
claim could be boasted by three inches. We found that every 3
inches increment gives significant improvement on performance.
Same size dishes made by different manufacturer can give
observable differences on reception because of the real size is
different. Do not trust the dimension claimed by manufacturer.
You must compare it with your own measurement.
The atmosphere can attenuate
signal. The shortest route of air traveled is directly under the
equator. When you are away from the equator, the signal has to
travel a thicker air. When the satellite is located at the same
longitude with you, it has the shortest air path to your site.
When you point your dish to another satellite, which is further
away from your longitude, your air path is longer. The signal
attenuation is proportional to the air path. Cloud, rain, and
snow can weaken your signal. Wind can cause temporary off
alignment of dish. The dish is never too big. You could receive
the signal well on new installation. Your dish could be off
aligning after some severe weather. This is especially
troublesome on small dish because it is touchy on alignment. Our
experience shows that weather is not a major factor of poor
reception. Dish size plays a more important role.
Rotor:
Besides the dish, you need a good
rotor if you want to receive multiple satellites, unless you
want to install several dishes. Some rotor has a weak motor. You
might have to push it to get moving. USALS compliance is a good
feature to select. Theoretically is supposed to use two motors
to control the dish. One motor rotate horizontally, and the
other vertically. Since the vertical rotation always follows a
fixed geometrical pattern. By using a tilted shaft rotor, we can
eliminate the vertical motor.
How to
install satellite dish
Survey:
All geostationary satellites were
installed at a high altitude of 35,800Km above the equator. On
northern hemisphere, we must point the dish toward south .On
southern hemisphere, it is just the opposite way. At equator,
you have to point the dish upward. At northern or southern
hemisphere, depending how far you are away from the equator, you
have to point the dish at an elevation angle.
Before installation, you have to
find out the longitude and latitude of the installation site.
On the chart
http://www.lyngsat.com/,
find a satellite, which is closest to your longitude as
reference to true south.
Site
selection:
Select a rigid spot which has a
clear vision to south ?
with the height as high as possible. No trees or objects in
front. Most rooftop is using very thin wood; your dish could off
align or even blow away if not properly reinforced. You can use
concrete patio slab as support.
Blowing wind on the dish can give
extreme load on the rotor. Occasionally the rotor can fail to
rotate to the predetermined position. You can switch to a near
by satellite and then come back. It is wise to install your dish
on a wall facing south, because you can use the wall as shelter.
In Northern hemisphere, wind is often blowing from Northwest.
Mounting on rooftop and chimney has nuisance wind disturbance.
Your dish should be mounted as high as possible. Mounting on
ground level is for sure has blockage to reach remote satellite,
because the elevation angle on such satellites could be as low
as near zero degree.
Rigid dish support is important.
Strong wind can cause intermittent signal.
The pole has to be absolutely
vertical. Non-vertical pole can make some satellite off align
while the others are on target. The weight of the dish itself
can also give tolerance.
Tools
required:
Electric drill concrete drill
bits, spanner, and ladder.
Level. Use this tool to align
vertical pole.
Compass. Compass can read roughly
the azimuth. It can give you severe error on placing near a
dish. It is not needed if you know the direction. The final fine
adjustment is done on field strength meter.
Rope. Use it to hoist up the
dish. Use the dish support as hoist. The dish is bulky and
heavy. Pre-assemble the dish before installation. Do not attempt
to carry it on a ladder; you could lose your balance and fall.
Portable TV or professional
satellite finder. Amateur satellite finder cannot identify the
satellite. It won?ft help even you found one of them. Portable
TV is the best and cheapest choice. Most receivers have built in
satellite search feature and field strength meter. It can out
perform professional satellite finder.
Installation:
Make measurement on highest side
of wall. Make sure your disk would not hit the trough. Dill
holes to mount the wall mount. Use a small carbide drill bit to
make one hole first. Then enlarge the hole to the correct size.
Mount the bracket with one screw. Use a chisel to punch a small
hole to guide the drill. Drill the rest of the holes. The holes
have to be precisely drilled. If you do not follow this
procedure, there is a chance of off alignment. You might have
damaged the wall.
There are two adjustments on
elevation angle. One variable adjustment is on the dish. The
other fixed setting is provided on the rotor. If you do not
intend to receive multiple satellites with motorized dish, you
can simplify the installation. Get the latitude of your site and
set it on your rotor and fix it permanently. Install your dish;
with lose elevation and azimuth alignment screws. Attach
receiver and portable TV near the dish.
Alignment:
Before doing alignment, set your
receiver to installation mode. Entry data such as satellite's
name, longitude of satellite, transponder frequency, symbol
rate, your own longitude, and latitude. Make sure the initial
transponder frequency is valid. Otherwise, you can never detect
the signal. On the control program, rotate your rotor to the
azimuth of target satellite, in this example case,Point your
dish approximately to that direction. Rotate your dish up and
down by hand until you observed some signal. If you cannot find
any, rotate the azimuth by half degree and repeat again and
again until you find the satellite. Do a channel search to
verify your Satellite. Select the weakest transponder on a
remote satellite. Peak the signal. Tighten alignment screws. A
strong signal would give more room for off alignment. Do not use
a strong signal to peak. Some satellites are installed on a
higher orbit by 1 Km. The USALS calculated azimuth could be off
by a fraction of a degree. You can deviate the longitude setting
to compensate the error.
Adjust focus by pushing LNB in
and out. Peak the signal again. Switch to another satellite and
check for signal strength, and do channel search again. If your
dish is properly aligned to true south or north, you can switch
satellites and still under precise alignment.
When microwave enter the
atmosphere, it has similar optical property to light passing
through glass. The signal trail could be deflected by a small
angle. This tolerance is noticeable on bad weather, and could
vary day by day.
Behavior of
digital TV:
As we have mentioned, the digital
receiver is in fact a computer. It inherits all the flaws of a
computer. For example, it could crash or hung as a computer
does. It requires time to boot up and tune into a station. If
you are experiencing a freeze, just unplug and reboot. Turning
off and on ,because this computer is not really shutdown.
Occasionally, you are unable to tune to a station, because of
the computer cannot process the signal correctly. You can tune
to another station of the same satellite and go back and forth
to wake it. One advantage of digital TV is it does not give
snowy picture on weak signal as analogue TV does. You can always
get a clear picture even on low signal. But it gives jerk and
squares. On sudden lost of signal. The picture will remain there
as a stable image. The clarity of picture depends on the symbol
rate of the station. In other words, it is the bandwidth of the
channel. To make it easier to understand, say, it is equivalent
for you to have a 56K dial up line or a high-speed internet
line. Some station pay higher price to least a wider bandwidth
channel. It also assigns more data bits on parity check for
errors, so the quality of picture will be good. Some station
will cut cost by leasing a narrow bandwidth channel, so the
picture is blurry.
Digital TV is very different from
analogue TV you get used too. You can hear or see some noise on
weak analogue signal. But on digital signal, you would get
nothing on very weak signal. On barely decodable signal level,
you would get square on you pictures, and intermittent sound.
You cannot use the picture to do alignment as in analogue TV,
because the picture will have delay time to show up, which; by
that time you might have missed that alignment position.
Because of the dish needs
precision alignment before you can receive something. After
installation is complete, you still have to calibrate the dish
and entry channel data. For beginners, it could take you several
weeks of work. It might not worth to do it by yourself. That
could be the reason FTA TV is not as popular as pay TV. However,
the FTA is in fact more interesting if you are not an aggression
movie bug.
Conclusion:
To simplified the installation
instruction. Zero the rotor to center position. Point the dish
to true south. Select a weak signal. Peak the signal strength on
adjusting elevation angle and focus.
Free to air TV programs are very
interesting to watch, because you can see different cultures.
You used to have to travel to that country to watch their TV
programs. With nowadays technology, the whole world is within
your reach. There are many cultural, educational, health, news,
sport, family, and religion channels. It has very few violence
programs. It is suitable for all ages.
One major feature with FTA is
religion programs. All religions are teaching people towards
good. However, not many of them could tell you the real truth.
What is the world? the future looks like? Is there Hell? What
would people be after death? Amount all the religion channels I
watched, tbn on satellites agila-2, PAS-9, Thaicom-3, nns-95
gave me the best answer.
Do-It-Yourself (DIY) Satellite TV
Installation
you live in an apartment or condo
complex and aren't allowed to mount your dish on a wall or roof,
you can mount it inside, or on your balcony, using a stand which
can be ordered from your satellite TV dealer.
After installing your satellite TV dish, run the cable through
your house walls to the rooms where you have your TVs, then
ground your dish, and caulk all the holes you made in your
walls.
Hooking up your satellite TV consists of connecting the cable to
your satellite TV receivers, then connecting your receiver to
the nearest telephone jack. Follow the wiring diagram that came
with your satellite TV equipment package.
Now go to your satellite TV provider's signal strength menu on
your satellite TV receiver to get the correct azimuth
(direction), elevation (angle), and skew (dish rotation) for
your location so your can correctly aim your dish.
Using the signal strength menu, a compass, and a friend to
monitor the signal strength menu on your TV, point your dish in
the right direction and move it slowly up and down until you
obtain maximum signal strength. Be patient as this may take
awhile.
Finally, you'll need to contact your satellite TV provider to
activate your system.