Hello All,
I have been watching footy on 8 West I have noticed the signal starts to drop I then lose the picture. Can anyone confirm whether this bird is inclined?
Thanks for your help.
Hello All,
I have been watching footy on 8 West I have noticed the signal starts to drop I then lose the picture. Can anyone confirm whether this bird is inclined?
Thanks for your help.
Telecom 2D is inclined at 7.8w.
If the feed is between 11459 - 11694 then its on 2d and inclined.
Check here for 2d freqs:
http://www.lyngsat.com/tele2d.html
and here for current inclination:
http://www.lyngsat.com/tracker/tele2d.html
that the first time i've noticed that it was inclined, as i never seem to have a problem with the satellite
with inclined orbit dish size is not the only factor ordinary polar mounts will not track these
Last edited by satwyn; 25-09-2008 at 07:20 PM.
Thanks everybody for your replies - I have a 1.2 Channel Master using
36v 1224 Supermount.
Inclined - does this mean if the signal drops I just need to move and raise the dish slightly to bring in the signal?
Many thanks.
Yes and No.
Yes it is just a case of lowering or raising your dish in line with current inclination found here:
http://www.lyngsat.com/tracker/tele2d.html
But NO you shouldn't as it will completely mess up your arc unless you put it back exactly where it was before to get the dish back on the arc.
The best thing you can do for an inclined satellite is:
- Have a dedicated dish for that satellite only.This means you can move it up and down whenever you want.
- Get a dual-axis special mount that can deal with azimuth and elevation tracking.These are quite rare, but I do remember seeing them online.
Thanks for your advice
Murco,
Your Jaeger 1224 motor and mount is purpose built to allow dual axis inclined orbit tracking. All you need to do is to get the elevation kit which updates the Jaeger for dual axis inclined orbit tracking.
The items you need are:
a) An 8" optical actuator
b) Superjack EZ2000 positioner
c) The stock item fitting brackets to upgrade to dual axis inclined orbit elevation
d) The correct length of control cable for the 8" oprical actuator.
The Superjack EZ2000 positioner has a display counter that will let you know how much you have altered the elevation and that will allow you to always get back to your correct arc.
You should be able to get the lot for less than £100 and you are fixed. There is no need for any fancy malarky bollix stuff, this does the job perfect and is rock steady on a big dish.
Rgds
Last edited by moonbase; 26-09-2008 at 06:03 PM. Reason: .
blimey - how do you know all this? AND what a load of hassle it sounds!! i'd rather miss the game
LOL!
but RESPECT!!!
or get an irte omnisat motor, which does horizontal and vertical movements
ManikM,
I know it because it is in my interest to know it and it takes about 45 minutes to set up. There is no hassle in setting this type of tracking up and it is the perfect solution for inclined orbit tracking outside of the commercial domain.
One commercial option would be to use an RC2000C dual axis tracking controller that has predefined algorithms stored in memory that "autojog" the dish to keep a constant lock on the satellite without any intervention from the end user. These cost around £1800 GBP but can be picked up 2nd user for approx £700. They will auto track up to 20 inclined orbit satellites and are very good even though they are expensive for a "home enthusiast".
Rgds
omnisat works fine with my clarke tech ct5000 combo
think thats a digital receiver and hd
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