Sattelite advice
#1
Posted 13 October 2008 - 10:32 AM
#2
Posted 13 October 2008 - 10:40 AM
Why do you think you have the correct one, if you can't find the channels on it you are expecting.
It sounds to me like you found something like "Astra 1" or "Hotbird", rather than (from memory), "Astra 2" which is where I think BBC & ITV channels are.
Alan
#3
Posted 13 October 2008 - 10:46 AM
Paul
#4
Posted 13 October 2008 - 10:58 AM
T.A, on Oct 13 2008, 11:32 AM, said:
We found that if we attached the dish to the boat itself the signal failed (something to do with static possibly), yet since we have attached it to a pole we don't have a problem. We have tuned into Astra 28 and can pick up some Astra 19 aswell. I believe our signal is around 76 and the other figure is around 72.
Perhaps try mounting the dish away from the structure of the boat!
#5
Posted 13 October 2008 - 11:03 AM
T.A, on Oct 13 2008, 11:32 AM, said:
Yes, you needed to swing the satellite dish about 8 or 9 degrees towards the south (ie: towards the right, looking from the back of the dish) and you would have picked up all the English stations. You were on the wrong Astra satellite - we all do it sometimes when setting up!!!
Chris
This post has been edited by chris w: 13 October 2008 - 11:03 AM
#6
Posted 13 October 2008 - 11:22 AM
#7
Posted 13 October 2008 - 11:24 AM
#8
Posted 13 October 2008 - 11:41 AM
NB Alnwick, on Oct 13 2008, 12:24 PM, said:
Ah well, Graham, you need to put a spring on your satellite dish
To the OP: wrong satellite but easily done. The score was 2-0 by the way.
#9
Posted 13 October 2008 - 11:41 AM
T.A, on Oct 13 2008, 12:22 PM, said:
If you do not have a clear line of sight between your dish and the satellite you will not get a good signal or no signal at all. What size dish is the maxview and where on the boat are you mounting it and what method are you using to locate the satellite e.g. sat finder.
#10
Posted 13 October 2008 - 01:30 PM
Dominic M, on Oct 13 2008, 12:41 PM, said:
To the OP: wrong satellite but easily done. The score was 2-0 by the way.
It seems you could not find the satellite either I heard the score was 5-1
If you do not have a clear line of sight between your dish and the satellite you will not get a good signal or no signal at all. What size dish is the maxview and where on the boat are you mounting it and what method are you using to locate the satellite e.g. sat finder.
I think the size of dish is 400mm I mounted it on the roof with a suction pad device. Since the satellite is low it must be really difficult to get a clear line of sight?
This post has been edited by T.A: 13 October 2008 - 01:32 PM
#11
Posted 13 October 2008 - 02:05 PM
T.A, on Oct 13 2008, 12:22 PM, said:
You definitely need a clear line of sight HOWEVER, that clear line is not directly straight out from the dish. Mini satellite dishes are a cleverly shaped paraboloid so that, when it is vertical, the beam is actually pointing about 20 degrees up. That direction has to be a clear line of sight.
Chris
#12
Posted 13 October 2008 - 03:25 PM
T.A, on Oct 13 2008, 02:30 PM, said:
It seems you could not find the satellite either I heard the score was 5-1
How do you know he wasn't hoping to watch the Wales Liechtenstein match?
Edited to say: Sorry, "he" is of course you. Therefore, how was I to know you didn't want to watch the Wales Liechtenstein match? I was doing my bit for our inclusive society
This post has been edited by Dominic M: 13 October 2008 - 03:32 PM
#13
Posted 13 October 2008 - 03:55 PM
GSer, on Oct 13 2008, 11:46 AM, said:
Paul
If you're getting sky from 19.2e then you must be pretty exclusive, sky hasn't broadcast from there since they switched off the analogue signals and moved to digital on 28.2e...
("sky" and "satellite" are two completely different things and should not be confused!!! sky rents space on the astra2 satellites, and do not own any of their own satellites and have not done so since they sold off the two BSB Marcopolo satellites...
Anyway, for UK TV channels, you need to point the dish towards the Astra 2 cluster at 28.2 degrees East of South, Google Earth can help with this, find your location, take a screenshot, print it off, then using a compass or protractor mark out the general direction of 28e, sit it next to your dish to aid the lining up of the dish, then line up your dish in this direction, tweak it a few times until you get the best signal strength. Then, and this really does help, you need to set the skew of the LNB (the bit on the end of the arm on the dish). To do this, looking from the front of the dish, move it until the cable is at 6 O'Clock, then gradually twist it Clockwise until the Signal Quality is at it's peak (70-90% is best, 100% is impossible). And there you go, TV from the heavens!!!
Just a note for those with Free-To-Air receivers, at the moment, Channel5, sky Three and some other channels are not available to these boxes, C5 should hopefully be giving their sky contract the boot soon so will appear, but at the moment the only way to receive it is via Analogue terrestrial (yeah, right!!!), Freeview, or with a sky "Pay once, watch forever" Free-to-View card and sky receiver. Also, there are Freesat boxes available which have the channels already programmed in and sorted to save tuning in and updating your box, just avoid Currys as they insist that they install it for you, for an excessive price, even if you already have a dish and cable set up...
If you feel like venturing out into the real world of satellite TV, pop over to one of my other favourite forums, www.satellites.co.uk, who have a lot of experience when it comes to dish fiddling, and were only recently 10 years old, and for those who like their footy, you'll find how to get premiership matches for less than sky charges, and it's completely legal!!!
#14
Posted 14 October 2008 - 07:59 AM
twocvbloke, on Oct 13 2008, 04:55 PM, said:
Just goes to show I know nothing, just like the missus says
Paul
#15
Posted 14 October 2008 - 12:43 PM
It was about £13 and would be worth it I think if it saved you an hour of head scratching and screaming back and forth to the Mrs.
If its useless Maplins do some sort of money back thing.
#16
Posted 14 October 2008 - 12:46 PM
Also the type of dish has an effect, it the dish is oval with the narrow bits at the top and bottom, then this type of dish is meant for any satellite, and if the dish is oval with the narrow bits at the side, this dish is made for sky only.
and the dish does have an offset, its usually 22degrees, if the dish looks as though its vertical, its actually 'listening' 22 degrees up into the sky.
Your reciever box should have a function that tells you the id of the satellite, this will tell you if its the correct one.
My cruiser has a mobile setup, and after a few times its easy to set up, I usually get a signal as soon as I power on, the dish actually points slightly at the ground because of the offset.
#17
Posted 14 October 2008 - 01:30 PM
mrbeats, on Oct 14 2008, 01:43 PM, said:
It was about £13 and would be worth it I think if it saved you an hour of head scratching and screaming back and forth to the Mrs.
If its useless Maplins do some sort of money back thing.
Some satellite boxes (the Maplin one is an example) emit a loud tone when you put it into seek mode. As you orientate the dish, the tone goes high-pitched when you hit on a satellite. The tone is easily audible outside the boat.
Personally. I find the tone method far superior to trying to watch a sat finder dial and twiddle the dish at the same time. Further, the tone method means that one doesn't have to insert anything into the coax and then remove it after the dish is set up.
If you don't have a set top box with a tone then the sat finder is probably the next best thing. Another must is a compass to allow coarse orientation of the dish to begin with. Don't stand too close to the boat when aligning it though!!
Chris
This post has been edited by chris w: 14 October 2008 - 01:32 PM
#18
Posted 14 October 2008 - 01:53 PM
I really struggled to begin with but what I finally realised is that the box has all channels from all satellites preset. When you are first pointing south ish the first satellite you often find is Astra 1 at 19.2 deg E. What is confusing is that you can have the channel on BBC1 and audibly you are getting full strength but no picture. If you change to one of the German channels Das Erste or something you will have a picture. So the audible warning is not telling you about BBC but just the satellite. If you keep moving to the East and adjusting the tilt you will then get to Astra 2 at 28.2 deg E. Now you will get the audible warning again but then the channels that are from Astra 28. It takes a while but once you have the knack it is quite straightforward.
My next experiment is to try to delete all the preset channels and only tune in the Astra 28's so its a bit easier to find what you are looking for.
For info I have bolted the dish with the wall mounting bracket that was supplied, to the front top of the cratch and I dont seem to suffer with boat movement, possibly due to it being centrally fixed.
#19
Posted 14 October 2008 - 01:53 PM
Find it in a search or pm Alan Jones.
#20
Posted 14 October 2008 - 01:55 PM
Yoda, on Oct 14 2008, 02:53 PM, said:
Find it in a search or pm Alan Jones.
Not for winter use though or much of the british year! Its a sundial satellite finder.

Help




















