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#22
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Jim Watt wrote:
Glass passes the signal just fine. It is glass that contains lead or other non passive materials that causes problems. BULL**** ! Normal window glass attenuates satellite signal considerably and it does not contain any significant lead. Histrionics aside, very few installations of window glass are pure glass. There is no such thing as 'pure glass' Do some resarch into the subject its quite interesting and an area that has developed a lot in the last decade. I get little or no attenuation through my circa 1928 living room glass windows. I get little or no signal at all through my circa 1990 bedroom glass windows. That's all the research I need to know. |
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#23
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wrote:
Does anyone know a good indoor Satellite Dish that works in Tehran/Iran? A dish could be hidden in a large plastic bag. Or in a box covered with plastic sheeting. Glass should be okay as a cover; heat-reflecting or tinted glass isn't. But glass is see-through. The 'invisible' antennas often are just a dish in a plastic box - not much special about them. Some are a slightly more efficient dish design to compensate for the smaller size. Alternative antennas are also possible. These may or may not be easy to recognize. And RF lens design could be fairly easy to make and might be inconspicuous because it is so different: http://www.st.northropgrumman.com/ca.../aiaa_1078.pdf I've seen a radio amateur who described making one from styrofoam and aluminum foil. These lenses work only with a single polarization, which is quite a disadvantage. Note that a normal dish (offset dish) can be rotated. When rotating it, the correct angle will change. This will make the dish take an unexpected shape, even pointing in the 'wrong' direction. Which could make it easier to hide it. On the other hand, an operating dish probably leaks out RF. This would demonstrate a dish operating. A TV leaks radiation as well, but a satellite reception and a DVD viewing would be difficult to discern. Good luck, Thomas |
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#24
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On Wed, 30 Aug 2006 10:16:22 +0100, "Andy Luckman (AJL Electronics)"
wrote: In article , Jim Watt wrote: Although some people in the UK report getting dishes to work behind glass, that certainly was not my experience in a fringe area. So how do you explain that we have a minidish / quad running happily behind our shop window? We have the Sky HD and a standard box in use and I would say it was more resilient than the external dish. You are in a fringe area ? -- Jim Watt http://www.gibnet.com |
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#25
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On Wed, 30 Aug 2006 10:34:52 -0700, UCLAN wrote:
Jim Watt wrote: Glass passes the signal just fine. It is glass that contains lead or other non passive materials that causes problems. BULL**** ! Normal window glass attenuates satellite signal considerably and it does not contain any significant lead. Histrionics aside, very few installations of window glass are pure glass. There is no such thing as 'pure glass' Do some resarch into the subject its quite interesting and an area that has developed a lot in the last decade. I get little or no attenuation through my circa 1928 living room glass windows. I get little or no signal at all through my circa 1990 bedroom glass windows. That's all the research I need to know. Your 1928 glass is based on sodium which has been replaced with better materials. It was much more difficult to do things with than later glasses and does not have the same strength. However Jomtien is on the right track with plastics. -- Jim Watt http://www.gibnet.com |
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#26
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In article , Jim Watt
wrote: You are in a fringe area ? Everyone using a minidish is in a fringe area. :-) -- AJL Electronics (G6FGO) Ltd : Satellite and TV aerial systems http://www.classicmicrocars.co.uk : http://www.ajlelectronics.co.uk |
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#27
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On Thu, 31 Aug 2006 08:02:37 +0100, "Andy Luckman (AJL Electronics)"
wrote: In article , Jim Watt wrote: You are in a fringe area ? Everyone using a minidish is in a fringe area. :-) Thats an opinion However there is a lot more signalwhere you are than where I am and where to get all the sigs reliably one needs a 1.8m dish which might not fit behind your showroom window comfortably. I previously mentioned that dishless antenna that looks like a sawn off exhaust pipe, its not worth trying one here though. Have you seen one actually working ? -- Jim Watt http://www.gibnet.com |
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#28
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wrote in message Does anyone know a good indoor Satellite Dish that works in Tehran/Iran? A few friends are suggesting: http://www.maplin.co.uk/searchtempla...LLITE%20D ISH http://www.rflinkusa.com/products_apd1410.html Any suggestions? Thanks. I understand that you are no longer allowed an external dish. Why not take the external dish down and try it behind a window to see what happens. If it works with the window open but not closed then try it with a pexiglass in front. If that still works then change the window glass to pexiglass. It might be safer/cheaper than trying to import a special internal dish. Ian |
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#29
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In article , Jim Watt
wrote: [Dish antenna horn] Have you seen one actually working ? I did order one from our distributers for test. However, they suggested that it may be better to set fire to a bunch of £20 notes. The end result would be similar. :-) -- AJL Electronics (G6FGO) Ltd : Satellite and TV aerial systems http://www.classicmicrocars.co.uk : http://www.ajlelectronics.co.uk |
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#30
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On Thu, 31 Aug 2006 13:22:04 +0100, "Andy Luckman (AJL Electronics)"
wrote: In article , Jim Watt wrote: [Dish antenna horn] Have you seen one actually working ? I did order one from our distributers for test. However, they suggested that it may be better to set fire to a bunch of £20 notes. The end result would be similar. :-) Sadly that was my suspicion, otherwise it might make a wonderful stealth antenna poking through a wall. -- Jim Watt http://www.gibnet.com |
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