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#11
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On 05/06/2012 8:53 AM, Brian Gaff wrote:
I ask this as some people I know who live here darn souf, seem to always get duff reception when the cloud cover is bad. OK I don't know enough about the location etc to comment, but there do seem to be a lot of people in forums etc complaining recently, and i just wondered if in order to make the dishes look smaller the gain has been paired to the bare minimum. Brian their dishes are the right size - assuming they are pointing in the correct direction. -- Gareth. That fly.... Is your magic wand. |
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#12
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#14
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On Tue, 05 Jun 2012 10:07:55 +0100, Jeff Layman wrote:
On 05/06/2012 08:53, Brian Gaff wrote: I ask this as some people I know who live here darn souf, seem to always get duff reception when the cloud cover is bad. OK I don't know enough about the location etc to comment, but there do seem to be a lot of people in forums etc complaining recently, and i just wondered if in order to make the dishes look smaller the gain has been paired to the bare minimum. Brian Did you mean to ask "Are Sky dishes too small?" I have always understood that the 45 cm Sky disk was the minimum size that Sky could get away with for (usually?) reliable reception. When I looked into getting Freesat a couple of years - or maybe more - ago, the minimum size of disk available relatively cheaply, complete with receiver, was 65 cm. Apart from having to move the dish because of a tree growing too high, I've never had reception problems from 28.5° here in Sussex, no matter what the cloud cover. I went for 65cm, just to be on the safe size. What is the reception like much further north, particularly in Scotland? That needs Skye dishes. -- Peter. The gods will stay away whilst religions hold sway |
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#15
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One thing that did intrigue me was that some sats vertical and horizontal
signals are not exactly that and need a bit of skew added, somone here suggested the dishes were small to make them useless for other sats, but maybe the skew does that. Brian -- -- From the sofa of Brian Gaff - Blind user, so no pictures please! "the dog from that film you saw" wrote in message ... On 05/06/2012 8:53 AM, Brian Gaff wrote: I ask this as some people I know who live here darn souf, seem to always get duff reception when the cloud cover is bad. OK I don't know enough about the location etc to comment, but there do seem to be a lot of people in forums etc complaining recently, and i just wondered if in order to make the dishes look smaller the gain has been paired to the bare minimum. Brian their dishes are the right size - assuming they are pointing in the correct direction. -- Gareth. That fly.... Is your magic wand. |
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#16
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On Tue, 5 Jun 2012 14:30:18 +0100, PeterC
wrote: On Tue, 05 Jun 2012 10:07:55 +0100, Jeff Layman wrote: On 05/06/2012 08:53, Brian Gaff wrote: I ask this as some people I know who live here darn souf, seem to always get duff reception when the cloud cover is bad. OK I don't know enough about the location etc to comment, but there do seem to be a lot of people in forums etc complaining recently, and i just wondered if in order to make the dishes look smaller the gain has been paired to the bare minimum. Brian Did you mean to ask "Are Sky dishes too small?" I have always understood that the 45 cm Sky disk was the minimum size that Sky could get away with for (usually?) reliable reception. When I looked into getting Freesat a couple of years - or maybe more - ago, the minimum size of disk available relatively cheaply, complete with receiver, was 65 cm. Apart from having to move the dish because of a tree growing too high, I've never had reception problems from 28.5° here in Sussex, no matter what the cloud cover. I went for 65cm, just to be on the safe size. What is the reception like much further north, particularly in Scotland? That needs Skye dishes. Oh! ye'll take the high band and I'll take the low band, And I'll be in Scotland afore ye. I'll get ma kilt. Haste ye back! I've had ma tea. -- Graham. %Profound_observation% |
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#17
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"Brian Gaff" wrote in message ... I ask this as some people I know who live here darn souf, seem to always get duff reception when the cloud cover is bad. OK I don't know enough about the location etc to comment, but there do seem to be a lot of people in forums etc complaining recently, and i just wondered if in order to make the dishes look smaller the gain has been paired to the bare minimum. Brian 60cm works in most of the UK, but at least this is advisable in Scotland. As most installations are "free" from $ky and any front of house / chimney stack dishes are limited to 45cm, then this is the size they normally use. Pretty marginal for coverage especially on poor weather or if water gets in anywhere. |
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#18
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Brian Gaff wrote:
I ask this as some people I know who live here darn souf, seem to always get duff reception when the cloud cover is bad. OK I don't know enough about the location etc to comment, but there do seem to be a lot of people in forums etc complaining recently, and i just wondered if in order to make the dishes look smaller the gain has been paired to the bare minimum. The question is, what is meant by 'too small'? Too small for normal commercial standards of reliability, yes. Too small if the odd bit of rain fade can be tolerated now and then, no. Complaints about poor satellite reception always come down to dish misalignment, faulty LNB, faulty cable, faulty tuner, terrestrial interference. Bill |
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#19
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David Woolley wrote:
DSB dish sizes tend to be set by planning law. They are set based on what is permissible without explicit planning permission. The max size set by planning law significantly exceeds the range of mini-dish sizes. Bill |
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#20
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Jeff Layman wrote:
I have always understood that the 45 cm Sky disk was the minimum size that Sky could get away with for (usually?) reliable reception. When I looked into getting Freesat a couple of years - or maybe more - ago, the minimum size of disk available relatively cheaply, complete with receiver, was 65 cm. Apart from having to move the dish because of a tree growing too high, I've never had reception problems from 28.5° here in Sussex, no matter what the cloud cover. We find it helpful to use larger dish sizes for communal systems where there is a lot of amplification, because the increased s/n ratio (less beamwidth means less sky noise) means the amps aren't having to carry the whole bandful of noise at a high level. Also, really clean muxes can stand more amplifier noise. Bill |
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