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Old 03-01-2004, 12:07 PM
tanjiabdou
 
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Satellite dish in the equator.


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Old 03-01-2004, 12:44 PM
69BEEPER 69BEEPER is offline
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Awesome pics!

69beeper
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Old 03-03-2004, 12:10 AM
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mhoward mhoward is offline
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Distance from dish to Sat

I was just thinking...

If a Dish were at the Equator like this one, and the Sat were directly overhead, what is the distance between the dish and the sat. In other words, what is the distance from the earth surface for a Geostationary SAT?

Secondly, How much closer is a Dish from the Sat at the equator than say, here in the US? Does that distance help signal quality?

Just a collection of random thoughts...lol
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Old 03-03-2004, 12:42 AM
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DruzeTito DruzeTito is offline
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Satellites orbit the earth at about 22,000 miles up in space. It would be difficult to figure out the "line of sight distance" from the satellite up in space to a dish somewher in the USA because the earth is curved. You can estimate though. For a perfectly true south satellite, Figure out the distance from a dish's truesouth to the equator. Then incorporate 22,000 miles into whatever distance measurement you use. Then use a^2+b^2=c^2 to figure out approx the line of sight distance.

I can't even imagine a dish 90 degree elevation being able to receive any satellite. Unless the satellite's beam can be perfectly vertica which i doubtl!!

For the best signals from a satellite, you have to take a look at a satellite's footprint in lyngsat.com and see where the max amount of power is output.
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Old 03-06-2004, 01:03 PM
ezsat ezsat is offline
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DruzeTito , i agree totaly with you but look again at the picture ....the elevation is less then 90 degree i think he is at the edge of the footprint.
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Don\'t aim the dish at the planet uranus, you\'ll get a ****ty picture...
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