Quote:
Originally Posted by powderburn2
I'd like to know also. The instructions suck. Ithink it is the points on the sides of the washer but who knows? I cant get a signal on the darn thing no matter which indicator I use. BUH!
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Mine has a point near the top of the washer and the word DOWN at the bottom of the washer. The motor elevation needs to be equal to your latitude. Make sure you use the LATITUDE scale on the side of the motor mount.
This is only about half of your process of
aiming your dish. You need to find your true south, then locate the nearest satellite to your true south, and move the motor using USALS on your receiver to this satellite. If there is no signal, you move the whole motor assembly on your mount to home in on your satellite. You also have to consider dish elevation, which for that motor is 30 degrees MINUS your declination angle. To add to the confusion, some dishes are off on the elevation by as much as 5 degrees.
My dish elevation is 30 - 6.05 which should be 24 but, I actually have my dish at 29 to get signal on the satellites.
So, pointing your dish is a matter of motor elevation, dish elevation, and proper azimuth. When USALS moves your dish, it assumes you are starting at 0 on the motor. When you are aimed perfectly at true south, your motor should move the proper number of degrees to point at any satellite on the arc.
Don't be afraid to post questions in the new users area too. This forum is fine, but, you will find alot more information about getting "pointed" in the right direction by using the New users forum.
Good luck with your setup. All your hard work will be greatly rewarded by all the nice cool free TV you will find once you are aimed correctly. To many of us, one of the coolest things to find is "wild feeds". I found a college football game one evening with 5 different views. The game was being broadcast on TBS but I got to see things from a different perspective by finding the wild feed. You can also find local news stories with reporters doing all sorts of funny things that you never see when the story airs on the local news station.