
Originally Posted by
wejones
I've noticed this over the past year or so, and may have mentioned it once or twice, but decided to start a thread about this. Anyway, with either of the two signal meters I have, ie the little SF95 (or whatever it's called) or my Channel Master 10071FD, I have problems seeing AMC3. It is really weird. Yesterday, I was re-aiming my fixed Primestar dish, moving it from G26 to AMC3. I just happened to be doing this at a time when my Fortec dish was aiming at AMC3, and the sun was at the same azimuth as AMC3, so I knew where to aim the dish approximately, however the signal meter wasn't showing a maximum there. So I moved the dish a bit to the east, watching the meter go up to a maximum. Went inside, and I was sitting on AMC9. Went back outside, moved the dish a bit to the west, watching the signal go down, then up to a maximum. Went inside, and found that I was on G11 (I think), then moved to a smaller peak to the east, and found I was on G28. Moved back to the east more, and ended up on AMC9 again. I eventually found AMC3 (had to run the signal to a TV I could see outside), but AMC3 was not at any perceptable maximum on the meter, but instead was at the minimum between two maxima.
I assume that what is happening is that the two maxima I'm seeing are the two Nimiq sats, which AMC3 is pretty much exactly in between, and apparently they are so strong that they are wiping out sats in between. However what confuses me is why it seems to only be AMC3 that gets wiped out this way. Ie I can see other satellites that are in between strong DBS satellites, usually they appear to be less intense maxima. But for AMC3, there isn't even a hint of a peak there. Perhaps it's because it's exactly in between the two strong sats???
Anyway, like I said, this exact same thing has happened to me 4 or 5 times before, almost always with AMC3. Just curious whether anyone else has ever noticed this? Seems like the best way to eliminate this behavior is to have some kind of a low pass filter on the meter, that would filter out everything above 1450 MHz, but I don't think I've ever seen anything like that for sale. I guess it's simpler to just use a sat receiver like I did. It's just kind of annoying that the satellite I watch the most (PBS) is the one I have the most trouble finding with a meter.