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View Full Version : As Requested - A brief history of my 24 foot BUD



tonydix
03-19-2010, 05:41 PM
A brief history of the BUD for those interested.


I had rescued and repaired a 12 ft BUD while I was stationed in Bermuda between 1993 and 1998.I had lots of fun searching for satellites and particularly wild feeds. It was an analgue receiver and dish mover combination.
Many years went by in England and cruising on sailboats where a BUD was out of the question. In 2005 I moved to Panama to build a shack and live in a warmer climate. I was in a bus travelling from Chiriqui Grande to Almirante when I noticed a BUD on a lot which looked unused and decaying. I made some enquiries and was told the name of the owner who had now let the property to local tenants. I made repeated efforts to contact the owner about a possible purchase. After many months an agreement to purchase for $200 was made.
I then had to lower and dismantle the dish about 1 day. Hire labour to cart it down the hill to the shore 1/2 day and then load it into a boat for a trip to my property. It took 3 trips to get everything across about 1/2 day. Then we carted it up the hill to the location where you see it on my property.
It then took me about 2 months, not working every day, to pour the base mount the tower, re-assemble and repair the dish.
What I hadn’t really appreciated was the weight of the dish so I had to errect a very strong timber A frame which surrounded the tower and then used a block and tackle and a comealong to lift the dish into position.
Subsequent problems have been actually accessing the LNB for a change of unit or an adjustment.. I had to build a ladder with side leg supports to get to the LNB.
Anyway after many hours of fun and games we now have a working system which does track the arc and gets me a fair selection of FTA channels.
A big disappointment to me was the poor quality of reception of 99 west where I had hoped to pick up the main us networks.
I plan to buy a better C Band LNB and a KU band LNB to go on the BUD to see what I can get.Of course getting any of this stuff in Panama is nearly impossible so I have to buy in the US and have the stuff shipped here
All in all a lot of work, some disappointments but quite a lot of interesting channels found, lots of fun and a huge amount of learning particularly about digital. The people on Satelliteguys have been great, very generous with help and advice. I have learnt a huge amount from them.
THANK YOU.

Anole
03-19-2010, 05:59 PM
I've been wondering how you came by that 24' dish, since you first posted here.
Thanks for the back story.

As I was reading along, at first I was thinking you were going to say you found the dish, and just bought the land it was on! - :up

I'm sure our vendors will do what they can to ship you any necessary equipment.
And read the C-band department to help make up your mind what might work best.
Some day, you'll have to let us know your favorite channels (the public ones)

tdti1
03-19-2010, 06:05 PM
Whats your arc coverage? if you have something to control polarity you mite be best off with a wideband feed and commercial lnb's with that dish.

neljtorres
03-19-2010, 06:21 PM
I takes a good motor to move that antenna!:D

i4tas
03-19-2010, 07:07 PM
do you have bigger and more pictures?

Iceberg
03-19-2010, 07:52 PM
I takes a good motor to move that antenna!:D

yeah like a car engine :)

brotherhood
03-19-2010, 07:58 PM
now that's a diehard:)

Phottoman
03-19-2010, 08:14 PM
No Ice, I think more like TWO car engines, one for El, and one of Az.

crackt
03-19-2010, 08:26 PM
im definately abit envious. wow. okay alot envious. we need some bigger pics of that beast.

crackt out,.

toucan-man
03-19-2010, 08:50 PM
I was listening to an astronomy podcast, and they referred to our backyard dishes as radio telescopes. Which is what I will tell people from now on. In your case it really rings true!

Anole
03-19-2010, 11:07 PM
im definately abit envious. wow. okay alot envious.
we need some bigger pics of that beast.

Yea, no kidding.!. - :eek:
Here's the thread when he first got it and was trying to assemble the dish (http://www.satelliteguys.us/c-band-satellite-discussion/166209-need-help-identifying-monster.html).
And here's a picture of the dish fully assembled (http://picasaweb.google.com/marilynstevens09/Satellitedish#5372128754191570994).

More pics are welcome, too! :)

madmadworld
03-20-2010, 05:32 AM
Tony Thanks for the story and the pic's
and Anole for the dig
pic's of the back would be cool.

heck i dream for a 16'

Tron
03-20-2010, 05:59 AM
I had been wondering how you got out to the LNB without a cherry picker ;) ... Great dish!

ynnedibanez
03-20-2010, 06:24 AM
wow!! that is a beauty!!:D
and for just $200!!
man, you did good on that deal!!:up

neljtorres
03-20-2010, 10:03 AM
yeah like a car engine :)

A caterpillar motor!

neljtorres
03-20-2010, 10:05 AM
Yea, no kidding.!. - :eek:
Here's the thread when he first got it and was trying to assemble the dish (http://www.satelliteguys.us/c-band-satellite-discussion/166209-need-help-identifying-monster.html).
And here's a picture of the dish fully assembled (http://picasaweb.google.com/marilynstevens09/Satellitedish#5372128754191570994).

More pics are welcome, too! :)

That's real BIG!::eek:

neljtorres
03-20-2010, 10:07 AM
im definately abit envious. wow. okay alot envious. we need some bigger pics of that beast.

crackt out,.

That's a good name! The Beast! La Bestia in Spanish!:eek:

tonydix
03-20-2010, 12:51 PM
Wow I am amazed how many of you are interested. As requested here is a link to some further pictures of the components of the BUD :-

Picasa Web Albums - bigtone - feedhorn (http://picasaweb.google.com/tonydix/Feedhorn?authkey=Gv1sRgCJbi7LDI08TqpgE&feat=directlink)

And here is a link to some pictures about the reassembly and ereection of the dish:-

Picasa Web Albums - Marilyn - The Story of ... (http://picasaweb.google.com/marilynstevens09/TheStoryOfTheBigUglyDish?authkey=Gv1sRgCK7dwMfxhcalCA&feat=directlink)

Hope they both work for you.

Enjoy

Tony

chapelrun
03-20-2010, 01:16 PM
Tony,

Thanks for sharing - - - - I love stories like this - - - - very cool !! :up :up

I guess in your location you need a very large dish in order to get signal.

phlatwound
03-20-2010, 11:11 PM
Now that's a project.

Nice job Tony. :up

wescopc
03-21-2010, 02:09 AM
Thanks for sharing!
Bob

John Popper
03-21-2010, 02:56 AM
incredible story! how many actuators have you gone through trying to move that monster?

tonydix
03-21-2010, 09:01 AM
Just the one at the moment, but it only swings the dish through half of the arc. So I just use the western segment at present. When I have exhausted this segment I will re attach the positioner to goto the eastern segment.
Tony

Blindowl1234
03-21-2010, 10:34 AM
Tony, I love the pics! What all can you receive on the dish? I know you mentioned trouble with 99W. I guess you get a lot of the stuff I can't get, would be easy for you....Brazil, Chile etc...Blind

Greg Mueller
03-21-2010, 10:48 AM
Bravo!

Greg Mueller
03-21-2010, 11:43 AM
When we were down in Costa Rica we saw a dish that looks like it was made by the same manufacturer that yours was

http://www.muellersatomics.com/Satellite/Big_Dish.jpg


He said it was a 20' but after looking at yours it looks like less.

That's San Jose in the valley

cracklincrotch
03-21-2010, 06:45 PM
That's amazing...truly amazing.... That is the coolest thing I've seen in a long time. And talk about envious. :eek::eek::eek: