Those listed below are our PROUD SatelliteGuys GOLD Sponsors!
Applied Instruments DishStore.NET Home Theater Cruise glorystar.tv satelliteavgs tele-satellite.com

Welcome HOME to SatelliteGuys!


  •  » Looking for help picking a television provider?
  •  » Need Help with your Satellite System?
  •  » Need Advice on your Home Theater Setup?
  •  » Looking for the latest industry news and rumors?

...then you have come to the right place!

DIRECTV, DISH Network, FTA Satellite, Cable TV, HDTV even 3DTV!

We Can Help! We are known as America's Satellite Information Source!
YES! I want to register an account for FREE right now!

YOU ARE AT THE PLACE WHERE INDUSTRY EXPERTS HANG OUT!

p.s.: Registered members see a lot less ads! REGISTER TODAY!

Page 1 of 2 1 2 LastLast
Results 1 to 10 of 11
Like Tree1Likes

Thread: What should I use to make a dish cover snow/ice?

  1. #1
    ken2400's Avatar
    ken2400 is offline SatelliteGuys Senior
    Join Date
    Sep 4th, 2004
    Location
    Central NY Sate
    Posts
    918

    What should I use to make a dish cover snow/ice?

    ADVERTS 1
    It's that time of year. Snow/ice
    I have a Channel master fiberglass 74/ small P* dish
    I also have a 36" round standard offset dish.

    What materials should I use to make a cover.
    How is tyvak to use?
    What about using a thin tarp?

    I see the pros are black and wrap tight around the main dish leaving the arm exposed.

    Thanks

  2. # ADS
    Register Today & This Ad Goes Away! Circuit advertisement
    Join Date
    Always
    Location
    Advertising world
    Posts
    Many
     
  3. #2
    FaT Air's Avatar
    FaT Air is offline SatelliteGuys Junkie
    Join Date
    Feb 27th, 2010
    Location
    97W 48N
    Posts
    2,019
    There was a couple of threads last winter, but danged if I can locate them. Tyvek, I would think, should work well, except for the lack of colors. Think you'll only find white with, I think, red and blue signage to work with. I know there was a couple of aerosol products mentioned, to apply to the dish and, I also think, the working end of the LNBF. But, can I find the threads, or bookmarks, uh, no.
    One night I walked home very late and fell asleep in somebody's satellite dish.My dreams were showing up on TV's all over the world. -- Steven Wright
    Openbox S9, Pansat 9200+S2(Sick), Pansat 3500SD, 139w to 55.5W +30W

  4. #3
    primestar31's Avatar
    primestar31 is offline SatelliteGuys Regular
    Join Date
    Mar 15th, 2005
    Location
    Under the bridge (Michigan)
    Posts
    723
    Tyvek works fine, I have used it on my dishes. The problem though, is that it only lasts about 2-3 years, rots then falls apart. I suppose you could paint over it with a non reflective paint, and that might make it last longer.

    I stopped using it, and just spray my dishes with a silicone spray, so snow slides off easily.

  5. #4
    AcWxRadar's Avatar
    AcWxRadar is offline Pub Member / Supporter
    Pub Member / Supporter

    Help Keep SatelliteGuys For All, Click a Star and Become a Supporter! This Member did! Help Support The Site And Get Rid of the Syndicated Ads, This Member did! If you enjoy the site consider supporting it, this member did! Click a Star and become a Supporting Pub Member today!
    Join Date
    Apr 26th, 2006
    Location
    40 miles NW of Omaha. Omaha?
    Posts
    4,237
    There is a coating for fiberglass. You use it for boat hulls and shower stall walls. I have wondered if it would work for a fiberglass dish or for a painted metal dish. I am having a hard time remembering the name, though. I can kind of see the can that it came in in my mind. Kinda a pinkish label on white background. Gel Gloss? Something like that.

    Yep! Gel-Gloss, here it is...
    Welcome to Gel-Gloss




    Don't know how it would work on a painted metal dish. But, wouldn't hurt to try it on the backside of the dish and see how well of a finish it creates.

    My personal idea that I would like to test is to use a 1/8" thick piece of clear Lexan cut to fit the outer perimeter of the dish and screwed into the perimeter to hold it in place. Then spray it with silicone or this Gel Gloss. I'd have to hold a small piece in front of the feedhorn to ensure that it didn't diminish the signal first.

    RADAR

    Last edited by AcWxRadar; 01-27-2012 at 06:32 AM.
    There ain't no Sundays west of Omaha. Clyde "Fats" Potter, "The Cowboys"

  6. #5
    turbosat's Avatar
    turbosat is offline SatelliteGuys Guru
    Join Date
    Dec 26th, 2006
    Location
    Oneonta,AL
    Posts
    7,294
    Rain-X ? Used to work pretty well on glass, oughta make that snow slide right off.
    Icon 550, Vantage 1100HD (thanks Stogie) on .90M primestar DG380 motor.10'Sami+GI650 for c-band.
    CS5000 now on 1m primestar-polar mount backup system.
    Avatar: Kepler20E, artist's conception, see NASA's Kepler Mission page:http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/ke...20-system.html

  7. #6
    Iceberg's Avatar
    Iceberg is offline The No Pain Train
    Proud SatelliteGuys Staff Member

    Proud Staff Member
    Join Date
    Nov 17th, 2003
    Location
    Now Living In the Last House on the Left
    Posts
    75,800
    In the 9 years I've had FTA I dont use anything. I just put the dish on true south and let the sun melt any of the snow. Also due to my setup the dish is pretty low on the roof so if we get 3-4 inches of snow I have to snow rake around them anyways so I just clean the dishes off then
    dougruss likes this.
    Winegard 76cm dish, SG2100 motor, Sadoun dual KU LNB..... Directv Slimline SWM 3 LNB.... GeoSatPro 36" dish with Sadoun dual KU LNB... Coolsat 5000 on motorized.... Manhattan RS1933....Directv HR34 (yes the 5 tuner monster) GeoSatPro 200 to aim dishes.... few receivers not set up yet
    Two 6 foot Fortec dish with GeoSatPro dual C-Band LNB "ghetto moved" to various C-Band satellites

  8. #7
    Iceberg's Avatar
    Iceberg is offline The No Pain Train
    Proud SatelliteGuys Staff Member

    Proud Staff Member
    Join Date
    Nov 17th, 2003
    Location
    Now Living In the Last House on the Left
    Posts
    75,800
    I mean when you have something like this after a snowstorm.....nothing will help
    Attached Thumbnails Attached Thumbnails Click image for larger version. 

Name:	000_0087.jpg 
Views:	31 
Size:	294.4 KB 
ID:	73642   Click image for larger version. 

Name:	000_0088.jpg 
Views:	28 
Size:	302.3 KB 
ID:	73643  
    Winegard 76cm dish, SG2100 motor, Sadoun dual KU LNB..... Directv Slimline SWM 3 LNB.... GeoSatPro 36" dish with Sadoun dual KU LNB... Coolsat 5000 on motorized.... Manhattan RS1933....Directv HR34 (yes the 5 tuner monster) GeoSatPro 200 to aim dishes.... few receivers not set up yet
    Two 6 foot Fortec dish with GeoSatPro dual C-Band LNB "ghetto moved" to various C-Band satellites

  9. #8
    SatelliteAV's Avatar
    SatelliteAV is offline Proud Gold Sponsor
    Join Date
    Sep 3rd, 2004
    Location
    Roseville, CA
    Posts
    3,445
    Snow or ice build-up on a small KU band reflector has minimal effect on the signal. Snow or ice on the LNBF face or build-up on the arm in front of the LNBF is a major problem. Here in the Sierras they often use
    Rain Shield


    on the LNBF face and a fabricated triangle on the arm and coat it with Rain Shield or wrap the arm with heat tape. If build-up on the reflector is an issue, heat tape or a heater strip designed for satellite dishes is applied to the reflector. I have only observed the reflector heating in commercial installations or in extreme situations where the prevailing wind will drift snow to envelope the dish and build out to the LNBF.

    If aesthetics are not an issue, consider using a large poly garbage bag over the entire dish and arm. The thin plastic will flex in the slightest breeze and shed any accumulation. I once saw a very innovative solution with a small automotive 12vdc fan/heater clipped to the LNBF arm keeping the poly bagged dish warm and cozy..... Wouldn't have done that myself, but I thought it was very creative "out of the box" thinking!

    Brian Gohl - Satellite AV, LLC (Gold Sponsor)
    Equipment Development / Distribution / Repair / Call Center

    888-483-4673 - http://www.satelliteav.com
    eBay Special Deals
    Attention Installers: Want more work? Join the Largest Satellite Technician Referral Website - www.FTAinstall.com

  10. #9
    ken2400's Avatar
    ken2400 is offline SatelliteGuys Senior
    Join Date
    Sep 4th, 2004
    Location
    Central NY Sate
    Posts
    918
    Thread Starter
    Thanks for all the info so far.
    I will try the bag idea around the arm and LNBF.
    This is for dishes used to receive RTV then rebroadcasted OTA.

  11. #10
    AcWxRadar's Avatar
    AcWxRadar is offline Pub Member / Supporter
    Pub Member / Supporter

    Help Keep SatelliteGuys For All, Click a Star and Become a Supporter! This Member did! Help Support The Site And Get Rid of the Syndicated Ads, This Member did! If you enjoy the site consider supporting it, this member did! Click a Star and become a Supporting Pub Member today!
    Join Date
    Apr 26th, 2006
    Location
    40 miles NW of Omaha. Omaha?
    Posts
    4,237
    I suggested options, but to be honest I don't use anything to prevent snow and ice on my dishes. We get a lot of snow and freezing rain here and I never if rarely have any troubles. In seven years I think that I swept the snow off the dish twice because it was a problem and that was on my WildBlue sat, not the TV sat dish.

    I really don't think that it is a major concern. Maybe you get a lot of snow, more than we do here. But, for the past three years, we have had major snowstorms and I never had a problem. The main trouble stemmed from rain in the sky between the dish and the satellite. You can't do anything about that.

    RADAR
    There ain't no Sundays west of Omaha. Clyde "Fats" Potter, "The Cowboys"

Page 1 of 2 1 2 LastLast

Tags for this Thread

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •  

SatelliteGuys.US | 46 Miami Avenue | Newington, Connecticut 06111
Links monetized by VigLink