Another option, and this has already been said in this thread in a roundabout way but...
If you are attempting to fix this dish on one satellite, and you don't have enough adjustment range in your mount to get to the required elevation (in a non-inverted orientation) you can lean your pole (or shim your mount) in whatever direction is required to get the elevation needed.
A plumb pole is only required for a motorized setup, so the dish will track the arc. A fixed (single satellite) installation has no such rules, just figure out how to point that dish at an object 22,000+ miles away however you can.
Lots of ways to skin this cat.
If you are attempting to fix this dish on one satellite, and you don't have enough adjustment range in your mount to get to the required elevation (in a non-inverted orientation) you can lean your pole (or shim your mount) in whatever direction is required to get the elevation needed.
A plumb pole is only required for a motorized setup, so the dish will track the arc. A fixed (single satellite) installation has no such rules, just figure out how to point that dish at an object 22,000+ miles away however you can.
Lots of ways to skin this cat.