You can do it a few different ways depending on how much money you want to spend, this is the cheapest way using Chaparral Corotor II Plus c/ku-band FeedhornI want to add Ku band to my 10Ft Cband Mesh Dish.. Where can I buy the Scaler I need to add a Ku band LNB to my set up? Thank You
I know this wasn't your question but If you have the room and the budget, install a separate Ku dish. My old 36 inch Starchoice dish with a GEOSAT pro performs better than my 10 foot mesh with a Cal-Amp C-Ku feed horn. You will also find it difficult to get your 10 foot to land on the Ku satellites accurately.I want to add Ku band to my 10Ft Cband Mesh Dish.. Where can I buy the Scaler I need to add a Ku band LNB to my set up? Thank You
You do that... and you can NEVER have it center correctly that is a cheap way but it will be off center when you turn your dishcheapest way it sidecar your ku lnb....iget the same strenth as i did on my 48 inch ku dish. 3 pictures attached
Is that a Titanium LNBF with a Chaparral scaler ring?I've had the same setup with a geosatpro lnbf for several years.Cheap and easy and pretty darned good signal strength. It still illuminates only a portion of the 12 footer....because it's designed for a smaller dish.
And yeah. Playing around finding the sweet spot because I have a buttonhook feed ends up with the lnbf reflecting East around 5-6 degrees difference for the same sat. on C band. No biggie.
Never a concern with C band reception on an E2 receiver. The "Filter out adjacent satellites" up to X degrees during a blindscan with "Disable sync with known satellites" set to No becomes handy due to signal bleed over.
Dunno if it's an issue with the same setup on smaller dishes. But it sure can have you scratching your head when you come up with far more transponders than listed in charts. And some have a lot less signal. Right?
It works, it's cheap. I held mine in my hand when aiming for a signal then made the bracket to attach it to the scalar.
Of late though in the low SR challenge post here. Could be the footprint. Could be other things. Tweaks?
Having a time snagging signal at all on them. But hey. What's worth really watching on ku?
So there you have it.
It was at the time I took the pic. Now have a ortho setup for c band. The slight misalignments you might see are just from setting it all up back then.Is that a Titanium LNBF with a Chaparral scaler ring?
With all of the theoretical jargon aside. Relating to scanner dudes mentioning that 75 ohm coax don't make a difference. Within limits my choice is to do it right. You know?For interest's sake... and because I do not believe I have seen it mentioned in anywhere in the forums, even after extensive searching...
Has anyone installed a prime focus Ku LNBF with a flat scalar as a side car? How did it perform versus the integrated conical scalar in an offset LNBF?
The conical scalar Ku LNBF - on paper - should suffer from reduced illumination + a substantial reduction in gain due to the offset on the radiation pattern envelope. When I compare to the RPE for a terrestrial microwave antenna operating in a similar but adjacent band, I would expect the ~ 9 to 10 dB of additional inherent gain in Ku to be eliminated AND THEN SOME. Based on some rough calcs, a 3 m reflector with roughly 40 dB of C band gain should have about 49 dB of Ku gain. This is corroborated by vendor spec sheets for both satellite and terrestrial reflectors, plus figures from online calculators. Factor in at least 10 dB of RPE reduction due to being off-axis and that the 3 m should perform no better than a dedicated 1.2 m Ku. This doesn't even factor in the focal length disparity or the effects of the stepped conical scalar or the effect of the Ku -3 dB beam width being much narrower than that of C band.
Based on these figures, I have to wonder about the true, practical downside effect of using a LNBF designed for offset reflectors as a prime focus side car. On paper, the off-axis RPE should have at least the same or greater effect on received signal levels than does the f/D under-illumination or the conical scalar.
Has anyone tried cutting the feedhorn off a Ku LNBF and operating as a side car without any form of scalar?
... should suffer from reduced illumination + a substantial reduction in gain due to the offset