The hardest part by far for me (bad back) is going to be lifting the Prodelin back off the pole I have it sitting on right now to get the Ajak under it. It's on a 7 ft tall pole, and i am not looking forward to lifting it back off. I made a jin-pole out of an 21' aluminum extension ladder, a come-along, a 2" muffler hanger clamp (drilled through the fiberglass top middle back dish ring, and bolted this through there for a lifting point), some trailer holddown straps tied to a tree right behind that pole, then to the ladder bottom, middle, and top to tilt it for overhanging the pole. Kinda like the way the boom hangs out from a crane. I then put the fixed az/el mount by itself on the pole and set it properly and tightened it down. I then lifted the dish up that 7 plus feet as my wife just helped balance it at the bottom so it wouldn't suddenly swing off to the side. Once I got it cranked nearly in position, I then used a tall stepladder and slapped in the bolts to bolt the dish to the mount. It was a bit exciting, as the very top of the extension ladder actually FLEXED almost 1 foot from the weight and strain of that beast of a dish. That ladder owes me nothing though so even if it had been permanently damaged, it would have been worth it.
Back when I was in my 30's in the mid '90's, I did the same thing with a 300lb plus 11'~ fiberglass dish ON the polar mount, up and on top of a 12' pole all by myself.... I used a chain-drive come-along with that one, as I could see the possibility of the cable snapping on a lesser model.
I need to get my hands on a REAL satellite dish jin-pole, or see if somebody nearby could loan me one for a few days. Jin-poles are expensive, even if you can find one.