Reflector skew signal loss

  • ENJOY SATELLITEGUYS AD FREE THIS FEBRUARY!

    Thank you to the very generous support we got from our members in December we have decided to make the month of February AD FREE for everyone!

    We want to see the true speed of our site and enjoy SatelliteGuys the way it was meant to be enjoyed!

    If you would like to help us keep the lights on and keep enjoying the site AD FREE consider becoming a PUB MEMBER by CLICKING HERE.

    THANK YOU TO EVERYONE FOR YOUR SUPPORT!
Status
Please reply by conversation.

Joe DC

SatelliteGuys Family
Original poster
Aug 19, 2011
104
10
Cana,Va
On a fixed oval shape offset Ku dish designed for a single LNB would there be signal loss if only the LNB is skewed and not the dish? For skews 45 degrees or more it would seem that the dish illumination pattern would be partially off the dish thereby reducing the signal level. If so would the signal loss be significant?
 
nope. Dish illumination isn't decreased. The illumination shape is a cone. And the surface it's (the feed horn/lnbf) looking at is a perfect circle.
To 'see' this. Remove the LNBF. look at the dish face from the LNBF's perspective. (eye 'in' the feed holder)
From the satellites perspective, it's also a perfect circle.
 
  • Like
Reactions: scarecrovv
This could be proper if you are using a single regular off-set dish with an added sidecar lnb to aim at two satellites at once, BUT don't skew the dish itself to follow the arc. That's why multi-sat dishes are elliptical, so the dish can be skewed and fully (or as close as can be done) illuminate all lnb's to maximum dish surface.
 
So the LNB sees a circle within the dish no matter what the skew. Thanks for clarifying.
 
Status
Please reply by conversation.

Gbox with microHD Refresher Please

ASC1 DiSEqC 1.2 Positioner - New Loader / Editor Software Version 1.8