Satellite on Window

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sudn3sc3d

New Member
Feb 22, 2009
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New York
Is there a satellite I can put on my window with a suction cup or something because my management doesn't allow dishes on the roof and placing it on the window is the only line of sight.
 

Cadsulfide

SatelliteGuys Pro
Sep 8, 2008
1,305
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Cavalier, North Dakota
It may get some signal through a window, but not much. Do you have a balcony that you can set a 5 gal pail on? If yes, you can put a post in the pail and fill it with cement. A lot of people use that trick when traveling in a Winnebago.
 

Hermitman

SatelliteGuys Pro
Jul 2, 2006
420
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Limestone, Mi
If its ok with your management, you might try to custom-make a mounting plate that clamps to your window sill. That way it won't need any holes drilled and you could just open the window to adjust the dish. Good luck.
 

Tron

SatelliteGuys Master
May 6, 2005
6,599
33
Metro New Orleans, LA
A satellite dish would be way too heavy to attach using a suction cup, but if you can open the window and set the dish inside on a tripod (provided, of course, your window has an unobstructed view to the satellite you want to receive), it may work.
 

SatelliteAV

SatelliteGuys Master
Lifetime Supporter
Sep 3, 2004
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Roseville, CA
We had a sample several years ago that was constructed of a 16" x 16" plexiglass plate predrilled for a standard J-post mount with suction cups placed in the four corners. It securely held a Winegard 76cm dish, but I would suggest adding tether as a safety for those below!
 

empiretc

SatelliteGuys Pro
Mar 4, 2008
1,657
51
i made one years ago in our first apartment. Management didn't allow satellites either since they provided cable. Back then, DirecPC was the only high-speed available.

I used a sheet of 3/4 Ash I had and cut it to match the open window. I screwed the mast on it and anchored the board to the sill. then I sealed around the board and open window. Man I got some FUNNY looks from the neighbors and people driving by. Imagine it, an open window (on the 2nd floor) with a weird looking dish in it.

It worked great and management was fine with it. They did dock my deposit a little for the holes left by the "L" anchors. But you know that goes....
 

Sadoun

SatelliteGuys Pro
Feb 27, 2005
2,320
1
Columbus, OHIO
You may try to utilize a glass suction cup handle tool like this one:

41tO-Mixn0L._SS500_.jpg


Attach the dish to it somehow, and like Brian said, make sure you tie everything with a tether to a hook or something solid, just in case the dish falls down.
 

sudn3sc3d

New Member
Feb 22, 2009
4
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New York
We had a sample several years ago that was constructed of a 16" x 16" plexiglass plate predrilled for a standard J-post mount with suction cups placed in the four corners. It securely held a Winegard 76cm dish, but I would suggest adding tether as a safety for those below!

do you have something similar to it now? can you construct something similar?
 

SatelliteAV

SatelliteGuys Master
Lifetime Supporter
Sep 3, 2004
6,486
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Roseville, CA
We do not carry this device, but it sure would be easy to build! Buy 4 bolt mounted suction cups and a piece of plexiglass.

I really like Sadoun's suggestion of the plate glass carrying handle. Seems like the would be easy to modify.
 

toucan-man

SatelliteGuys Pro
Jul 13, 2008
2,693
25
Wisconsin
We do not carry this device, but it sure would be easy to build! Buy 4 bolt mounted suction cups and a piece of plexiglass.

I really like Sadoun's suggestion of the plate glass carrying handle. Seems like the would be easy to modify.

Suction cups can lift and sustain great weight on a temporary basis, lifting heavy plate glass, etc., but when they fail, over time, they fail suddenly and completely. I'd want to avoid a suction cup solution if at all possible.
 
Last edited:

mikekohl

Prehistoric Satellite Guru
Supporting Founder
Jun 4, 2004
876
318
Montfort, Wisconsin
I recall listening to someone from Manhattan, NY describing an urban legend; a DirecTV antenna suction cupped to an apartment 30 or 40 stories up. The occupant brought it in every evening after watching television, and carefully "temporarily" installed with the suction cups every night after work. Management had a problem with permanent installations on the building, and there wasn't much of a ledge to hide it.

The temporary installation was noticed one weekend during a period of high winds, when the suction cups did not hold, allowing the antenna to swing down over one story below by its coaxial cable. Thoughts of horror crossed some people's minds when considering that the coax might have been loosely finger tightened, and could have dropped several hundred feet below to the ground. The owner of the dish VERY carefully pulled it back up without incident, but retained a state of paranoia afterwards.
 

SatPhreak

SatelliteGuys Pro
Apr 19, 2007
943
139
Thunder Bay, ON
I have seen ads for a suction mount with some type of coaxial connector atached that will work though the glass(no idea whether it works or not), BUT it was designed for a 18" dish. All though I have never seen one in person, I would never advise it for a dish larger than 18", and with a 18" dish I would only recommend it IF the dish had a tether cord anchored to the building to stop it from falling onto somebodys head.
 

SpiffWilkie

SatelliteGuys Pro
Jul 16, 2008
557
0
Memphis, TN
What about magnets? You can get some pretty powerful magnets and mount some on the outside and some on the inside. That would necessitate having two people for the setup, of course, but magnets tend to hold better than suction cups. Of course, a good tether is still necessary.
 

SatPhreak

SatelliteGuys Pro
Apr 19, 2007
943
139
Thunder Bay, ON
The magnets could be an idea, the neodymium magnets are very strong but a tether cord should still be used for safety reasons. Large neodymium magnets are used in windmill generators and need a air gap of about 1/4". Be very, very careful if you try this type of magnets if you try this method as people have crushed thier fingers without using jackscrews to bring them close enough to 'grab' ahold of each other. They could also result in a broken window if they start to 'grab' each other with a tiny bit of a gap from one side of the window to the other. The force of suddenly slaming into a piece of glass from only a few millimetres away could shatter or crack the glass.
 

avg1joe

SatelliteGuys Pro
Oct 27, 2006
677
0
Southern Maine
Ever use a bicycle carrier on the back of a car?

If you had a double hung window you could fashion clips to grab the edges of the upper frame and use straps to crank it down tight.

You'd need rubber pads on the dish mounting plate to distribute the force on the glass.

You may want to check to see how much a new window is before you start.

Have you checked to see if you have a line of sight from your window?
 
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