According to Lyngsat, Anik F3 & EchoStar 7 & DirecTV 7S at 119.0°W - LyngSat - the transponder freq is 12370 on the 119 bird.
So, if you subtract the local oscillator frequency of several common LNBs, here are the results.
DBS:
12370 R (tp 11) - 11250 LO = 1120
Standard:
12370 R (tp 11) - 10750 LO = 1620
Universal: (with 22khz on)
12370 R (tp 11) - 10600 LO = 1770
Considering how strong the signal is, a blind scan receiver (or one carefully tuned to the right frequency), should see the signal.
Now, the question is, does the LNB put out a signal that high (frequency), and does it receive a signal that high (frequency), or does internal filtering affect you?
I'd guess that's not a major problem...(?)
Lastly, the fact that you are receiving a circular signal on a linear LNB, causes a bunch of additional loss.
So, what's the answer?
Hard to say. Give it a try.
Why are you trying to do the wrong thing, anyway?
DBS LNBs are dime a dozen, and so are the 18" dishes they go on.
