And to have a good signal in Ku, put a plastic visor on the antenna. It has been tested, in snow and rain the signal is not 100 percent, but you can watch. If the antenna was higher from the ground, there would be less snow.The Ku dish stopped receiving.
Good to know. This snowfall was quite unusual here. Snow is not normally an issue at my location so it's a novelty. Brushing the snow off immediately restored good operation of the Ku dish. I like the dish very close to ground so I can sit on a chair while tweaking the LNB, especially on C-band.And to have a good signal in Ku, put a plastic visor on the antenna. It has been tested, in snow and rain the signal is not 100 percent, but you can watch. If the antenna was higher from the ground, there would be less snow.
If i left my dishes that close to the ground, id have to tunnel down to them in the winter..I like the dish very close to ground so I can sit on a chair while tweaking the LNB, especially on C-band.
As it stands, if we get much more snow, i'm gonna have a problem keeping my 10' cband above ground. I've already started carving away at the snow to keep it slightly below the rim. February can go either way. We could get another 40" of snow. February is typically very windy, so drifting can be tricky.I LIKE your Snow Blower !!!If i left my dishes that close to the ground, id have to tunnel down to them in the winter..As it stands, if we get much more snow, i'm gonna have a problem keeping my 10' cband above ground. I've already started carving away at the snow to keep it slightly below the rim. February can go either way. We could get another 40" of snow. February is typically very windy, so drifting can be tricky.
Here is an example of the massive drifts we can get. We had our court yard closing in on us from a 8+ drift. It was hard keeping that open that winter. The drift is the massive drift working its way from the right to the left. I will also add that what you think is the ground is probably about 10-12 inches of hard pack snow/ice. The bottom/last picture is what one night of wind does to our driveway after a long snowy winter.
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Actually, my drive-way, but not my snow blower. It was the neighbors. Mine was a John-Deere that was in the shop at the time. Since that, i upgraded to a much beefier serious blower that out blows the New Holland in the picture in the last post. It is a double height auger, heated cab, articulating drive, 4 wheel drive that just munches anything i throw at it. They don't make stuff like this anymore. Its old, but its a beast!I LIKE your Snow Blower !!!