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Automation, Cinema, Computers, Television Forum
"Sky" satellite dish
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<blockquote data-quote="Bruspark" data-source="post: 496211" data-attributes="member: 20106"><p>If you have a satellite box or tv that has already scanned the channels on a working dish then it’s relatively easy to set it to a channel, connect to the new dish and wave the dish around until it comes to life. Then Finely tweak position and skew using the tv’s signal display </p><p> </p><p></p><p>Once pointed at a clear sky there isn’t much left to go wrong and what does go wrong can be diagnosed/eliminated with a length of spare Coax and a spare LNB (total cost £30) </p><p></p><p>Money on sophisticated testers is IMHO better spent on terrestrial TV where signal quality is always an issue and small changes of aerial position can produce significant changes in quality </p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Bruspark, post: 496211, member: 20106"] If you have a satellite box or tv that has already scanned the channels on a working dish then it’s relatively easy to set it to a channel, connect to the new dish and wave the dish around until it comes to life. Then Finely tweak position and skew using the tv’s signal display Once pointed at a clear sky there isn’t much left to go wrong and what does go wrong can be diagnosed/eliminated with a length of spare Coax and a spare LNB (total cost £30) Money on sophisticated testers is IMHO better spent on terrestrial TV where signal quality is always an issue and small changes of aerial position can produce significant changes in quality [/QUOTE]
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