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Author Topic: The Satellite Arc  (Read 748 times)
Robbo
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« on: January 09, 2008, 10:14:04 PM »

We often speak of the TV satellites being on an arc. Especially when thinking of a motorised dish. Still very relevant however for any fixed dish setup.

In most of the UK, the satellites closest to your due south are the Thor 2 & 3 satellites at 0.8 degrees West, and are near the top of the arc and the highest in the sky. As you move east or west the elevation of the other satellites gradually drop down and approach the horizon as shown in the diagram. In the far west of the UK or Ireland you will find Atlantic Bird 3 at 5W will be nearer your due south.


The diagram also illustrates why the satellites at the extremes of the arc are difficult to get as they are so close to the horizon. In southern England (London), 0.8W will be around 30 degrees above the horizon, in Scotland about 25 degrees above, 68.5E for example will be around 5 degrees.

This image is an original from Nosky.co.uk and permission is granted by the author for personal use and for posting elsewhere on the internet as long as its content is not modified in any way.
« Last Edit: January 11, 2008, 12:35:34 AM by Robbo » Logged

I have a Triax TD110 dish, that goes where I tell it coupled to a TM1000D receiver, and a fixed dish that goes where the wind blows it.
Also got a TM6800HD.
Analoguesat
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« Reply #1 on: January 09, 2008, 10:50:12 PM »

Nice one Robbo. A worthy sticky.   Right On
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BGonaSTICK
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« Reply #2 on: January 09, 2008, 11:12:16 PM »

Love it!
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Fibostöp 90cm/Invacom Quad on Moteck SG2100, Triax TD110/Inverto multi-LNB, Dreambox 7000, Skystar 2 PCI, Humax Foxsat HD
Thus the metric system did not really catch on in the States, unless you count the increasing popularity of the nine-millimeter bullet ~ Dave Barry
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