blueandwhiteg3
Computer
- Nov 22, 2008
- 89
Basically all small and medium satellite dishes (1 meter and less) are not quite round. Some dishes are oval and horizontally wider, vertically taller for multiple feeds, wider angles, etc. Others are vertically taller.
I have several dishes here, from the little 18" DBS dishes to big 1 meter dishes. Every single one is slightly distorted one way or the other enough that it's clearly not a manufacturing defect.
I suspect the goal is to optimize for an offset feed, which is quite common with satellites. However, the implication of this is unclear to me.
Does this design modification preclude the dish from being useful with a traditional centered parabolic feed approach? Would it improve the ability to use multiple feeds on a single dish with the same remote focal point?
I have several dishes here, from the little 18" DBS dishes to big 1 meter dishes. Every single one is slightly distorted one way or the other enough that it's clearly not a manufacturing defect.
I suspect the goal is to optimize for an offset feed, which is quite common with satellites. However, the implication of this is unclear to me.
Does this design modification preclude the dish from being useful with a traditional centered parabolic feed approach? Would it improve the ability to use multiple feeds on a single dish with the same remote focal point?