I am looking for SNR data from people here who are using the DC3 with the MK1 LNB and a dish.
Could you please post details about your setup and the SNR improvements you see with the dish (compared to just using the LNB). Please also include the size of the dish being used, and any other factors that might matter.
Iām about 20 miles NE of Los Angeles. Using old DirectTV dish, 20 3/4" x 18 1/4". MK-1 LNB at end of original support for the DirectTV LNB. Setup is on a wood 2" platform on a normal patio table shielded from rain or wind. I have been getting a consistent SNR of + 6 to 6.5. This a bit higher than before you replaced the modem on the uplink awhile back.
I really didnāt try just the LNB by itself. At the time there were so many novel cone ideas that seemed to work. I just waited and read about them, but didnāt proceed to build one. I was hoping the Team would manufacture the cone idea of the best design.
This is real general question⦠Can you be more specific on what you are comparing.
Things like, pointing, coax, dish coating, polarity, skew, weather. trees/leaf interference, local rfi
What is a good snr, or lock, or rssi. Iāve got lotās of variables that I have changed over the last four months. It is tough to generalize ā what is good, better, best.
I am currently using an old āMotoSatā 18" dish with the MK1. Seeing +7 to +8 SNR. Naked LNB at same location runs -13 to -11 SNR.
Both show RSSI at around 80.
Yes, it is. I purchased the old MotoSat unit from the manufacturer (I was just looking for a dish), but the price was right, and the motors still work, although in this application they are not needed. The unit was designed to be carried atop a motor home or camping trailer, and the dish will lay down level with the mount if desired.
It is not hard to point, using the DCās screen. Of course, the compass and a protractor can be useful to get a startup fix, then using the DC to fine-tune it. It is working in the position shown in this picture. The MK-1 is sitting at approximately the same position as the original LNB, which did not seem to be in working condition when I connected it. I just took measurements of the position of the original, then mounted the MK-1 as closely as possible to that original position and it worked. The original had no skew adjustment, which is possible with the MK-1 as now mounted, so this helped also.
gave an SNR of +9.25 dB and RSSI of -65 dBm with lock. My FTA Invacom Quad Polar LNB QPH-31 has a spec gain of 55 dB with a .3 dB noise figure.
I checked my portable (it has a different Dreamcatcher board and Maverick LNB) with just a bare LNB and received an SNR of -11.5 dB with an RSSI of -75 dBm. With my cone cup extended, my SNR went up to -9.5 with an RSSI of -75 dBm.
Inside 500 feet away no longer a puzzle
With the Maverick installed on my 80 cm offset dish outside 500 feet away, I had lock with an SNR of + 5 dB and and RSSI of -95 dBm. With the FTA Invacom LNB my SNR was +3.25 dB with an RSSI of -99 dBm. In both cases, I did not have a DiSEqC or motor drive in the circuit.
I can now account for the RSSI signal drop and reduced SNR due to cable loss from locating the Dreamcatcher 500 feet away inside.
I made a terrible mistake reading the SNRs with the Dreamcatcher connected at the base of my offset dish. I reported the readings as negative - - they were all positive at +9.25.
You are absolutely right on. When I originally pointed my dish, final alignment was done by tightening/loosening the left or right side nuts on the clamps that held the dish onto the mounting pole. I never could see a one degree shift but my FTA receiver did. Ken
I normally see a SNR in the range of +10 to +12, depending on factors like cloud cover, light rain, etc with a 1-meter dish. I also have a fairly long coax run to inside the house, which is about 150 feet.