Update:
11082 V New SR 12100
11099 V 1506 New
11155 V New SR 45000
and also in H: 11155 H 45000 (if it's not a cross polar mistake...)
Update:
11082 V New SR 12100
11099 V 1506 New
11155 V New SR 45000
and also in H: 11155 H 45000 (if it's not a cross polar mistake...)
11155 V,45000,2/3,Dvb-S2/QPSK,ACM,GS:Vpid-2048,Apid-8001/8003/8005/8007
Hi Feedsat,
I see you have many transponders with cross-polar, some get more than 8 dB!?Attenuates the useful signal on the other polarity.
Regards
@ Feedsat,do you mean that,besides 11155 V,the other transponders used horizontal polarity?If I understand well what you say now,I find it strange that we have strong signal on vertical pol. from the beginning, and now to see that actually transponders are on horizontal!
On your RF,I can see that to 11106 V is 12.5dB,and horizontal is 8.9db! Is too high attenuation. What I think something is not correctly adjusted or lnb problem?I think rather the signal on horizontal appears as a result of the fact that polarities are not completely separate.Don't know if you can completely eliminate this phenomenon over the entire bandwidth on the lnb that we use(commercial and not professional). It is only possible to check if you used one Ku-band LNB with a single polarity to be sure of the results.
When you have found the signal on horizontal?This phenomenon occurs on other satellites?From whom should we have confirmation that what you say is true?
Who knows,maybe you're right,but I don't think these transponders use horizontal polarity
Hi,
of course this satellite has transmitions with horizontal polarisation.
In case of 11155 H I would say it´s correct and using horizontal polarisation, because 11155 H is not new (see first page in this thread) and both scans, scan of Feedsat and my scan, are showing this too.
If it is true that we have the same transmission with the same parameters of the two polarities at two different spots,that means that you grab, in the western part of Europe,that spot!There are four beams in Ku-band on this satellite,two of them appear as overlapping up to a point,East Atlantic and West Atlantic.In West Europe,the last beam enters the better than in my area.
And yet...Otherwise there is no explanation,at least commercial,to use the same transponders for the same spot!If technically it can be done,don't see how different providers have resorted to the same method when clients of these transponders are not the same!?
I mean if you look from a logical point of view,and from our experience, each of us found that there are a lot of technical anomalies on satellite reception,that only the one who does the transmission could explain.
The only thing that we can do about it,as hobbyst,is to notice a phenomenon,sometimes even to explain,but that doesn't mean that we are always right,such as might be my doubt about this case
Scan of the day, vertical.
Nothing new.
von heute
I hope this is not a mistake, but now I have found in BS a transponder in horizontal:11070 H,1000,1/4,Dvb-S2/QPSK,ACM,Single-new GS.That's why I scanned several times bandwidth and I got the same result.I don't know why,but I doubt it is horizontal?!
Scan of the day.
I scanned twice on the horizontal and I found at 11052 H,19995,1/2,but of course I have not locked.Surely this transponder is active(maybe AOL),but it should be (re)checked.
Yes, AOL
Thanks Satesco, see you next year for more Satellite DX.
There are 2 new small spikes in Vertical , noise or what ?
11225 11255
Scan of the day and a look on the spectrum.
Changing SR (a little bit):
10995 H 446320 DVB-S2
Left: 11079 H, 11095 V and 11112 V
Just a quick look here. Nothing new.
Scan of the day, but nothing new.
New : 11382 V 1000
11289 V 30000 new
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