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How a Satellite Dish Works


How a Satellite Dish Works


By Gary Davis

Dish-Network-Satellite-TV.ws


Webmasters: You may reprint this article in its entirety,
providing you leave the Byline and About the Author sections
intact, including the links to href="http://www.dish-network-satellite-tv.ws/">Dish Network
Satellite TV. A href="http://www.dish-network-satellite-tv.ws/">satellite
dish is an href="http://www.dish-network-satellite-tv.ws/how-a-satellite-tv-
antenna-works.htm">antenna designed to focus on a specific
broadcast source. The standard dish consists of a parabolic
(bowl-shaped) surface and a central feed horn. A controller
sends it through the horn, and the dish focuses the signal into
a relatively narrow beam.

A narrow beam is generated as the dish reflects energy from the
feed horn.

The satellite
dish
on the receiving end can only receive information; it
cannot transmit information. The receiving dish works in the
exact opposite way of the transmitter. When a beam hits the
curved dish, the parabola shape reflects the radio signal inward
onto a particular point, just like a concave mirror focuses
light onto a particular point.

The curved dish focuses incoming radio waves onto the feed horn.
The feed horn then passes the signal onto the receiving
equipment. Ideally, there will be no obstructions, such as trees
to interfere with the signal from the satellite to the href="http://www.dish-network-satellite-tv.ws/">satellite
dish. With no obstructions you receive a much clearer
signal.

Some systems are set up to receive signals from more than one
satellite. A new dish design uses two or more horns to pick up
different satellite signals. As the beams from different
satellites hit the curved dish, they reflect at different angles
so that one beam hits one of the horns and another beam hits a
different horn.

The central element in the feed horn is the LNB (low noise
blockdown converter) The LNB amplifies the radio signal bouncing
off the dish and filters out the noise (radio signals not
carrying programming). The LNB passes the amplified, filtered
signal to the satellite receiver inside the viewer's house.

A cable is run from the satellite dish into the house and then
connects to the href="http://www.dish-network-satellite-tv.ws/">satellite TV
receiver (black box) thus completing the connection.



About the author:
Gary Davis is owner of href="http://www.dish-network-satellite-tv.ws/">Dish Network
Satellite TV, has several years experience in the Satellite
TV Industry and has written several articles on satellite TV.



Author : Gary Davis
Site : www.goarticles.com

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