Colony dishes can be portable and fix on the force.
Protectorate dish television lends itself largely able-bodied to excursion when using an RV for both native and transportation. Setting up a protectorate dish at an RV grassland is absolutely coincidental to the action in which it would be installed at a constant site, with the caveat life that the dish must be aligned every date it is taken down and then allot back up again. Any day the RV is relocated and the dish place up, scope and longitude grid squares chicken feed, which requires this readjustment. With this in imagination, a facile course exists for a crack, solid, impermanent dish set-up at an RV stadium.
Instructions
1. Hook up your television to the "TV out" jack on the receiver and make sure that the TV is set to the correct channel for viewing satellite programming, often channel 3 or 4.5. Adjust the azimuth and elevation settings of your dish using your remote control as you would at your regular fixed home location, following your satellite television provider's instructions in aiming for their specific satellite. Tighten down both the azimuth and elevation locking screws firmly once you have achieved the maximum reception of signal as indicated by your system's signal strength indicator.
2. Attach the dish to the tripod and rotate the entire system so the dish is aimed roughly toward the direction of the satellite signal.
3. Lay one full sand bag across the end of each tripod leg to stabilize it, preventing wind gusts from interfering with the signal after the system has been aimed and adjusted.
4. Run the RG-6 coaxial cable from your satellite dish into the RV. Hook the cable to the "satellite in" (or "sat in") jack on the rear of the receiver. Fix up a spacecraft dish mounting tripod on the side of your RV that has a "unrestrained opinion" of the Southern sky with no obstructions (For instance, no other RV parked further accelerated, and no trees blocking the sky). Whether you carry no undarkened view of the Southern sky, place the tripod at the back of your RV so that other vehicles aren't blocking your dish's view of the sky. Some RV owners set up the dish on the roof of their RV.