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Comment by tcmart14

12 days ago

Unfortunately, some of use are not so lucky, at least I am not, haha.

I got the idea to tinker with satellite dishes to make a simple radio telescope. I remember riding around and constantly seeing old DirectTV satellite dishes constantly on the side of the road for trash. Before this idea. So I figured, oh, I can easily get my hands on one. As soon as I committed to that project, I never saw a single satellite dish sitting by the street as I rode around.

If it makes you feel better you probably would not have been able to just pick up the dishes and use them without buying extra parts. I had DirectTV and when I cancelled they came and took the feed horn off the satellite dish but left the rest of the dish. I’m not sure how much a feed horn would cost but at least the dish wouldn’t have been immediately usable. I also was interested in making a radio telescope but gave up when I realized DirectTV took that part of the dish

  • Back when wardriving was a more popular pastime (and before the ISM bands got clogged completely up with everything), I wanted to play around more with long-range 802.11b/g signals.

    I scored an old Primestar dish and LNBF. This was the easy part: I just talked to one of the guys at a small local company that dealt with things like consumer satellite, and asked nice. He was curious what I wanted to use it for (Primestar was dead by that point), so I told him, and he thought that was a fun idea so he gave me one or two that he had kicking around in the shop.

    The idea was to toss the LNBF and put a biquad antenna made from wire at just the right spot where the parabola focused. It seemed easy enough, but my fabrication skills 20 years ago were lacking, and I didn't have any measurement gear beyond a multimeter and a tape measure, so the project never went anywhere.

    But nowadays, with modern accessible CAD and 3D printing and sendcutsend and JLC and SDR dongles and Harbor Freight and everything else? With the RF gear I either own these days, or have access to? Yeah, I'd probably be able to make it work. I might even be able to turn a new feedhorn on my buddy's lathe to increase efficiency. FFS, there's probably already parametric models out there for OpenSCAD that just do this thing.

    It seems much, much more do-able with today's resources than it was back then.

    Except, also these days: If I wanted a big parabolic wifi antenna, I'd probably just buy one that was made in a factory...and use it. :)