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Alternative Uses For an Old Satellite Dish?

Posted by kdawson on Tue Jul 15, 2008 07:58 PM
from the birdbath-for-condors dept.
ya really writes "My family has one of those BUDs (Big Ugly Dishes) sitting in their back yard still. The other day they asked me if I would take it apart for them. Aside from simply recycling it, I was wondering if there are any alternatives for its use. It was one of the last made before DirectTV and Dish took over satellite broadcasting, and even has a digital receiver. I'd say it was made around 1996."
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  • Use as... well... (Score:4, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday July 15 2008, @07:58PM (#24206411)

    Bird Baths...

  • by slifox (605302) * on Tuesday July 15 2008, @07:59PM (#24206425)

    Satellite dishes make excellent directional 802.11 antennas.
    Just remove the existing LNB from the dish and replace it with a homemade antenna, like a biquad, tuned for your band-of-interest (i.e. 2.4GHz ISM for wi-fi). Make sure you get a powerful (high RX sensitivity & high TX power) wireless card with an external antenna jack

    Here is one project write-up, though I'm sure there are many others:
    http://www.engadget.com/2005/11/15/how-to-build-a-wifi-biquad-dish-antenna/ [engadget.com]

    Alternatively, keep the LNB, get a DVB capture card (PCI models go for $20-$80+ new), and use the dish to get FTA (free to air) satellite TV.
    There are many communities for this kind of thing exactly, just search google for: FTA forum

    I'd also take apart that digital receiver and reverse engineer the hardware as much as I could, just for kicks.
    When you've gotten your hour of fun out of it, gut it for parts and move on to the next interesting project.

  • 1. Attach to tin foil hat
    2. Read other people's minds.
    3. ???
    4. Profit!
  • I dunno. (Score:5, Funny)

    by PakProtector (115173) <{moc.liamg} {ta} {vikvec}> on Tuesday July 15 2008, @08:00PM (#24206433) Journal

    Maybe you could use it to create some sort of device that would beam correct spellings into /. submissions?

  • Well. . . (Score:4, Funny)

    by Cait Sidhe (1026312) on Tuesday July 15 2008, @08:00PM (#24206441)
    Nothing quite like a giant pudding bowl?
  • Sled (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday July 15 2008, @08:02PM (#24206459)

    This may be a bit redneck, but when I was a kid a friend had one. We took it down and used it as a big saucer sled to pull behind a truck in winter. It was great fun.

  • Cooking! (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday July 15 2008, @08:02PM (#24206469)

    Since it's parabolic, you can can, with the addition of some reflectivity, use it to concentrate the powers of the sun [backyardnature.net], suitable for culinary and other low-heat chemistry.

  • Attach handles... (Score:4, Interesting)

    by jblake (162981) on Tuesday July 15 2008, @08:02PM (#24206473) Homepage

    ...and go sledding!

  • by glittalogik (837604) on Tuesday July 15 2008, @08:04PM (#24206493)

    Loud sex [xkcd.org].

  • by Chandon Seldon (43083) on Tuesday July 15 2008, @08:04PM (#24206505) Homepage

    Full size satellite dishes are still the best way to receive free television content, despite what the cable / pay satellite providers may imply in their advertising. If you don't have any place to put it yourself, it shouldn't be too difficult to find someone who would be willing to buy it.

  • by tetrahedrassface (675645) on Tuesday July 15 2008, @08:05PM (#24206521) Journal
    " I was wondering if there ae any"

    Yes there 'r'. :)

  • keep it (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday July 15 2008, @08:05PM (#24206527)

    Go over to lyngsat.com [lyngsat.com] and see what you can see. Satellite TV is far more than what the media companies are willing to sell you.

  • DeathStar? (Score:5, Funny)

    by therufus (677843) on Tuesday July 15 2008, @08:06PM (#24206543)

    Either grow a massive hedge in an orb shape and stick this dish in the top section just like the DeathStar from StarWars or just do the same thing (sans hedge) with paper mache.

  • by commodoresloat (172735) * on Tuesday July 15 2008, @08:16PM (#24206625) Homepage
    well i overheard a neighbor talking to a friend about how he had harvested a whole bunch of BUDs from his backyard. He just said he was planning on smoking them; I'm not sure what that means but good luck with your search.
  • Radio Telescope (Score:5, Interesting)

    by novadragoon (746815) on Tuesday July 15 2008, @08:17PM (#24206645)
    Some people in the physics dept here at uni, took an old parabolic dish and made a radio telescope with it. Big semester project.
  • Fountain (Score:4, Interesting)

    by mrbcs (737902) on Tuesday July 15 2008, @08:17PM (#24206655)
    I have one of these and my wife wants me to make a fountain out of it. I'm thinking of putting plastic pipe around the outside edge and drilling a bunch of holes that would face the center. Put it on a brick foundation with a place for the storage tank and pump, put some rock in it and it should be pretty cool.

    Will still be a while making it though... I've been a year on an addition to the house and cleaning up the mess that the previous owner left.

  • C band (Score:5, Informative)

    by jonfr (888673) * on Tuesday July 15 2008, @08:21PM (#24206731) Homepage

    Get a C band LNB and point to the next C band sat that is out there.

    Plenty of C band channels out there. A good list is here.

    http://www.lyngsat.com/america.html [lyngsat.com]

  • sculpture (Score:5, Funny)

    by fahrbot-bot (874524) on Tuesday July 15 2008, @08:26PM (#24206783)
    Paint it black, make a giant white-gloved hand reaching out of the ground and tell the neighborhood kids you buried Mickey Mouse [wikimedia.org] in your backyard...fun for the whole family.
  • TV, Ham radio, etc (Score:5, Informative)

    by n1ywb (555767) on Tuesday July 15 2008, @08:39PM (#24206919) Homepage Journal
    I think the most obvious use would be to receive satellite TV, there's quite a bit of free stuff out there still. One of those fancy new mpeg receivers might be helpful. http://www.tech-faq.com/free-to-air-satellite.shtml [tech-faq.com]

    You could also:

  • thermal collector (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Admin (304403) on Tuesday July 15 2008, @08:40PM (#24206935)

    Yank out the transceiver, put in a heat exchanger in its place. Use sheets of 1/2 " peel and stick mirror tiles to cover the dish surface. Pick up a small 4 sided pyramid, put photocells on all 4 sides, and use a couple of differential op-amps to determine which side has the most light hitting it.
    Use those two signals to run the motor controls to aim the dish. It will always point at the brightest spot in the sky. A small pump feeding fluid (such as connonseed oil) thru the heat exchanger, to a large thermal well( say a buried concrete container full of steel slugs), will gather all the heat you need. Use the secondary loop from the thermal well for your home heating, hot water, cooking. etc. (cottonseed oil will easily heat to 400F)
       

  • Bionic Ear (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Roskolnikov (68772) on Tuesday July 15 2008, @08:41PM (#24206941)

    mount a microphone at its focal point and aim that sucker (carefully) at whatever you would like to hear.

    I also second, third, or whatever the notion of a death ray,
    take a microwave oven apart and get creative with the +10 ray of amana.

  • Mind Play (Score:5, Funny)

    by Zaffle (13798) on Tuesday July 15 2008, @08:52PM (#24207057) Homepage Journal

    Lower the dish so its pointing directly at your neighbours house.
    When they enquire about it; Tell them you can now read their email.
    Refuse to elaborate.

    My shrink's neighbour has a dish pointed at the shrinks office. He says the paranoid delusionals love it. I love it too. Total coincidence.

  • Free TV... (Score:5, Informative)

    by evilviper (135110) on Tuesday July 15 2008, @09:11PM (#24207245) Journal

    I wrote about think kind of thing briefly in my journal a while back: http://slashdot.org/~evilviper/journal/189083 [slashdot.org]

    You've already got most everything you need... For the cost of a DVB-S receiver ($40 for a PCI model, $100 for a set-top-box), you can get quite a few free TV channels, in addition to raw feeds and other eccentric stuff. No monthly fees required. That doesn't include most "cable" channels, but much more than you'll get with an antenna.

    Alternatively, if your dish was already fitted with a Ku-band LNBF, you could simply aim it at the DirecTV sat, and get a VERY strong signal, eliminating drop-outs even in the even of airplane flyovers, or extremely heavy rain fade.

    But I would suggest throwing out the DirecTV subscription, and going with the big-ugly-dish you already own, and a 4DTV receiver. It's easily the cheapest way to get subscription channels, probably less than 1/4rd the price of DirecTV or DishNet. Ala carte subscriptions are a big advantage that could save you dramatically.

  • Uses for a BIG dish. (Score:5, Interesting)

    by JWSmythe (446288) * <jwsmythe.jwsmythe@com> on Tuesday July 15 2008, @09:17PM (#24207319) Homepage Journal

    Oh, you have to be kidding me. Someone should take away your Slashdot license. :)

        What would a geek do with a big honkin' parabolic reflector? All kinds of things.

        1) The most obvious, pick up old satellite signals. I'm pretty sure (but not positive) that the C and KU bands are still in use. I used to watch live feeds for various news stations, along with all kinds of weird broadcasting. It was my first exposure to local TV in other areas.

        2) "Free to air". I won't say anything else about that, it's up to you to research.

        3) Listen in on unencrypted government traffic. There was a news story about this a few years ago. Some folks in England were intercepting not-so-secret US Government recon flights over Eastern Europe. (If they were to be really secret, they would have been encrypted and on different satellites). Just because the antenna normally points on one arc, it doesn't mean that's the only things to listen to.

        4) One heck of a 802.11b/g antenna. :) Watch out for the FCC though, that's a lot of gain. You may need to put a finer mesh screen over your existing panels. Check your wavelengths.

        5) Parabolic reflector + big light source (sun) = quick fried lunch. Cover it in mylar, and don't look into it directly. Better yet, don't be in front of it. It's all natural, and doesn't hurt the environment much. :)

        6) Parabolic reflector + microphone = really big parabolic microphone. Since you still have the mylar on from #5, all you have to do is mount the microphone. Well, you may want to use something less optically reflective, like saran wrap, unless you want to risk cooking your $5 microphone. :)

        7) Parabolic reflector + Microwave oven magnetron = trouble. Your 802.11b/g transmitter may have been putting off 0.025W (0.200W if you bought a good card). What happens when you pump 700W+ into the dish? :) How about a dozen magnetrons aimed into a smaller dish at the focal point, to reflect back down into the main dish first? 8.4KW and the gain of your antenna. You could cook your dinner from a few miles away. Don't aim it at friends, enemies, or anything you don't want to mess up pretty quick.

        8) Get another one the same size, cover them both in mylar, and have your own UFO parked in the back yard. Sell the pictures to the National Enquirer, and then sell the UFO on eBay with a signed copy of that edition.

        and on to the boring options.

        9) Scrap metal?

        10) Pull the panels, and you'll have really big snow shoes.

        11) Pull the panels for snow sled racing this winter.

        12) Pull the panels, Cover the convex side with styrofoam and fiberglass, and make some totally rad knee boards.

        Enjoy!

  • Dream (Score:5, Funny)

    by Schemat1c (464768) on Tuesday July 15 2008, @09:44PM (#24207531) Homepage

    You could fall asleep in it and broadcast your dreams all over the world.