- Joined
- Jan 7, 2009
- Messages
- 5,687
- Reaction score
- 6,186
- Points
- 113
- Age
- 59
- My Satellite Setup
- Some SAT-related hardware.
- My Location
- N-E from Riga
The thing that catches my eye is the elevation (or inclination, if you must) of the dishes.A few dishes spotted whilst travelling through Judea and Sameria in Israel from the Stalactite Caves near Jerusalem, probably the HOT TV uplink
View attachment 97739
as far as I am aware they receive and rebroadcast channels from all over the world to accommodate the eclectic diversity of nationalities that live in Israel covering the many languages, countries of origin and religions. Russian tv is very popular in Israel owing to the 1M Russian immigrants in the 80s and 90s. Equally Moroccan, Tunisian Iranian,Yemen Egyptian (generally dialects of Arabic or Farsi) English French South American, Indian,.. the list goes on. As you point out the larger dishes have a low inclination which to me suggests they are receiving channels rather than uplinking. The Amos range of sats are manufactured and used by Israel, though, I am sure @HB13DISH16 is more knowledgeable than myself on these dishes and Israeli programmingThe thing that catches my eye is the elevation (or inclination, if you must) of the dishes.
Being that far south, one should expect them to be pointing a but more, erh, upwards?
What sats are usually used for Israeli tv?
I think there is very little I can add. I don't know why there are so many dishes in that photo, Topper.As far as
as far as I am aware they receive and rebroadcast channels from all over the world to accommodate the eclectic diversity of nationalities that live in Israel covering the many languages, countries of origin and religions. Russian tv is very popular in Israel owing to the 1M Russian immigrants in the 80s and 90s. Equally Moroccan, Tunisian Iranian,Yemen Egyptian (generally dialects of Arabic or Farsi) English French South American, Indian,.. the list goes on. As you point out the larger dishes have a low inclination which to me suggests they are receiving channels rather than uplinking. The Amos range of sats are manufactured and used by Israel, though, I am sure @HB13DISH16 is more knowledgeable than myself on these dishes and Israeli programming
Nice. I am only guessing the size probably about 2.5m. Size does matter.Not a lot of unusual or larger dishes to be seen when we were in Barcelona and Granada a couple of weeks ago. However, I did find this one while walking through Granada...
Yes I did an EPG system installation in the late 90's in a head-end run by Irish Multichannel (later renamed Chorus).Top one looks like that point to point "cable" TV service you get in Southern Ireland.
See here:
Multichannel Multipoint Distribution Service - Wikipedia
I don't have solar water heating system because it is such an eye soar. I have an indoor electric water heating tank and it doesn't consume that much electricity 9 months of the year. For a large family, it is probably a good idea to have them.A typical view from an apartment in Rishon LeTzion, Israel and note the alternative mounting arrangements and usual rooftop clutter from hotwater tanks aircon heat distributors and cables galore