Hi everyone,
I'm upgrading from my 1-meter dish to a 2.4-meter mesh parabolic dish (C/Ku Band, f/d Ratio - 0.40, Focal Length - 28 inches, Punch Sheet - Aluminum Sheet, Wind load operational - 95 kmph).
I will be installing this dish at a remote rural location, where it will operate mostly unattended, with only occasional visits to rotate or re-aim it.
My feed is the Discovery Dish hydrogen-line feed from KrakenRF.
(docs:
https://github.com/krakenrf/discoverydish_docs/wiki/02.-Dish,-Feed-and-Enclosure-Assembly
https://github.com/krakenrf/discoverydish_docs/wiki).
The signal chain inside this feed is
Antenna → LNA1 → Filter1 → LNA2 → Filter2 → Output
using QPL9547 LNA chips and SAW filters.
The new dish includes the usual circular scalar-ring mount for a TV LNB, and I’m trying to determine the best way to adapt or replace that bracket to hold the Discovery feed at the exact focal point while maintaining proper illumination for this deeper reflector to utilize it to its maximum.
If anyone has any ideas, I would really appreciate your input.
I'll point it toward a part of the sky with strong, reliable hydrogen-line emission so it continues collecting data even when I’m not physically present, which it'll upload daily to OneDrive. Later, I also plan to use the same system for SETI narrowband observations.
Thanks in advance!

Here's an image of the feed,
it looks like its URL is broken in the above post.
Hi, Alex.
Thanks a lot! for the advice,
I'll get the materials needed to make a new feed that is shown in your document, thanks.
Also, do you think there is a way to reuse this feed's LNAs, filters, etc.? As it has dual LNAs and filters.
Its documentation says this:
Designed for prime focus satellite dishes, the Discovery Dish Feed comes in various versions for different applications and satellite bands:
Hydrogen Line: 1380 MHz – 1460 MHz. Explore the Galactic Hydrogen Line peak at 1420.42 MHz. Observe the Doppler shift caused by galactic spin.
All-in-One Unit: Integrates the feed antenna, LNA, filters, and cable, eliminating separate purchases and the need to weatherproof individual components.
Signal Chain: Antenna → LNA1 → Filter1 → LNA2 → Filter2 → Output. Uses the QPL9547 LNA chip and SAW filters.
Power: Bias tee 3.3V–5V, 120mA. Compatible with RTL-SDR Blog and Airspy dongles.
Skew Adjustability: Feed head rotates for skew alignment.
Weatherproof Enclosure: IP65-rated for standard weather conditions.
Dish Compatibility: Best with the Discovery Dish, but works with most prime focus dishes using an adapter, including typical 600x900 mm WiFi Grid Dishes.
Thanks.




Feedhorn dimensions are typically selected to illuminate the surface of a dish as fully and uniformly as possible, to achieve the highest possible antenna gain. Industry practice is to utilize a 10 dB edge illumination taper. That is, with respect to the center of the dish, signals reaching the feed from the very edge of the dish are 10 dB lower in amplitude. With simple cylindrical waveguide feedhorns, the result is typically a 55% efficient antenna system. For most communications applications, where range and margin are a function of recovered signal strength, this is indeed an appropriate design technique.
SETI, on the other hand, is a unique application in that the strength of the anticipated receive signal is entirely unknown. Our range and sensitivity are largely noise- limited. That is, in order to maximize our sensitivity, we need to reduce antenna noise temperature to the absolute minimum. This can be accomplished by deliberately under-illuminating the dish. Let's calculate an example based upon a 5 meter parabolic reflector operating at the 1420 MHz Hydrogen line. If we use a 15 dB illumination taper, the antenna gain goes down almost one dB (from +34.8 to +34.0 dBi), as efficiency drops to say 45%. But for a SETI system with a low noise front end, reducing antenna gain and efficiency actually improves sensitivity. Here's how:
Let's imagine our receiver uses a GaAs PHEMT front end, running at 50 K receive noise temperature. With a dish designed for optimum gain, the antenna noise temperature, dominated by Earth-seeing sidelobes, is about 50 K. The overall system noise temperature is thus 100 K, and sensitivity (given 10 Hz bin width and 10 second integration) is on the order of 1.3 E-22 W/m^2. Now under-illuminate for 10 K of antenna noise. Antenna gain decreases 0.8 dB as discussed above, but overall noise temperature reduces to 60 K, a 2.2 dB decrease in noise. System sensitivity is now 9.4 E-23 W/m^2, a net system improvement of 1.4 dB!
Is the cited sensitivity adequate to the task of meaningful SETI? In 1977, NASA SP-419, The Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence articulated this goal on page 21: "Existing antennas could be used to search ... the entire microwave window to as low as ~10 E-23 W/m^2 in a few years of observing time." By increasing to 120 seconds the integration time constant of the system just described, overall sensitivity improves to on the order of 2.7 E-23 W/m^2. Thus, two decades later, amateur SETI is just now closing in on NASA's sensitivity goal for SETI sky surveys.
The chief determinant of illumination taper for scalar-ring feedhorns is the placement of the choke ring along the waveguide feedhorn. The choke ring must be designed so as to slide back and forth on the waveguide horn, in order to optimize the illumination pattern of the feed for noise vs. gain, as well as the particular focal length to diameter ratio (F/D) of the dish being used. Here are the critical dimensions for the distance between the front of the horn and the back of the choke ring. They are shown in Table 2 for dishes of various F/D ratios, for both lowest antenna noise temperature (the preferred condition for SETI) and greatest antenna gain (which you would choose for a transmit antenna). All dimensions are in cm (inches).

That is amazing, Ayushman – I asked ChatGPT (sorry guys!) what advantages of 2.4m over 1m were for H-Line, and this is what it said today….
NB If you join us in the H-Line group meetings, please show us loads of photos, and tell us all about finding the dish, buying it, installing it (or your hopes on installing it including info on site), info on how you will feed it, how long the coax will be and where and what PC and software you hope to use, etc. etc. – if you don’t have that info don’t worry, you can talk about your thoughts, and other members may have suggestions that might help.
The mount shown in the photo is non-tracking – does that mean you intend to do H-Line drift scans with this dish? (where you point in one direction and allow Earth to rotate bringing 360 degrees of sky across the dish over 24 hrs.)
One question to whole group, can you do pulsar observations with 2.4m dish from radio quiet site? I know several people here do them with 3m dishes.
Andy
Upgrading from a 1-metre dish to a 2.4-metre dish for 1420 MHz hydrogen-line work brings several big improvements. The gains are mainly in sensitivity, signal-to-noise ratio, and angular resolution.
Below is a clear breakdown:
Dish sensitivity scales with collecting area, which goes as πr².
Area ratio ≈ 5.7×
This means:
This is the biggest real-world benefit:
► Weaker sources become detectable, and integration times shorten dramatically.
Beamwidth is roughly:
θ ≈ λ / D
At 1420 MHz, λ ≈ 0.21 m.
So you get:
A larger dish has a:
This helps the system temperature (Tsys) drop, improving SNR further.
Because you start with higher SNR:
With a 2.4 m dish you can:
Many Radio JOVE-type feeds and simple LNAs perform noticeably better when paired with larger apertures for this reason.
Upgrading from 1 m → 2.4 m gives:
Improvement | Factor |
Collecting area | 5.7× |
Signal-to-noise | ~2.4× |
Angular resolution | ~2.4× better |
Integration time needed | ~1/6 for same quality |
Ability to see Galactic features | Much better |
If you’re doing serious hydrogen-line spectroscopy—especially velocity mapping—the upgrade is a very large step up.
Thanks in advance!

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I didn’t realise that was the official name, Alex, for a cantenna – a “tuned cylindrical waveguide”…..
In future, when I am doing talks at astronomy clubs in UK on radio astronomy, I will no longer have a cantenna on my 150cm dish, but now I have upgraded to a very serious sounding tuned cylindrical waveguide!!!!
Andy
From: 'Alex P' via Society of Amateur Radio Astronomers <sara...@googlegroups.com>
Sent: 19 November 2025 01:15
To: Society of Amateur Radio Astronomers <sara...@googlegroups.com>
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Of a large coffee can………..
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I didn’t realise that was the official name, Alex, for a cantenna – a “Tuned Cylindrical Waveguide”…..
Hi Alex,
Thank you so much for the detailed explanation, the choke-ring information, and for pointing me toward Barry’s document. This will make things much easier when I start working on the cantenna. I really appreciate you taking the time, it’s extremely helpful.
I actually wanted to buy the Nooelec SAWbird H1+ right from the beginning, but it has been out of stock everywhere for months. That’s the only reason I ended up getting the Discovery Dish H1 feed. If I bought a separate LNA, finding a proper 1420 MHz SAW filter was also proving difficult, and I wasn’t sure if the ones on eBay were genuinely good or just generic & untested.
I did see some options on the GPIO Labs store, but the SAWbird would still be my first choice because of the fully integrated design.
If anyone knows a source where the SAWbird H1+ is currently in stock, I’d definitely be interested in purchasing one. Otherwise, I’ll try to pick up a wideband Nooelec LNA that is available, source a suitable filter, and build a proper cantenna + LNA + choke-ring setup for the 2.4 m dish. I can continue using the Discovery Dish feed on my smaller grid dish.
Thanks again for your help and the references—they really make things clearer.
Regards,
Ayushman
Hi Andrew,
Thanks so much! Yes, I’d be happy to join the meetings and share photos, updates, and everything as the installation progresses. I’ll really enjoy doing that.
I bought this dish: https://www.solid.sale/Solid-Dish-Antenna/8ft-Dish
(I actually received a slightly upgraded version of it as bought from an antenna solution provider) The price was quite reasonable—about $110 (USD) plus $20 shipping—and it even comes with a free mounting pole that has built-in elevation adjustment. It’s a surprisingly reliable brand from what I’ve seen. I could have gone for a larger dish, but since I’ll only be visiting the site once every 4–5 months, I wanted something big but still manageable to mount and keep secure. With this one, I can simply cement the supplied pole onto the roof.
I’ll be running the setup on a Raspberry Pi 500 with an SDR server, and it will upload the daily data to OneDrive automatically. I’ll also set up Tailscale or DDNS for remote access, since it will be using a cellular LTE/5G router for internet.
And yes — using ChatGPT etc. has been helpful.
Claude Code is also great for calculations and programming, also it can create whole Python GUIs for Virgo etc. It runs directly in the terminal and handles math/programming really well. Of course, it’s always best to double-check anything AI produces, but it can save a lot of time: https://claude.com/product/claude-code
Looking forward to joining the meetings and sharing progress soon!
Regards,
Ayushman
Hi Andrew,
Thanks so much! Yes, I’d be happy to join the meetings and share photos, updates, and everything as the installation progresses. I’ll really enjoy doing that.
I bought this dish: https://www.solid.sale/Solid-Dish-Antenna/8ft-Dish
(I actually received a slightly upgraded version of it as bought from an antenna solution provider) The price was quite reasonable—about $110 (USD) plus $20 shipping—and it even comes with a free mounting pole that has built-in elevation adjustment. It’s a surprisingly reliable brand from what I’ve seen. I could have gone for a larger dish, but since I’ll only be visiting the site once every 4–5 months, I wanted something big but still manageable to mount and keep secure. With this one, I can simply cement the supplied pole onto the roof.I’ll be running the setup on a Raspberry Pi 500 with an SDR server, and it will upload the daily data to OneDrive automatically. I’ll also set up Tailscale or DDNS for remote access, since it will be using a cellular LTE/5G router for internet.
And yes — using ChatGPT etc. has been helpful.
Claude Code is also great for calculations and programming, also it can create whole Python GUIs for Virgo etc. It runs directly in the terminal and handles math/programming really well. Of course, it’s always best to double-check anything AI produces, but it can save a lot of time: https://claude.com/product/claude-codeLooking forward to joining the meetings and sharing progress soon!
Regards,
Ayushman
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Marcus that is pretty much the same thing I have sitting on the ground next to the observatory waiting for the time to build it. I'll be following your progress with interest and will hit you up for advice next summer.
Bob
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Hi Alex,
With regards to tuning the cantenna, which aspects are those, in your opinion, that must be just right?
Andy
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And, the positioning of the waveguide at the proper dish<>feed spacing.
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Also the SNR scales directly with area ratio not the square root
of the area ratio.
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This all fits with my understanding so far:
(i) Distance of probe from bottom of can really matters.
(ii) Length of probe matters, although this can be compensated for by cutting probe slightly long and nibbling bits off whilst checking SWR with NanoVNA, until get close to 1:1.
(iii) Recently, discovered what probe is made of also matters – 1/8-inch copper tubing seems to be very effective and better than simple wire.
Alex/Marcus/anyone else – please correct above!
Andy
From: 'b alex pettit jr' via Society of Amateur Radio Astronomers <sara...@googlegroups.com>
Sent: 19 November 2025 17:57
To: sara...@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: [SARA] Advice needed for mounting Discovery Dish hydrogen line feed on a 2.4m parabolic dish
And, the positioning of the waveguide at the proper dish<>feed spacing.
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This all fits with my understanding so far:
(i) Distance of probe from bottom of can really matters.
(ii) Length of probe matters, although this can be compensated for by cutting probe slightly long and nibbling bits off whilst checking SWR with NanoVNA, until get close to 1:1.
(iii) Recently, discovered what probe is made of also matters – 1/8-inch copper tubing seems to be very effective and better than simple wire.
Alex/Marcus/anyone else – please correct above!
To view this discussion visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/sara-list/004f01dc5982%241730ffe0%244592ffa0%24%40googlemail.com.
What do you think is a practical VSWR match that can be achieved by amateurs?
Andy
From: sara...@googlegroups.com <sara...@googlegroups.com> On Behalf Of Marcus D. Leech
Sent: 19 November 2025 18:36
To: sara...@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: [SARA] Advice needed for mounting Discovery Dish hydrogen line feed on a 2.4m parabolic dish
On 2025-11-19 13:26, andrew.thornett via Society of Amateur Radio Astronomers wrote:
This all fits with my understanding so far:
1. Distance of probe from bottom of can really matters.
2. Length of probe matters, although this can be compensated for by cutting probe slightly long and nibbling bits off whilst checking SWR with NanoVNA, until get close to 1:1.
3. Recently, discovered what probe is made of also matters – 1/8-inch copper tubing seems to be very effective and better than simple wire.
To view this discussion visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/sara-list/fe34c9b7-82d0-4045-939d-2f6a82350890%40gmail.com.
What do you think is a practical VSWR match that can be achieved by amateurs?
Andy
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Thanks.
Also – recently I tried using two probes same length, same distance from bottom cantenna – it seems to me that this has adversely affected the signal power level detected on both probes – is that a sensible suggestion?
Andy
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Thanks.
Also – recently I tried using two probes same length, same distance from bottom cantenna – it seems to me that this has adversely affected the signal power level detected on both probes – is that a sensible suggestion?
Andy
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Pretty sure that was on bench ..
This is one of the Yagis ... just takes tedious adjustments
On Wednesday, November 19, 2025 at 02:29:56 PM EST, Marcus D. Leech <patchv...@gmail.com> wrote:
On 2025-11-19 13:57, 'b alex pettit jr' via Society of Amateur Radio Astronomers wrote:
Nice. I have never personally been able to achieve better than 1.4:1 on the bench with a circular wave-guide and probe. Speaking with other radio astronomers
at the time, they said that was their experience as well. But yours is a lovely counter-example. Was this measurement on-dish, or on the bench?
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From: Lester Veenstra [mailto:m0...@veenstras.com]
Sent: Wednesday, November 19, 2025 12:34 PM
To: 'sara...@googlegroups.com'
Cc: 'sara-...@veenstras.com'
Subject: RE: [SARA] Advice needed for mounting Discovery Dish hydrogen line feed on a 2.4m parabolic dish
I have them tested, documented, with case, direct from me (SARA Store)
Lester B Veenstra K1YCM MØYCM W8YCM 6Y6Y W8YCM/6Y 6Y8LV (Reformed USNSG CTM1)
To get past GMAIL SPAM FILTER reconstruct a return address from
lester "aptsign" veenstras "dot" com
452 Stable Ln
Keyser WV 26726 USA
GPS: 39.336826 N 78.982287 W (Google)
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Hi Markus,
Yes, I was surprised by that price as well. Once I get the dish set up and have tested it a bit, I can check what the shipping cost to the USA might be. You could also ask the manufacturer directly if they can ship from their factory, if it’s being produced there, sea freight should make it much more affordable.
Hi Alex, Andrew, thank you both. I contacted Nooelec, and they replied saying they’ve added the SAWbird+ H1 back now to their webstore. So I’ll go ahead and purchase it now.
Thank you all for the help—I’ll try to build a proper Cantenna during the next few weekends and will share updates and photos as I make progress.
Thanks,
Ayushman